Longhorn
Evil Genius
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2001
- Posts
- 1,294
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Thats pretty frickin spiffy!
Am I the only one who mentally replaces the "Aer" with "Cunna" and then makes myself laugh?
Less than optimal logistics until the new terminal is done, but overall this has the *potential* to be highly beneficial to both carriers.
The 36" of legroom in the first 11 rows is a good start for us, and maybe a true first class is still a ways off, but IMO we need to market (and price) those rows with at least a slight premium, give it some sort of distinction (BlueBusiness Class, or something like that), put in some sort of little foot rest, make the seats recline a tad more and get the enhanced pillow/blanket idea put on the front burner. That sort of "poor man's first class" could appeal to lots of folks who now only have 2 choices on many airlines without a "middle class": Lay flat luxury, for thousands more, or 31-32" of middle seat purgatory.
In any case, good move. We'll see if its handled well. I've been advocating for a partnership with Aer Lingus (even put it in the Speak Up survey...they listened! They really listened!)But AL is an established European airline soon to be partnerless, and as such was a great catch. Most reputable airlines are already in long term commitments with other US trunk carriers. Sure, AirWherethefrikistan may be available, but AL tops the list in terms of desirability, availability and route compatability.
Am I the only one who mentally replaces the "Aer" with "Cunna" and then makes myself laugh?
I am trying to look for the positive here, but this is not a codeshare. Just a link on a website. Until we can book on each other's systems ("I was-a soaking his cork, while he was-a soaking MY cork") I am not sure this will do much for us. But maybe it's a foot in the door.
I re-read the press release just to make sure and it does sound like a full codeshare. To quote, "Customers will now be able to make just one booking, which will allow them to travel from Ireland to the U.S. and onto a direct Jet Blue flight to 51 destinations." There was also that mention about the website but that seems like it would be in addition to the codeshare.
AL will lose all its alliances in April. They've been fighting Ryan Air off and have reestablished themselves in a low-cost manner to compete with Ryan-- any kind of partnership is a move in the right direction for both carriers. The true code-share is a difficult thing for Jetblue to handle right now (liabilities) and the internet link is the way to go. This will be the "new" way you can bring in one of many international carriers on board from JFK/BOS without all the strings attached. I bet we see more of these "partnerships" soon.
I believe this will play out as a web site alliance. Instead of going to Jetblue's web site and buying a ticket from LGB to DUB on JB305 connecting to JB8555 (the EI flight), you would purchase two tickets on JB305 and EI104 in one transaction. This seems to be the logical arrangement if there's only one booking and no code share.