Flying Business Class With American Airlines
Usually, when flight crews see me taking pictures of myself,
they respond in one of two ways. The most common is that they offer to take my
picture for me, which necessitates me explaining why I travel around the world
with a tripod and remote which, in turns, makes them feel disused. The second
is laughter I imagine is slightly more judgmental than it sounds.
But onboard American Airlines Phone
Number flight 27, from Los Angeles to Tokyo Handed, Sandra simply
smiled sweetly and handed me a glass of champagne.
“My Dad was a photographer,” she said, evoking the kind
approach of Paola aboard KLM 611 the week prior, and set a hot towel on my
drink table, careful not to disturb my sulfide-assembly. “Pretty nice setup you
have!”
As boarding completed and the 787 Dreamliner blasted off
over the Pacific, I completely my self-portraiture and prepared my camera for
more discrete use, i.e. to photograph the meals I was about to enjoy. Sandra,
for her part, didn’t speak much more about her father or his photography, but
I’m happy to report that the hospitality she offered me the rest of the flight
was as organic and effortless at her introduction had been.
Service and
Hospitality in American Airlines Business Class
In the past, my experience with flight attendants onboard
American Airlines flights has been a mix of fake-friendly and downright mean,
with some standouts thrown in thanks to sheer mathematical luck. In business
class on AA27, Sandra was definitely the highlight of the crew, but every one
of her colleagues exuded the same genuine hospitality she did.
More than her kindness, however, Sandra’s competence and the
ease with which she provided top-notch service was what wowed me.
When I began to express my dismay about the lack of sake on
the flight, for example, she not only completed my sentence (“I’ve never been
on a flight to Japan,” I began, and she immediately followed “without sake.”),
but managed to find some buried in the plane’s galley. Or, when I asked for a
cup of green tea she actually went to get some match powder and whipped it up
right at my seat, while conversing with me about the book I was reading, Hauk
Marukami’s 1Q84, and how it related to where I was headed.
AA Business Class
Food Quality and Seat Comfort
I spoke a lot about beverages in the previous section; to be
sure, the things I consumed in American Airlines business class were all
delicious. From the bento lunch featuring pan-seared halibut, to the handmade
ice cream sundae (a slightly tacky item, in my opinion, but a delicious one),
to the cold soba mid-flight snack and even the yakiniku beef and rice I took
instead of western breakfast, all of the food was delicious, especially
considering that American’s usually isn’t.
Likewise, I found myself wowed by the physicality of
business class aboard American’s 787-8, from the attractiveness of the brushed
metal seat, to the sleek, dark color scheme of the plane’s interior, to the
exclusive feeling of the back “mini-cabin” section in which I booked my seat.
Then again, I also love the exterior color scheme of the “new American,” a
livery disdained by many AV geeks, in my opinion because they know far more
about flying than good design.
Had Sandra been as successful in finding the umeshu liqueur
as she’d been with the phantom sake, I would literally have had zero complains
about transpacific business class on American Airlines.
Transit to JAL
Domestic at Tokyo Haneda
I upgraded to enjoy American Airlines business class (more
on that in a minute), which meant that my onward JAL domestic flight was still in
economy. That’s the bad news. The good news is that thanks to my one world
Sapphire status, I still enjoyed access to the Sakura Lounge at the Haneda
Airport domestic terminal, although it offered little more than views of the
tarmac.
(And I’m already seen plenty of those by the time I got into
the lounge.)
Indeed, transit from international to domestic at
Tokyo-Haneda is obnoxious due to the physical distance between the
terminals—you either need to take a shuttle bus, the Tokyo Monorail or the
Keikyu Airport Line, and while all are free for connecting passenger, it’s
still a bit annoying in my opinion.
The Bottom Line
American Airlines’ transpacific class far exceeded my
expectations, which were based on average-to-poor experiences with the airline
in the past. Although I imagine some of my enjoyment of this experience was due
to the fact that it was on a 787 Dream liner, flight attendant Sandra proved
that true hospitality is not gone from the American-staffed skies. American
Airlines business class is a particularly good option if you can upgrade as I
did, a process I’ll describe below.
How to Book Business
Class on American Using Miles & Points
As I alluded to above, I upgraded to American
Airlines Customer Service business class, rather than paying for it
outright with cash or points/miles. As of March 2017, upgrading from economy to
business on a transpacific American Airlines flight requires 25,000 Advantage
miles, plus a co-pay of $350, per leg. AAdvantage is not an AMEX or Chase
transfer partner, so you either need to earn these miles by flying American,
purchasing them outright or via spending from a co-branded AA credit card.
Alternative options for booking business class travel on
American Airlines using miles & points include spending 60,000 AAdvantage
miles and booking directly (although availability via this method is
notoriously scant) or booking through partners like British Airways, who is an
American Express transfer partner, albeit one through whom awards are more
expensive.
Resource Blog: https://bit.ly/2UAOOup
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