I decided to make my own passenger briefing (PPL - SEL) per whats needed by regulations. However, I would love for it to have humor.
Can you chip in with your own experience/ two cents?
I once got an egress brief in an A-3 (no ejection seats) from a new-to-me aircraft commander: "If you *need* to get out you probably can't, and if you *can* get out you probably don't need to. Any questions?""If we have to get out, I'll say EJECT, EJECT, EJECT; if you're still here after the third EJECT, you're the aircraft commander"
I guess having one with a little humor as a private pilot flying friends and family is not a bad idea. I must say though that I hate when airline stews try to be funny during their briefings. It just makes the briefing drag on and they all use the same old stale jokes that are barely funny. Southwest is by far the worst in this regard. I would think it would be distracting and confusing to the newbie passenger and that the actual message will get lost. I am sort of surprised that the airline or the FAA allow it.
Can you chip in with your own experience/ two cents?
I guess having one with a little humor as a private pilot flying friends and family is not a bad idea. I must say though that I hate when airline stews try to be funny during their briefings. It just makes the briefing drag on and they all use the same old stale jokes that are barely funny. Southwest is by far the worst in this regard. I would think it would be distracting and confusing to the newbie passenger and that the actual message will get lost. I am sort of surprised that the airline or the FAA allow it.
Going to have to disagree on this one. I've heard some funny stuff out of many SWA crews. Most are usually plays on the same jokes, but I rarely heard the same joke twice, even after 35+ flights with them. At least they have fun with it, rather than the UAL and Delta crews that pop in the announcement CD and stand there with that look of misery half of the time. The musical (raps or songs) are also a bit entertaining, but can seem long-winded by the time it's all done.
I decided to make my own passenger briefing (PPL - SEL) per whats needed by regulations. However, I would love for it to have humor.
Can you chip in with your own experience/ two cents?
I agree - if you actually need to listen to the passenger briefing to learn how to buckle your seat belt or where to find the life vest in case of a water evacuation, then you should not be out in public without a guardian.
"Please check that you have taken all of your belongings. Whatever you leave behind on this aircraft belongs to the cabin crew. Please don't leave husbands or children behind."
I agree - if you actually need to listen to the passenger briefing to learn how to buckle your seat belt or where to find the life vest in case of a water evacuation, then you should not be out in public without a guardian.
"Please check that you have taken all of your belongings. Whatever you leave behind on this aircraft belongs to the cabin crew. Please don't leave husbands or children behind."
The seat belts aspect I agree: Everyone should know how to use a seat belt. However, the life vest is not so obvious. And without having been told where it is, it would take a bit of figuring out before someone realize where the life vest is. Personally, I don't think an emergency is the right time to be playing Marco Polo with your life vest...
I had some fun shooting this one with my nieces and nephew.
I had some fun shooting this one with my nieces and nephew.
I flew with someone who would say, "There are 50 ways to leave your lover but only two ways out of this airplane." It was funny. Once.
Going to have to disagree on this one. I've heard some funny stuff out of many SWA crews. Most are usually plays on the same jokes, but I rarely heard the same joke twice, even after 35+ flights with them. At least they have fun with it, rather than the UAL and Delta crews that pop in the announcement CD and stand there with that look of misery half of the time. The musical (raps or songs) are also a bit entertaining, but can seem long-winded by the time it's all done.
Going to have to disagree on this one. I've heard some funny stuff out of many SWA crews. Most are usually plays on the same jokes, but I rarely heard the same joke twice, even after 35+ flights with them. At least they have fun with it, rather than the UAL and Delta crews that pop in the announcement CD and stand there with that look of misery half of the time. The musical (raps or songs) are also a bit entertaining, but can seem long-winded by the time it's all done.
The seat belts aspect I agree: Everyone should know how to use a seat belt. However, the life vest is not so obvious. And without having been told where it is, it would take a bit of figuring out before someone realize where the life vest is. Personally, I don't think an emergency is the right time to be playing Marco Polo with your life vest...
I had some fun shooting this one with my nieces and nephew.
This.I don't know why you need to add humor to it anyways? Here is how to open/close the door, here is how to move your seat forward/aft, here is where the sick-sacks are, wear your seatbelt the whole time, don't touch anything unless I say you can.
I once got an egress brief in an A-3 (no ejection seats) from a new-to-me aircraft commander: "If you *need* to get out you probably can't, and if you *can* get out you probably don't need to. Any questions?"
Nauga,
who knows how Jonah felt
The other non-obvious thing I have personally caught passengers doing is fastening the belt with the lever in towards their body.
So, just for grins, what's the reason for not using the push-button automotive style seat belt?
Age.
They are used in later models such as "restart" Cessna 172s.
The other non-obvious thing I have personally caught passengers doing is fastening the belt with the lever in towards their body. The lever must be facing outwards or else you can't get out of the belt if it is under tension........