A roundup of the most important stories of the day. I keep you up to date on the most interesting writings I find on other sites – the latest news and tips.
Just 5 Months for United to Start Cutbacks in Polaris Business Class: Fewer Pillows and Mattress Pads
Ever since United launched its new international business class ‘Polaris’ soft product (service) on December 1, the airline has been gaining a reputation for having stepped up its premium class game.
The new product was sufficiently good — and really closed the gap enough with other carriers that I thought it would ultimately no longer be necessary to book away from United (once the seats were sufficiently widespread) — and so out of character for the airline that I also wondered how long would it take before they started cutting back on the service?
“One Card to Replace Them All” Plastc Entering Bankruptcy, Product Won’t Ship
In 2015 Plastc promised chip and pin support, water resistant features, and capacity to hold 20 cards.
Plastc, like Coin, was delayed in production. It’s 2017 and they never shipped. And now they’re calling it quits.
Bangkok Isn’t Completely Banning Street Food — But They Might As Well Be
A few days ago I shared reports from the Bangkok Post and elsewhere that the military administration was pushing out street food vendors.
I suggested that some vendors rent space in front of stores rather than squatting on public streets, and that local jurisdictions were all interpreting the new edicts the same way so some street food would survive — and some of the best places are in actual hole in the wall restaurants — however limits on street vendors raise costs and create barriers to entry, reduce competition, and will limit food quality over time.
Hilton’s New Lifestyle Brand Tru Will Have Reduced Points-Earning
Hilton as their own new brands — Tru by Hilton and Tapestry Collection by Hilton — and noting they talk about them as by Hilton which is a great reminder.
Hilton describes both as having “a hotel experience that is vibrant, affordable and young at heart with style and personality unique from our existing portfolio.”
Insane Video of Woman Ranting on Delta Flight, ALL Passengers Removed
Here’s a really crazy video that was uploaded yesterday of a woman on a Delta Connection flight who had issues, yet seemed to be having fun with her issues. Other passengers on the ground in San Antonio actually seemed to be enjoying the performance, at least until the whole flight was asked to deplane.
Language is not safe for work, but the woman offers an ongoing narrative where she’s even the one claiming the airline says she’s disruptive while she says the airline denies it. But ‘they ain’t seen crazy yet’ they’re going to see tri-polar, not just bipolar.
US Bank’s President of Retail Payments Opens the Kimono on New Card To Compete With Amex Platinum and Sapphire Reserve
Inside Flyer interviews the man behind the card that US Bank is introducing to the premium market: the Altitude Reserve Card.
Before all the details were out Frequent Miler called it the “Sapphire Reserve killer” though while an attractive value proposition I don’t think that’s quite right.
Here’s Where US Airlines are Growing This Quarter — and Which Big Airports See Them Running Away
Airline Weekly (subscription only) ran charts this week with data from Diio Mi showing the number of scheduled seats departing various airports for the largest U.S. airlines in the second quarter, and the year-over-year growth (or retrenchment) that represents.
Serious Question: Would You Rather Fly United or Emirates?
Delta, United, and American have unsuccessfully lobbied for two years to get the government to limit flying by Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar — reducing consumer choice and raising prices. Delta’s CEO actually said his goal was a government rule against lower airfare prices.
And even as Emirates announces a 20% cut in US flights because of passenger drops, they continue to press their case claiming Emirates doesn’t really make decisions based on the performance of its flights. Really?
Next Week Tom Stuker Will Fly His 18 Millionth Mile on United Airlines
In 2009 he was flying 700,000 miles per year. Last year he hit 17 million flown, which would mean 7 million in 5 years or 1.4 million per year — twice his earlier pace. That would be 3835 miles per day which would require flying literally a third of the hours in each year.
He has a titanium frequent flyer card and a plane named after him.