Do overweight passengers deserve a bigger seat on a plane?
On a recent flight from Phoenix to London, Gerri Hether found herself seated next to an overweight passenger — so overweight that he couldn’t fit into his seat.
On a recent flight from Phoenix to London, Gerri Hether found herself seated next to an overweight passenger — so overweight that he couldn’t fit into his seat.
Here’s an idea for creating a better flying experience: Why not stop economy-class airline seats from reclining?
Should you recline your airline seat? The passenger sitting in front of me on a recent flight never bothered asking. Shortly after takeoff, he just lurched backward. No warning.
The start of the summer travel season is only a few weeks away, but people in the know have already identified the most pressing problem: dangerously cramped airline seats.
Air travel can be a humiliating, dehumanizing and even torturous experience — at least according to my e-mail inbox.
One piece of conventional wisdom has gone unchallenged during our ongoing debate about class, privilege and human dignity in air travel: that the elites sitting in the big seats are subsidizing everyone else’s low fares.
Airlines are considering a new class of service — and I use the term “class” loosely — called economy “minus.”
Rod and Carol Mourant recently flew from Seattle. Amid their list of complaints is one that stuck, and do they have a case?
Hey buddy, wanna sign up for a credit card?