Search 
     
 
 Most Popular Searches:  Subscription | Immigration | Great Depression | Florida Sites | Elvis Presley  
 
American Heritage Blog << Blog Home
 
 
 

March 24, 2007
Stewardesses IV

Posted by John Steele Gordon at 10:15 AM  EST

Fredric Smoler writes, “But I do not think that regulation can account for the stewardesses being touted in the way they were. There were a lot of regulated industries before Alfred Kahn came along—telecommunications, for example, and trucking, but no eroticization of the labor force in those cases.”

I don’t think regulation made the eroticization of stewardesses inevitable, simply possible. Without regulation, the airlines would have competed on price and convenience. With those off the table, they looked about for something else to compete on, and, as I wrote, there wasn’t much available except eye-candy stewardesses. Once it started (perhaps in the fertile brain of a Madison Avenue ad man), of course it took on a life of its own, as these things tend to do in both economic and biological ecosystems, and went about as far as it could go in those more restricted days.

As for other regulated industries, telecommunications was a regulated monopoly, not a regulated cartel, so there was no competition at all. Further, the personnel in telecommunications are, the opposite of well-behaved children, largely heard but not seen. (The plot of a 1950s Broadway musical, Bells Are Ringing, turns on this very fact.) The exception is the telephone repairman, a job category that would have been hard—not to mention socially dicey—to eroticize. Nothing much can happen on an airplane, after all, but milkman stories have been around forever.

Trucking, in turn, is almost exclusively a wholesale business, with businesses, not individuals, as customers. So sex appeal would not have been a very effective draw. Plus there is the problem of turning truck drivers into the kindling of sexual fantasy for the largely male hirers of trucking companies.

Mr. Smoler writes, “Now that airlines can and do compete on the basis of price, there is no reason for them to have stopped competing on other fronts.” Indeed, but with the rise of modern feminism at about the same time as the rise of deregulation, the disappearance of stewardesses touted for their sex appeal rather than their competence was surely inevitable.

Discuss this post
 


Browse by Week
 

March 25–31, 2007

March 17–24, 2007

March 9–16, 2007

March 1–8, 2007

 
 
 
Browse by Month
 

March 2010

December 2009

May 2009

April 2009

March 2009

September 2008

August 2008

February 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

 
 
Contributors
 
 

Frederick E. Allen

Allen Barra

Alexander Burns

Ellen Feldman

Julie M. Fenster

John Steele Gordon

Claire Lui

Audrey Peterson

Frederic D. Schwarz

Fredric Smoler

Richard F. Snow

Catherine Sumner

Joshua Zeitz


Contact Us >>

 
 
 
 

Contact Us  |  Subscriber Services  |  Terms and Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map  |  Newsroom  |  HeritageSites.com  
 

American History from AmericanHeritage.com. Copyright 2008 American Heritage Publishing. All rights reserved.