graxx
Intern
- Joined
- Nov 18, 2010
- Posts
- 62
Qantas have tried to keep their International and Domestic Lounges up to a very high, 'up-to-the-international-competition' standard and they are mostly pretty stylish.
Coming through the Los Angeles Lounge this week however, I was struck with a very obvious, very sad, very depressing and appalling lack of quality in the standard of one element- the passengers.
Is there any point in maintaining great, sophisticated, international quality lounges when a fairly large proportion of the inhabitants are in singlets (to show off your tattoos), shorts and thongs (i.e. flip-flops if your are American). I haven't seen it in other European or American lounges.
Seriously, there were a high proportion of really offensively badly dressed people.
It's not snobbishness (even I wear jeans to travel in these days), and the jacket and tie days are well gone, but it is quite grotty to litter the place with bad taste and sloppy dress and it significantly drops the feeling of 'specialness' of these facilities and indicates an insulting attitude to the airline.
These guys (sadly, generally guys only) wouldn't dress like that to go to a restaurant, so why Qantas Lounges??
Should Qantas introduce some sort of dress code like nightclubs and bars?
Coming through the Los Angeles Lounge this week however, I was struck with a very obvious, very sad, very depressing and appalling lack of quality in the standard of one element- the passengers.
Is there any point in maintaining great, sophisticated, international quality lounges when a fairly large proportion of the inhabitants are in singlets (to show off your tattoos), shorts and thongs (i.e. flip-flops if your are American). I haven't seen it in other European or American lounges.
Seriously, there were a high proportion of really offensively badly dressed people.
It's not snobbishness (even I wear jeans to travel in these days), and the jacket and tie days are well gone, but it is quite grotty to litter the place with bad taste and sloppy dress and it significantly drops the feeling of 'specialness' of these facilities and indicates an insulting attitude to the airline.
These guys (sadly, generally guys only) wouldn't dress like that to go to a restaurant, so why Qantas Lounges??
Should Qantas introduce some sort of dress code like nightclubs and bars?