Mom And Daughter Bbc

Mom And Daughter Bbc




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Enjoying the luxury of business class seats on an 11-hour flight back to Auckland was meant to be a treat for Renell and Tere after undergoing weight-loss surgery in the city of Bangkok.
Instead, the sisters and their mother, Huhana, were left ''traumatised'' by Thai Airways staff who came at them with tape measures telling them they were ''too big'' for their business class seats.
Six months on from that ''disgusting'' experience and Huhana, 59, is still bitter about the experience.
''The staff were shouting 'too big, too big' at us repeatedly. Rows of people watched as they measured us at the check-in. It was so humiliating the way we were treated that I just broke down in tears,'' said Huhana.
The language barrier didn't help as staff refused to let them enter the business class section and made them sit in economy class.
"We were really looking forward to flying on business class and instead we were left traumatised,'' she added.
Most airlines can provide seatbelt extensions for larger passengers.
But Thai Airways said its business class seatbelts are fitted with built-in air bags which means they can't be extended. The family are still confused by this explanation.
Since their traumatic experience last summer, Huhana and her daughters have been trying to get a refund from Thai Airways. But the airline has only offered to recompense the family based on the difference between business and economy fares.
She approached the travel agent she booked the flights with, Flight Centre, who said it would provide a full refund, although the family had to wait more than six months for it.
When contacted by the BBC, a spokesman for Thai Airways said it now has better warnings in place on its reservations system so agents are made aware of such issues.
The family were on a tour organised by Destination Beauty, which specialises in sending clients to Thailand for weight-loss and plastic surgery.
Martin Olsen, chief executive of Destination Beauty, said he was ''very saddened and surprised'' at the way the airline handled the situation.
He was also confused by the actions of Thai Airways staff as ''many obese people book business class as they are unable to fit comfortably into economy class''.
When it comes to oversized passengers, it's up to the discretion of each airline how to manage the situation, a spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said.
Airlines do calculate the take-off weight for a plane, but this takes into account the estimated weight of passengers, their luggage and fuel. ''In most cases the average passenger is well under the weight limit as the allowance tends to be fairly generous,'' he said.
Most airlines recommend that if you think you will be too big for your seat, you should buy a second seat at the time you make your booking. But few airlines have specific guidelines when it comes the definition of ''oversized''.
However, American Airlines does state '''if a customer's body extends more than one inch beyond the outermost edge of the armrest and a seatbelt extension is needed, another seat is required''.
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In Orangeburg, South Carolina, white kids don’t go to school with black kids.
More than half a century has passed since American schools were officially integrated, but in Orangeburg there are two schools: Orangeburg Prep (OP), which is 95% white, and Orangeburg-Wilkinson (OW), which is 98% African-American.
Among the 2% at OW is Mykenzie Free. She moved last year from OP.
BBC Three followed her move to OW in new documentary, American High School.
For both Mykenzie and her mother, Linda, their unusual decision was about trying to make a difference.
Among the town of 90,000 inhabitants, Linda is a prominent figure. “I’m always doing these speeches about how Orangeburg should be more united,” she says.
Mykenzie started telling her mother they should practice what they were preaching, and became really serious about moving schools about a year before it actually happened.
“It was only when Mykenzie kept badgering me that it dawned on me - maybe I should be part of the solution, rather than the problem.”
The problem is the area’s ongoing racial divide, which goes way beyond the school halls.
One of the students describes the divide: “The town is split in half. On one side, that’s the hood. But if you live on the other side, they come pick your trash up and everything."
Linda says, “We were raised in a society that had a lot of racism. Even if that was another generation, I feel like that’s still deeply embedded in us.
“It’s 2016 and we still feel that way deep down inside, whether we want to admit it or not.”
Linda backed her daughter’s desire to move schools completely, hoping their example would challenge the town’s status quo.
“I know there are parents in this city that need government assistance just to pay their bills," she tells me. “All just so they can send their kids to a private, segregated school. That’s so sad.”
But, she says,“When I enrolled Mykenzie in OW, I had friends come up to me and ask, ‘what in the world are you doing - have you lost your mind?’”
Even Mykenzie’s stepfather had his misgivings (her real father had never been in her life).
"My husband wasn’t too keen on the idea at first. But he came around.”
Linda admits, “I did have concerns, too. I really had to face myself, realising I was worried she might be treated differently as a minority, or that she just wouldn’t fit in and be part of the culture.”
Mykenzie settled into OW and made friends easily. But being one of the few white faces in the school meant she stuck out.
In American High School we see her being stared at in the canteen. “It makes me feel like there’s something wrong with me,” she says.
At one point, she angrily tells the camera, “It isn’t someone’s skin colour that makes them who they are. It’s about how they act and how they carry themselves and their morals and values.”
It’s an intriguing moment. Is she objecting to the prejudice faced by African-Americans? Or is she angry at being treated differently herself, as part of a white minority? It’s hard to say.
When Mykenzie turns 16 she throws a party, inviting her friends from OW as well as her (white) family members. It makes for excruciating viewing.
“That was a nightmare from start to finish,” says Linda. “I love my family dearly but they are – what you would say here – rednecks. Redneck country boys.”
A phone goes missing and Mykenzie’s aunt accuses the OW kids of stealing it.
Then Mykenzie’s uncle Jodie busts them smoking marijuana and pulls a gun on them.
“Jodie and I spoke about this afterwards. He should have allowed me to handle that. It’s my home.”
Linda describes Mykenzie as "mature beyond her years and not afraid to stand up for her beliefs".
“I wish more people could be like her. She doesn’t beat to the normal rhythm of society. She beats to her own little drum. And her little drum sees the good in every situation. I don’t think a lot of us do that any more”.
Linda blames her own generation for perpetuating racial divisions in their community.
"Kids will always find a way to get on,” she explains.
“Before we started this, I thought it was going to be the kids that were going to be cruel to each other. But you realise it’s not – it’s the parents.”
As one of the OP girls puts it in American High School, “I don’t think my parents would like it if I had a black boyfriend, because they were born in a different time. But I don’t think it should be that way”.
Enrolling Mykenzie for a second year at OW, Linda hoped to see other students from OP that had followed their example. But there were none.
“As I say to Mykenzie, we can lay our head down on our pillows at night with a good conscience, knowing we did the right thing. And that means everything”.
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