Where do you like to sit on a commercial flight?

When I was younger and someone was sleeping in the aisle seat next to me and I had to get out, I would sometimes get up on my seat and use the armrests on either side of the sleeper to literally climb over him and then jump down into the aisle. Doubt if I’d do it now, though.

I’m weird. I like to wait for others to get the hell out of the plane, let the rush subside, before I leave. I sit in the back, at a window, if possible.

Joe

Window seat near the rear of the plane. It sounds stupid but I like to watch the wing control surfaces in action.

Aisle of course, but I also chose the “knucklehead” answer of towards the front of the plane. I’d take an aisle in the back before a centre seat in the front, though.

That wasn’t a knucklehead answer ya knucklehead. The knucklehead answer was choosing the option that was just there to divide the two parts of the poll.

Wait, you actually pick your seat based on how easy it would be for you to fight off mid-air hijackers? That’s like choosing what car to drive based on … how easy it would be to fight off mid-air hijackers (as you seem to acknowledge).
Oh, and window/no preference. I do have long legs, but I like the “snug” feeling the window seat provides (and the view is nice, too, of course). I don’t like the bulkhead.

I don’t care, as long as whoever sitting next to me doesn’t ooze into my space. I’m very short, so leg room is never an issue. I just don’t want to be touched.

StG

Ditto. I also have to have that little air nozzle blowing on me at all times.

Front for me for the same reason as you; the quicker I can get off the plane, the better. Window for me, again because of the same reason you stated. Also, I tend to fall asleep and a pillow against the window is just the ticket.

Those people that would ask you got a seat by the window of their own, they don’t want to be stuck next to some map-dude, they want to see for themselves!

Aisle, always – I hate rubbing shoulders with strangers. I’ll take a window seat only if I can’t get an aisle seat. Taking a middle seat only happens if I can’t take another flight.

Front of the plane, when I can get an aisle seat there.

Aisle seat, always. Don’t care which portion of the plane.

It’s okay–doesn’t bother me in the least. I don’t sleep terribly well on flights, either, but I do nod off for periods at a time. At the very least, I enter that zen-like half-awake state with my eyes closed, head leaned against the window, listening to my iPod, where time sort of disappears. I find that much more difficult to do without the ability to lean against something. My neck gets sore in a sitting position.

Before the baby I preferred the exit row window. Now that I fly with her I prefer first class or economy plus middle and window near the front as long as there is underseat storage ( so no bulkheads). Also facing forward I pick the left side of the plane.

I’m not too fussed where in the row I sit but I very much prefer escape route seats for the extra legroom, and seats over the wings for a more comfortable ride.

I voted 'Other."

I prefer to be seated next to very attractive younger ladies who are polite enough to engage in meaningless conversation with an old man.

I’d love to sit nearer the window, but being a larger person, I’m very conscious of encroaching on other people’s space, so sitting in the aisle allows me to ensure I’m not causing my neighbour any discomfort.

I’m not too bothered about where on the plane I sit, because I always have luggage and there’s really no benefit to getting to the baggage collection before the bags start coming out.

Aisle or window in the middle of the plane. I’m the one meditating doing slowed controlled breathing and gripping the arm rests, while dressed in a manner that would allow me to flee a burning airplane if the need arises. Sitting next to map guy would be interesting, I can never tell where I am from up there…

Window seat, over the wingbox, which normally is the middle of the plane.

If things go badly and the plane goes down, the wingbox area is the strongest section of the fuselage and there will be one or two exits no more than about ten feet away. Yes, I’m one of those people who take note of how many rows are between me and an exit, fore and aft.

In much less alarming terms, the wingbox is also a center of rotation, so there’s less perceived motion. (Picture yourself sitting on the center pivot of a teeter-totter, and compare that to sitting at the end of the teeter-totter.)

Aisle seat.

Back of the plane. (There are always bathrooms there.)

I may not need it, but if I do, I’ll need it now.