UPS lost my wife's wedding ring. After it was accidentally dropped, she took it back to the jewelry store where I bought it for inspection. They determined that it needed to go to a specialist facility for repairs, and shipped it there via UPS. About a week later, we were told that it had never arrived. About a month after that it was declared lost, and the store was able to provide an identical replacement. My reaction to that news was similar to reading about these films: surely no-one in their right mind would ship such a valuable object using a method that has a significantly less than 99.9% reliability rate? But they did.
Until around a year ago, the reputational word on the street in these parts was that FedEx was significantly more reliable, both in terms of time taken, and not losing things. But then FedEx started to deteriorate, too. One ongoing issue I have with them involves a 12-plex in downtown LA that is buried in the middle of huge shopping/restaurant mall. Access to the theater requires climbing three stories, using a combination of stairs and escalators. Almost every time we've needed to have a warranty replacement part from Barco/Cinionic shipped there, we provide copious instructions, and the head tech puts a notice in the window of the main entrance saying "FedEx - please call XXX XXX-XXXX on arrival." But they always, without fail, report a failed delivery attempt, with the result that the site staff have to go to a FedEx office, collect the package, and then haul a 50lb light engine up several flights of stairs when they get back.
Very belated edit: this reminds me of an extremely tasteless joke that did the rounds a couple of years ago. Why do FedEx and UPS workers have so many abortions? Because they never want to deliver.
Until around a year ago, the reputational word on the street in these parts was that FedEx was significantly more reliable, both in terms of time taken, and not losing things. But then FedEx started to deteriorate, too. One ongoing issue I have with them involves a 12-plex in downtown LA that is buried in the middle of huge shopping/restaurant mall. Access to the theater requires climbing three stories, using a combination of stairs and escalators. Almost every time we've needed to have a warranty replacement part from Barco/Cinionic shipped there, we provide copious instructions, and the head tech puts a notice in the window of the main entrance saying "FedEx - please call XXX XXX-XXXX on arrival." But they always, without fail, report a failed delivery attempt, with the result that the site staff have to go to a FedEx office, collect the package, and then haul a 50lb light engine up several flights of stairs when they get back.
Very belated edit: this reminds me of an extremely tasteless joke that did the rounds a couple of years ago. Why do FedEx and UPS workers have so many abortions? Because they never want to deliver.
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