Just odd??😆😆

If there are just three, why not pick an row where they could sit completely together. Just odd. Like that time that man sat right beside me in the doctor office when there was dozens of empty chairs with no one else near. I too moved. 👍

Is there extra legroom there? The only extra legroom is in that one seat that my daughter had picked. There's tons of extra legroom in the seat in front of that person.

I would have picked the seat directly in front. Makes no sense unless it was a computer doing it.
As mentioned... Row 41 IS an exit row, so there is automatically more legroom than Rows 42+. Also, Row 40 will have limited recline, so you don't have to worry about that. I *LOVE* exit rows.

Row 40, from what my quick research tells me, is a "bulkhead", meaning there's a wall in front of the seats. Yes, you still get the extra legroom from being in an exit row, but more than likely the TV is in the armrest of the seat, meaning you won't be able to use it for ~the first 30 minutes of the flight and the last 30 minutes of the flight (in addition to waiting for the aircraft to board).

So, if the "group" the person in 41C wants:
* two aisle seats
* no bulkhead
* exit row

That leaves 41C-D or F-G. We don't know if the person in 41F is part of that group or if it was already taken.

Whoever selected 41C has no idea who's in 41B, male, female, young, old, etc. I think you're reading too much into it.

Your doctor's office example is different because the person who chose to sit next to you could tell a lot just by looking at you.
 
As mentioned... Row 41 IS an exit row, so there is automatically more legroom than Rows 42+. Also, Row 40 will have limited recline, so you don't have to worry about that. I *LOVE* exit rows.

Row 40, from what my quick research tells me, is a "bulkhead", meaning there's a wall in front of the seats. Yes, you still get the extra legroom from being in an exit row, but more than likely the TV is in the armrest of the seat, meaning you won't be able to use it for ~the first 30 minutes of the flight and the last 30 minutes of the flight (in addition to waiting for the aircraft to board).

So, if the "group" the person in 41C wants:
* two aisle seats
* no bulkhead
* exit row

That leaves 41C-D or F-G. We don't know if the person in 41F is part of that group or if it was already taken.

Whoever selected 41C has no idea who's in 41B, male, female, young, old, etc. I think you're reading too much into it.

Your doctor's office example is different because the person who chose to sit next to you could tell a lot just by looking at you.
Not sure what he could have telled about me in the dr office?
 
Not sure what he could have telled about me in the dr office?
Your sex.
Your attractiveness.
Your age (close enough).
Your wealth (by what you're wearing).
Your boredom level (do you have a book? looking at your phone? staring into space?)
Your "approachability".

None of that is available on an aircraft seating chart.
 
Your sex.
Your attractiveness.
Your age (close enough).
Your wealth (by what you're wearing).
Your boredom level (do you have a book? looking at your phone? staring into space?)
Your "approachability".

None of that is available on an aircraft seating chart.
Ohhhh I get it now. 😆😆
 






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