I was very keen to work for Airbnb and applied via LinkedIn, and was contacted a couple of months after, when a similar opportunity had opened. The recruiter screen went well though it took some time to get the time right (time zones misunderstanding).
I was then scheduled for an interview with the hiring manager, who got the recruiter to cancel our interview as I was already waiting on Skype. It was rescheduled for the same day, 3 hours later (late evening for me), and this time he just didn't show up at all. I sent an email to the recruiter who apologized on his behalf and we rescheduled for another night, which happened on time this time, with no mention on the previous mishaps.
I was successful and got to the next round, 4 skype interviews, for which I gave the recruiter my availability. She scheduled 2 at the only moment I said I was unavailable. I sent her an email right away (2 days before the interviews) to ask her to reschedule but was still contacted on the wrong day by an interviewer who had not idea we weren't meant to speak that day. Recruiter apologized, and we rescheduled, all interviews back to back and I took an afternoon off to make sure it would happen.
This is when I started losing motivation... The first interviewer asked me the most random questions, amongst which "tell me a joke" (and it wasn't one...) and "tell me something extraordinary you did in the past month. Since I had not discovered the cure to starvation that month, I thought I'd go for something "challenging" instead... and try to do better the following month (but probably not at Airbnb). I tried to impress him with my knowledge of the company and its growth and expansion, with the acquisition of several companies, amongst which a direct competitor in Germany. He told me I was wrong, no such thing ever happened... By then I had lost 50% of interest in the role, but I still decided to drop it. He then praised the company at length: how his whole family wears Airbnb t-shirts and the company itself is like a big family (it started to smell like stinky cheese right there).
Next interviewer was great, bright, smart, sharp, with very tough but real life problem solving questions that did not involve me pretending to be Louis CK.
The final one was a nice one as well but actually reading out pre-written questions, and trying to log my answers right away into her feedback system, which was a little disturbing. She offered to answer more questions by email afterwards, which was nice and told me I should have a couple more Skype interviews after. Radio Silence after that, so I wrote to the recruiters a couple of weeks later to give them feedback (someone's got to get feedback!) and let them know I was dropping out (thank you Airbnb for letting me exit with dignity!)