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Posted: Tue, 27 Jun 2017 09:56:29 GMT

Flight attendant reveals which flyers crew hate the most.

WHEN it comes to mile high madness, some passengers are definitely worse than others.

But flight attendant Brad Bernoulli has revealed in a column for the Independent which flyers that cabin crew like the least.

From smuggled alcohol to inappropriate prayers, there’s plenty of behaviour that could get you get you on their bad side.

Here are the four worst types of flyers.

Selfish dads

According to Mr Bernoulli, it’s not uncommon to see a man who flies a lot for work using his air miles for a seat in First or Business Class, while the wife and kids are left in Economy.

And while Mr Bernoulli said crew think that’s pretty selfish at the best of times, one such frequent flyer once even tried to hit on Mr Bernoulli after sending a glass of champagne back to his wife in Economy.

Selfish dads living it up in first class while their families are stuck in economy are the worst.

Selfish dads living it up in first class while their families are stuck in economy are the worst.Source:istock

Rowdy men

Passengers aren’t the only ones on a plane to dislike boozed-up lads, they often manage to annoy the cabin crew too.

“I’m used to watching muscular meat-heads and their arm candy board and immediately try to drink their own booze on-board, or worse, try to play beer pong across several rows of seats,” Mr Bernoulli said.

Groups of schoolchildren

Cabin crew struggle with these passengers mainly because they remind them of their own awkward youth.

“The crew suffers from mortifying second-hand embarrassment as we watch the popular kids to try avoid sitting with the less popular, and remember our own school days,” Mr Bernoulli wrote for the Independent.

Flight attendants struggle with groups of schoolchildren on planes.

Flight attendants struggle with groups of schoolchildren on planes.Source:istock

Church groups

Groups of passengers from a church group who travel together might sound harmless enough, but apparently they can really get in the way at prayer time.

“[They] always seem to try to clasp hands and form a prayer circle in the cabin at the worst possible time, or have their leader tell his flock that the way flying works is that God lifts the plane into the sky and sets it carefully back down,” Mr Bernoulli said.

This article originally appeared in The Sun and was republished here with permission.

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