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Australians high on the Mile High Club: survey

CANBERRA
Sun Jan 20, 2008 9:47pm EST
File photo shows a passenger aircraft flying as the sun sets in New Delhi, January 8, 2008. Two in three Australian travelers are either members of the notorious Mile High Club or would like to be a member, a survey showed on Monday. REUTERS/B Mathur

CANBERRA (Reuters) - Two in three Australian travelers are either members of the notorious Mile High Club or would like to be a member, a survey showed on Monday.

Lifestyle

Asked if they would consider a mid-air sexual encounter, almost half of 1,110 people surveyed wanted an adventure, while 12 percent already had mile-high membership wings.

"People are obviously looking for more stimulating entertainment than a movie or a CD when traveling by plane," Totaltravel.com global marketing manager Paul Fisher said.

A flight attendant for Australia's flag carrier Qantas was sacked last year after claiming to have had a tryst with actor Ralph Fiennes in a business class lavatory during a flight from Darwin to Mumbai.

Singapore Airlines last November asked passengers on its new super jumbo Airbus A380 aircraft, which had its maiden commercial flight from Singapore to Sydney, not to seek Mile High Club membership in first class cabins, which boast a double bed.

Fisher, whose company carried out the survey, said joining the Mile High Club was easier these days in a super jumbo, but urged travelers to be mindful of others within close cabin earshot if gripped by "Mile High madness".

(Reporting by Rob Taylor; Editing by Bill Tarrant)



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