Nervous? Hah! NERVOUS?! Forget it! I am not the least tiny little BIT nervous about
engaging in air travel these days!! Why even as I write these words, I am boldly sitting
in a jet-powered commercial airplane, and I am cool as a cucumber. This is because we are
on the ground at the famous Atlanta airport, which means we will all be dead from
starvation long before we take off, because there are 1450 aircraft ahead of us, including
a number of biplanes still awaiting clearance to participate in World War I.
Sitting next to me are two pilots whose flight was cancelled. I am not making this up.
They work for Eastern Airlines, one of a growing group of airlines that, as far as I can
tell, do not actually own any airplanes. What they own is a large, modern and superbly
maintained fleet of excuses for why your flight has been cancelled. It's a real thrill
to watch the gate crews for these airlines swing into action as departure time approaches:
"Ladies and gentlemen," the gate agent proudly announces, "the excuse for
cancelling Flight 219 is now arriving on our computer screen." Right on
time! The aspiring passengers cluster around and watch with nervous
excitement as the gate agent frowns at the computer, then says, "Flight 219
has been cancelled because of... (dramatic pause)... MAYONNAISE IN THE
GYROSCOPE!"
Ha ha! A new one! What will they think of next? The aspiring passengers, shaking their
heads in wonderment at how far commercial aviation has come in just their own lifetimes,
wander off to look for a working vending machine. Not that I am complaining about being
stuck on the ground. No, because the aviation industry is operating under a new policy
called "deregulation", under which anybody who can produce two forms of identification
is allowed to operate an airline, and alarming things can happen to the occasional flight
that actually becomes airborne, as evidenced by recent news reports of planes whose
engines were turned off when they were not in direct personal contact with the ground;
planes taking off without important mechanical parts such as wings; planes bound for
Lexington, Ky., but landing, due to navigational error, on the Lost Continent of Atlantis;
etc.
But what really bothers me is the pilots. When I was a boy, all the pilots were much older
than I am, but in recent years there has been a disturbing trend - you may have noticed
this - toward pilots MY OWN AGE. I happen to be my own age, and I would never place a
person such as myself in a position of responsibility. I live in constant fear that one
day I'm going to get on an airplane, and there in the cockpit, wearing a uniform and
frowning at the instruments, will be somebody I went to high school with, somebody like
Billy Kirkwood, who once, at the Hallowe'en Dance, on purpose, set fire to his own hair.
And let's not even TALK about what happens to luggage. I'm going to have a little sticker
made up: YOU CAN CHECK MY LUGGAGE WHEN YOU PRY MY COLD, DEAD FINGERS OFF THE HANDLE.
Everybody feels this way. Everybody carries everything on board. You see people stuffing
Barcaloungers into the overhead racks. TRUE ANECDOTE: Recently the remains of Pvt. Eddie
Slovik, the only American executed for desertion during World War II, were supposed to
be flown via TWA from New York, N.Y., to Detroit, Mich., so naturally they wound up in
San Francisco, Calif. This really happened. Fortunately somebody managed to track Pvt.
Slovik down before he earned a Frequent Flier bonus trip to the Far East.
Meanwhile, here in the Atlanta airport, we are getting our Safety Lecture. "In the
unlikely event that we make it as far as a body of water before we crash," the flight
attendant is saying, "you can use your complimentary snack to repel sharks." Next to me,
the Eastern pilots - one of whom is, no question about it, YOUNGER than I am - are looking
at the little safety card from the barf-bag pocket, and they are LAUGHING at it. This is
the truth. I ask them what is so funny, and they point to the diagram of the plane
floating perkily on top of the water, like a giant inflatable pool toy, while the
passengers alertly rescue themselves. "You mean the plane won't do that?" I ask. "Listen,"
one of them says. "This plane floats about as well as a boat flies."
Finally, days later, we take off. The pilot is talking on the intercom. "Folks," he is saying, "on behalf of your entire flight crew, let me just say that I am setting fire to my hair." I hope the beverage cart gets here soon.