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Thank you to the OP for posting this, as I've been meaning to update my Marriott Profile to remove my request for a daily newspaper. Just did it now. I must have placed it on my profile back in the dark ages when I read a physical paper in the hotel gym or at breakfast! I have dumped countless newspapers straight into the wastebasket since I'm going to read the paper on my iPad anyway. Now that is me being wasteful!
To the OP, I've seen consistent newspaper (WSJ) delivery M-F at full-service brands in the US as long as I've been a Marriott member. Not on weekends, and not in limited service hotels like Courtyard or Townplace suites. Don't believe I've seen them in international hotels either but again, I haven't been looking for them as I read the news (NYT, WSJ, local paper) on my iPad every day whether I'm at home or travelling. |
Originally Posted by mahasamatman
(Post 28660098)
But Fox News/CNN/MSNBC don't print a newspaper.
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Yes - it's an official dictate - paper versions of newspapers are no longer a brand standard. The hotel would presumably lose the bulk discount thus limiting any desire to keep purchasing them.
I think it's a mixed bag - while the physical paper is nice to have, there is a cost to purchase, and a cost to dispose of. (Imagine 1000 papers per day in a dumpster....). Worse, many/most of them go unused. Fake news commentary aside, USA Today (and WSJ) are both politically polarizing (particularly USA Today). The best use (for me) is to line my cat's litter box....the furries don't care much about the content. |
1 Attachment(s)
I asked a friend who works at a Marriott. This is right off the screen at the front desk.
Attachment 37606 |
Originally Posted by Long Train Runnin
(Post 28660281)
I asked a friend who works at a Marriott. This is right off the screen at the front desk.
Attachment 37606 |
Oh my. No notice as usual. Not even a going green double speak. Another death by a thousand cuts.
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The screen says no longer required to provide newspapers as of August 1st, but it doesn't say that hotels can't provide them anyway.
Since we've had some reports post August 1st of properties still providing them, this seems like all things Marriott - depends on the property. Cheers. |
Originally Posted by joshua362
(Post 28660397)
Oh my. No notice as usual. Not even a going green double speak. Another death by a thousand cuts.
- No longer provides a newspaper. - No longer offers in-room dining (many Marriott hotels now only offer grab-and-go, even if you order "room service" you get the food in boxes and a bag with plastic flatware). - No longer provides slippers or a bathrobe as a brand standard. - Doesn't have shoe shining. - Doesn't have real bellmen. - Doesn't have a concierge. - Asks you to tip for housekeeping. - Charges you for the fitness room, internet, housekeeping and pool towels, as some/many Marriott "resorts" do. |
Originally Posted by SkiAdcock
(Post 28660943)
The screen says no longer required to provide newspapers as of August 1st, but it doesn't say that hotels can't provide them anyway.
Since we've had some reports post August 1st of properties still providing them, this seems like all things Marriott - depends on the property. Cheers. Because a hotel may not be required to provide newspapers to individual rooms it will likely get away with only having 1-2 newspapers in the lobby or charging you for newspapers that were previously complimentary. |
Originally Posted by rrz518
(Post 28660207)
The hotel would presumably lose the bulk discount thus limiting any desire to keep purchasing them.
I think it's a mixed bag - while the physical paper is nice to have, there is a cost to purchase, and a cost to dispose of. (Imagine 1000 papers per day in a dumpster....). Worse, many/most of them go unused. The same is true for airport lounges. There's a reason why airport lounges often have magazines or newspapers (Financial Times, International New York Times) that aren't generally widely circulated. Having 50-100 copies of the Financial Times in every airport lounge really pads the circulation figure. |
Originally Posted by hockeyinsider
(Post 28660017)
I wouldn't be surprised if Gannett, which owns USA Today, is partly kept in business by all of its hotel sales as I don't know anyone who otherwise buys USA Today.
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Originally Posted by SkiAdcock
(Post 28660943)
The screen says no longer required to provide newspapers as of August 1st, but it doesn't say that hotels can't provide them anyway.
Since we've had some reports post August 1st of properties still providing them, this seems like all things Marriott - depends on the property. Cheers. (Maybe I'm being nostalgic, but I still enjoy the feeling of waking up in my pajamas, and opening the door to find the morning paper waiting for me!) |
Originally Posted by SkiAdcock
(Post 28660943)
The screen says no longer required to provide newspapers as of August 1st, but it doesn't say that hotels can't provide them anyway.
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Originally Posted by CPRich
(Post 28661076)
I just picked one up as I checked in at a Four Points. $2 for 26 pages. I can't imagine anyone actually pays for this at a newsstand, or even by delivery.
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Originally Posted by rrz518
(Post 28660207)
Yes - it's an official dictate - paper versions of newspapers are no longer a brand standard.
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