Weâve all, at one point or another in our time on the internet, seen a post or comment so mean, shitty, or just bad that we canât help but start clacking the keys and writing up a response. It turns out, even Nintendo of Americaâs presidentâDoug Bowserâcanât always resist the siren song of hopping into the comments when he sees something he strongly disagrees with.
As recently spotted and documented by PKLeor on the LinkedInLunatics subreddit, about a week ago Chad Rogersâa partner at public affairs agency Crestview Strategyâposted a small rant (and AI image) on LinkedIn about people using the seat in front of them to help them enter or exit a plane. He wanted to make it clear that people should never, ever, ever do that!
âAs you make your way to your seat, rise from your seat, navigate the centre aisle, etc. a reminder you DO NOT HAVE THE right to touch other peopleâs seat backs,â Rogers posted.
âThe seat [sic] on front of you is not there for you to stabilise or raise yourself (that is what an armrest is for). The seat you are in is yours, no other seat or seat back should be touched by you at any time. Thank you for respecting the miracle of flight.â
Normally, Iâd not waste your time with the random rants that flood LinkedIn, but one of the people who responded to this weirdly aggressive take was none other than Nintendo of Americaâs president, Doug Bowser. And folks, he wasnât having any of Rogersâ angry nonsense.
âRather arrogant and entitled comment,â posted Bowser. âSome people may be challenged moving to thier [sic] seat (physical limitations, narrowness of seating areas, etc.). That said if a passenger should need to support themselves getting in/out of a seat they should be as gentle they physically can.â
Bowser then pulled out the classic poster tool of a nice little passive-aggressive âPSâ at the end of his comment.
âPS. Where on your ticket purchase documentation are your ârightsâ to the seat back or other ârulesâ you speak of declared?â
At this point, if I was a wealthy executive, Iâd probably realize the error of my ways and stop posting shit online. Iâd go count all my money again or pay bills on time. Instead, Chad Rogers replied to Bowserâs comment.
âEntitled would be indicating you own everything not elucidated on a ticket on contract,â said Rogers. âManners are clea, [sic] happy to help you out on them with the post. Seats are allocated by passenger, in fact printed on all boarding passes.â
Bowser responded for the last time in the thread with:
Manners are different from rights. I do see the arrogance is still prevalent however. Have yourself a good day.
Thatâs about as close to âFuck you and fuck offâ as an active executive at Nintendo will ever post online. In response, Chad deleted Bowserâs comments and other replies that he didnât like. However, by checking Bowserâs profile on LinkedIn, you can still find evidence of the comment war.

A few days after Bowserâs reply, another user responded with âWell said Doug Bowser.â It got nine likes. Rogers replied simply âWho?â which got zero likes and is basically the biggest loser move you can pull in an online comment battle, especially when you previously replied to that person multiple times and then deleted his comments.
At the end of the day, itâs fun to see that rich dudes on LinkedIn act like I did when I was an active user of far too many internet forums back in the day. The more things change and all that.
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