JDiver is now an evangelist
#1
Original Poster
Community Director Emerita




Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Anywhere warm
Posts: 35,605
....and is a truly stellar example of someone who consistently and cheerfully shares his wealth of travel knowledge. Whether I'm learning about travel in Africa, American Airlines, Hilton, or South America, JDiver is there sharing his extensive knowledge.
His posts on this AA thread, perhaps his first as an evangelist, exemplifies his consistent helpfulness. He fields - yet again - the question of what benefits 2MM brings on AA.
His posts on this AA thread, perhaps his first as an evangelist, exemplifies his consistent helpfulness. He fields - yet again - the question of what benefits 2MM brings on AA.
#5
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Sep 2000
Programs: UA Million Miler (lite). NY Metro area.
Posts: 15,436
Originally Posted by BenjaminNYC
I'm getting there...

I'll get there one of these days. If I do the math, it's about 3 years.
JDiver, thanks for contributing; and, making FT a better place.
#6
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Under an ORD approach path
Programs: DL PM, MM. Coffee isn't a drug, it's a vitamin.
Posts: 12,935
Congrats! So many contribs to FT, both by the heavy and the light posters, make this a great place; and the heavy posters help maintain a consistent tone, spirit, and character.
#7
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: PDX, MSP and MCI
Programs: WN AList; Delta Nada; Hilton DIamond; Marriot Gold
Posts: 400
As a humble newbie to FT (especially when looking at the post count of the other posters on this thread), I've received the benefit of JDiver's advice and wisdom many times.
Thank you!
It's a well-deserved title ^
Thank you!
It's a well-deserved title ^
#10
In Memoriam, FlyerTalk Evangelist

Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Southern California
Programs: DL: 3.8 MM, Marriott: Lifetime Titanium
Posts: 24,575
Originally Posted by SanDiego1K
An evangelist has 10,000 posts or more on FT.
And I might add this definition of evangelist:
(noun) one who attempts to convert others to a specific way of life, set of ideas, or course of action
(synonym) missionary, apostle, colporteur, missioner, propagandist
(related) revivalist, promoter
So in the context of FlyerTalk, I would assume that an Evangelist would be one who promotes this website and encourages others to participate here.
#14
FlyerTalk Evangelist




Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Los Angeles, California
Programs: United LT-GS, AA LT-Plat, Hyatt LT-Globalist, Hilton LT-Diamond, Marriott LT-Titanium, Hertz PC
Posts: 15,833
Well done, JDiver; I moving to AA for the rest of the year, so I am sure I will see you on the AA Forum now and again!
#15
Moderator: American AAdvantage




Join Date: May 2000
Location: NorCal - SMF area
Programs: AA LT EXP; HH LT Diamond, Matre-plongeur des Muccis
Posts: 62,948
Eeek! They're talking about me!
My ears are very red this morning - my curiosity was aroused by a mysterious link on the AA Forum, and... I'm very humbled. (A good feeling as I leave the home office to go do a tricky workplace intervention.)
I really haven't given anything to FT and its members I have not received myself. I lurked and learned, sometimes I saw a question I could actually answer, and it all grew into a feeling of online community. That was familiar, as I was online initially with a local users' group, then helping with volunteer duties moderating on GEnie, later assistant sysop on CompuServe's Travel Forum. Sigh - all of it part of cyberhistory, I'm afraid. But FT continues, and it has the same general feel and helpfulness to others as GEnie and CIS.
Anything that makes us better travelers and brings this global community together is a good thing, IMO. We undoubtedly have different values, ideas, perspectives - but it's always instructive to hear how others see things, to extend ourselves and meet them. It's hackneyed to say travel is broadening, but it is in so many ways; I began when I was a child, sometimes just getting away from home for a day by taking the "Ometochtli" (one rabbit) communal bus to nearby Tepotzln, observing and soaking up the different language (Nahuatl,) customs, ways of doing things... and it became addicting.
So here I am, an immigrant from Mexico in the armed forces sitting on a tour bus in Japan who met a woman from Connecticut (teaching for the Dept. of Defense,) and all of a sudden it's 40+ years later... and the challenges are the same: making enough time to travel, narrowing down where it will be next (that place I want to return to so I can see / learn more, or someplace new; land-based, or diving - this is my 50th year of scuba diving,) learning more, on occasion having the opportunity to pass it on. It's been a milestone year all around.
Now that I've had the pleasure of meeting a few FTers, once at a mini-do, on occasion in an airport (yeah, those yellow tags do make us more visible.) It'll soon be time to plan attending a full do to meet more of you! Thanks to you all, to Randy for offering this wonderful forum, and here's to personalization, communications, meeting each other halfway and peace.
Cheers, Jos / JDiver
(I really did not start out to write a plurry speech - just to say "thanks! It's great to be here.")
My ears are very red this morning - my curiosity was aroused by a mysterious link on the AA Forum, and... I'm very humbled. (A good feeling as I leave the home office to go do a tricky workplace intervention.)
I really haven't given anything to FT and its members I have not received myself. I lurked and learned, sometimes I saw a question I could actually answer, and it all grew into a feeling of online community. That was familiar, as I was online initially with a local users' group, then helping with volunteer duties moderating on GEnie, later assistant sysop on CompuServe's Travel Forum. Sigh - all of it part of cyberhistory, I'm afraid. But FT continues, and it has the same general feel and helpfulness to others as GEnie and CIS.
Anything that makes us better travelers and brings this global community together is a good thing, IMO. We undoubtedly have different values, ideas, perspectives - but it's always instructive to hear how others see things, to extend ourselves and meet them. It's hackneyed to say travel is broadening, but it is in so many ways; I began when I was a child, sometimes just getting away from home for a day by taking the "Ometochtli" (one rabbit) communal bus to nearby Tepotzln, observing and soaking up the different language (Nahuatl,) customs, ways of doing things... and it became addicting.
So here I am, an immigrant from Mexico in the armed forces sitting on a tour bus in Japan who met a woman from Connecticut (teaching for the Dept. of Defense,) and all of a sudden it's 40+ years later... and the challenges are the same: making enough time to travel, narrowing down where it will be next (that place I want to return to so I can see / learn more, or someplace new; land-based, or diving - this is my 50th year of scuba diving,) learning more, on occasion having the opportunity to pass it on. It's been a milestone year all around.
Now that I've had the pleasure of meeting a few FTers, once at a mini-do, on occasion in an airport (yeah, those yellow tags do make us more visible.) It'll soon be time to plan attending a full do to meet more of you! Thanks to you all, to Randy for offering this wonderful forum, and here's to personalization, communications, meeting each other halfway and peace.
Cheers, Jos / JDiver
(I really did not start out to write a plurry speech - just to say "thanks! It's great to be here.")



