Just heard a blurb on CNN about how the F/A's will make 9.00$ per hour but will make commission off of the crap they sell onboard!!! Who in their right mind would take a job like this? Yep those big spenders all will be buying crap while flying down to grandmas on the 10$ dollar fare.
It's true.
I don't know why anyone would take a flight attendant job at this joint. See glamorous cities like Columbus and make a living by begging for one dollar tips?
If they're ugly, they'll starve. If they're hot, they probably know of a different job that collect $1 bills WAY faster than selling candy bars on a plane . . . .
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http://blogs.usatoday.com/sky/2007/05/skybus_attendan.html
Skybus attendants to work on commission
"Just what the airline industry needed: Flight attendants on commission." That's from Mark Tatge of
Forbes.com, who writes that while Skybus can get to Columbus for as little as $10, "you'll pay in peace and quiet. Skybus flight attendants will be hawking not only food and water but also such sundries as suntan lotion and jewelry to an extremely captive market. And the attendants will have incentives aplenty to tap you on the shoulder. Paid only $9 an hour, or $16,000 a year, they'll get a 10% commission on any merchandise sold in this flying souk. (Pilots, paid $75,000, don't get a cut, but we can only imagine the infomercial-like announcements.)," Tatge adds.
Naturally, Skybus says it does not allow outside food or drink on board –- presumably something meant to help boost in-flight sales. But there's also this take from Ohio passenger Adrian Scott, who was on Skybus' inaugural Columbus-Burbank flight yesterday. "Everything went really smooth, and we landed right on time. I would recommend if you're traveling with children that you carry blankets and bring snacks," she tells
The Columbus Dispatch. Despite the no-food policy, "Scott said a flight attendant just encouraged her to buy a snack without giving her a hard time about the children's goodies," the
Dispatch writes. "We bought a Twix. It seemed like most people were buying food," Scott tells the paper.