Go Back  FlyerTalk Forums > Travel&Dining > TravelBuzz
Reload this Page >

Disgusting Airline Passenger Manners

Community
Wiki Posts
Search

Disgusting Airline Passenger Manners

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Feb 12, 2001 | 10:22 pm
  #1  
GB
Original Poster
All eyes on you!
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Sep 1999
Programs: AA EXP, SPG PLT, Hyatt DIA, Hilton GLD
Posts: 978
Disgusting Airline Passenger Manners

It seems that during the last year, I have found that fingernail clipping on board during a flight (my ears perk up to the undeniable sound of clink, clink, clink), has become an "acceptable habit" among passengers. Lately I have also found many nail and hand "chewers" within close proximity. And finally, on my fairly frequent European trips (both back and forth), I can usually put money on the fact that I will personally witness at least one nose picker during the flight. I am not asking for a suit and tie on every flight, but what is happening here?
GB is offline  
Old Feb 12, 2001 | 10:54 pm
  #2  
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Spring Lake,NJ
Posts: 1,219
I swear that sometimes I'm sitting next to the only person on the flight that is passing gas!!!
IM4Travel is offline  
Old Feb 12, 2001 | 11:15 pm
  #3  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
30 Nights
3M
100 Countries Visited
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Sunny SYDNEY!
Programs: UA Million Miler. (1.9M) Virgin Platinum. HH Diamond + SPG Gold
Posts: 32,351
How do you check you are right on that?
ozstamps is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 1:42 am
  #4  
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: Houston, TX (HHonors Gold)
Posts: 365
What is happening on planes simply reflects what is going on in society as a whole: fewer people caring about how they behave in public or if they're encroaching on the sensibilities of others. So far, I've been spared public nail clipping, but the yak-yak-yak of people on cell phones literally everywhere is about to drive me nuts.
ClassicalGal is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 3:07 am
  #5  
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Great Britain
Posts: 1,442
Please add to that list men (I have not yet seen any ladies do this) who take bulkhead seats and seat with their feet up on the bulkhead with or perhaps worse without socks. People who click click click away on their laptops which squeak every time a key is depressed. The Gas and nail chewing is unpleasant, but I can forgive those as they may well be as result of fear of, or the effects of flying. You are right about society, but it is sadly typical. i just dread to think what they do in their own homes if that is how people conduct themselves in public!
PAUL PALMER is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 5:20 am
  #6  
10 Countries Visited
20 Countries Visited
30 Countries Visited
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: LH SEN, SPG Gold(SCI Gold), Hyatt Diamond, Hilton Gold
Posts: 5,482
Originally posted by PAUL PALMER:
Please add to that list men (I have not yet seen any ladies do this) who take bulkhead seats and seat with their feet up on the bulkhead with or perhaps worse without socks.
That is how to avoid thrombosis.
peter42 is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 5:24 am
  #7  
 
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Great Britain
Posts: 1,442
And, I presume that picking one's nose avoids a build up of pressure?
PAUL PALMER is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 5:24 am
  #8  
 
Join Date: May 1999
Location: new jersey,usa aa: mm plat, HH Diamond
Posts: 239
My biggest complaint is when someone starts moving my bag or just forces there bag on top of mine in the overhead with out asking. I watched a lady do this last week on a flt to lhr and I asked her not to put her bag on top of mine(I was in a bulkhead seat) she told me find a place then if you don't want me to do it. I showed her the space under the seat in front of her. What a look I got but not another word came out of her mouth.
nj_flyer is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 5:41 am
  #9  
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: London, home of the world's favourite airline
Posts: 184
I am a strong believer that if you treat people like animals, they become animals. I think the airlines need to reconsider how they herd people into the airplanes, into a small space that would otherwise be reserved, in the outside world, for the likes of a cat.

I think that a lot of passengers feel strongly that the small space they have paid for is theirs for their own liking, and do as they please.

What else can one do to occupy oneself for hours on end in a cramped box? If you're strapped in your seat, it's the perfect time to clip your fingernails, as long as you collect and dispose of the clippings properly.

The nose drilling is a different story altogether. What's worse is watching someone actually eat the matter they have scraped out of their nostrils.

As usual, though, I speak from the back of the airplane as I'm usually flying economy class.
dholloway is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 6:21 am
  #10  
All eyes on you!
25 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: USA
Programs: AA-LEP, Hyatt Globalist, Marriott Lifetime Titanium
Posts: 1,484
There are two things that annoy me and thankfully the first is realatively rare and the second was a one time only event but - Oh so strange.

The first is women putting on nail polish during the flight.

The second happened on a flight from NRT - KIX. The person sitting next to me would yank out a hair from his head and eat it. He did this for most of the flight. After a he did this for a few times, the FA discretely asked me if I would like to move as she had a seat for me upstairs. I took it!
MikeFly is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 6:37 am
  #11  
20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 1,877
Some people just lack good old fashion class. . .

I truely do not understand this, as I am 25, and have class, and manners. . .
DelrayChris is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 6:41 am
  #12  
Original Member
10 Countries Visited20 Countries Visited30 Countries Visited20 Years on Site
 
Join Date: May 1998
Location: Las Vegas, Nevada
Programs: United, Hilton
Posts: 691
I would have to add snoring to the list as well. For some reason, I can't stand that sound. But, it is my problem and I never bother a seat mate that is snoring. Live and let live, whenever possible.


rxziebel is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 6:52 am
  #13  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Winter Garden, FL
Programs: Delta DM-3MM United Gold-MM Marriott Lifetime Titanium Hertz President's Circle
Posts: 13,498
It might be appropriate to distinguish between voluntary and involuntary behavior. I have trouble criticising a person for snoring, for example! Nose-picking is another thing entirely.

Bruce
bdschobel is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 8:35 am
  #14  
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Santa Barbara, CA
Posts: 7,149
I am a snorer, and thus I try at all costs not to fall asleep on a flight. But I am one who is "guilty" of putting my feet up on a bulkhead with clean and fresh socks. It is difficult to do this with business shoes on.

I usually won't do this if there is someone next to me, but if noone is next to me, who is being harmed. And why are you looking at my feet anyway?
BoSoxFan45 is offline  
Old Feb 13, 2001 | 9:02 am
  #15  
RKG
 
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Home
Posts: 2,707
Snoring I can forgive and hopefully ignore. I think it is involuntary. What bothered me the most was when, enroute from NRT to SFO, the person next to me took off his shoes. I was in WBC seat 1A. He was in 1B. His previously white socks, (I assume) were dark gray and black. The stench was so bad that I inquired about another seat. No luck! The flight was full. All I could do was direct my vent to try to fan the offensive odor away from my seat.I tried to stay as close to the window as possible. It was a very, very long flight.

-RKG
RKG is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.