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Southwest Declares Kevin Smith Too Fat To Fly

theodp writes "Kevin Smith is not a happy Southwest customer. The director was thrown off a flight from Oakland to Burbank, after being deemed too fat to fly. He later wound up on another Southwest flight, but has declared It's On and taken his rants to Twitter. 'Dear @SouthwestAir — I know I'm fat, but was Captain Leysath really justified in throwing me off a flight for which I was already seated?' he began. He also let the airline know he'd made it to his destination. 'Hey @SouthwestAir! I've landed in Burbank. Don't worry: wall of the plane was opened & I was airlifted out while Richard Simmons supervised.'"

5 of 940 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Welp, that's it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Do you even know who this guy is? He isn't THAT big.

  2. Southwest Airlines "Customer of Size" Q&A by codeonezero · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to http://www.southwest.com/travel_center/cos_qa.html

    It sounds like the determination is made if you can not fit within the confines of a standard seat with the arm rests down on both sides. I wonder if they don't have a test airplane seat you can sit in before hand at the terminal before trying to board or set of measurements you can take at home before buying your ticket/boarding to reduce the potential for embarrassment of being forced off the plane once you try to seat onboard.

    From the link above:
    "I am a large person and use a seatbelt extension, but I fit in one aircraft seat. Do I have to purchase two seats? Our policy does not focus on weight, and the seatbelt extension is not the determining factor. We use the ability to lower the armrests as the gauge, as the armrests are truly the definitive boundary between each seat."

    Another interesting tidibt from the link:
    Are all overweight people subject to the policy?
    Many Americans are "overweight" or "clinically obese." A number of overweight or obese people occupy only one seat. In fact, many Customers may use a seatbelt extension but occupy only one seat, and these Customers would not be asked to reserve a second seat. If a Customer cannot lower the armrest (and is unable to comfortably travel with it in the down position), he/she is required to pay for the additional seat occupied. Again, we will offer a refund if the flight does not oversell.

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  3. Re:Before the dust settles by jra · · Score: 5, Informative

    Perhaps.

    Here's their blog response: http://www.blogsouthwest.com/blog/not-so-silent-bob

  4. Re:That's what you get by trapnest · · Score: 5, Informative

    some people just have big bones.

    And then some people are just fat.