I was just playing this - I got so engrossed I did not come back and post the link

Brings to mind an anecdote from Spike Milligan's war reminiscences where he describes how the moment word is received that the train will be arriving at its destination - and ten minutes before it will get there - 'all the idiot sergeants get up and stand in the corridor. Why don't they just go and stand in a cemetery and have done with it?'Arrgghh, the plane boarding thing really gets on my nerves. Do people really believe that they will be left behind if they don't all try to jump aboard as soon as the first seats are called?!
I think it's an American thing thats spread, where seats are regularly overbooked and the first into the seat gets priority.
I think it's an American thing thats spread, where seats are regularly overbooked and the first into the seat gets priority.
I know people who wonder across the street dodging traffic without really looking. How they haven't been run over I don't know.+1
The vast majority of people can't be bothered to think - it's too much effort - and to be fair they get through the day okay, mostly.
My fathers phrase was "How they cross the street each day without dying, I'll never know."
If they're overbooked they will disallow boarding or seek volunteers before boarding takes place. There isn't a case of 100 passengers getting on a plane with 90 seats. It's down to overhead locker space
I know people who wonder across the street dodging traffic without really looking. How they haven't been run over I don't know.
If they're overbooked they will disallow boarding or seek volunteers before boarding takes place. There isn't a case of 100 passengers getting on a plane with 90 seats. It's down to overhead locker space
Ah, the glamour of the jet age...Not quite.... in the bad old days of Okada Air in Nigeria touts would buy tickets in any old name and every flight would end up heavily overbooked. You would arrive at the terminal to be told that the flight was full but that you could buy this ticket for an exorbitant extra price. You would find yourself holding a hand-written ticket and named as Olusegun or something. The flight would be called and everybody would dash across the tarmac clutching their hats to prevent them being blown off by jet blast from a moving plane, then fight to get up the dangerously swaying stairway. Once the plane was full the ground crew would pull the stairway away, still loaded, and some brave folk would jump the gap into the plane door. Anybody who got on would sit in the aisle between the seats and some who didn't would retreat swearing and cursing with torn shirts and bloodied noses. Goats went in the hold.
...How does that explain the recent violence in america on the plane over overbooked seats?
Not overbooked
What happened was everyone got in their booked seats. Then a number of staff who were being redeployed to the destination airport were told to board also (without seats). Result was more people on board than seats. Forcible deplaning, violence etc
No airline allows more paying passengers onto a plane than there are seats. Overbooking is common in USA but the "excess" are either denied boarding or, more commonly, an auction takes place to incentivise passengers to give up their places
The newspapers disagree with your definition of overbooked and claim that no more passengers than seats can get on the plane:
View attachment 354928
Probably the nearest the lemmings could find to jumping off a vertical cliff.![]()