Five-and-a-half hours. Customs queues. Re-booking queues. Waiting, stripping, pocket-emptying; I was seconds from becoming a deranged passenger on an airline reality show, running maniacally about the terminal and screaming indiscriminately before collapsing in a maddened, drooling, broken heap.
Fortunately, I was rescued from the brink of impending lunacy by an experience perhaps more American than excruciating air travel itself: a hearty session of rampant, unabated consuming. Therapy came in the form of American Airlines' in-flight shopping magazine, and I was delighted to discover a day's travel tension could be undone with a few simple swipes of my credit card.
I began up top. My airport experience had undoubtedly cost me some hair, and I was pleased to discover the Sky-Mall magazine offered a variety of solutions. I overlooked hair replacement pills ($50), turned down Go-Away-Gray shampoo ($20) and instead called the flight attendant for a brand new I-Grow hair rejuvenation helmet ($695).
I tore it from its box and immediately began restoring my follicle base. The helmet's laser lights and ultra-modern detailing looked like something created by Nasa, and as we jetted down the runway I drifted into somewhat of a cosmic mood.
Page 17 had just the fix. A brand new R2-D2 Star Wars robot was modestly priced for such robust sweatshop engineering ($200). He's voice-activated and dances on command. Row 28 had never seen such joy.