Review: Virgin America
Virgin America prices its flights to compete with bargain airlines, but in my opinion, you don't get what you should. If you want to get even, you have to pay.
Flight Services
Flight from New York to Los Angeles: $149
Charge for choosing first row of coach or exit row: $25
Non-alcoholic drinks are the only things that come complimentary on the flight. They don't even serve peanuts for free. You have to pay $2 for snacks and $6-$8 for a cold meal. You order at any time through the touchscreen entertainment system in front of you. The flight attendants don't bug you for anything except to buckle up during turbulence, which is a good thing.
Movies are $8, which is more than average. I'm surprised they didn't charge me for my pillow and blanket.
The seats were comfortable, with an adjustable head rest. I took the first row charge so that I could stretch out completely. The blue lighting didn't do much for me, but I guess it was calming. I was appreciative of the power outlets at each seat (2 for every 3 seats) and plan on making use of them on the return flight.
Entertainment System
The Virgin America personal entertainment system is run on Linux, and it definitely has that cheap open source feel to it. You control it through the tandem of a remote that you remove from your arm rest and through just touching the screen. There are plenty of bugs that remind you that its still in Beta, and plenty of features that haven't even been instituted. From the home menu, you are given the options for Watching, Listening, Playing, Chatting, Shopping, and Eating.
The Dish Network TV services are horrible. They are nowhere on par with the quality or selection given by JetBlue. I only found a handful of channels that could maintain a solid signal. I didn't spend too much time on this.
The movies that are offered are both studio and student films. The studio ones, mostly new releases, cost $8 to watch and the short student films are free. There are also premium TV episodes "on demand" that cost $2 per viewing. They really want every last penny.
I didn't check out their radio stations, but Virgin America's MP3 selection is rather accommodating for the popular music lover. They have a large range of genres and artists, featuring a smattering of their greatest hits. The sound quality could not match my MP3 player though, and the bad words are censored. Audiophiles like me need not approach. At least listening was free.
Virgin's games were a huge disappointment. This is where the Linux thing is really evident. The games that were offered looked like some 14 year old's programming class midterm project. The only remarkable ones were DOOM and Mahjong. Unfortunately, the controls were nowhere near easy for DOOM (By the 3rd level, I was getting frustrated. I commend anyone who has beaten this game using these controls.) and Mahjong only had one level.
The plane has several central chat rooms that you can join and talk with other passengers. I was only able to strike up a conversation with one other person (my wife not included) on this empty flight, but the typing on the too-small and too-resistant buttons on the controller grew tedious within a couple lines. I made a bad joke about not being able to surf porn and left.
As stated before, if you want any food from the flight attendants, you have to order things from the Virgin America system. It works like an online store; you fill up your shopping cart and then check-out. The only sustenance that you get for free are regular drinks. Everything else will make you whip out your credit card. They don't take cash. I starved myself until my wife finally forced me to order a meal because she didn't want my dead body slowing her down when we landed.
I still have the return flight to reconsider my feelings about this, but I feel like JetBlue is a better value at this point.
Here are some things that Virgin America can do better:
1. Serve some complimentary food, damn it. Even JetBlue has a few snacks they pass out that generally hold you over on a CROSS-COUNTRY FLIGHT.
2. Fix up that TV service. Right now its a total drag.
3. Its not a stretch to assume that you can find better open source games. Do it. Start with solitaire. Add a poker game. Anything.
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