Category Everything is Terrible

I found….a penny! Could this be the best day of my life?

 

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I have been collecting pressed pennies for as long as I can remember. Literally any time there is an opportunity for a coin-based souvenir, I have either gotten it myself or wrested it out of the hands of someone else.  They all hang out in a bowl in the house, and like a great big weirdo, I scoop them up in my hands and let them jingle through my fingers. I would swim in them, Scrooge McDuck style, if it was possible.

The day we went to the Kennedy Space Center, there were two separate coin-based souvenir opportunities: one pressed penny, and one silver coin with the NASA logo. I needed both, and stripped the necessary change to acquire them out of Jason’s pockets. This ended up costing me significantly more than the value of the coin.

Unlike Washington State, where there are only a few toll roads and they’re mostly avoidable, Florida has tolls everywhere. It seems like there’s a tollbooth every twenty feet on the highway, and as people who rarely carry cash, we were completely unprepared. Luckily, we had some cash on hand when we arrived at the airport, and the booths we went to were staffed with people who could give us change. Unfortunately, on our way back from the Kennedy Space Center, our GPS lagged at a critical juncture, and I ended up merging from one highway to another going in the opposite direction of the one we wanted to travel. Normally, this isn’t a problem; you just drive to the next exit, turn around, and merge on in the opposite direction. In Florida, this was a problem, because on this particular highway, the exits (and entrances!) were tolled, too. Umanned tolls, accepting only change.

Change that I had used in the acquisition of pressed pennies.

Shit shit shit.

We scrounged through the car, through my purse, through all of our pockets, and we were exactly one penny short. I shit you not. I didn’t know what to do at this point, except I saw a video camera monitoring the scene, so I made a show of pulling a dollar out of my wallet, showing it to the camera, getting out of the car, and very conspicuously jamming it in the door of the tollbooth (because I didn’t want to break the change counting machine and get into MORE trouble). Then I got back into the car and proceeded to exit because I didn’t know what else I could do. As our car pulled out, a flipping SIREN went off and a camera took our picture as I cringed and cried out a Darth Vader style “Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo.”

Then it was a matter of driving around and finding a business that would give us change so we could merge back on to the highway in the correct direction, which took longer than you might think.

Before we went back to Florida, I stopped at a bank and picked up an entire roll of quarters. This time, the toll roads wouldn’t accept cash, period, only a sunpass, which of course, being tourists in a rental car, we didn’t have. Seriously, Florida? In order to get to our destination in South Beach, we ended up having to take a pass only toll road, so I’m not sure exactly how they deal with violators, but as a repeat offender, they probably have a warrant out for The Tollway Terror. We’re the most infamous duo since Bonnie and Clyde.

Battle of the hotels: The Waldorf Astoria vs The W

Since I’ve crammed all of my Florida posts into one stretch, you might not know that I actually made two trips to Florida in the past few months: one to Orlando for my honeymoon and one to Miami for my brother-in-law’s wedding.  On each, I stayed in 5 star hotels; the Waldorf Astoria in Orlando and The W in Miami, and yet the experiences could not have been more different.

 

The Waldorf Astoria Orlando

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We booked our trip to the Waldorf through Expedia, securing a rate that averaged to $150/night with the “Best of the Waldorf” package which included $50 of room service/spa treatment credits per day, an included breakfast buffet every day (for which they normally charge $32/per person), and when we arrived, there was a fruit platter waiting in our room with a personalized card stating that they hoped we would enjoy our stay. Valet parking was mandatory, at an additional charge of  $24/day, and there was an optional daily resort fee of $25, which included wifi throughout the hotel, access to the driving and putting ranges, and use of the spa.  Including  these additional charges, we paid $200/night. As we made use of the room service credits and breakfast daily (Gelato delivery! Fresh fruit juice! French pastries! Crepes!), and had a most excellent time making divots in their driving range, it still overall worked out in our favor.

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The room itself was clean if a bit old-fashioned and was cleaned again every morning with a second turndown service each evening. The bed was comfortable, the bathroom was sizable (containing both a soaking tub and a separate shower) if a bit dark for my preferences. The towels were average quality, as were the toiletries. They also provided two comfortable robes for our use during our stay. The room had one large television centered for prime viewing from the bed. The only time we heard other people was when they were walking down the hall and talking directly in front of our door. Whenever we called down to have our car brought around, someone always answered the phone immediately and referred to us by name each time, always finishing the call by asking if there was anything else they could do for us.

The two pools at the Waldorf were large, but the best part was that we were also given access to the next door Hilton’s pools as well, which had a lazy river for us to splash and play in during the day, contrasting with quieter swims at the Waldorf in the evening. They also provided bicycles with which to travel between properties.

Considering we booked through a third party service at a presumably deeply discounted rate, the Waldorf Astoria had no incentive to give us special treatment, yet we were treated as honored guests in every respect. Everyone was exceedingly polite and friendly, and the one issue we had with our room (our toilet would run occasionally) was fixed immediately upon contacting the front desk.

 

The W Miami

wroom Our trip to The W was booked as part of a block of rooms, as the wedding itself was at the hotel; the rate was $750/night, which was for the room only. Valet parking was mandatory, at an additional charge of $37/day. Internet was an additional charge of $15/day, bringing the overall daily rate to over $800. When we arrived, I noted that our room was coated in dust, and every available surface was filled with items they’d be happy to sell us for an additional fee–water, snacks, etc. All of those items were dusty as well. They also provided a broken kaleidoscope. When I tweeted my displeasure at the level of service we were receiving for our room rate, to their credit, someone got back to me immediately and contacted the hotel manager, who called me and was very apologetic; he said that he’d like to make things right as a show of good faith and comped our internet, while stammering that it’s standard practice to include a munchies bar in every room. My issue isn’t that you sell snacks at a premium price, dude, my issue is that you sell dusty, expired snacks at a premium price. He also sent someone upstairs with two bottles of water, and though I had emphasized the dust all over everything in the room, the woman who came to my door didn’t seem to know anything about it. She thrust the bottles of water at me and said huffily “Look, I’m just here to make you happy” which, incidentally, made me less happy. She then left to go get a feather duster; I had to leave the room to attend the rehearsal dinner, and when I returned, I saw that a half-assed dusting had been done, but that overall, the room had still not been cleaned to a 5-star standard.

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Dusty coffemaker

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Dusty snacks

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Dusty alarm clock

wbrokenkaleidoscopeI guess if I was going to make a wish, it would be for a working kaleidoscope.

The room itself was beautiful and modern and opened up onto a balcony which overlooked the ocean and a public parking lot; however, the setup of the room was awkwardly split into two. Our bed faced a doorway into a different guest room, which is something you usually see in cheaper hotels, and it shuffled the TV off oddly to the side. The room actually contained two small televisions, which were controlled via one remote, so after we were finished watching television in bed, a click from the remote turned that TV off…and the one in the office area on. This happened back and forth until I finally got up and turned them off manually. The bed was a bit stiff. The rugs were stained. The bathroom contained only a shower, with an extra wall spigot straight at butthole level, and there was a panel of frosted glass between the bedroom area and the bathroom, so if you use the bathroom in the middle of the night, you end up lighting up the entire room unless you attempted to pee in the dark. The towels were scratchy, and while the toiletries were from Bliss, they had a funky aftersmell that neither of us cared for. To collect our car, we had to go downstairs and wait; unfortunately, when we went down, the valet was nowhere to be found so we had to wait around. The noise? The noise was unbearable. Anthropologists will be delighted to know that there is a new subspecies of human being residing in Miami that exclusively communicate to one another via honking their car horns. Short beeps, long blasts, this happened at all hours of the night, along with screaming and shouted obscenities, beside the more traditional and expected hallway noises. We could even hear the valets loudly talking to one another outside: this is with the balcony doors closed on the fourteenth floor.  At one point, at three in the morning, there was a series of extremely loud thuds coming from another room that literally shook all of the booze bottles for sale on our coffee table. I was able to sleep only fitfully over the course of our stay due to the aforementioned honking, screaming, shouting, and thudding; this made everything else feel so much more unbearable.

wierdtvView from the bed

wshowerButthole spigot with glass panel that looks into room

The pool at The W was well-maintained and attractive, but small, with an even smaller number of seats available. Of course, there was the ocean available immediately outside their doors, but their pool alone was substandard.

As said before, our trip to The W was part of a large block of (full price) rooms reserved for wedding guests and the wedding and rehearsal dinner were both at the hotel. Over the course of the weekend, a lot of money changed hands between the family and the hotel, and yet we were treated as though they literally could not have given even part of a shit about our comfort. One of the bridesmaids had jewelry stolen from her room. My tweet was resolved with a half-assed smooth-over that made it clear to me that further complaint would fall on deaf ears because all they wanted to do was “make me happy”/shut me up. They claim to want to provide you with Whatever/Whenever and for your experience to be filled with Wow; the only things that wowed me were the bill and the staff’s overall “whatever” indifference.

 

 Overall

Even if we’d paid close to the same price for the hotels, the level of service we received from The W and their overall room quality was appalling when compared to The Waldorf Astoria. It’s appalling when compared to the goddamned Best Western. When you factor in the price difference, it’s not only appalling, but insulting that The W believes they can get away with treating their customers so poorly. Granted, Orlando tends to cater to families, and as best as I can figure out, Miami caters to the scum of the earth, but that still doesn’t account for the discrepancies between what are supposed to be world-class hotels. If given the option, I’ll choose the establishment that values service over flash every time.

May the best man win: the mating call of the loser!

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  Just like at Universal Studios Hollywood, Universal Studios Orlando has a CityWalk outside: an area full of restaurants and shops designed to part you from your money before you even make it into the park. What separates it from nearby Downtown Disney is that at Universal Studios, they charge you for parking, too.  The walkways to the park lead you directly past Hollywood Drive-In Golf, a minigolf course that appeared entirely too spectacular to miss, so we vowed to go there at least once during our trip. We actually ended up going twice: once before Halloween Horror Nights and once on the last day of the trip as we had a significant amount of time to kill after we checked out of our hotel but before we had to go to the airport (enough to play 36 holes of minigolf, see Gravity, AND have lunch), and the amount of fun we had didn’t diminish upon replay. In addition to the fun themes, it’s actually well-designed so that skill plays a larger role than luck and balls can’t just go willy-nilly all over the place and get stuck like one particularly shitty course I’ve played. They have two 18 hole courses: The Haunting of Ghostly Greens and Invaders from Planet Putt.     IMG_2401

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IMG_2413This was my favorite tombstone: “So long together, I will always remember Wigglesworth, faithful tapeworm. I’m empty inside without you.”

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IMG_2469 Each course was super detailed, with sound effects, moving parts, and hilarious decorative touches. For instance, they had swamp creatures all around one hole. As you walked toward the hole, they’d spit water at you.  One was additionally positioned directly above the hole and would shoot a puff of air out at you as you bent over to pick up your ball. I went first and it startled a screech out of me.

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IMG_2436 Incidentally, that scream that the golf course got out of me the first time we played was the only time I screamed that night, which was pretty sad since it was immediately followed by Halloween Horror Nights, the entire reason we waited until later in September to go on our honeymoon. Halloween Horror Nights Orlando was horrible.   hhn-2013-haunted-houses-2900x2000-oi-1160x800

First of all, the scare zones were just zombies, zombies, and more zombies, which as you’ll see, contrasted with the maze’s themes of zombies, zombies, and more zombies.  Ugh. Cabin in the woods? Redneck zombies. Resident Evil? Lab zombies. Walking dead? Zombie zombies. Evil dead? Zombie zombie zombies! ENOUGH WITH THE ZOMBIES. Zombies have been played out for a long time, let’s try something new. Two of the non-zombie mazes were repeats: La llorona, and An American Werewolf in London (which essentially recycled all of the stuff from The Wolfman maze even if it wasn’t exactly the same), so the only two that brought something new to the table were Havoc and After Life: Death’s Vengeance. Havoc boiled down to army dudes yelling on a train; one literally yelled at me for not being scared. After Life: Death’s Vengeance was at least decent, as it was about the victims of a serial killer taking their vengeance on him after he was electrocuted–in 3D. The 3D effects made it visually interesting, but distracting, not scary. Every few feet, there were zombie nurses selling shots, which I don’t remember from Horror Nights Hollywood. Maybe there’s a difference between the state’s liquor laws that allow for it in one park but not the other, but the only message it sent to me was that they knew the mazes and scare zones sucked this year so you’d need to be hammered to enjoy yourself. If we go back to another Horror Nights, it will be to Hollywood, it’s not worth the trip to Florida.