We always used to get the stretch seating. But it’s not always available. If the flight is only 2-3 hours, I can do economy. But I often have no choice.
Well, I mean…they are in their seventies. I’m sure they were great once upon a time (I’ve never seen Cheap Trick, but I’ve heard a couple of old live performances and they sounded pretty tight), but I never expect much from geriatric rock acts. Some blues and jazz artists can keep going deep into their twilight years. But the loud, aggressive music of youth doesn’t usually translate very well into the age of creaky knees and sagging guts IMO. There are certainly exceptions and I’ve seen some pretty frenetic rock shows by cats in their fifties. But sixties and seventies not so much.
I’ve pretty much given up going to see legacy rock acts at this point, the nostalgia isn’t enough of a draw.
Anytime I fly to Europe it’s going to be in a comfortable seat.
Short hops are OK if it’s not too long.
Some flights do not have more comfortable options depending on the airline.
My cousin is a retired United pilot and I used to love flying on the “buddy passes”.
Although waiting until the end of boarding to see what was available could sometimes be a problem.
Tastes are subjective, but still, some of these posts! How can you be underwhelmed by Hawaii? Maybe everyone has too high expectations, I dunno.
“I went to the moon, and it was all grey and empty. BOOOOORING!”
And then I read this
and I remembered. Space Center Houston.
You’d think that the NASA museum, in Houston fercripessake, would be THE premier space museum. They should get all the best stuff, and all they have to do is wheel it across the parking lot. But it doesn’t! It’s got a bunch of exhibits that wouldn’t overwhelm in the Podunk Children’s Science Museum. And it is terribly run. (The subtour to the actual Mission Control was cool, but for the amount of tourists they get, you’d think they’d get an elevator for everyone. I think it’s four floors of narrow stairs.)
And dark! How about some lights, people! I spent more time making sure I didn’t walk into people (and was not always successful) than looking at the exhibits, that’s how dark it was!
For comparison, air and space museums where I was NOT underwhelmed, far from it, AND they have adequate illumination:
Kansas Cosmosphere
US Space and Rocket Center, Huntsville
Museum of the Air Force
San Diego A&S
Smithsonian (PS I liked the Hope Diamond across the street, too )
Pima A&S
National Aviation Museum, Pensacola
War Eagles Museum, Santa Teresa, NM
Museum of Flight, Seattle
Evergreen, McMinnville OR (the Spruce Goose!)
EAA Museum, Oshkosh
South Dakota Air and Space
SAC Museum
Castle Museum
Tellus Science Museum, Cartersville, GA
Now, I’ve never yet been to The Big Show, KSC, but, I am prepared to be underwhelmed.
I’ve not been in years decades. But the real problem with all of NASA is that their heyday was 60 years ago. They’re still in business, but everything they’re famous for is ancient and raggedy and small. The machines are huge, but the human facilities were cramped and still are.
What they don’t seem to have is the budget to make 60-year old stuff look cool or look recently repainted.
Oh, that’s a good one. The cheese curds taste like other cheese curds I’ve had, but i really felt like the whole was less than the sum of the parts.
It’s not as hot, it’s not as aggressively noisy/smokey, and the food is better. At least, i found it a lot easier to get excellent food in New Orleans than in Vegas. But it’s weirdly segregated. I was there with a Black colleague, and everyone stared at us, because even in a town full of tourists, 3 white women and a Black woman who were obviously together was clearly remarkable.
Whenever someone talks about flying first class it’s important to distinguish between US domestic, local around Europe, trans-Atlantic, or serious long-haul like polar or trans-Pacific.
There is almost nothing in common between a US airline first class ride from e.g. Chicago to Las Vegas and a US airline first class ride from e.g. Los Angeles to Hong Kong. And the trans-Pac experience is utterly better yet again on the better Asian carriers over the US ones.
Or for the ultimate experience, the subsidized Arab carriers.
A friend of mine & his business pal recently went business class, not first class, trans-Atlantic on Emirates. They each drank over $1K retail of vintage French wine on the 7 hour flight. They’re big drinkers, but that was not cheap wine they were served. From a wine list with about 30 varieties. And they ate two severely wonderful meals in very spacious and gracious surroundings. And a shower onboard. the best part was they even got transportation to Europe out of the experience.
When I was in college about 50 years ago, my Canadian classmates always ordered their fries with brown gravy. So I tried it, and it tasted like fries with brown gravy. So last year when I was in Ontario, I tried poutine. It tasted like fries with brown gravy with cheese curds as a topping.
I’ve had good poutine and bad poutine. The difference, IMO, is in the freshness. In good poutine you are served immediately after the fries come out of the fryer and the gravy poured on. Those first few bites are delicious. Even just a few minutes later and it starts to taste stale.
Malibu, CA. Heard my whole life that’s where the entertainment industry’s rich & famous liked to live so it must be really beautiful there. Staying in Santa Monica decided to drive up the coast and check it out. Just felt crappy and run down. The coast line was packed shoulder to shoulder with homes in various states of run-down, under construction, outdated, expensive. Thought maybe the nice homes were up in the hills. Driving up there was like driving through a quarry. Rocky, not many trees, kind of ugly. Not sure why you’d want to live there besides privacy in the hills or an overpriced beachfront property.
I live in a place that is just as expensive as Hawaii. Fabulous views from my deck too.
The Manta Ray thing was cool. Hiking the caldera was very much like the surface of the moon. It was interesting, but other wise a slog of a hike. The fruit with the food was good, otherwise just ok.
I’ve been to a number of tropical vacations. Hawaii just didn’t do it for me. I’m really not a beach person either.
We did do a boat tour that was pretty cool. Also a downhill bike ride that kind of sucked.
Setting aside the overcrowded places or the “were new and cool but are now just old and tattered” places there’s another factor.
If you’ve never seen tropical turquoise-blue water and very light to white sand it’s pretty amazing. But anyone in the last ~75 years has seen hours and hours of professional film or video of exactly that. When someone like that finally does get to see it for real, it probably isn’t quite as perfect a day, or as clean a beach, or … as the conditions shown in the average vid they’ve seen. So yes, it’s real not just a pic, but also yes it’s familiar and hence underwhelming.
What we’re all lacking is the wide-eyed amazement of seeing new sights that we’ve never seen the likes of before. The poor farm boy’s first train ride to the big city used to be an amazing life-altering immersion in a totally unfamiliar landscape. Now that kind of kid will have spent 15 years watching cities on TV before that first fateful visit. Lots will still be different from home and different from his accumulated vicarious experience of cities in general. But all that it will be a difference of details, not of kind.
I’ll add a general class of things, “Anything where I have to line up for an ungodly amount of time”. I hate waiting in line, and I don’t think I’ve ever had anything that turned out to be worth the waiting time. This is the main reason I’ll probably never visit any of the major theme parks. The amount of waiting that appears to be required for relatively short rides means they will almost certainly disappoint.
I’m in a similar mindset. If it has more than a trivial line, I don’t need it that bad.
As to theme parks, nowadays there’s an app for that. Where you can reserve a time and not stand in line. Or for an extra fee, just jump the line. Meaning only total chumps will simply stand in the mostly non-moving line as half or more of the ride’s throughput is absorbed servicing the paid line jumpers and the reservations.
Of course once everyone has the app then we enter that 21st Century tragedy called “When everyone is special, nobody is special.”
To be fair, the good side faces the ocean. which is the point of living there, and many are nice on the inside.
Got no argument from me there!
I’d live there, but only if I didn’t have to go out regularly, like to a job. Work from home, yeah! Some days, you just can’t get in or out of your own driveway for the traffic.
Having grown up along the SoCal coast, albeit not Malibu, I can say that in the 1960s when most of the cliffside houses were first being built traffic simply wasn’t an issue.
SoCal defined generously now has almost 25M people in it. Back when it had 10M (or 5M!) it was a very nice place with lots of space for nature and lots of space for everyone. Not so much now.
Yep, that’s the other problem. I have some friends who recently did a major trip in Europe. One of them mentioned that there was a line up to get into the first class lounge at one of the airports they had a layover in. Kind of defeats the whole purpose of the first class lounge.