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Old Oct 6, 2006 | 10:31 am
  #43  
Travellin' Fool
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Tokyo
Posts: 430
Originally Posted by FarRider
it depends on your job and the what type of traveling you're doing. i recently sat next to a multi-color hair, tattooed-covered, grunge looking guy and his wife in first. it turns out this guy was the lead singer of a famous band (name withheld) returning home after an awards show. he was extremely nice and polite and i got the guy’s autograph, email and cell phone with an invitation to come down and visit when I’m in town, but the fa's treated him poorly, while the catered to me. if a t-shirt is what you're comfortable with, you can wear a jacket over it. you'll always take it off once you sit down. regardless, airline folks and hotel attendants will always look at guys in jackets more favorably than one in a t-shirt. they are cynical, tired and in no moods to be talked to. that's just the way things are. they're used to seeing thousands of people a day and you have a few seconds to impress them if you're looking for an upgrade, good seat or better room, regardless of your status, especially if you have none. i work in technology/consulting and my experience is that techies/programmers don't really care about how they dress, while consultants, sales and executives do because it’s important to feel businesslike. looking like a ceo will make you feel like a ceo, even if you're in jeans. you don't see many ceo's in t-shirts or tank tops.
My first post in the MilesBuzz forum. Please don't take anything I say personally, but I tend to disagree with you on this. From what I've seen it is actually the norm for "high class" people to travel in jeans and t-shirts nowadays. I say travel comfortably. Especially on long trips. Jeans (baggy) and an untucked t-shirt or even a polo if you must will be very comfortable. And you don't have to worry about the belt at the checkpoint. I guess I'm just saying that I've never been treated any differently than anyone else just because of the way I dress.
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