Sunday, March 25, 2007

The EVIL department

Well, it's happened. I am working at a hotel again. I am not in "operations" which is where all the action takes place, but I'm sure some good stories will come out of this job. However, from what I can tell, this is by far the most smoothly run hotel I have encountered. Ever.

So I am now in the "evil" department. Sales. In every hotel I've worked at the front office abhorrs the sales department. Sales are the spawns of Satan in fact. They book all this business, which is good, but then they get to leave. And the front office is stuck dealing with the egos and the very specific demands that all front office agents can't stand.

Some of our favorite requests:

Late check outs - anyone who's on vacation and has a late flight does not want to vacate the room at the stated time. I get it. I understand. We don't care that you ask. We just care that you don't understand why we say no when we do.
I promise its not because we're mean and find it amusing to kick you out (well, we kind of do want you to leave if you've been a particularly handful of a guest like the guy who complained that the elevator certificate expired two months ago and we should probably look into that) but its because other people need to check in. Housekeeping are people too, with lives even, and don't want to be cleaning rooms til 9:00pm at night.
Anyway, the second we say it's going to be a fee all of the sudden the person is cool with leaving on time, which is noon and is not all that early. Oh, and we'll store your bags. If a hotel doesn't offer at least that then you are getting screwed and/or staying at a Motel 8. (I once had a hotel store a hard cover of a jeep I had rented. That's service!)

Early check in - I don't know of a hotel that won't check you in early if there is a room available. But the only way to guarantee it is to to buy the room for the night before. Hotels are a business. Shocking, I know. If they can sell every room, and have everyone actually show up, it's called a perfect sell. It rarely happens. And yet, people don't understand why when they requested an early check in (key word is request) that it may not happen. This goes for all requests actually. You know why we can't guarantee anything? Because people are self-absorbed flakes. If a person wants to stay another day and the hotel is sold out, we can't force them on to the street. This happens a lot, especially in convention cities.

Oh, I should mention what a "walk situation" is now. I personally can't get over the shock and anger some people go through when they get walked.

So, like I said, people are flakes. So hotels purposely oversell their hotels in order to try and sell out. I am not exaggerating when I say my last hotel averaged like 5 no-shows a night. And these people put down credit cards! I know, it's weird. So when all the peeps actually show up, the hotel is like shit, we have to walk someone. Guess what, the hotel is paying on this one. And if you have another night to spend, you will get treated like royalty upon your return (if the hotel knows what it's doing.) Um, I'm game if someone wants to bump me somewhere and pay for it.

The problem is when either the guest is not paying, maybe their company is, and its late and they just want to go to bed. Tired and cranky people? NO thank you. Or the person had some kind of plans revolving around our hotel and it fucks up their world. This is what happened to me the first time I walked a lady. She started crying because all her friends were staying there and it was like their annual girls trip or something. Anywho, shit happens. It sucks, but life will go on.

When I was an agent I was always trying to be helpful. There was this lady who booked a suite and was having some sort of party. OK, fine. She wanted to know exactly which suite it was. I assigned a room and told her. Fast forward two weeks and she checks in, but it's not the suite I assigned. She asks for the manager. Who moved her suite? Apparently she had printed the room number on the invitations. Now, she was in the exact same kind of room, BUT it was a different floor. Now my manager and the lady are pissed at me. Fuck, I was trying to help. But the people in the original suite stayed another day and it all got rearranged. Yeah, this is why we dont guarantee anything. It's impossible.

Not too long ago my friend who's a manager at a hotel had a guy who was staying a lot while he was shooting a new TV show. He was making a lot of last minute reservations. He calls one day and needs a suite on a day they are sold out of suites. He refuses to take a standard room. My friend says that's his only option. He threatened to call the CEO of the company who is a friend of his. Guess what? He did. He got his suite and some poor couple or family probably got bumped. Fucker.

Anyway, the whole point is that hotel Sales departments get all this business and have all these signed contracts and sometimes they involve getting someone a free upgrade or something, but in the end they are not dealing with it. So I'm a sucky sales person now. But I don't have to work weekends, or holidays, or overnights...

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

My First DB

OK. I wasn't there. I haven't actually seen a dead body besides at a funeral. There is nothing funny about it. I am not relating the story for amusement but for the sheer fact that it is something that happens.

I was working at Travelodge. I was out of town this particular weekend, and my roommate was nice enough to work a double to cover for me.

Since there was always wacky people staying with us, I gave a call on my drive home that Sunday to ask how the weekend went.

Me: Any crazy shit happen this weekend?

Roommate: Actually...well...I checked in this guy last night.

Me: What's wrong? You sound weird. (My roommate was one of those people that was never shocked.)

R: I checked this guy in to 313. He, uh, Gus had to call an ambulance last night. (Gus was our overnight manager with diabetes who ate too much chocolate, and we were afraid he was going to lose a foot any day.)

Me: Gus went to the hospital? (My first thought is: Poor, roomie. He must have gotten called in to work or something.)

R: Noooo. He had to call 911 for room 313. Apparently the guy called down and asked him to call an ambulance because he was bleeding.

I mentioned in a previous post that my boss was a doctor waiting to start his residency.

Me: Well, what happened? Is he OK?

R: Gus called Rameez after he called 911, and Rameez came right away. When Rameez went to check out the room...it was covered in blood.

Me: Like how much? (I'd never heard my roommate sound so freaked out.)

R: Like the entire room. Floor to ceiling. There was a broken coffee pot in the sink. Rameez says he thinks the guy tried commit suicide with the broken glass and may have lost about 80% of his blood.

Me: (Silent)

I am stunned. I'm like 20 years old and barely even able to understand the concept of death really. When I get back to work the next day my roommate and Rameez are cleaning "the room." (This is a small hotel and the housekeeping sucks, asking them to clean blood would be like asking them to sing showtunes or something.)

I finally see Rameez and he's wearing one of those surgical type masks. He looks tired.

Me: So...he lost a lot of blood?

Rameez: There was a lot of broken glass in the room from the coffee pot it seems. (He gets quiet.) I don't think he could have lived.

Room 313 was out of order for 2 months.

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Celebs I have Met

That's the first question people ask me when I tell them where I worked. Something about my last hotel definitely attracted the big names. Of course, if they were musicians and on tour they would come really late because they would be driving in from after their gig somewhere. Lots of them though would just check in under their own name in the middle of the day. You would get lots of guests going, "Is that Dan Aykroyd?" "I just took the elevator witrh James Blunt!" All you could do was smile. I can neither confirm nor deny, sorry.

I've been wanting to write about the really juicy stuff that celebs do like the one A-lister who made my friend cry because he was such a prick (that story will be told soon), but I'm still unemployed and if God forbid I have to work in a hotel again I am going to hold off, just in case.
So here's a brief list of celebs I have had an interaction with:

I ordered a sandwich for Art Garfunkel
I was working an overnight shift and it's a skeleton staff at night, so our cranky Operator takes the food orders for Room Service. Mr. Garfunkel comes to the desk looking all peeved and tells me that he's having communication problems with our order taker, and he just wants a sandwich. I hadn't been working there long, and he looks just like he always did, so I was a bit in awe. My reply? "It's very nice to meet you Mr. Garfunkel." What??? Fuck!!He just kind of mumbled thanks, but "can you take my order please?" (I don't remember what he ordered, but I hope he enjoyed it.)

I asked Ben Harper to sign a paid out slip
I was at the front desk and the concierge told me that Ben Harper and his girlfriend Laura Dern were going to be arriving soon in a limo he had ordered. The limo was to be charged to the room, but I needed a signature to do that so the driver could get paid. The concierge left me the slip knowing he was arriving late. I was so freakin happy I was going to get to meet him that I didn't realize I wasn't supposed to ask Ben, oh no, I was supposed to get the signature from the manager. Well, maybe I did know, but I asked Ben anyway just so I could say I met him. (He said hi and went to sign for it and then it kind of dawned on him that he doesn't do that kind of thing, you know, take care of his own money.)

Kristy Swanson hugged me
I got involved in creating her reservation for some reason I'm still not sure. So when she was checking in I was working, and I got up to greet her to the hotel. She threw her arms around me like we'd been friends for years. Sweet girl.

I brought John Mayer a phone charger
We knew he was coming in. I'm not the biggest fan in the world, but he looks just like my ex-boyfriend so I was intrigued. When he arrived he came to me to check in and asked if we had a box of chargers people left. We do, but it was in housekeeping so I was going to have to go through it. He drew me a picture of it! of the phone charger! I didn't have the heart to tell him that I had the same phone and knew exactly what it looked like. When I delivered it to his room he opened his door, he smiled at me, and he said "Thank you! You saved my day!"
Ha! Take that Jessica!

Bill Murray talked to me
I was a concierge at the time, and I knew Bill was inhouse. For some reason he called me saying how nice we were to extend his stay last minute, but he decided to stay by the airport. He was really just making sure we knew he wasn't going to use the room unlike some assholes who think if they just leave we won't charge them but how do we know it's unoccupied? Anyway, a few minutes later he was about to walk out the front door and he caught my eye (because I was staring), so he changed direction and came over to say thanks again. Then he said, "Are you in love? You look like you're in love!" (Yeah, with Bill Murray. He's one of my favorites.)

I checked in Jason Lewis without knowing who he was
I didn't have HBO like ever in my life, so I was not hip to the Sex and the City until I got them on DVD. One Sunday this incredibly good looking guy and his friend check in with me. I'm looking at him, and I'm thinking this guy is freakin hot! He asks me where to go on a Sunday night, I mention a few places and then I mention he could talk to the concierge. He wanders over there, and my doorman comes up to me. "I think that guy's on Sex and the City." I asked how would he know that. He tells me his sister and his girlfriend watch it all the time. I just shrugged. Years later I'm watching my DVD's and I realize it was him. Fuck!


See these were very harmless stories but still fascinating all the same, right? Well sorry to bore you. They were fascinating to me dammit!