Sunday 23 February 2014

Let’s Face It: Things Get Weird at 37,000 Feet - Muddy K's guest appearance

Greetings, armchair travellers. This is Muddy Karpitz, making a long overdue guest appearance on Dusty Venetian’s blog. I know more than a few members of our extended circle have, after following my cranky dispatches during my previous trip to Abba-land, been awaiting similarly rage-infused observations from me during our current trip to the Big Apple, but I may have to disappoint you all, because I’m having too good a time with Dusty in this amazing city to invoke my “angry-dickhead-abroad” persona. But that’s not to say that this trip hasn’t already produced more than it’s share of intriguing, funny and flat-out strange moments, some of which I’ll try to convey here at Dusty’s digital domain, now that we’ve pitched tent at Red’s Upper East Side pad, and I have an opportunity to marshal my thoughts and sharpen my (digital) quill.

Where do I begin? Let’s start with the epic 20-hour flight from the Land of Oz to the Home of the Brave. As many of you know, long-distance flights fill me with as much joy as, say, sticking push-pins into my forehead, or mucking out the chimpanzee cages in animal testing laboratories. Which is kind of ironic, given that I am a card-carrying plane-spotter (i.e. aircraft nerd) who could – and, indeed, did – correctly identify the line-up of aircraft assembled on the top-deck of the USS Intrepid for Dusty’s benefit (For which I’m sure she was super grateful. I mean, I think it’s important that people know that the Israeli-made Kifr jet fighter was copied from the French Dassault Mirage fighter – Isn’t that right, Dusty? Dusty? Why are you walking away from me? Dusty?)

Sorry, where was I? Oh yes, flying. Look, I do appreciate what a marvel of the modern age long-distance jet travel is, allowing people like me and Dusty to traverse the globe in less than a day. But that doesn’t mean things don’t get weird at 37,000 feet. Nor does it mean that I felt any less like a POW being subjected to sensory deprivation torture at high altitudes.  We flew (Dis)United, and were warned by all and sundry to expect the worst. While I’m willing to wager that Soviet-era Aeroflot airline travel would be considerably worse, (Dis)United came perilously close to fulfilling our friends’ warnings.

One of the cabin crew welcomed us aboard by thanking us for choosing them as their Valentine (We departed Oz on Friday February 14). Hey, sister, we only choose this flight because it was going dirt-cheap on WebJet, so don’t think this means we’re going on a date anytime soon, okay. As it was, the female flight attendants looked like they were previously employed as guards at a women’s detention centre (“He used to give me roses…”). Got a problem with your in-flight vegan meal? Keep it to yourself, people, unless you want to get smacked down by one of these perfumed steamrollers.

Someone told us that there was no in-flight entertainment aboard (Dis)United flights at all. Like, no video screens or audio/radio channels at all. Good Lord, what were expected to do to occupy ourselves for 23 hours? Read a book? Talk to one another? Oh, the humanity! As it turns out, (Dis)United’s fleet of older aircraft did have shared (communal) video screens that dropped from the ceiling above our seats, which we could watch if we chose to – but they weren’t the seatback video screens that we’ve now become accustomed to. Which makes this a “First World” problem – on a par with choosing to eat (dead) organically fed, free-range chickens over (equally dead) battery farm hens – than a source of genuine distress (Like having electrodes pinned to your genitals by corrupt police officials, which qualifies as a uniquely “Third World” problem).

But that doesn’t diminish the horror of having to watch Thor: The Dark World which, even for a former Marvel Comics-geek like myself (who avidly read The Mighty Thor comic book as a kid) from wanting to puncture my eardrum with a fork to stop listening to this drivel (As it was, I just chose to watch it without sound, which made it marginally less awful). Oh, and because (Dis)United screens films and TV shows on communal screens (which darling kiddies might see during the flight), all the rude bits are edited out, or otherwise modified. Which meant that Kate Moss’s tits were clumsily airbrushed out of a photograph seen in the background of the other in-flight movie, About Time. That doesn’t even qualify as soft-core porn, you people! Porno denied! Thanks for nothing, (Dis)United!

Because (Dis)United is an American carrier, passengers are subject to US federal aviation laws and regulations, such as congregating around the on-board toilets, which is forbidden – no doubt on the grounds that would-be Jihadists leave it to the last minute to plot mid-air mayhem hanging around an airliner’s toilet cubicle while their erstwhile leader is trying to punch out a turd. That all sounds fine in theory, but it all goes to hell in a hand-basket once several passengers are simultaneously afflicted with broiling bowel syndrome, and would willingly trample to death any small children who stood between them and the on-board dunny. Which is where I often found myself throughout the course of our 20-hour flight, exchanging wild-eyed glances with fellow inmates – sorry, I meant to say “passengers” – as we waited desperately for the cubicle sign to change from “Occupied” to “Vacant”. But I can assure all those good folk at the Department of Homeland Security that no plotting took place in these circumstances. We were more concerned with our near-exploding bowels than with explosive devices.   

Now, I’m about to get scatological here, so those with delicate sensibilities and/or little kiddies should stop reading this now. (Okay, have all those sooks left the room? Good – let us resume) Perhaps it was the airline-standard food that did it. Or that our internal organs are being slowly rearranged in new & interesting ways in the pressurized cabin. But going to the toilet at 37,000 feet is a strange and terrifying experience. Not only do you have to fold your limbs like a sheet of origami paper just to sit on the bowl in such confined quarters, but what comes out the other end is…well, it just doesn’t look like it does back on terra firma. Nor do the wafer thin pocket squares they jokingly refer to as toilet paper on these flights comes anywhere close to carrying out their intended task (Ahem). But the flushing mechanism is what scares me the most. Push the button and whatever deposits you’ve made (Again – ahem) are sucked out into the stratosphere with the force and speed of a Polaris missile. I can’t help but think that our airborne waste is swiftly turned into an icy projectile as it hurtles towards Earth in sub-zero temperatures. These now shard-like “Number 2s” could potentially blind an innocent islander who happens to be looking up at the night sky from their Pacific Ocean atoll as our flight passes overhead.   So, to the people of greater Micronesia, I apologise for my airborne “gifts” and any atmospheric havoc they may cause. (I mean, it’s bad enough they have to contend with global warming and rising ocean levels – they don’t need me dumping sh*t on them, either)

It wasn’t all bad, though. During the LA-NYC leg of the flight, we sat next to a lovely woman named Liz, who was a sales representative for a US company, which frequently sent her across the States and abroad. Turns out she was a native New Yorker, because when we told her we were flying to the Big Apple, her eyes lit up and she said:

New York is the dirtiest, smelliest, noisiest and ugliest city in the world. And I know there are far prettier places on Earth – but there’s no other city in the world quite like it.


And as Dusty and I were about to discover  - she was right.

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