Hatterlovesbrighton
something clever
Not a freebie it is paid for
Wonder what percentage of people actually pay for their first class ticket? I'd think that quite a few of them would be perks from companies.
Not a freebie it is paid for
People who don't have to commute because they live near the office. (start my new job in Brighton in 2 weeks after 8 years of commuting) :dance:
There are actually two very good reasons why people do this:
(a) They have a laptop in the rack above and want to make sure it's not getting stolen
(b) They want some legroom so can swing their legs into the aisle.
2. Families travelling home from a day out in London and letting their young precious kids have a seat to themselves - put them on your lap!
This is annoying, but I'd probably rather stand than sit next to someone with a kid on their lap!
Hate all the obvious things like pricks on their mobiles. However, what's annoying me most recently is the ticket gate line at Victoria. Firstly, the twattish people on the gates who decide to not allow any railcard tickets through, meaning a MASSIVE bottleneck at the single manned gate where they even ask to see railcards. Sorry, but if you want to do this you need to employ more staff to check them. OR, just rely on the fact that anyone buying railcard tickets without a railcard is likely to get caught by a ticket inspector on the train and doesn't need to get their cards out AGAIN to get out of the station. Also, people who automatically get in a massive crowd for the manned gate, blocking all the perfect functioning automatic ones. The worst, however, is people who still try and put their ticket in even when the gates are all open. What is wrong with you? Just walk through!
Also, this a slight tangent, but how f***ing annoying is Haywards Heath station now - they can afford to have someone titting around on the ticket gates, whilst there are queues out the door for the ticket office and ticket machines because of staff shortages. Surely the priority should be allowing people to actually buy tickets? Greedy bastards. Plus, 2 gates each way is not enough during busy periods, it's pure greed in place of sense. Trying to get through with matchday tickets usually causes a problem as well, as each idiot on the gates comes up with a different way of delaying everyone. Had a big run in with a prick of a guy once who took the hump because we were trying to get on a train and he was talking to a customer so I shouted "mate, can you open the gates for us?".
Finally - after the last evening game, at Brighton statiion our train arrives in a position where everyone had to get through the gates, which were closed. Cue a MASSIVE bottleneck at the one open gate. A policeman told a complaining bloke to tell the rail guy to open the gates. The bloke points out the problem politely - "no one can get through the gates", the rail guy's response was, I quote, "well they should have got here earlier then shouldn't they". A better example of the kind of twats that seem to work for the railways I've yet to see!
Rubbish! I got on the 17.23 at london bridge nice and early on tuesday , got a seat comfortably and then just as the train was pulling out made the schoolboy error of looking up from reading the standard to notice a heavily pregnant woman stood near my seat, I offered her mine , she gladly accepted and I was stood all the way to bloody three bridgesPeople with backpacks on who don't realise that when they turn round, they're going to hit people with it.
People who have those pull-along suitcases and nearly trip up all the people they cut across.
People who never give up their seats for pregnant women (only other women seem to notice and do this)
8. People listening to music with Apple standard issue earphones, allowing everyone else in the carriage hear your music.
People who don't have to commute because they live near the office. (start my new job in Brighton in 2 weeks after 8 years of commuting) :dance: