Paris Trip Day 21

Monday. I have already started to worry about protesting in London and dread going back to the States. I am worried about how British people who see me protesting outside Buckingham Palace will react. Prior to my situation, I had always loved the U.K. My mother was part Irish. My father talked about him being an Anglophile. I’ve always loved the British people and their way of life, and as a city girl, I’ve always loved London, though Paris has always been my all-time favorite. Princess Diana was my favorite person on earth, and she helped me find myself. I even wrote a letter to The Washington Post after Richard Cohen wrote a disparaging column on Diana after her death. [Here is a link to that letter, but The Washington Post has it jumbled with other letters to the editor above it. It starts with “I AM 36, THE SAME AGE DIANA WAS…]

I just can’t help wondering: If the British people knew how Queen Elizabeth II has sacrificed my branch of her family tree for her financial and other gain, would the British people want justice for my mother, father, his family and me, or would they side with the Queen, just because she is their monarch?

Salut !

 

Image of international sign by Can Stock Photo.

Madeleine LeBeau, French actress who sang ‘La Marseillaise’ in ‘Casablanca,’ dies at 92 – The Washington Post

She was the last surviving credited cast member of the 1942 wartime drama, one of the greatest films ever made.

Source: Madeleine LeBeau, French actress who sang ‘La Marseillaise’ in ‘Casablanca,’ dies at 92 – The Washington Post

Today I am sharing the obituary of Madeleine LeBeau, a French actress who made a small though significant contribution to AFI’s second best film of all time: ‘Casablanca.’

 

 

 

 

 

Au revoir!

 

 

Casablanca 1942 retro image by Roberlan Borges, Flickr, CCBY 2.0.

 

 

When is a ‘Travel Hack’ Unethical?

Where should consumers draw the line in an era where the tactics are profit-maximizing on both sides?

Source: When is a ‘travel hack’ unethical? – The Washington Post

There are ethical and not-so-ethical methods to secure the best travel deal.

There are ethical and not-so-ethical methods to secure the best travel deal.

Travel hacking is loosely defined as strategies for getting better travel deals. According to the article cited, travel hacking may be legal but not always ethical, especially when the practice involves deception. This post is a summary of the article.

Why do it? Price seems to be best when you choose the home base of the airline, and the U.S. dollar is always the most expensive option.

Ethical Strategies

1. Look online for hotel rates, then call a hotel to negotiate a better rate. No problem, no deception involved here.

2. Clearing your web browser’s cookies before going onto a travel site. The site won’t know you’ve been looking to book travel arrangements and will therefore be more likely to give you a good rate. Again, this is thought to be ethical because it doesn’t involve deception.

Probably Unethical

1. Using a different country other than your own on an airline’s website. Airline websites are multi-lingual and multi-currency. If you change your country (after first deleting cookies, no doubt) on an airline’s website, you might get a better deal. Unfortunately, if an airline figures out what you did, they might not honor the ticket.

2. Using a “hidden city” airline ticket to finish a flight at a stopover instead of the true destination. This can save you a lot of money, but it violates airlines’ fare rules. If you used a travel agent to book your trip, finishing a flight at a stopover could get the travel agent in trouble — the article doesn’t cite how — and it could lead to higher fares across the board: airlines will have figured out what travelers are doing and raise their rates to make sure there is no benefit to this practice.

3. Changing your IP address to a different country. Different countries have different local economies and standards of living. Should a traveler in one country pay the same rate for airfare as a U.S. citizen, who probably has a higher standard of living?

4. Using the title “Dr.” when you’re a Ph.D. because it might get you preferential treatment. This one is up for grabs. On one hand, people feel entitled to use a title they’ve earned; on the other, I’m not sure what “preferential” treatment someone might get because an airline crew thinks they are a medical doctor. As an experienced traveler, I’ve never seen a call for “all doctors can board now,” nor have I ever witnessed a flight attendant saying anything like, “Since you’re a doctor, we’d like you to have a better meal than everyone else.” (Yes, I’m being facetious. That’s the point.) In fact, the only time I’ve ever heard a flight crew use the term “doctor” on board is when a traveler has been sick and the crew has asked if there is a doctor on board the flight. One word of caution: If you’re a Ph.D. and you use the title “Dr.” liberally, don’t be surprised if you find yourself in a situation where a member of a flight crew asks, “But I thought you were a doctor?”

All travelers want to get the best deal. My one suggestion to ask yourself: If an airline found out how you got your deal, would they honor it?

Au revoir!

 

Image of plane landing by Modes Rodriguez, Flickr, CCBY 2.0.

Traveling in 2016? Make a Resolution Not To Make This List

Expedia released their first ever Hotel Etiquette Study, which details the Top 10 Most Annoying Guests. Can you guess who is Most Annoying? (Hint: “Little Jimmy can scream in the halls all he wants. We pay good money to stay here!”)

Source: Annoying hotel guests make Expedia’s list. We know who you are. – The Washington Post

Hotel hallways are NOT the place to allow your kids to train for the 100-yard dash.

Hotel hallways are NOT the place to allow your kids to train for the 100-yard dash.

Ahhhh, traveling. So exciting to see how people from other countries live. Take in the sites, sip Cappuccino, have new experiences. Unfortunately, those new experiences often include contact with other, less-than-well-mannered guests at your hotel. Expedia recently conducted a survey to find out which behaviors bothered hotel guests the most. Hopefully, the survey will give at least some travelers something to think about the next time they pack their bags (that is, those who need to read it). Here are the Top 10 Most Annoying Guests, counting down:

10. Elevator Chatterbox. Have you heard the term “elevator speech”? It’s a thirty-second (the typical time one spends in an elevator) summary about yourself and what you can do for an organization. Candidates put a lot of thought into their elevator speeches when they’re looking for a job; it might just get them a foot in the door. When you’re on vacation (or, in European terms, “on holiday”), riding an elevator with persons unknown, it is not the time to practice that elevator speech; rather, it’s the time to practice restraint. No one wants to hear the details of your life. And if someone doesn’t speak your language, it’s just noise.

9. Business Bar Boozer. All dressed up with nowhere to go, the Business Bar Boozer hangs around the bar whenever he or she isn’t busy with that Important Meeting or Conference taking place in the hotel. Why not: 1) read a book, or, 2) just drink something non-alcoholic? Business attire does not make drunkenness more attractive.

8. Hot Tub Canoodlers. I’ve never understood this one. A couple is on vacation at a hotel, and they choose to show way more Public Displays of Affection in a hot tub than they’d want their own children to see — why not just go to your room? You’ve paid for it!

7. The Loudly Amorous. Well. Perhaps the Hot Tub Canoodlers decided to go their room after all. Keep it down, please. The walls aren’t that thick!

6. Poolside Partyers. This is probably the most dangerous category, since drinking alcohol around a pool can cause a person to slip and hit their head with catastrophic consequences. In addition, Poolside Partyers are often just plain loud: playing in the water, calling out, laughing. Sounds of life, right? Other people have lives, too. Keep the noise down.

5. Bickerers. This is probably the saddest category: people on vacation spend it by arguing the entire time? It’s not just a downer for the people involved, but for everyone around them. Perhaps next time the money for vacation would be better spent on a couples’ therapist.

4. In-Room Revelers. As already mentioned in #7, hotel room walls might not be as thick as you imagine, so having an after-party in your room at 1:00 A.M. may not be the best idea. Sure, you’ve paid for your room, but here’s the kicker: So has everyone else. And they paid for peaceful sleep.

There are other ways of defining oneself besides complaining.

There are other ways of defining oneself besides complaining.

3. Complainers. This isn’t about letting the front desk know you found bed bugs in your room. A Complainer is like a leaky faucet: No matter how much you tend to it, it never stops. Complainers are never satisfied. Please. So you only got three towels instead of your usual four — do you really need it?

2. Hallway Hellraisers. Hotels are known for having long, wide hallways. Unfortunately, many people see these hallways as their personal space for letting others know how happy they are to be on vacation — or, better yet, as the place to allow their kids to train for the 100 yard dash. Guess what? Fellow guests are behind many of the doors you walk by (or in the kids’ case, run by). Be an angel and keep quiet as you walk back and forth to the elevator.

And the winner is………..

1. Inattentive Parents. Sixty-seven percent of more than 1,000 participants said parents have allowed their children to run down halls, destroy plants, kick furniture, and slam doors in hotels. What these parents don’t understand is that their children are likely to grow up to be guests #2 – #10. Good manners start with you, parents. As the song says:

You who are on the road
Must have a code that you can live by…
Teach your children well…
And know they love you.

 

Au revoir!

 

Image of Hotel Hallway by Sebastian Lange, Flickr, CCBY 2.0. Image of Complainer by Dushan Wegner, Flickr, CCBY 2.0.

Lyrics of “Teach Your Children,” by Graham Nash, recorded by Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young, 1970. Copyright Sony/ATV Music Publishing, LLC.

 

 

 

 

Paris Trip Day 21

Monday. I have already started to worry about protesting in London and dread going back to the States. I am worried about how British people who see me protesting outside Buckingham Palace will react. Prior to my situation, I had always loved the U.K. My mother was part Irish. My father talked about him being an Anglophile. I’ve always loved the British people and their way of life, and as a city girl, I’ve always loved London, though Paris has always been my all-time favorite. Princess Diana was my favorite person on earth, and she helped me find myself. I even wrote a letter to The Washington Post after Richard Cohen wrote a disparaging column on Diana after her death. [Here is a link to that letter, but The Washington Post has it jumbled with other letters to the editor above it.]

I just can’t help wondering: If the British people knew how Queen Elizabeth II has sacrificed my branch of her family tree for her financial and other gain, would the British people want justice for my mother, father, his family and me, or would they side with the Queen, just because she is their monarch?

 

Salut !