Delta Airlines Kiosk - they can create a lot of anger

Delta Airlines Kiosk - they can create a lot of anger

A passenger from Georgia was trying to take a Delta Air Lines flight in Bismarck, ND and had some issues with the automated kiosk. He only had 30-minutes until his flight departed, it was 5am, and the passenger got up on the wrong side of the bed. Instead of asking for some help, he decided to take his anger out on the kiosk, smashing the screen and causing $15,000.00 worth of damages.

The airport and Delta Air Lines have barred the man from contacting either one and the passenger has been charged with a felony.

Source: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution Image: choking sun
Photo taken by a passenger on Delta flight 1050

Photo taken by a passenger on Delta flight 1050

Delta Air Lines flight 1050, a Boeing 757, from Seattle to Atlanta had to be diverted yesterday due to a passenger who got a bit out of hand. Witnesses report that a passenger, Paul Marchak III was sitting in a middle seat and started to have a heated conversation with a woman sitting in the window seat. When she was trying to get up to move, he was not allowing her and not listening to the orders from the flight attendant. Three men who “looked like linebackers” came to her rescue and helped to subdue Marchak in the back of the plane with zip ties. The pilot decided to divert the plane to Nashville, where police were more than happy to arrest him.

Family of Marchak say he has Tourette’s Syndrome and had been in Alaska for a two weeks visiting his stepmother. His stepmother stated he had been acting unusual and violent during his trip with her.

Although the incident was scary for those on board, the woman in the window seat praised the flight crew and the gentlemen who helped her, “(They) handled it perfectly,” she said. “I don’t know how they maintained their calm and peacefulness. I don’t think it could have gone any better considering what could have happened.”

The flight landed about 1.5hrs late with no other issues.

Source & Image: KOMO
ANA 747-400D(JA401A) which can hold up to 565 passengers

ANA 747-400D(JA401A) which can hold up to 565 passengers

SAVE THE WHALES! It is easier than you might think. You don’t have to donate money, go out and protest, nor send a letter to your congressman. All you need to do, according to All Nippon Airways (ANA), is use the bathroom before you board your flight.

Confused? ANA is stating that if just half their passengers would use the facilities before taking flight, it would save 4.2 tons of carbon dioxide per month.

All joking aside, they might have something here. The more weight on an aircraft, the more fuel it will burn and the more carbon dioxide will be put into the atmosphere. One of their Boeing 747-400D (high density seating) can hold over 560 people. Take 560 x  (bathroom times) = a lot of weight.

Now, this is not all that ANA is doing to help out. They have also started using recycled paper cups, plastic bottles, and eliminating glass. They are also showing an eFlight (the “e” standing for “environment” not “electronic”) film to all passengers that states, “This flight is a so-called ‘eFlight.’ The idea behind the operation is to think about the Earth in the sky above. Fuel reduction by lightening the weight of the aircraft will lead to restrain the carbon dioxide emission, which is one of the causes of global warming. Thank you for your understanding.”

Either way, if this saves ANA a few bucks in gas and maybe a whale or two, it works for me. Besides, it is best to go before flight anyhow, so you can avoid using an airplane’s tiny bathroom.

Image:  woinary
Space shuttle sitting on top of a modified Boeing 747 - Click to see video.

Space shuttle sitting on top of a modified Boeing 747 - Click to see video.

I know it is not directly related to airlines, but close enough. You have a modified Boeing 747 that can fly the Space Shuttle across the country.  The process of getting the shuttle on and off the Boeing 747 is not an easy task. A reader pointed out a site that shows a bunch of photos and also a time-lapse video.

Thanks Dan for the tip!

Mesa Air Group-operated ERJ-145 for Freedom Airlines, which runs for Delta Connection

Mesa Air Group-operated ERJ-145 for Freedom Airlines, which runs for Delta Connection

On October 13, 2006, Emily Gillette was breast-feeding her daughter on a Delta Airline’s flight from Burlington, VT to New York City. Gillette, who was 27 at the time, started breast-feeding her 1 year old daughter while still at the gate. She states she was in a position where her breast was not exposed and nothing was indecent. A flight attendant told her she needed to cover up with a blanket and Gillette refused. The flight attendant ordered a customer service representative to kick Gillette and her family off the plane.

Delta is not saying much. Their spokesman Anthony Black said yesterday that the airline does not comment on litigation but supports a mother’s right to breast-feed.

Gillette is suing three airlines: Freedom, Mesa, and Delta.  Mesa operates the aircraft for Freedom, who flies for Delta Connection (I know, confusing). Having all three airlines involved is causing issues. The Human Rights Commission in Vermont is also filing a lawsuit, but only against Mesa and Freedom, finding that they couldn’t hold Delta responsible for the other airline’s actions. The commission states the law is clear, ’œa mother may breast-feed her child in any place of public accommodation in which the mother and child would otherwise have a legal right to be.’

Thanks Jessica for the tip!

Source: Current Image: Pix Picks