Originally Posted by
robyng
Flying used to be fun. You could show up 10 minutes before a flight - smoke a cigarette during the flight - keep your shoes on when you went through security.
I find flying pretty dismal these days - but airline companies are still trying to figure out how to rise from being perhaps the least profitable industry in the world over many decades to second or third from last place.
And I think they're starting to get some traction.
One of the things that has to be curtailed is overly generous FF programs except for the absolute best passengers (you million mile or 50+ flights a year people - you know who you are).
I've been doing FF stuff for maybe 20 years now - and it has gotten harder and harder in recent years IMO for normal people like me. Who have branded credit cards and perhaps fly max 25K miles a year (usually a lot less). And whatever rules exist today - I don't think I can count on them to be in effect 2 years from now.
Anyway - I used to be able to count on getting good rewards tickets. Those days are gone IMO for average travelers - even those who spend a lot of branded credit cards.. What do you think? Robyn
Let's see what we have here:
- You say that overly generous FF programs should be curtailed except for the very best pax.
- At 25K miles, you are at best a modest traveller. Certainly not one of the "very best" (by your definition).
- You complain about not being able to count on getting good reward tickets.
What do I think?
- By your criteria, you don't deserve ready access to award tickets.
- Flying is infinitely more pleasureable now that smoking has been banned in airplanes and most terminal areas.
- I'm just glad that Richard Reed tried to hide explosives in his shoes and not in a suppository.