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Gulliver

Business travel

  • Trolley dolly folly

    Many airlines shamelessly exploit female sexuality

    by J.Y.

    EVERY December, more than 1,000 female high school students, some as young as 15, take part in a “bikini competition” held in the eastern Chinese city of Qingdao. The event, hosted by Oriental Beauty, a modelling agency, provides a platform for aspiring flight attendants to show off their bikini bodies to eager recruiters from the Chinese airline industry. Those deemed the most attractive are invited to join a fast-track flight attendant trainee scheme, which can open the door to a dream job at one of China’s big airlines.

    Many Chinese and other Asian airlines shamelessly exploit female sexuality.

  • Flying the red-eye

    An airline apologises after threatening to sack a pilot who was too tired to fly

    by B.R.

    A POST on this blog from earlier this month talked about how airlines are sweeping the issue of pilot fatigue under the carpet. The London School of Economics had surveyed some 7,000 European captains and first officers—around 14% of all commercial pilots in the region—on various issues. Although most said that airline managers take safety seriously, they have a blindspot when it comes to tiredness. Close to 60% of pilots said that they and their colleagues were often fatigued and half said that their employers do not pay enough heed to the issue.

  • The Kangaroo Route in a single bound

    Qantas is to fly direct between Australia and Britain

    by B.R.

    WHEN the England cricket team travelled to play Australia in the first ever Test match in 1887, the journey down under took around 50 days by steamship. (The Aussies won, as they have mostly continued to do over the subsequent 129 years.) When the team flies out to compete in the latest installment of the Ashes next year, the journey time will be much reduced. If they fly from London to Perth on Qantas, they could conceivably do it in under 17 hours, nonstop.

    The Australian flag carrier announced over the weekend that it is to launch a direct service from Western Australia to London.

  • How to avoid a hostile reception

    Why do hotels still bother with receptionists?

    by B.R.

    AS A rule, when Gulliver first arrives at a hotel, he would prefer not to have to deal with another human. There are three main reasons for this. The first is that he is, by nature, cantankerous. The forced jollity of the initial exchange with a receptionist does not come easily after an exhausting trip. The second, perhaps not unrelated, is the fear that a porter might latch on to him and insist on showing him to his room. What is it about Gulliver’s demeanour that suggests he is incapable of counting room numbers sequentially, or is unable to identify which of the two chambers in his room is the toilet?

  • Waking up to fatigue

    Pilots are too often flying when tired

    by B.R.

    A RARE tragedy came to pass on December 7th: a fatal crash at a European airport. As it came into land at a foggy Basel airport in France, a light aircraft narrowly missed a British Airways jet on the runway. The smaller plane burst into flames; two people were reportedly killed.

    Such occurrences are thankfully few and far between. Flying is about as safe a form of transport as there is. A commercial flight takes off somewhere in the world, on average, every second. That is some 37m journeys a year. Yet according to IATA, the main airline-industry body, last year not a single passenger on a commercial jet died in an accident.

  • Air Force done

    Donald Trump says he will cancel an order for a new presidential jumbo jet

    by B.R.

    EVEN when all other orders evaporate, at least Boeing can rely on one important customer for its jumbo jet: the president of the United States. That was the gist of a post that Gulliver wrote earlier this year on the travails of the 747, a once-popular aircraft that has fallen foul of today’s aviation economics.

    Gulliver may have spoken too soon. Today, Donald Trump seemingly announced that he would cancel an order to develop a new jumbo, due to come into service in 2024, to ferry around whomever is then the leader of the free world. In a tweet, Mr Trump wrote: “Boeing is building a brand new 747 Air Force One for future presidents, but costs are out of control, more than $4 billion.

  • Snoop case

    Transport employees in America were secretly paid by the government to search travellers’ bags

    by A.W. | WASHINGTON, DC

    THERE are many reasons why you might have been stopped at an American transport hub and your bag searched by officials. You might have be chosen at random. Perhaps you matched a profile. Or you could have been flagged by an airline, railroad or security employee who was being secretly paid by the government as a confidential informant to uncover evidence of drug smuggling.

    A committee of Congress heard remarkable testimony last week about a long-running programme by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

  • Fuel folly

    Why the Chapecoense football team’s plane ran out of fuel

    by R.J.E.

    MUCH remains unknown about Lamia Airlines flight 2933, which crashed into the hills of Colombia on November 28th, killing 71 of the 77 people on board (see article in this week’s print edition). Fans of Chapecoense, a Brazilian football team, must wait to hear the full story of how a chartered plane carrying 22 of their players and several staff members failed to arrive safely. (Only three players are among the survivors.) Many Brazilian reporters covering the crash knew one of the 21 journalists on board, and are starting to ask why these lives were lost in such devastating circumstances.

  • The death of hands-free

    How “driver mode” for phones will affect those who work behind the wheel

    by A.W. | WASHINGTON, DC

    FOR business travellers moving between cities, there’s no better place to get work done than the train. But for travellers in America, going by rail is generally not an option outside of the transit corridor from Washington, DC to Boston. And so people covering ground for business are often forced to make do with cars, and with whatever they can manage behind the wheel—which usually means making a lot of phone calls.

    That could soon change. Just as airplane mode has restricted travellers from using cellular networks while in the skies, “driver mode” may soon severely limit communications on the road.

  • Clampdown in Catalonia

    Barcelona hits Airbnb with a hefty fine

    by B.R.

    THE phoney war between home-sharing websites and Barcelona seems to have come to an end. After months of sparring between the parties, this week Barcelona levied fines of €600,000 ($636,000) each on Airbnb and HomeAway, which it says have been offering to rent properties that do not have a tourist licence to holidaymakers. The firms had already been fined a nominal amount last year. HomeAway says it will pay the fine; Airbnb is appealing.

    Airbnb says that it is “part of the solution” in Barcelona. That depends on which problem it thinks it is addressing. Barcelona is a cramped town.

  • On the wrong track

    Internet on trains hits the buffers

    by B.R.

    THE train is often the best way to travel for business. Anyone heading to Paris from London for a meeting, for example, would be mad to choose an Airbus over a Eurostar. The journey time by rail may be more than twice as long—two hours and forty minutes compared with an hour and a quarter in the air—but that doesn’t take into account the fact that passengers must mope about the airport for a couple hours before boarding their flight. (Eurostar suggests turning up 30-45 minutes before the train leaves; for domestic trains you just need a few minutes.) Furthermore, unlike St Pancras station and Gare du Nord, Heathrow and Charles de Gaulle are some distance from the centre of town.

  • Guide the way

    By launching Trips, Airbnb hopes to capture every step of the travel process

    by A.W. | WASHINGTON, DC

    OVER the past year, cities around the world have begun to crack down on illegal Airbnb listings, threatening the home-rental firm’s seemingly unstoppable expansion. As regulation bites in some of its most important markets, so Airbnb is looking for new ways to grow.

    Last week, the company announced the launch of Trips, a service through which locals can offer guided tours and other experiences to travellers. It will start modestly, offering 500 things to do across 12 cities: London, Miami, Nairobi, Havana, Florence, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Tokyo, Detroit, Seoul, Paris and Cape Town.

  • Return of the Mach

    Will supersonic passenger planes boom again?

    by B.R.

    SINCE the moment that three British Airways Concordes touched down at Heathrow in 2003, on their final journey before being retired from service, air-heads have pined for the days of supersonic passenger jets. Concordes were cramped and noisy, but they were the very emblem of the jet-setting elite. One’s time had to be very valuable indeed to justify paying thousands of pounds extra to shave three-and-a-half hours off of a transatlantic trip.

    One of Concorde’s most wide-eyed fans was Richard Branson. The airline boss apparently kept a model of the plane—with his Virgin livery replacing British Airways’, naturally—on his desk.

  • One step closer to steerage

    Airlines are finally explaining what “last class” means. It isn’t pretty

    by A.W. | WASHINGTON, DC

    OVER the past couple of years America’s three biggest carriers, Delta, United and American, have each unveiled a fare class below economy. The new designation, known as “basic economy” to the airlines and derided as “last class” by their customers, is an attempt to compete with the low fares on profitable no-frills carriers such as Spirit and Frontier.

    From the airlines’ initial announcements, it seemed that the sacrifices passengers would have to make in order to secure last-class fares would be modest. The most notable was the inability to select seats when booking a flight.

  • Losing the power of flight

    Turkey’s dream of becoming the epicentre of global aviation looks shaky

    by M.R.

    UNTIL recently, the worst thing about transiting through Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport was the heaving throng of passengers crammed into its over-stretched terminals and under-staffed security lines. It was also the best thing. Witnessed from the sanctuary of a barstool with time on your side, the endless haze of Nigerians, Swedes and Pakistanis dancing around one another creates the most sublime of spectacles. It is a modernist dream that quickly becomes a nightmare, of course, when you join the scrum yourself. Yet the appeal of the global hub endures for all but the most battle-worn and hardened of business travellers.

About Gulliver

Our correspondents inform and entertain business travellers with news and views to help them make the most of life on the road

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