Plot twist: That’s not his foot. /s
Plot twist: That’s not his foot. /s
That part made me laugh out loud. There is no optimal driving position that includes a 4" heel like in the video. Driving in heels sucks. They throw off all your leg and foot positions. So much so that I’ll drive somewhere in flats and change into my heels when I get wherever I’m going.
If you need more than one gas pedal you’re going too fast...
Bonus points if you can heel and toe shift in heels.
How do you look out the rear window without full recline?
False. However you sit on the living room couch that was a Cadillac from the 80's is the best way to sit. Spinal support be damned.
Never knew I was supposed to drive in Heels. I will go out and get some
I am sick of having to tip people for doing their job. I don’t get to carry around a tip jar at my job. It is just another way of employers getting out of paying a living wage.
Boutique hotels are different...I am talking about the majority of hotel rooms as an average...obviously they aren’t talking 15 minutes to clean a suite at The Regis...but your bog standard hotel room is 10-15 minutes...they are replacing the towels, any amenities, quick look at the bar fridge, making the bed and…
no fucking way am i tipping hotel staff 10 bucks without them giving me an enthusiastic hand job with eye contact first.
This article is pretty clearly for people who go out of their way to make other people’s lives a tiny bit easier.
Not to mention if this becomes so commonplace that staff becomes “tipped” employees, that you bet your ass management is going to reduce them to 4$/hr.
If everything in this article is separated by the word “and”, you’re basically doing a portion of the laundry, part of the bathroom clean-up, and the bulk of the room re-arrangement “and” paying the person $10 for the pain of an already-mostly-clean room to finish cleaning up. I am nice to servers in restaurants and…
$10/day per person for tips? Have you been talking to the Salty Waitress?
$10 per day, per person?!?
Lolwut? $10/day/person?! So for a week long trip, a small family (or group of friends) could tip a few hundred dollars?
See, I don’t understand any of this at all. I book a hotel room so I have somewhere to sleep when I’m not doing what I’m in town to do. The job of housekeeping is to refresh the room after I’ve used it. I’m not gonna trash the room, but why should I do their job for them? If I want privacy, I need to feel bad about…
I’ve got about a decade of daily french press grounds down the disposal that says they’re not plugging anything up. On the other hand, potato peelings are a big no-no.
Er, I sometime forget my friends names! ;)
But all my friends are named Bruce.