Donate SIGN UP

Plane Daft

Avatar Image
Gromit | 08:39 Mon 14th Oct 2013 | News
18 Answers
A 37 stone man was told he had to pay for two seats for an airline journey. Because of his size, he was told it was airline policy.

Fair enough you might think.

When he was allocated his seat(s) at the airport, he was put in a row of three. But he was give the aisle seat and the window seat.

On his return journey, his seat(s) were two rows apart.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/10376714/37st-man-forced-to-pay-for-two-seats-on-jet-finds-they-are-rows-apart.html

Not really a question, but I thought it might amuse you.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 18 of 18rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Gromit. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Lol
Having had to sit squashed next to a fat woman once on the way back from Bruxelles tweo seats is definitley what should happen.

But this is a joke, must be Monday I think but I couldn't see the airline?
I am by no means a Slim Jim but I had the unfortunate experience of having to sit next to a very large woman, on a flight back from Boston a few years ago. It was terrible, for her and me. The plane was full, so I wasn't able to move to another seat. I spent about 3 hours standing at the back of the plane, near to the toilet, just to be able to breath properly.

Large people have my every sympathy but when you are that size everybody else seems to suffer.
Although this person weight was caused by an accident I totaly agree that there should be a Human weight charge, they should be charged on the same basis as your cases.
Some airlines boast about their roomy fore and aft seat pitch interval, but don't tell you what their seat widths are. I've been on a BA flight lasting over 9 hours, Heathrow to the Caribbean, with a 16½" seat width, yet their Aberdeen to Heathrow connecting flight had 18" wide seats. That extra 1½" made for quite a difference!
this incident http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_Midwest_Flight_5481 was a wake-up call for the airline industry, which had always previously estimated human weight based on a figure that was woefully inadequate for today's demographic.
Question Author
That is an interesting link mushroom. I hadn't heard of that case.
Rereading this, I can't get the name 'Ryanair' out of my mind for some reason.
it is customary to seat the heaviest passengers at the back, to balance the captain's wallet
JNO, that airline flight crew are thought to be "minted" is largely a misconception. Whilst senior staff working for flag-carriers will be on a good remunerative package, most staff flying for budget carriers will be on zero hours contracts.
Was he forced to eat 2 airline meals then ? Perhaps he was entitled to 2 lots of "duty free" as well.
At 37 stone he's lucky he didn't get charged for 3 seats.
I think that most UK airlines still work on the basic principle of average adult male weight being 85 Kilos (13stone-ish), and average adult female weight being 70 kilos. Given the supposed trend of increased obesity, I think they may have to recalculate in the not too distant future!
-- answer removed --
That's funny!
Was he flying to Split, by any chance?
so he had the aisle seat and the window seat? I'm damn glad I didn't get the one in the middle.
Best Answer to cecil39 I think

:+)
The crash Mushroom's link is about, I have seen a programme on Air crash investigation about that.

I can't say anything for this poor passenger but once (long time ago) I was travelling on a local transport in my birth city (Lahore, Pakistan). We were two friends. My friend was very big and I used to be very skinny. Ticket man asked us to pay for two tickets for my friend. I shut him up by saying that if he were to charge like that then what about me? He should let me travel for free as I was very skinny. And he agreed.

1 to 18 of 18rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Plane Daft

Answer Question >>