As I write this I am sitting on a Jetstar flight; the only airline to travel  direct from our holiday destination to Melbourne. Suffice it to say, this is an  incredibly awful flight. Even more so than the absolutely zero dollars in  savings we got because we pretty much had no choice but to take it.
 
I'll start with the obvious, the lack of assigned seating. Now I can imagine  a world in which no assigned seating might make sense. If there is a commuter  flight with mostly lone travelers, they will get on the plane and sit in the  nearest available seat. It probably means that you can load people on to a plane  quicker.
 
But for a holiday destination with mostly families traveling, the whole thing  is a disaster. There is no appreciable saving in time because the large chunks  of families scramble to get seats close to their children. Now I had fantasised  about not doing this, going to the back of the queue and being separated from  our children for the whole flight; leaving them as some other sap's problem.  Sadly, the issue is that in musical chairs I would likely end up sitting next to  someone else's children and that was a lottery I was not willing to play.
 
Anyhow, we had a 'prized' orange pass which meant that we would be first to  board -- being with kids got us that. It was clearly better than the blue pass  or worse something called the silver pass (I do not know who you would have had  to offend to get stuck with one of those). But, if you had noticed my earlier  foreboding, the 'prized' orange pass was only prized in the sense that there  were a couple of people with the other passes. Actually, from a scarcity (but no  value) perspective, the other passes were rarer.
 
I was not really aware of this and we had positioned ourselves well to get on  the flight at the top of the queue. Unfortunately, 15 minutes before boarding,  due to one of our adult party being in the bathroom, I watched the 'tipping  point' occur. It occurred to someone that they could just stand in line right  then and they did. Within seconds, as if someone shouted 'fire' in a cinema (or  shotgun in this case), there was a rush to the queues. I thought the worst would  happen would be that we were at the back of the prized orange queue. In dismay I  saw that the orange queue had half the fracking plane! Nonetheless, we stood in  it.
 
15 minutes into standing in this queue, my 7 year old asked, "why are we just  standing here?" I told her that it was because of the "tragedy of the queue."  Everyone wanted to be in the front of the queue and so we all moved to get  there. "But we aren't in the front of the queue?" she said, pointing out the  obvious. Well we aren't quite at the back either, which we weren't. So we are  standing here so we won't be at the back. "And what is the problem with being at  the back?" Well, we won't get as much choice in seats and I argued that this was  something we wanted.
 
[Now we had become savvy enough to realise one thing, there was another  opportunity to jump the queue, as we walked across the tarmac to the plane. We  weren't going to do this but we were going to maintain our relative position  against the blue passers nipping at our heals and unencumbered by children. One  got through but we broadly succeeded.]
 
On the plane, the true inefficiency of this emerged. People who boarded at  the front were going back. People who boarded at the back were going forward.  They collided. It was chaos. We staked out our row and wanted to maintain a  spare seat. (There were 8 on the flight). Fortunately, the 2 year old put on a  wonderful screaming performance and repelled all challengers.
 
Next came the food issue. I  blogged on our experiences on the way here but that was on Qantas where we had  stopped off in Brisbane. (So yes we had a choice which was to take some  crazy stop-over route back to Melbourne. So there is only a Jetstar monopoly on  direct flights.)
 
On Jetstar you buy food and that is what we intended to do. Big mistake. We  were in the middle of the plane and by the time the food cart got to us, there  was, no food. Certainly, no healthy food like sandwiches and meat pies. We got  some potato chips. Now you might think it was some funny time flight that would  have led to this situation. But no, it was the prime time 12 - 3pm run.  Lunchtime. Hence, the high demand for food but that didn't explain the low  supply. I secured chips and a lolly bag.
 
Then I had an idea. I would try and procure a sandwich from the row ahead. I  said, "I'll give you $15 for your sandwich." The women I was negotiating with  pondered this and then said "how about $30?" I said, "$20?" She said, "no deal."  I said "Are you really going to eat a sandwich that is now worth $20 in cold  hard cash?"
 
Actually, none of that happened but pondering the potential for a black  market got me to open up my laptop and starting writing. I also wanted to  remember to bring more contra onto the next Jetstar flight I had the misfortune  to travel on. I think one could make a nice killing.
[Update: my sister-in-law adds her own miserable food experience to the plot. Click here.]