Reddit user spambox odered a bacon and egg sandwich at Edinburgh airport, apparently from the EAT cafe.
And got the smallest egg and tiniest piece of pork, ever. It cost £3.20 (about $5).
by Gary Leff
Reddit user spambox odered a bacon and egg sandwich at Edinburgh airport, apparently from the EAT cafe.
And got the smallest egg and tiniest piece of pork, ever. It cost £3.20 (about $5).
by Gary Leff
A collection of the most interesting links you’ll want to see, many you’ll want to click.
by Gary Leff
Prince William flew European discount airline Ryanair from Stansted to Glasgow.
Prince William in coach shouldn’t be a shock, as he flew American Airlines coach Memphis – Dallas a year ago (even though he certainly could have purchased first class. Indeed, he flew first class on the US Airways Shuttle back in December.
by Gary Leff
In the New York Times, James Stewart thinks that the airlines’ public statements demonstrate collusion to restrict capacity and thus raise prices as the Department of Justice is investigating.
Except that if there was actual collusion, the last way they’d be able to successfully pull it off would be for the CEOs of major airlines to signal their plans in a public forum. If all that existed were public statements, that would be highly suggestive there wasn’t any collusion.
by Gary Leff
I needed to be in New York on Monday for meetings, so I flew up Sunday night. I spent less than 20 hours in the city.
My plan was a hotel near my first meeting of the day. And the W Times Square was both reasonably close and priced ~ $180 on a ‘AAA Hot Deal’. I hadn’t ever stayed there, so figured I’d give it a go.
I used Starwood’s app and was happy to see the hotel come up as ready for their new ‘keyless’ option — you check-in with your phone, your phone acts as a room key, and you can bypass the front desk entirely. At about 10pm, wanting to get sleep before morning meetings, that appealed to me.
by Gary Leff
A collection of the most interesting links you’ll want to see, many you’ll want to click.
by Gary Leff
Cathay Pacific first class award seats especially have gotten much tougher to book in recent months. Cathay still regularly makes unsold seats available in the week and even day prior to travel, but advance award availability can be scarce. Business class awards aren’t as easy as they used to be, but aren’t as restrictive as first class.
…[W]hen you see award seats available online using the customary sources for this data — the Qantas frequent flyer website and the British Airways site — but an American telephone agent says it isn’t available, it’s natural to think that the space is being blocked (either on the American side, or that Cathay is imposing point of sale restrictions to prevent American’s members from booking the space).
by Gary Leff
Last week I showed you a foreign airline in each of the 3 alliances that will match your current elite status. That’s useful because it may get you free lounge access (even on the airline you usually fly), or at least airport priority like check-in and boarding when flying an airline that isn’t your usual carrier.
Skyteam member and Delta partner Alitalia now has an official website detailing their offer to give you complimentary elite status.
by Gary Leff
Scott Mayerowitz and David Koenig broke the story that the Department of Justice is demanding copies of communications between major airlines as part of an investigation into unlawful collusion to limit capacity and increase airfares.
..In the face of the double whammy of recession (which kept people out of the air) and high fuel prices, the airlines developed capacity discipline as a means of survival. It’s conceivable there were unlawful communications or signaling along the way and no doubt the Department of Justice will find that.
by Gary Leff
While the most obvious thing to do with Starwood points is use them for hotel stays, I think the most valuable thing to do with them is transfer them to airline miles.
Through August 7 there’s a 20% bonus on transfers to American AAdvantage — every 20,000 Starpoints you transfer will get you 30,000 American miles.
Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel -- a topic he has covered since 2002.
Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »