Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As an antidote to DCUM derision, I am reflecting on my Thanksgiving trip to the Midwest with gratitude and awe.
My parents' house is beautiful, their neighbors are kind and generous, and my hometown is delightful.
To get there, it's a 10-hour drive. We drove straight there on the way, but on the way home, we broke the trip up with an overnight stay at a Hampton Inn (with a pool!) and ate dinner at the Olive Garden.
You know what? The Olive Garden treated us freaking RIGHT. Breadsticks and salad on point, and plentiful. All the entrees and kids meals were good. Glass of wine? Yes, please. It was pleasant and clean, the server was nice, the price was a downright bargain. Everyone had a good time. What a nice break after a long day of driving.
Hampton Inn, similarly great. Clean and nice rooms, nice breakfast area with edible-but-hey-free food, pleasant staff.
Here is your chance to say nice things about everything DCUM sneers at. Cracker Barrel, Embassy Suites, lazy rivers, buffets, Ann Taylor, Five Below, Aldi, Great Wolf Lodge, lay it on me. Tell me all about it. I want to hear all the NICE things you have to say about the not-finer things in life.
You do realize, this is the area where MAGAs live, right OP?
MAGAs live everywhere. Even in NYC.
- a New Yorker
Yes, certainly.
However, one need not intentionally patronize the locations and sorts of business frequented by MAGAs.
And it’s vulgar to actually celebrate these common and low-brow businesses.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I needed a job with hours to coordinate around the school day I cleaned rooms at a Hampton Inn. The standards are impeccable. Everything is thoroughly cleaned. I had to quit after 2 weeks because it was so physically exhausting but it changed the way I am able to clean my house.
So the way I feel about hotels - there's not a huge difference between $200 and $350 a room. Location is many times the primary difference and from a practical perspective the difference between 3 and 4 stars is manageable. The difference is between a 2 and 4 star or 3 and 5 star. The difference is between a $450/night and 850/night, all things being equal. There's just not that big a difference between $200 and even $375-400 or $350 and $450-500/night. Location would be for me the difference but all things being equal I've stayed in all these levels. So I typically do the $750-1000/night whenever my family is seeking a resort experience but will very often feel that the $500/night offers about the same level of comfort when comparing just room comfort and quality. Now the resorts will always jack up the price and you get a brand name for X dollars but I'm talking the actual place itself - really when something is nice it's nice enough. Unless I am going up to $1000+/night it gets nicer but otherwise the room and place is about the same (again location is key but in general terms). My point is unless it's a sleezebag 2 and 1 star place you can even find something cheap that's as good as something pretty nice and likewise a $350-400 room a night place isn't all that.
Anonymous wrote:When I needed a job with hours to coordinate around the school day I cleaned rooms at a Hampton Inn. The standards are impeccable. Everything is thoroughly cleaned. I had to quit after 2 weeks because it was so physically exhausting but it changed the way I am able to clean my house.
Anonymous wrote:Omg so much snobbery pretending to be down to earth in one thread
Anonymous wrote:I love Buffalo Wild Wings. My favorite waitress knows my order by heart.
Anonymous wrote:I like Carnival cruises
Anonymous wrote:
I’m sure there are a bunch of things but here is a start:
Freddys- Chicago dog
McDonald’s- ice coffee
Multicolored Christmas lights
Pigs in a blanket, grape jelly/chili sauce cocktail meatballs
Drury inn - free adult beverages