"Catfishing" for Seats: A New Trend on Southwest Airlines
Southwest Airlines' unique boarding process, which does not include assigned seating, has sparked creative tactics among travelers looking for the best seats. Passengers line up based on their boarding numbers, and it’s a first-come, first-served system. To secure a preferred seat, some board early, fake disabilities, or employ other cunning strategies like scattering crumpled tissues on adjacent seats to deter others from sitting down.
A novel method that has emerged involves selecting seatmates based on appearance, a practice dubbed "catfishing." This involves passengers leveraging perceived attractiveness to influence who ends up sitting next to them.
In one reported scenario, a petite woman appeared interested in an empty middle seat. When offered the spot, she invited her much larger boyfriend to take the seat instead. This tactic of using attractiveness to influence seating arrangements is becoming increasingly common, particularly during the later stages of boarding.
Another incident highlighted this trend when a man chose to sit next to a young mother with a baby, despite an empty row behind her. His decision to occupy the middle seat disrupted the mother's travel setup and raised questions among other passengers. Such behaviors illustrate the lengths to which some will go for their preferred seating arrangements.
Women, aware of men’s preferences for attractive seatmates, often use this to their advantage during boarding. Men, hoping to sit next to an appealing passenger, sometimes find themselves next to someone entirely different when the original passenger switches seats.
These seating strategies can lead to awkward and uncomfortable situations. Young women have even reported men removing their wedding bands after seating themselves. This manipulation of seat choices, unique to Southwest Airlines' boarding system, underscores the complex social dynamics in play during air travel.
As more travelers become aware of these tactics, it will be interesting to see how Southwest Airlines and its passengers adapt. For now, "catfishing" remains an intriguing and occasionally unsettling aspect of flying with the airline.