Hotels and Hassles
by Thomas Sowell
Recently
by Thomas Sowell: Waiving
Freedom
Few things
can make you appreciate home like staying in a hotel. This includes
not only low-budget, bare bones hotels but also sweepingly large
and ornate luxury hotels. What many hotels seem to have in common
are needless hassles.
Since most
people who stay in hotels do so while traveling, and stay only a
few days in a given hotel, you might think that those who run hotels
would want to make it easy for someone who arrives a little tired
(or a lot tired) from traveling to use the various devices they
find in their hotel room. But you would be wrong. That thought never
seems to have crossed their minds.
Recently, at
a well-known luxury hotel in Los Angeles, I found that something
as simple as turning on a television set can require a phone call
to the front desk, and then waiting for the arrival of a technician.
Then it took another phone call to get a list of which of the dozens
of channels were for which networks.
Why the turning
on of a television set should be anything other than obvious to
a newly arrived hotel guest is apparently a question that never
occurred to the people who ran this hotel. Nor did it apparently
ever occur to them that someone just arriving from a journey might
want to be able to relax, instead of having to cope with complications
that the hotel could easily have avoided.
The next morning,
in the shower, I found myself confronted with a dazzling array of
knobs and levers, none of which provided any clue as to what they
did. The lever rotated and four of the surrounding knobs both rotated
and tilted forward and backward.
Apparently
it was not considered sporting to come right out and tell you how
to get hot water or cold water. That was something you could find
out for yourself by being either scalded or chilled.
Being fancy
and opaque seemed to be the guiding principle.Getting on the Internet
required another phone call to the front desk. In fact, it required
two phone calls, because I was first referred to the wrong technical
support group.
It is easier
to get on the Internet at almost any institution other than a hotel.
And, at this particular hotel, you had to go through the whole procedure
every day, instead of just signing up for Internet access for your
entire stay when you checked in or logged on.
Being a luxury
hotel, this one provided bathrobes. But I had my own bathrobe. At
least I had it until the maids took it away when cleaning the room
while I was out. Another phone call to the front desk.
Since my bathrobe
was a white, terry-cloth robe and the hotel's robes were a light
tan and made of a different material, I thought there was no danger
that one would be mistaken for the other. But I was wrong.
Just how wrong
I discovered when, after a long delay, late at night when I wanted
to get to sleep, a man appeared with a large bag containing two
bathrobes. Apparently their search had also turned up another guest's
bathrobe that the maids had taken. It looked even less like the
hotel's bathrobe than mine did.
Something as
simple as turning on a light can be a puzzle at some hotels. Again,
the fatal allure of the fancy seems to be the problem with people
who choose things to put in hotel rooms. Moreover, it is not uncommon
for different lamps in the same hotel room to have different fancy
ways of being turned on.
Years
ago, at a hotel where I stayed for a week, it was only on the last
day that I finally figured out, or stumbled on, the way to turn
one of the floor lamps off and on.
Since I was
very busy on that trip, I didn't feel like adding this to the list
of things to phone the front desk about, especially late at night,
when I was more interested in getting to sleep than in waiting for
some technician to show up and unravel the mystery.
After my misadventures
in Los Angeles, I was off to San Diego, where a hotel maid had to
replace a light bulb in the bedroom and a technician had to fix
a lamp in the living room. Later I had to fix a toilet that kept
running after being flushed. I once had a toilet like that at home,
so I knew what to do. But I replaced my malfunctioning toilet at
home, unlike the hotel.
No amount of
fancy things makes up for hassles.
November
23, 2012
Thomas
Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford
University. His Web site is www.tsowell.com.
To find out more about Thomas Sowell and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
The
Best of Thomas Sowell
Copyright ©
2012 Creators Syndicate
|