When Ms. Dean was in charge of catering for HP, and the later the "west" side of operations with US, she made so many service cutbacks to please ($$) the higher ups that our product onboard became bare bones at best.
She provides little if any oversight on the contracted catering (LSG, etc.) operations and we constantly get less than what we are supposed to for our flights. When you see us serving the items for a snack basket on a tray it is because catering did not provide a basket to begin with. The plane may fly for days, even weeks, before a basket is ever put onboard. We (FAs) complain, we write up catering irregularity reports and submit them and yet we never see any improvements. I think our reports go right into the trash, to be quite honest.
There was a period a couple of years ago when we ran out of plastic cups!! Now, as a Flight Attendant who prefers working "A" position, I would prefer to serve my drinks in First in real glassware - regardless of the stage length of the flight. We sank to an all time low when we ran out of plastic cups. Imagine, as I'm sure you can, being a Chairman's Preferred and having your Gin and Tonic being served to you in a cheap styrofoam coffee cup!! It was so bad that I went to Costco and bought my own plastic cups to use onboard during that fiasco that lasted almost two weeks!
All I can say is that if the product seems pathetic or you are not getting the minimum that you expect, please do not get angry with the Flight Attendants. We are only offering what we have been provided and trying to do the best that we can with what little we have or don't have.
I work Hawaii flights often, again as "A" position. I spend my own hard earned money to buy a few "extra" things to offer my First Class passengers a product that I think they deserve. I like to buy real limes, snacks (in addition to those from the snack basket) for a "Snack Station" that I set up in my forward galley after meal service, etc. I will usually spend anywhere from $75 to $100 of my own money to enhance the bare bones service that Ms.Dean created on our Hawaii flights. If I could afford more, I would even do more. The sad thing is that I have to explain to my First Class customers that they cannot expect this level of service on every flight because what they are being provided is essentially a gift from my crew to them.
You see, after a meal on a Hawaii flight, you have essentially nothing left to offer in First Class for the remaining 5 and a half hours of the flight except for refills and a smile. I prefer to provide more than that. I guess what I am trying to say is that isn't it sad that an employee has to cough up their own money to provide a level of service that our First Class passengers come on board to expect?