Carnival's John Heald puts an angry passenger in their place

After a brief period of people being polite to each other, Heald once again had ti return to a Facebook page filled with sometimes misguided anger.

Oct 12, 2024 - 00:30
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Carnival's John Heald puts an angry passenger in their place

At some point of a hurricane or any period of uncertainty and danger, nearly all people put aside their petty grievances and be troubled about the important things. They arrive together and show genuine concern for each other.

Within the cruise world, that implies people stop being concerned about whether someone within the principle dining room is wearing the precise outfit, and they legitimately pray that others make it through safely. Which is one within the total small glimmers of light during an otherwise terrible situation.

Related: Carnival Cruise Line enforces a little bit-known adult beverage rule

As cruisers have spent the past few days worried about whether their homes emerged intact after Hurricane Milton, our normal little complaints went away. And while many folk remain compassionate for victims of the storm, others quickly returned to being concerned about themselves.

"I guess that after a couple of days of general kindness for those in Florida that priorities have returned," Carnival Brand Ambassador John Heald said sooner than responding to an angry passenger.

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Carnival shows sporting events on its big pool screens, in its casinos, and in its sports bars.

Image source: Carnival Cruise Line.

Carnival makes its TV plans clear

Cruise ships pay for every television channel they get. For that reason they offer fairly limited selections.

By way of sports, Carnival, like its rivals, offers most but no longer each of the enormous games. Which is because TV rights for major sports are split among many channels. Something like a semi-important college football game or a prime golf tournament may prove airing on a channel to which the ship hasn't secured rights.

Big fans of sports and specific teams often are trying and find out whether their games will likely be airing on the ships they're traveling on. Since Carnival would no longer publish a catalogue of which ships have which games (it'll vary by ship), that may perhaps lead misinformation to spread.

Heald addressed one such passenger on Oct. eleven.

"Question John Heald. Why does Carnival no longer show the World Series. I was once told that it be miles because you must have your passengers to be drinking your liquor, playing within the casino, and that Carnival doesn't want you TV. It truly is just no longer right! I will likely be on the Venezia and I should watch my Mets," they wrote.

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Heald responded in an exceptionally Heald-like way.

"We're going to have the baseball shown on the ships. You are ready to computer screen the boys with the sticks hit the ball while his mates chew on lumps of stuff like human beavers. Anyway, revel within the game and I hope your Chicago Mets win," he wrote.

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