Southwest Gate Agent Entertains Passengers With Ukelele
We're not huge fans of the ukelele, but this is a lot better than that time we were stranded at JFK and the Delta gate agent stared coldly at us as he recited the words to NIN's "Closer" into the PA system.
Plug in your work headphones and get ready to rock out classic-easy-listening-style.
Gate Agent Plays Ukelele [YouTube] (Thanks to Brent!)
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Comments:
@structuralpoke: Exactly. You see this? This is why Southwest is my favorite airline. They hire actual PEOPLE. Even when a situation is completely beyond their control, dammit, they still try. Their employees are largely inventive, humorous, and above all, good-natured. I have never once had a problem with Southwest's customer service, unlike other airlines, whose employees trend towards surly and short-tempered.
Granted, I have also never worn a mini-skirt, but you take my meaning, I'm sure.
Southwest's flight attendants crack me up. Once one of them asked us to pretend to pay attention to the safety lecture and promised us that if we did, in the unlikely event of a water landing we could use our seat cushions as floatation devices and could keep them as souvenirs of the experience. Another got on the PA system as we were taxiing to our destination and serenaded us briefly to the tune of the Barney theme:
We love you,
You love us,
We're much faster than a bus . . .
Several years ago, on an ATA flight, we were serenaded by the pilot on harmonica while waiting in line for takeoff. He also got on the PA at the gate and said that we were free to make fun of people holding up the boarding process by trying to jam their gigantic "carry on" suitcases into the overhead bins. I loved that pilot.
Why oh why can Southwest not fly out of my city? The company is pretty much the only major airline to actually seem like they care about their customers. And, Southwest flies big planes all the time, not little dinky regional jets. For those two reasons alone I can be in love with Southwest, but there's still more. And that guy was pretty good on the ukulele, I do have to say.














I don't know how "Ukulele" and "more bearable" can be used in the same article.