They’ll intentionally delay flights
If a flight is
delayed, the crew often gets paid overtime. But this only kicks in after
a certain amount of delay, so sometimes the crew (after the doors have
closed and they are in fact on the clock) will delay take off
intentionally.
They’re the law
They may look
unassuming in their pencil skirts and cardigans, but it’s against the
law to disobey crew members’ commands. Simply refusing to put your seat
up when it’s time could mean a meeting with police when the plane lands.
They throw out the extra wine
The
plane isn’t allowed to have opened, unfinished bottles of wine when
they land, so they pour out all extra wine. If you mention you know
this, it could be hard for your attendant to deny you a couple extra
free glasses.
They delay dinner on purpose
If
you’re asleep, your flight attendant is supposed to leave you alone and
that means less work. For this reason, the crew will often delay dinner
as long as possible on night flights, so that half the plane is asleep
and they don’t have to serve that half.
You can have first class’s leftovers
After
everyone in first class has been served their meal, a flight attendant
could technically give you one of those sought-after leftover meals.
It’s worth asking.
Nice clothes can get you to first class
You
actually can be upgraded for free to business or first class once the
cabin doors have been closed. But here’s a secret: the crew isn’t going
to put a slob in stained sweatpants up there, so dressing nice could be
your ticket to first class service at economy prices.
They’re not on the clock until the doors are closed
If
the crew doesn’t seem to care about you until the doors are closed,
that’s because they’re not being paid to. They don’t make a dollar until
those doors are shut which is also why they rush you to put your bags
away and sit down.
You only think you know turbulence
Flight
attendants laugh when they hear passengers swap stories of “the worst
turbulence ever” and “dangerously bumpy flights.” Out of the over 2
million people who fly yearly, there have only been three fatalities due
to turbulence in over 30 years, and two of those individuals were not
wearing their seatbelts.
Joining the mile high club is not illega[/b]l
That’s
right! If you can get away with it, you didn’t do anything wrong. That
being said, flight attendants almost always know when this is happening,
and will ask you to exit the lavatory
[b]They’re sneaking you decaf coffee
Why
would they give you regular if that just means you’ll be awake for
hours, wanting snacks, wanting drinks, and asking pointless questions?
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