Why do they mark up the items in mini bars SO much?

This is very interesting.

Foreign guests may also be a factor. It takes a while to get a feel for what is and is not a good deal when you are converting money in your head, and you may have a different reference point for what is expensive.

I’ve bought stuff from the mini-bar now and then, usually if I’m traveling for work, would like to unwind with a beer after a long day (or a long flight), would rather not wander an unfamiliar area/country at night and don’t want to be mistaken for a local prostitute at the hotel bar.

For what I’m paying, the condoms are always gratis.

Over here, you’ve just got the little bellhop/room-service boy asking if you need a condom. Or asking if you need a girl if you appear to be alone. (Like that one time in Loei province up by Laos, when the kid delivering my beer asked me if I needed a girl, and I declined, mentioning that the wife was in the bathroom. Or in China, where it’s common for male guests to receive telephone calls out of the blue from “masseuses” looking for customers.)

I’m guessing it’s one of those stretchy rubber rings the guy puts on his penis and it has a vibrating nub that stimulates the clitoris during intercourse. Not really much for the guy but value-added for the lady. The ring itself isn’t one of those ejaculate-preventing cock rings but rather just something to put the vibrator bit in place.

:slight_smile: I read this as a joke about hookers, not hotel prices.

This is definitely a hijack but my understanding was that the rings help prevent blood back flow, ie, help keep you hard.

We’ve gone from:

to:

Is this one of the weirdest tangents a thread’s gone off on?

Could be. Cock rings are out of my usual bailiwick.

I wonder if the prices are partly driven by the fact that hotels don’t make much money on phone calls any more.

Why do you think people would mistake you for a local prostitute?

I don’t know what country she has in mind, but in some hotels in Panama (and other countries I’ve been too) single women hanging out in the bar are frequently (in some hotels almost invariably) prostitutes.

It used to be said that everything but the gaming tables was a loss leader in Vegas. Inexpensive rooms, drinks, and food were all abundantly present in order to entice more visitors into the casinos.

Because it’s happened. I look vaguely Eastern European, and the entrepreneurial spirit of Russia has pervaded illicit industries around the globe. Russian working women are often among the high class escorts that are an expected feature of hotel bars in many areas, and a young woman in business dress slowly nursing a drink is often perceived as soliciting business.

Huh. You must travel in very different parts of the world than I do.

There were many Eastern European hostesses and prostitutes in Tokyo.

I don’t know if I ever saw a Russian / Eastern European woman in a bar in Tokyo who wasn’t a professional.

Probably. But my experience is like even sven’s. (Well, I’m a male, but I’m talking about that association.)Single woman hanging out in a hotel bar = possible prostitute is not all that unusual a connection in my travels.

It’s hardly unknown even in the US. And it’s pretty near standard in much of the developing world.

I hear or heard right here on SD that they put these expensive bottles of whatever, to quench your thirst, on little sensors that tell the front desk what to charge you. That way they don’t have to send a person up to the room to check the mini-bar.

One person said he just picked it up to look at the bottle and they charged him.

Perhaps it has something to do with the hotel learning it’s lessons from the old honor snacks days lol

No one is honest … no not even one.

That’s so funny. I used to travel for work, and I loved eating in the various hotel bars. It never once occurred to me that someone might mistake me for a prostitute. Of course, I usually ordered food and had my nose in a book as well, so maybe that helped…

Hey, phasers on stun everyone, I’m not doubting her. Goodness, I’ve had plenty of propositions myself after all; being propositioned in a hotel seems plausible. It’s just odd that I’ve been on more than a thousand work trips in 14 different countries over my career of 2+ decades and I’ve not encountered such. Then again I do tend to stay in rather expensive places.