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 Friday, April 11, 2008

Shame on American Airlines

I have been a happy customer of American Airlines for over a decade. It’s been my preferred carrier of choice. I’ve flown them so much, that I’ve achieved Lifetime Gold Status by earning 1,000,000 miles in about 7 years of flying and buying stuff on my Citibank Credit Card.

And my loyalty is nothing compared to the folks who achieve Lifetime Platinum (2,000,000 miles) or qualify for Executive Platinum each year (100,000 miles but in seat).

But this morning I too awoke to a story of a disabled woman who had to physically go to the airport with her 7 grandchildren because American would not re-route her over the phone.

The NPR story is just a testament to the pain some folks are experiencing.

"They said that we had to come here to the airport to get everything straightened out, that they wouldn't do it over the phone," she says. Carter's flight to Austin, Texas, was canceled Wednesday. She's sitting in a wheelchair, with her infant, 2-year-old and 4-year-old grandchildren all hitching a ride.

"Even when I told them I was handicapped, and I said my daughter's going to have to come and she has seven kids, a newborn baby, she said she was really sorry but that was all they could do," says Carter, one of tens of thousands of passengers that American Airlines has been apologizing to this week.

This brought chills to my spine and vivid memories of how Alaska Airlines abandoned us in Mexico back in January.

Jeff Jarvis believes we’ve reached a tipping point. I think I’d agree.

You simply can’t treat people this way and survive. We all hate the airlines. We hate the experience on the plane and in the airport. We should fear for our safety, given American’s shoddy (and, one wonders, fraudulent) maintenance work. (As the Times said this morning, at least the FAA is doing its job.) The airlines never see themselves as our advocates, friends, servers; no, they are our prison wardens and enemies as they fight down legislation that mandates they should give us the crudest amenities a prisoner would get: clean water, air, and a toilet. The economics of the industry as it is being run today are unsustainable. And apart from the all-business-class airlines I try to fly every time I can (Eos, Silverjet, and there are more coming), there is not one visible bit of innovation — not one attempt to get out of this mess — visible in the industry.

This is borderline criminal on the part of the airlines.

Right now American is focused on fixing their planes to make them airworthy. It might not matter in the end, cause my guess is the relationship with their customers will be broken for a long time.

BTW, American does MD-80 maintenance for many carriers that have MD-80s, so I suspect after they inspect all their planes, the international carriers will get hit with the same problems (those that have MD-80s).

Posted Friday, April 11, 2008    Permalink    Comments [4]  View blog reactions

 

 Saturday, March 29, 2008

Virgin America

imageIf I were to describe Virgin America this is what I would say.

Imagine if the Airlines never stopped innovating in the mid eighties, and the flying experience got better. If you fly Virgin America you are getting an end to end flight experience that represents what flying is supposed to be like in 2008.

or

If Apple started an Airline the experience would be Virgin America.

Do I really need to say any more? Virgin is simply the best domestic flying experience I’ve had, both in First Class and in Coach. Let’s examine the experience.

But first, if you are short on time, here are the bullets:

  • Great airport terminals at both SFO/SEA
  • AC Power in every seat
  • Nice Friendly Employees
  • Good Food and Drinks  with on-demand ordering
  • Fantastic in-flight entertainment
  • Comfortable seats in First Class and Coach

The Airport

When you fly Virgin at SFO you are leaving from International Terminal A. There are very few airports in the world that are nicer than flying the International terminal at SFO. Built in 2000, it’s pretty much a fantastic terminal, from the attached parking garage with reasonable short term parking rates, to the amazingly short security line, to the great food offerings and plenty of seating.

On the SEA side of things you are flying out of Concourse A, which is also brand new, and not crowded. Comparing this to the mayhem of Terminal C and D where Alaska flys is not fair, but it’s an amazing contrast.

The Plane

Virgin has a fleet of brand new Airbus A320 and A319s. the Airbus narrow body fleet(A319, A320) are equivalent to the Boeing 737 series (737-700, 737-800, 737-900) and the Airbus A321 is equivalent to the Boeing 757.

Personally I like Airbus planes. My favorite plane to fly is the A340-300 which is equivalent to the 767 but 20 years newer. The smaller Airbusses are comfortable, quite and have all the latest and greatest technology. The cockpit is impressive.

Since the plane is brand new, it has a leg on everything anyone else flys domestically. Continental, Delta, American, United have increasingly aging fleets, and you can get stuck flying a 20 year old plane that has never had a cabin refresh.

imageThe first thing you will notice is the cabin. The best way to describe it is the lobby of a W Hotel. There is pink and purple mood lighting, white leather seats in first class and black leather seats in coach with white iPod like plastic everywhere.

There is no carpet on the walls, no carpet dividers, no curtains, nothing that can get old and crappy worn out looking.

Instead of a "no smoking light" next to the "seatbelt" light, there is a "no portable electronics" light. Why hasn't every single airline replaced that stupid no smoking light with a no electronics light? I mean Hello, how many years has it been since smoking was allowed domestically?

All the seats have little steps for folks to place their bags in the overhead bins. This is a nice little touch.

image

BTW, all the airplanes have names. I flew to SEA on Jefferson Airplane. Virgin has always had an awesome sense of humor.

 

First Class

image There are 8 First Class seats. Buying a first class ticket is reasonable compared to say American or United, but you’ll pay a few hundred dollars one way for one. I upgraded to First Class during the checkin process for $50, which was well worth it IMHO.

The seats in first class rival the Business Class seats on International Carriers (albeit no lie-flat). You have a motorized seat with presets like “Take off”, “Comfort” and “Relax” as well as massage functionality.

The seats have 55 inches of seat pitch. Compare that to Alaska's 37 inches and you feel like you are actually in First Class.

There are nice little touches like numerous pockets in the seat in front of you for your iPod, magazines, books, laptops as well as an AC outlet, USB outlet and Ethernet port in each seat (Ethernet is not lit up yet).

When you take off you get an appetizer served in trendy containers, followed by drinks and a hot meal with silverware. My breakfast was a stuffed tomato with potatoes. It was yummy.

Coach

The coach seats have 32 inches of seat pitch, which is not bad, but not great. Many airlines actually have 31 inches of seat pitch, which for a 6 foot 3 inch person is knee crushing. 32 inches is tolerable but short of Jet Blue’s 34 and 36 inches throughout their cabin. Luckily you can pay $15 more for a reserved exit row seat (or in my case the lady who checked me in gave me one). You get about 4 more inches in the Exit Row.

imageThe A320 is noticeably wider than a 737 so the seats are a bit more comfortable (19.7 inches wide vs 17inches on A Boeing 737). Also, the seats have a physically smaller, thinner skeleton which actually increases the amount of room in the row. If you fly an old United plane with those ridiculously thick fat coach seats (which are not more comfortable) then you know what I mean.

image The Coach seats also have power, usb and ethernet in each seat. The tray tables have little built in cup holders when they are folded up so you can, you know, go the the bathroom and allow other people in your aisle to do so without spilling crap. Thoughtful touch.

Do you have any idea how useful it is to have AC Power in every seat? It means I can use my laptop on the flight and arrive for work with a full battery, or that I can use my laptop on the plane and not run out of juice.

Food

In Coach you can order Drinks, Food and Snacks

Snacks are priced from $1 to $2. My options were:

  • Buffalo Wing Chips
  • Snack Mix
  • Breakfast Oat Bar
  • Chocholate Chip Cookie
  • Organig Cranberry Nutbar
  • Strawberry Fruit Leather

Meals are priced from $8 to $12. My options were

  • Antipasto Salad
  • Turkey Bacon Wrap
  • Half Caprese Sandwich with Salad
  • Fruit and Cheese Plate

Drinks are priced free to $6 and you get:

  • Water
  • Soft Drinks
  • Beer & Wine
  • Vodka, Rum etc

I placed an order for a snack and a bottle of water and it arrived in 3 minutes. I swiped my amex card into the remote dongle and it processed it immediately. Virgin is cashless, so you have to pay with a credit card. No waiting for the host to get you change any more.

Entertainment System

image Both Coach and First Class have the same entertainment system. You have a physically large wide screen LCD touchscreen display to interact with called “Red”. You can also control the screen via the remote control dongle.

Red allows you to:

  • Listen to Local Radio stations (similar to what you can listen to on virginRadio).
  • Listen to a local collection of music (good stuff actually)
  • Watch TV
  • Watch a Movie
  • Play Games
  • Order food and drinks from your seat
  • Chat with your passengers via chat enabled keyboard.

image In the future you’ll be able to surf the web. The sound quality of the music is great, a far cry from what you experience on any American carrier (no hissing, low volume, or static).

There is plenty to keep you busy. And this is key. When are delayed 30 minutes during a ground delay at SFO you don’t care cause you barely notice.

While flying I noticed a bunch of friends sitting in different seats on the plane all chatting with each other. I thought that was pretty cool.

The Crew

Everyone that works for Virgin America is HAPPY. That’s right, they are smiling… most of them are young, energetic, polite, helpful and not patronizing or annoying. And who can blame them… they haven’t spent years working for an Airline that has gone bankrupt a few dozen times and has managed to screw them out of their pension, health benefits or whatnot. I do not believe any of Virgin’s employees are unionized.

On our flight we had about 20 folks connecting to LA in SFO. The flight crew busted their ass to get folks off the plane and to their connection by moving folks and their bags in the overhead bins to the front of the plane where possible and helping people with their luggage. I can't remember the last time I saw a airline employee go above and beyond like this.

During the flight the pilot was also awesome about being honest about our delays, how long we should expect to be on the runway, holding and so on.

The Schedule

For the SFO <-> SEA traveler, the schedule could not be better. 9:10 am flight in the morning, and 5:10 pm return flight getting me home for dinner with my wife.

Suggestions for Virgin

Some ideas for the future:

  • Remember everything I listen to on the flight and store in with my eleVAte membership
  • Preload my playlists and favorite radio stations when I board the flight.
  • Follow the JetBlue route and assign a certain number of rows more leg room

Final Thoughts

I don’t know what else to say. Virgin is the best airline in the country. There is little to complain about, and a lot to love. My college roommate is a pilot for Virgin having spent years working at United Express and America West (now US Air). He loves his airline.

I salute Virgin for bringing some dignity back to domestic air travel. Now if they could just do something for the TSA run security line.

Posted Saturday, March 29, 2008    Permalink    Comments [8]  View blog reactions

 

 Saturday, November 17, 2007

VibeAgent Launches

VibeAgent, a killer site for hotel reviews and booking launched last week. VibeAgent is co-founded by my best friend and it's a great site. I've placed a few reviews there of some of my favorite hotels around the world, but I have many more to review.

VibeAgent really solves the problem of hotel reviews by allowing me to leverage my network of friends to clue me into good and bad places to stay.

Here is a link to the TechCrunch coverage and the post on the VibeAgent blog.

Posted Saturday, November 17, 2007    Permalink    Comments [0]  View blog reactions

 

 Sunday, September 23, 2007

Flying with a Baby is better on JetBlue

"Look I'm Flying!" Flying with a Baby is pretty stressful. However, I have now flown on 3 different airlines with Sarah, and have learned a lot. The first thing I learned was to get Sarah her own seat, put the car seat in it and strap her in. She is a wiggler, and won't sleep or sit still on a plane without a car seat. Of course you should see what I look like coming down the aisle with a car seat, her two carry on bags (she has more carry on luggage than we do), and my teeny tiny bag with the absolute bare essentials in technology (iPod, book, headphones, camera). I learned quickly that taking a laptop with me anywhere with our baby is pointless... you see, 1) I never have time to use it, 2) it's big and heavy, 3) Security in this country is the biggest pain in the ass joke I have ever seen... Take off your shoes, take out your laptop, take out all the fluids and crap, take off baby shoes and on and on. It's hard enough by yourself, but with a family... I'm sure I'd forget my laptop lying there on the belt cause I'm so dammed overwhelmed with 800 things to do.

Anyway I digress....

So far I have flown:

  1. American Airlines
  2. Continental
  3. Jet Blue

And I have to say, Jet Blue is the absolute best experience when flying with a baby. Why? Oh, let me count the ways:

  1. Take off from the SFO International Terminal, which is quite possibly the nicest airport terminal in the world.
  2. Family Boards first (not many airlines still do this). Since it takes me like 10 minutes to collect myself, get on the plane, gate check the stroller, get to the seat, put the car seat in there etc I need every minute I can get and the last thing I want is a line of angry passengers looking at me like they want to kill me.
  3. 34 inches of seat pitch in the back, and 36 inches of seat pitch in the front (all coach). In fact, the coach legroom is on par or better than first class on Alaska Airlines. When you have a kid in a car seat, and tons of crap (and you are 6 foot 3) then this matter a lot. You don't even realize how much it matters till you fly on Continental and your plane has an astonishing 30 inches of seat pitch (the average in the US is 31).
  4. Direct TV with 36 channels. When you only have 30 minutes here and there it's great to pass time with some mind numbing television while baby is sleeping.
  5. XM Radio, not necessary with an iPod but nice to have.
  6. Good all you can eat FREE snacks and drinks.
  7. No stupid carts going up and down the aisle blocking you from getting to the bathroom to change a diaper.
  8. Changing tables in every bathroom
  9. Nice new clean planes
  10. Friendly staff

Seriously, about the only thing that sucks about Jet Blue is getting to the plane. That airline rocks.

Posted Monday, September 24, 2007    Permalink    Comments [3]  View blog reactions

 

 Wednesday, January 10, 2007

JetBlue adds SFO

As of May 3rd, JetBlue will fly into all 3 Bay Area airports; SFO being the latest addition. This is just super IMHO and should give American and United a good kick in the rear. Not so good for Virgin America which is still grounded.

Posted Wednesday, January 10, 2007    Permalink    Comments [1]  View blog reactions

 

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