KrishnaM
1st July 2009, 04:45 PM
They are back this time its safety
http://www.news.com.au/travel/story/0,28318,25717430-5014090,00.html
AIR New Zealand has figured out a way to make passengers pay attention to safety instruction - have them read out by flight attendants wearing only body paint.
In the video the body-painted crew cheerfully give the safety instructions, including where to stow baggage and how to use oxygen masks.
The airline launched the new inflight safety videos on Monday on their Boeing 737 domestic flights, and may expand them to other routes.
The release of the safety video comes on the back of the airline’s “Nothing to Hide” advertising campaign, which also showed cabin crew carrying out their duties wearing nothing more than body paint.
The crew's "naughty parts" are blocked due to strategic camera angles in the three-and-a-half-minute safety video and 45-second commercial.
Last year the airline paid people to shave their heads and wear temporary tattoos saying “need a change? Head down to New Zealand”.
The “Nothing to Hide” commercial has been viewed around two million times on YouTube and is the most-viewed clip to come out of New Zealand, Air New Zealand’s Marketing Manager told the New York Times.
http://www.news.com.au/travel/story/0,28318,25717430-5014090,00.html
AIR New Zealand has figured out a way to make passengers pay attention to safety instruction - have them read out by flight attendants wearing only body paint.
In the video the body-painted crew cheerfully give the safety instructions, including where to stow baggage and how to use oxygen masks.
The airline launched the new inflight safety videos on Monday on their Boeing 737 domestic flights, and may expand them to other routes.
The release of the safety video comes on the back of the airline’s “Nothing to Hide” advertising campaign, which also showed cabin crew carrying out their duties wearing nothing more than body paint.
The crew's "naughty parts" are blocked due to strategic camera angles in the three-and-a-half-minute safety video and 45-second commercial.
Last year the airline paid people to shave their heads and wear temporary tattoos saying “need a change? Head down to New Zealand”.
The “Nothing to Hide” commercial has been viewed around two million times on YouTube and is the most-viewed clip to come out of New Zealand, Air New Zealand’s Marketing Manager told the New York Times.