Musings
I was the keynote speaker last month at a speaker's "university" presented by the Greater Los Angeles Chapter of the National Speakers Association. I've spoken at GLAC before, and they are terrific people, wonderful hosts, and an attentive audience.
They had to choose a new hotel after their first choice abruptly closed, and they selected the Parker in Palm Springs, about two hours south of LA. For those of you who pay zero attention to California or to wealth, the Palm Springs area has probably increased in population by about 300,000 in the last five years, newer money joining older money, with the homes of media celebrities still in plain site. (My dinner companion, once an LA TV news anchor, and I dined at a wonderful restaurant on the grounds of the former Gary Grant estate. You get the idea.)
The Parker is THE hot hotel in this never-never land, and it is a hoot. It's coat of arms would be a shield of pretension on a field of bombast. Clients have forced me to stay at many of the trendy spots in New York and Miami's South Beach – The Delano, W, The Royalton, The Paramount, etc., all so "in" that you feel crushed – but the Parker wins the arrogance sweepstakes.
There is no self-parking, only valet. All the help are completely attired in white. There is no check-in desk, but rather a reception area where a combination bellman/desk clerk greets you and takes you to your room. Registration in completed in your room, once you have traversed the cute dirt paths among the buildings and pools. There are no signs anywhere, which of course would be déclassé, so finding your way from room to meeting facility to main building to wherever is like wondering in a maze built by a sadist. There is no exit.
There is only one speed, and it is set by the staff. They don't hurry, they don't raise their voices, they don't get excited, they don't show emotion. There was more empathy in Westworld. It took five minutes to get change for a $20 bill once the white-clad person disappeared behind a white door. I assume he was ironing the money.
I will never return, nor recommend anyone stay there, nor suggest anyone hold a meeting there. I can't fathom what prompts people to deliberately and voluntarily return to places where they are poorly-treated and ill-served. Is there a cachet, some kind of chic inside mentality, that lures people to hotels and restaurants where the staff is disdainful and the service dreadful? Is that like an army boot camp, where everyone loves to brag later that they endured it?
I remember staying at the Royalton in New York one August, in a minimalist, ghastly, windowless, black room where I couldn't figure out how to turn on the bathroom sink (I am NOT making this up). After calling the front desk to get directions to wash my hands, I asked that someone be sent up to light the tiny fireplace in the bedroom.
"But it's 80 degrees outside," pontificated the desk clerk, "why do you need heat?!"
"I don't need heat," I informed him, "I need the fire to create some light in here."
ORTIYKMWOYBNT-O Department
We were taking the Coastline Express from San Francisco to LA, and I had reserved a first class cabin on the train. Since I'm a train buff, I was pontificating to my wife and kids about, well, everything. I pointed out that the shower and toilet were self-contained in the next room of the cabin.
"I'll just test to see if everything is working," I said as the train prepared to leave, "because this is a car from the 1950s and it may not have been maintained properly."
I found that the toilet worked fine, but I didn't—I pushed "shower" instead of "flush" and was instantly drenched. There was nowhere to hide. I emerged, fully clothed, resembling a manatee.
"Of course," noted my kids, "you were made in the 1940s...."