Phobia Group Regresses; Airline Deeply Apologetic
Los Angeles (AP) American Airlines has been left with proverbial egg on their faces this week- not for pilot error, mechanical problems, or running horribly behind schedule, but for in flight entertainment on a flight between Los Angeles and Sydney, Australia. A flight on Friday travelled across the Pacific in a flight lasting over eighteen hours- a long haul by most standards, but typical for such a journey. Problems for this flight revolved around the choices made for in flight movies.
“Usually we have different choices for in flight movies,”
Jessica Montgomery, a spokesperson for the airline told reporters. “You know,
light fluffy romantic comedies. That’s about the only thing Kate Hudson does,
and we keep her in heavy rotation on our flights. We’re still investigating who
might have been responsible for the selection on this flight, but rest assured,
movies featuring plane crashes and turbulent mid-air disasters are not standard entertainment on our flights.”
However it came about, AA Flight 70’s movie selection were
all films that in one way or another featured plane crashes, tense suspension
on board flights, or some variation meant to unnerve passengers who might not
like to fly. Alive, Die Hard 2: Die Harder,
Flight, Con Air, Air Force One, Escape From New York, Flight Of The Phoenix,
Snakes On A Plane, and Cast Away were
the flight’s list of movies. On a normal flight, this might be problematic
enough, but Flight 70 had on board a group of passengers who were graduating
from a series of classes meant to calm their fear of flying.
Callie Hart, the facilitator of the group, was still fuming
three days after the flight. “Months
of work, down the drain. I had twenty people who for years had experienced crippling fear at the idea of even
getting off the ground and being up in a plane for hours on end. Every single
one of them wanted to conquer that fear, so they joined my class. We’d meet
weekly, do a whole series of mental exercises to get them past their fears,
even started getting them onto short flights in Cessnas as a way to work
through the phobia. All of them did well through classes and exercises and
talking through the fear, all of them were feeling good and had made good
progress. The trip to Australia was supposed
to be their way of showing that fear would never control them again.”
Instead, the fear of the aviophobic passengers came roaring
back. Not only in terms of the movie choices featuring the worst possible
material for people striving to put their fears behind them, but a peculiar glitch
in the aircraft meant that the screens at each seat couldn’t be turned off. A
flight attendant, speaking anonymously, sighed and mentioned the plotline
behind Alive. “Imagine being in a
plane, watching Flight 571 crashing in the Andes, and then watching Ethan Hawke
eating the dead, and not being able
to turn the monitors off. Even the passengers who didn’t have a problem with flying were queasy. Our class of phobic
passengers were throwing up. I feel sorry for the maintenance crews who had to clean
things up after we got to Sydney.”
“It was like taking a bunch of people who have a fear of
heights, and making them watch Cliffhanger,
Everest, or The Walk,” passenger
Geoffrey Birch, who was not one of the group of phobia sufferers. “By the end
of the flight, some of those people were outright catatonic. I saw one of them vowing that she would be applying for
permanent residency in Australia, saying as long as she lives, she never steps
off terra firma again.”
“Oops,” Montgomery told reporters after a couple of drinks
at one of the bars at LaGuardia’s terminal. “Look, these things sometimes
happen in international air travel. In flight entertainment have glitches, fear
of flying groups choose the wrong
flight entirely to cure themselves of their anxieties, and people end up throwing
up all over the flight attendants. Which is sort of why I got out of the flight
attendant job and became a spokesperson instead. That, and I hate the public, but everyone in the aviation industry hates
the public. Wait... did I say that out loud?”
Director Michael Bay, busy in pre-production for a multitude of films, heard about the story and left a peculiar message on his Facebook page. “Wow! You know, this gives me an idea or two. About a heroic cop who doesn’t like flying and who ends up having to fly across the country to stop a terrorist bomber named Hans and reunite with his ex-wife. What do you think of the title Die Easy?”
The last word belongs to someone who quite literally doesn’t
know when to shut up. Donald Trump, the recently confirmed (barring any tricks
happening at the convention) Republican candidate for President, has continued
to run his mouth off about anything and everything in recent days, using
favoured media and stump speeches to spew his usual brand of Trump verbal
excrement. Campaign staffers informed him of the incident, and he took to the
matter in one of his speeches before a couple of thousand loyal (and stupid)
Trumpites.
“You know what, folks? This wouldn’t happen if Trump
Airlines was still in business,” he boasted. “Believe me, we knew how to run
things. I had the best people, the most amazing planes in the business with me,
and well, long story short, Trump Airlines isn’t around anymore, but that’s not
my fault! No! You know whose fault it
is? Hillary Clinton. I’ll tell you, it’s disgusting
what that woman personally did to my company. Not as disgusting as what she does in the bathroom, let me tell
you.”
Trump sneered before carrying on. “And let me tell you
something else. So what if some sissy
pants scared of flying liberals had a meltdown? Because I can promise, without
knowing one thing about every single one of them, that they’re all left wing godless commie Muslim fascist black cowardly
liberal Mexicans. They can’t handle gettin’ in a plane, they should just dig a hole and
bury their heads in it. Just like I’m gonna bury the Democrats and Crooked
Hillary in November. I’ll tell you, folks, when I’m done, you won’t recognize
what’s left of this country.... hold on, did I say that out loud?”
The Shining picture with Trump is hysterical!
ReplyDeleteNot being able to turn off those stupid monitors on the back of the seat in front of me would be enough to make me nuts!
ReplyDeleteNothing can beat the first photo !
ReplyDeletecheers, parsnip and thehamish
I understand the fear! I really DO! haha
ReplyDeleteObviously, it was an inadequate fear of flying course. Not surprising. Most fear of flying courses are based on CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) which, being a "top-down" therapy (top: thoughts, cause feelings: bottom) can't deal with the real problem: feelings caused "bottom-up" when the plane drops in turbulence. In turbulence, the amygdala releases stress hormones regardless of what a person is thinking or is trying to do to relax. If you have been victimized by inadequate flight phobia help, get started on the right track by reading a sample of my book at this link http://a.co/0n0P5v2
ReplyDelete@Kelly: thanks!
ReplyDelete@Meradeth: me too.
@Parsnip: thank you!
@Diane: it seems common.
@Tom: I wasn't expecting such a response!
So Tom, is CBT also known as the Little Bobby treatment?
ReplyDeleteDie Easy???
ReplyDeleteTrump should really play the Jack Nicholson role in a remake of The Shining!
I definitely would not want Snakes on a Plane as an in-flight movie!
Glad I'm not flying anytime soon!
ReplyDeleteummmm that gud black dug does not knowin; that this is i thehamish Square Dog Friday he is funny gud dug for not knowin' this
ReplyDeleteyou gots chkikin'
opps this goes on the new post......
ReplyDelete