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Ryga wrote:I’ve known a few UK airlines to do this, so this is nothing new...
I mean traditionally “Afternoon Tea” is a “mini meal” in between lunch and dinner. Some people even refer to dinner as tea... So doesn’t necessarily have to include tea...
But we are in a world now, where the slightest inconvenience has to be blown out of proportion.
lowfareair wrote:It's a bit pedantic, but they do have a point: While it's a mid-afternoon snack, it generally does come with tea. I'd be surprised to order it and then find out it doesnt.
flilot wrote:Theres a national/regional language barrier here that some people aren't appreciating.
"Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition".
questions wrote:lowfareair wrote:It's a bit pedantic, but they do have a point: While it's a mid-afternoon snack, it generally does come with tea. I'd be surprised to order it and then find out it doesnt.
Of course you’d be surprised.
It’s poor marketing and false advertising.
Especially since it’s called Afternoon Tea!!
VSMUT wrote:They charge £2,5 for a cup of tea?!?
tonystan wrote:You can tell who’s not British in this thread.
Afternoon Tea is the name of a meal. It doesn’t necessarily mean it comes with a tea beverage. Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
This is a bit like complaining that Disney World is not actually a world and being upset that it’s just a patch of swampland in Florida!
tonystan wrote:You can tell who’s not British in this thread.
Afternoon Tea is the name of a meal. It doesn’t necessarily mean it comes with a tea beverage. Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
This is a bit like complaining that Disney World is not actually a world and being upset that it’s just a patch of swampland in Florida!
DDR wrote:You can tell who's not informed in this thread.
Orlando is not a patch of swampland in Florida.
BAWLGW wrote:If I go into any coffee shop and buy a scone, a cake, and a sandwich, should then I automatically expect a free tea? No! Get a grip!
rta wrote:Absolutely.This is a semantics problem
tonystan wrote:You can tell who’s not British in this thread.
Afternoon Tea is the name of a meal. It doesn’t necessarily mean it comes with a tea beverage. Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
This is a bit like complaining that Disney World is not actually a world and being upset that it’s just a patch of swampland in Florida!
scbriml wrote:#FirstWorldProblems
How will we survive?
SheikhDjibouti wrote:rta wrote:Absolutely.This is a semantics problem
One might even say it is all just a storm in a tea cup....
tonystan wrote:Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
tonystan wrote:You can tell who’s not British in this thread.
Afternoon Tea is the name of a meal. It doesn’t necessarily mean it comes with a tea beverage. Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
This is a bit like complaining that Disney World is not actually a world and being upset that it’s just a patch of swampland in Florida!
BAWLGW wrote:If I go into any coffee shop and buy a scone, a cake, and a sandwich, should then I automatically expect a free tea? No! Get a grip!
nycilley02 wrote:The biggest surprise to me here is that the tea isn't free, regardless of whether you have purchased a scone or not. Does BA really charge for coffee and tea on short haul flights? What exactly do they think their value proposition v. low cost carriers is?
One of the world's great enduring mysteries to me is the snobbery everyone abroad has about domestic US flights. No US major carrier charges for coffee, tea or any other soft drink on any domestic flight. Not even the major LCCs like Southwest and JetBlue. Just saying...
BAWLGW wrote:If I go into any coffee shop and buy a scone, a cake, and a sandwich, should then I automatically expect a free tea? No! Get a grip!
tonystan wrote:You can tell who’s not British in this thread.
Afternoon Tea is the name of a meal. It doesn’t necessarily mean it comes with a tea beverage. Infact Champagne is actually the most popular drink with afternoon tea amongst the younger generation these days.
This is a bit like complaining that Disney World is not actually a world and being upset that it’s just a patch of swampland in Florida!
shamrock350 wrote:I'm surprised so many in this thread are shocked that British Airways charge for food and drinks on short haul, I'm guessing most are non Europeans as not only was the move well publicised (and criticised) at the time but it's pretty much the standard within Europe these days, free snacks are becoming the exception rather than the rule.
BAWLGW wrote:If I go into any coffee shop and buy a scone, a cake, and a sandwich, should then I automatically expect a free tea? No! Get a grip!
BAWLGW wrote:If I go into any coffee shop and buy a scone, a cake, and a sandwich, should then I automatically expect a free tea? No! Get a grip!
shamrock350 wrote:Some parts of the UK refer to dinner or a small meal as "tea" but that's a bit of a stretch in this case as it's just a scone so it's neither, tea or a meal.
StudiodeKadent wrote:"Scones with Jam and Clotted Cream" are often referred to as a Devonshire Tea, but I do think that BA is using words somewhat imprecisely here.
Anyway, I think BA should serve complimentary tea on short haul flights, simply as a matter of "this is British Airways so we've got to have something recognizably British about it." So tea.
YULACYYZ wrote:flilot wrote:Theres a national/regional language barrier here that some people aren't appreciating.
"Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition".
Been to England many times and heard over and over "time for me tea" but they don't drink tea! Of course it's from Yorkshire and there are regional differences.
However, first thing that comes to mind for most people seeing this ad, is that the tea would be included.