Filed under: GirlTalk, Hospitality PR, Marketing & PR | Tags: appetizers, applebee's, Boston, Boston college student, Boston restaurant, Boston University, bottega fiorentina, brookline, chain restaurant, citysearch boston, cocktails, college, Communications, date, dinner date, emerson, first date, Hospitality, Hospitality PR, Italian restaurant, Lifestyle, longhorn, lunch date, Newbury street, Nightlife, panera, pasta dishes, PR, Public Relations, Restaurant, restaurant PR, sandwiches, sangria
Yet again, I find myself inspired to post in response to a reader comment! A few days ago I posted about my love of hospitality PR and my passion for the experiences of eating out, going out, and traveling.
I also professed my disgust with chain restaurants, as they lack any unique personality and usually come along with a range of problems from inadequacy of service to poor management. Most of all, however, I just hate the vibe of chain restaurants. I feel too much like an anonymous member of the masses.
One reader was appalled with my lack of affection for chains:
“oh please there is something to be said for hokey style chain restaurants where else can u take a first date with little money(emerson student) and know exactly what you’ll be charged
also comfortability knowing your way around, dress code and other familiar things. you know exactly what your meal will be and that it will taste good because it never changes Chains deserve a special place in restaurant lore some people do not want any surprises”
I feel as if you’ve been thwarted by some non-chain restaurant or heinous first date experience and have been frightened by your own vulnerability. Relax, buddy, they’re not all like that. The girls and the eateries.
“hokey style chain restaurants.”
Oh dear.
First of all, I just want to say that we are talking about this NO-NO specifically in relation to first dates. Obviously if you’re dating someone and you’re out at lunchtime and looking for a place to eat, go ahead and suggest the Panera that’s nestled on the street directly in front of you. It’s just not the right spot for a first date, in my opinion.
Second of all, there are obviously many different types of females out there. Some have upscale requirements, some have picnic-style requirements (a cute, inexpensive first date option, by the way!). Um, we’re flexible. Relax, we’re not looking for a dinner cruise and orchestra seats.
Third of all, we understand you have no money–we’re not all prisses thriving on our parents’ credit cards. I work four days a week, and still maintain a lifestyle similar to that of such prisses, because I prioritize.
If it’s important enough, prioritize. I’m a single girl who pays for herself, and I make out just fine. That being said, I don’t have many other things to spend my money on, save monthly bills, groceries, credit cards, and the like. I’m not trying to say I know how you feel as a guy with no money, or a human being with no money. It’s not the greatest position to be in, but don’t let it lead you to AppleBee’s.
But most importantly, NON-CHAINS ≠ $$$$
Take her to Bottega Fiorentina–on Newbury, not in Brookline. People love it for first dates, and the menu (authentic Italian) has a wide range of pastas, sandwiches, dinners, and salads that are revered around the neighborhood and beyond (by a lot of those prisses as well, incidentally) and hover around $10 each. The vibe is chill, metro, warm, and contemporary but never snooty. They have a great but manageable selection of wine for around $7 a glass and amazing red wine sangria for about the same price. Tell them I sent you. Literally.
Plan It
I feel like this comment comes from an experience in which you chose a place and it ended up costing way more $$$ than you expected. A novel idea might be to look at the menu ahead of time. They post them outside the restaurant (who knew!) and you can shriek at the price of the lobster ravioli sans judgment. Better yet, most notable spots have pdfs of their menus online. You don’t even have to get off the couch. Or go to a site like City Search and read customer reviews. They’re really honest about the price and the food.
There’s nothing more awkward than a freshman first date in tacky Easter Sunday clothes at one of those restaurants where two different wine glasses that your Keystone expertise has had yet to encounter are waiting for you on the table and everyone there is thirty-six and over. Don’t let this happen to you (again?). Prepare.
Choose the Environment
Now that the weather’s getting beautiful, sit outside at a restaurant with a patio during lunch. A. Lunch is always cheaper or the same price. B. the atmosphere makes up for your tight budget.
Hence, you’ll pay the same as if you had gone to Longhorn, but she won’t have to hear Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban belt on soft 106.7’s country equivalent.
Yes, I do know that a lot of young women like Carrie Underwood and Keith Urban. But I do not. I’m from New Jersey. And New York. No fluffy twangs, please. And no fried things that shouldn’t be fried by anyone, except Paula Deen.
Frame It
You’re doing the asking. So ask her out to drinks over appetizers. She won’t order more than two drinks, tops–and if she does you probably don’t want’er. Or go for coffee. Girls eat. coffee. dates. up. She’ll think secretly that your sensitivity only makes you more masculine. Plus, if it doesn’t go well, there’s a flexible expiration date. Or, if it’s going great, you can hang out over those $2 cups for hours. Just don’t order anything with the words “caramel,” “mocha,” or “frappuccino” in it.
I’ve got your best interest in mind, commenter, don’t be mad! I’m starting a list of places for you. I’ll post it shortly. For now, try Bottega.
Filed under: Newsworthy | Tags: Boston, Boston University, pandemic, pig flu, swine flu
My latest pet peeve: people who think they’ve caught the Swine Flu because someone sitting across from them blew his nose on the T and then grabbed the railing. Please do not hesitate to get over yourself.
Animals Suffer in Pandemics–and no one seems to care.
Click on the above link to read a comprehensive but to-the-point post on the Green Muze blog.
Also, I kind of didn’t realize how obscenely cute little pigs are until I searched Google Images for this post’s photo. They’ve actually sent me into permanent use of the puppy/baby/animal talk voice whenever I profess how adorable they are.
It’s really getting to be quite a problem.
Filed under: Marketing & PR, Newsworthy | Tags: Boston, Boston college student, boston marriot, Boston University, Boston University Medical School, Craigslist, Craigslist apology, Craigslist CEO, Craigslist personal safety tips, craigslist.com, Facebook, Jim Buckmaster, Julissa Brisman, philip markoff, PR, Public Relations, Twitter, westin, westin robbery
I’ve been getting comments! On the evening I posted about Craigslist’s poor decision to remain essentially inactive about its role in Philip Markoff’s crimes, a reader fed the conversation! (I had voiced my disappointment and shock with the site’s lack of an “apology”) The contributor asserted:
“An apology, from a legal standpoint, implies at least some degree of responsibility, which is why you won’t see one from anyone at Craigslist. Their position, which they repeat anytime they come under fire for enabling prostitution, is that they are not and cannot be responsible for the content posted by the individuals who use the site.”
-Comment by fjgallagher April 22, 2009 @ 3:58 pm
While I will say that “from a legal standpoint,” Craigslist may not owe anyone an apology (especially since law certainly is not my professed area of professional development), we’re talking about PR–which, in many cases, covers everything OUTSIDE and BEYOND the law. Step 1: Get permission to exist. Step 2: Get people’ta want us.
When it comes down to it, though, it’s really my fault for phrasing that preferential response as an “apology.” Forgive me, I meant it in quite a general sense.
More specifically, I believe Craigslist needs to join the dialogue–especially since its execs are far too late to start it, as they absolutely should have. But even though it might seem like a huge possibility, this isn’t just about breaking the law. At least, it doesn’t have to be. Rather, it’s about going that extra mile for the good of the company.
Even as a person who posts to Craigslist and browses the job postings, I know the company obviously does not have to pay any special attention to this matter. But I do think Jim Buckmaster would be a complete idiot from a PR perspective not to address the issue with simpathetic, humbled rhetoric.
To clarify, Craigslist should AT THE VERY LEAST:
-Give its condolences and express its outrage as a part of its position on the issue
Buckmaster has done this for the media, but what about on the site? It still lacks some humanistic voice to reassure hesitant users.
-Update its Personal Safety Tips page appropriately.
…I’m still waiting…
-Give related info referring to all of the above on Twitter, Facebook, etc. Wow, so, like, Craigslist users would, like, ah, be on those networks??
…
-Most importantly, EMAIL ALL USERS!!!!!
Come on, people. It takes like 10 minutes. You’re obviously not spending any of your precious time reviewing people’s submissions. There is virtually no design on the site. What are you doing with your time?
Sorry, I digress.
My point is that Craigslist isn’t there for its users to the extent that it needs to be. Craigslist’s failure to be proactive has forced it to succeed in assuming the defensive.
The company has officially lost my business; I would not recommend its services to anyone who’s safety I care about.
Filed under: Marketing & PR, Newsworthy | Tags: Boston college student, boston marriot, Boston University, Boston University Medical School, BU, Craigslist, Craigslist CEO, craigslist.com, Jim Buckmaster, Julissa Brisman, killer, online classified, philip markoff, post, PR, Public Relations, Quincy, sublet, westin robbery
Two things about the Craigslist killer situation are hard for me to wrap my head around:
1) Right now, it seems the killer is a BU med student w/no previous criminal record, a fiance, and the physical appearance of normalcy. He looks like someone my friends and I would chat with at a local bar. HOW ODD. Feeling a little uneasy about my post looking for a summer subletter on the classifieds site.
That being said, please rent from me. Please. Pretty please??
2) How come Craigslist has no apology on the site? A Monday CNN article included a quote from the site’s CEO saying they were all “horrified”.. Alright, at least that’s something. But what about something else? How about
- an email to all posters!
- an email to all current users!
- an apology on twitter!
- an apology on facebook!
- some details about the increased security the company is developing for those who post to the site!
- an updated, detailed warning to be safe when posting–for good measure!
The site’s Personal Safety Tips page was “last updated on September 15, 2008.” Nice.
But wait, a CNN article that was posted a little over three hours ago features an interview with CEO of Craiglist Jim Buckmaster.
FINALLY. Good thing this came six days after the initial finding that the thread between both women was Craigslist. Tisk, Tisk.
I wonder how many people will stop using the site now. I certainly will be more careful before giving anyone any personal info if email contact ensues about a posting. Not sure how safe I feel about it now. Think they’ll lose any business?
That being said, again, please peruse my post for a summer sublet in BU’s South Campus.




