Another TBB post featuring the most eclectic links around the web such as our ChatGPT world, the next opioid crisis, Bhutan trip report, airport lounge wars, the stunning Conrad Koh Samui, AI replacing our jobs, complying with the latest tax changes, elder abuse of very rich people, how to turn off AI, emojis and powerful ideas and castles, the best photography links and of course always all of the most important developments in the crazy world of frequent flyer miles and points at the lower half of the post. Have a great weekend!
Blog Mission: To Educate. Entertain. Inspire. In That Order!
This blog started way back in 2012 focusing on my crazy hobby addiction of traveling with frequent flyer miles, hotel and bank points. It has since evolved to curated posts featuring the best web content along with my commentary.
This blog stays in business with clicks only from readers for credit cards and coffees. You can always get to my credit card links by clicking on “CREDIT CARDS’ at the menu on the top of the homepage or the “We make finding a new credit card simple” banner on the right sidebar. Or, preferably, you can receive new offers in your email inbox by signing up to receive alerts HERE . Or just email me.
BLOG HOUSEKEEPING
This is truly a one man labor of love operation, enjoy it while it lasts.
Hello from the Park Hyatt in Bangkok, onwards to Malaysia, two nights at the inlaws and then ending this mega trip at the new Park Hyatt in Kuala Lumpur. Looking forward to return to Michigan and the snow, cough.
Every year in mid to late December I do posts with annual best of lists. I will continue these posts again.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK
“Doubt is not a pleasant condition, but certainty is absurd” – Voltaire
Please read the whole thing, not going to do it any justice by choosing what to excerpt here. Ok, just one paragraph excerpted below for you. Picked by me, a human:
The world that ChatGPT built is a world defined by a particular type of precarity. It is a world that is perpetually waiting for a shoe to drop. Young generations feel this instability acutely as they prepare to graduate into a workforce about which they are cautioned that there may be no predictable path to a career. Older generations, too, are told that the future might be unrecognizable, that the marketable skills they’ve honed may not be relevant. Investors are waiting too, dumping unfathomable amounts of capital into AI companies, data centers, and the physical infrastructure that they believe is necessary to bring about this arrival. It is, we’re told, a race—a geopolitical one, but also a race against the market, a bubble, a circular movement of money and byzantine financial instruments and debt investment that could tank the economy. The AI boosters are waiting. They’ve created detailed timelines for this arrival. Then the timelines shift.
PERSONAL FINANCE
The 2025 tax season is almost here and I am predicting…mayhem. Don’t be surprised if your tax preparer asks you if any of your compensation “qualifies” as tips and/or overtime income. Because you are not likely to get that properly singled out and shown on any of your W2 wage or paycheck statements. Since the latest tax law was passed late in the year it is clear that payroll systems are just not ready for prime time. So, it will get wild in 2025 and some will take it to the limit and let IRS come get them. And with IRS staffing down around 30%…well, good luck! Ok, long intro: ‘No tax’ on overtime and tips will trigger a tax ‘mess’ for many.
Key issue:
For 2025 only, employers will not be required to break out what overtime pay qualifies for the tax break and what overtime pay doesn’t. Beginning with 2026, employers will have to break out qualified overtime compensation as a separate line item by law. And tax filers will be able to refer to that paperwork when completing their 2026 returns in 2027.
Good advice, proper documentation backing up every number on the tax return you file will always go a long way towards winning any battles with the IRS:
Start gathering those pay stubs for 2025 now. Tax filers who don’t receive complete information from their employers will need to review their pay stubs and calendars and create a simple log showing the days and hours they worked overtime. While it’s late in the year, it doesn’t hurt to begin keeping simple logs now, both for overtime hours and tip income.
I see so much wasted bandwidth on what happens in the markets in the short term. Wildly popular podcasts by fellow Registered Investment Advisers talking about individual stocks and what happened to them yesterday or in the space of a few hours is just pure stupid nonsense, just don’t give them the honor of your clicks please. Unless you are watching it purely for entertainment purposes. Investing is always long term. Investing and short term should never be in the same sentence together, period. Good reminder: long term investing gobble gobble edition. Never forget:
The broad takeaway is straightforward: historically, stocks have produced the strongest long-run returns but the bumpiest ride; bonds have been steadier but not as powerful; and cash has been the most stable but the least effective at staying ahead of inflation. Over a 25 year period, a simple 60/40 mix of stocks and bonds historically has had the lowest probability— just 0.1%– of nominal losses.
Note what the above says: 25-year periods. Not 25 days. Not 25 headlines. The long-term data gets boringly consistent only when you zoom out far enough that individual news cycles stop mattering. Markets wobble all the time because humans wobble all the time, and that part hasn’t changed since the days of tulip auctions and overconfident spice traders. Sometimes there are long stretches where one asset does much better than the others: you can address this by holding a mix of them, not by trying to guess the next winner.
Wild story of yet another very rich old man falling for a much younger woman and in the process millions get lost, children are pissed and lawyers get involved and elder abuse is naturally alleged and…just wait for the movie: She Managed His Fortune. How Did She End Up Inheriting It?After the death of his first wife, Gulf & Western president David Judelson married his former banker and left her millions when he died. Now his kids are accusing their stepmom of something sinister.
By 2014, Jim was referring to still-married Eva as his life partner, waving away his children’s concerns about the Gayers and his declining memory. The next year, the children said Eva pressured Jim to make them sign a document agreeing not to contest the millions of dollars in gifts he had given her and planned to provide her. When they objected, Roy said that he remembers Eva pronouncing that “If you won’t sign the agreement, I’ll just have to marry your father,” which she denies.
It gets wilder, grab your popcorn if you decide to read this.
I like checking out the monthly Ponzi Scheme Blog roundup, here is the latest one for November 2025. Because I like to exercise my neck muscles as I shake my head reading how gullible people fall for obvious scams like:
…promised returns of 1-2% per day, or approximately 547% per year.
…guaranteed returns of 15% per month with a return of principal after one year.
…promising 5% monthly returns through day-trading securities.
…promised returns of 18% to 30% from supposed investments into software and technologies companies and in commodities and currency.
…promising them 200% returns.
…promised returns of 150% over 300 days, paying .5% daily.
…promised returns of 20% from investments in luxury watches, cars, precious metals, alcohol, and startups.
Sticking this anti gambling rant here because it is enabled by tech: The Next Opioid Crisis. This blog is anti gambling and sometimes I wonder what are we doing here promoting this shit smh.
Amid the mania, these platforms are moving deeper into the mainstream:
Robinhood, the stock trading app, is expanding in prediction markets with Kalshi as a partner, declaring it’s the “fastest-growing business” it has ever seen.
Google struck a deal to integrate odds from Kalshi and Polymarket into its search results so you can ask questions about future market trends.
The owner of the New York Stock Exchange agreed to invest up to $2 billion in Polymarket, which is preparing to return to the U.S. after being kicked offshore.
FanDuel is joining with derivatives exchange CME to launch a new platform, allowing it to bypass restrictions in states where gambling is illegal.
The most profitable companies all do the same thing: They tap into our flaws and monetize them, then pretend it’s innovation rather than exploitation. We need to have a wider debate about the society we want. Rather than celebrating gambling, we should embrace a different kind of risk: asking someone out, approaching a stranger, investing in relationships with friends and potential mates. [Or maybe read my blog to get educated, entertained and even inspired sometimes. Speaking to the choir here so please spread the word , thank you]
AI
Ok, there are some wild headlines around AI. And this one sure is: MIT report: AI can already replace nearly 12% of the U.S. workforce. Models of any kind can be wrong, it is simply too early to guess what will happen. But this is probably true as things stand today:
Early analysis points to significant exposure in white-collar, knowledge-heavy fields that were once seen as relatively insulated from automation. Finance, healthcare administration, human resources, logistics, and professional services such as legal and accounting work are among the areas where existing AI tools, including large language models (LLMs) and other software agents, can already execute many routine tasks. In other words, much of the potential disruption sits in more traditional back-office and professional roles that have drawn less public attention in AI debates.
Very cool, especially if you are into emojis: The Emoji Museum. A Journey Through Digital Expression. From pagers in 1999 to your pocket in 2025. Witness the evolution of how we communicate emotion through tiny pixelated art.
Great read. Takes you through the history of how lounges came into our lives and the frenetic pace lately building new bigger and more luxurious ones. Very funny article too, I bet you will laugh and then feel so grateful I brought this into your life to enhance it that next time you get a travel rewards credit card you will email me for a link (hint lol): The Airport-Lounge Wars. When you’re waiting for a flight, what’s the difference between out there and in here?
There are more than thirty-five hundred airport lounges in the world. Suvarnabhumi Airport, in Bangkok, has thirty-seven—roughly one for every two gates. Kasane, Botswana, a town of about ten thousand people, has an airport smaller than some lounges; it has an airport lounge. Three of the four lounges in Punta Cana’s airport have outdoor pools.
Very funny too, such as:
The fancier the lounge, the less the lounge goer has to interact with the actual airport. “We have Porsches,” Hiroko told me, by the windows. “You see them down below?” She led me to the tarmac, where there was a fleet of six cars. For an extra five hundred and fifty dollars, Delta will drive you straight to the plane and pick you up on the other end.
Hiroko booked me at the lounge’s restaurant, a Danny Meyer venture. I had trouble deciding what to eat. I eventually ordered the mussels with charred pineapple as an appetizer, and an entrée of lamb chops. “Are you sure you don’t want to order two?” my waiter, Darren, asked. I added risotto. “No surf and turf? Maybe the swordfish?” I ordered the swordfish. It was 11:30 A.M. Everyone around me was drinking red wine.
I’d made a miscalculation and accidentally booked a massage at the same time I was supposed to be getting my dessert. So Darren held my soufflé and pretzel brownie while an attendant escorted me to the spa. Around me, passengers wore compression pants that looked like astronaut suits, to drain the fluid out of their travel-bloated legs. My treatment was a chair massage. It was a little disappointing. Even this lounge was filling up, making it hard to fully relax, and I couldn’t help but think of Thai Airways’ first-class lounge in Bangkok, whose free one-hour massages are full body—the real deal.
The line “…Darren held my soufflé and pretzel brownie while an attendant escorted me to the spa.” is just pure comedic gold, imho.
This blog started with a focus on miles and points and travel. It has evolved since then. Everything below deals with the hobby of collecting frequent flyer miles and points and maximizing your travel experiences. If you are not interested, you can stop here, thank you.
MILES & POINTS
Here we go again. Going to keep this fairly short (for my standards lol) as I am traveling…
Devastating devaluation: Turkish Airlines Miles&Smiles Devalues Domestic Star Alliance Awards (US & Hawaii Hard Hit). Bloggers will not stop until they kill all sweet spots it appears. If you recently were thinking to go to Hawaii for a few Turkish Airlines miles, the joke is on you. Does it feel like this hobby is getting killed steadily and surely lately or what?
Oh dear God, yet another Wall Street Journal article: Citi’s Premium Card Rollout Was Marred by Errant Approvals. Bank froze accounts after special sign-up link intended for branch customers was posted online. If you feel like our species is getting beaten down lately, here is why:
But there is still a large community of people who treat chasing perks as a hobby, said Ted Rossman, a senior analyst at the personal-finance site Bankrate.
which has attracted a large community of credit card salesmen and…then there are small independent blogs like mine. Which was again warned I am not meeting my quota to sell 10 credit cards per month. The sad fact is that it is becoming increasingly harder to survive in this brutal landscape. Forbes Advisor had a massive layoff wave, which followed other massive layoff waves around the industry.
This is why banks are consolidating around an increasingly smaller set of affiliate relationships and us small guys are getting cut left and right. When this blog gets that dreaded notice again that I am out due to low sales this blog ends. Until then, enjoy it as much as I enjoy putting it all together. And know that every credit card sold (which represents over 90% of the blog revenues that covers most of the blog costs), every coffee bought and every positive constructive comment helps this blog to keep going, always free. Negative constructive comments are also welcome.
Speaking of credit card salesmen, there are so many out there that always morph content to sell more plastic. Because this is how they survive and sometimes thrive. Like this post: Apply Now and Double-Dip on These Citi Strata Elite Credits in Year One. Yes, you can help this blog, email me for a link.
Just left everything the same from last week again, sorry…
NEW OFFERS:
CAPITAL ONE Spark Cash Plus: Earn a $2,000 cash bonus when you spend $30,000 in the first 3 months. Earn an additional $2,000 bonus for every $500,000 spent in the first year. To learn more about the card read this.
100k CAPITAL ONE Venture X: 100,000 points after $10k minimum spend in first six months. $395 annual fee less $300 travel credit less $100 (for 10,000 points on each anniversary). The card that still pays you $5 to carry it in your wallet. It was the #1 card offer at 75,000 so now it is offered for 100,000. Of course the minimum spend is $6,000 higher than the 75k offer, you can’t have everything in life. See detailed description below. Click on the link, it takes you straight to the application, the only bank I am allowed to link directly to my affiliate links, thanks for your support.
200k/400k CAPITAL ONE Venture X Business: Almost identical as the personal Venture X. But higher signup bonuses and higher minimum spend requirements. 200k points for $30k spend in first three months and a whopping 400k points for an equally whopping $150k spend in the first six months. Click on the link, it takes you straight to the application, the only bank I am allowed to link directly to my affiliate links, thanks for your support.
$250k Chase Amazon Prime Visa: At $250 gift card, it is the highest signup bonus. No minimum spend. No annual fee. Requires Amazon Prime membership. Earns 5% on Amazon, Amazon Fresh and Whole Foods. Even earns 5% on travel purchases at the Chase travel portal. 2% on gas, restaurants and local transit and commuting. 1% on everything else. Earns 10% Prime bonus on rotating Amazon products and categories. No foreign transaction fees. It appears the Chase 5/24 restriction does not apply to this card. But getting it will add to your 5/24 count, so beware. This is for people who just spend a lot on Amazon and Whole Foods, I should get it myself but these Chase 5/24 slots are oh so precious…
The Signup Bonus offers remain the dreaded “Up to 175,000 points” for the personal card. And a solid 200,000 points for the Business card.
125k CHASE Sapphire Reserve/200k CHASE Sapphire Reserve for Business
Chase raised the Signup Bonus to 125,000 from 100,000 points. The minimum spend is $5k in the first three months. As with all cards, you know what to do to help the blog, thank you. You can read a lot more about the Sapphire Reserve cards HERE.
New card: CITI AAdvantage Globe Card Launches With 90,000 Points Bonus ($350 Fee). The minimum spend to earn the 90,000 AA miles is $5,000 within the first 4 months of account opening. The card earns 6x on AAdvantage Hotel bookings, 3x on AA purchases, 2x on restaurants, 2x on rides and rails and 1x on everything else. First checked bag free and preferred boarding. AA companion certificate (after the first year) for $99 plus fees and taxes. $240 credit on Turo at $30 per quarter, $100 credit on inflight purchases, $100 credit on Splurge (up to two merchants from 1st Dibs, eligible AAdvantage Hotels, Future Personal Training, or Live Nation). 4 Admirals Club lounge passes every year. $120 Global Entry/TSAPreCheck every four years. No foreign transaction fees.
American Express just came in with elevated offers on all four Hilton Honors cards, they all END 1/14/2026:
– Honors: 100,000 points after $2,000 spend in six months – Surpass: 155,000 points after $3,000 spend in six months – Aspire: 175,000 points after $6,000 spend in six months – Business: 175,000 points after $8,000 spend in six months
And Chase just elevated this offer:
Chase Marriott Boundless 125,000 Points + Free Night Certificate (up to 50,000 points) after $3,000 in six months
30k CHASE United Gateway
One of my favorite no annual fee keeper cards. Just $1k minimum spend in the first three months. Earns 2x on United purchases, gas stations, local transit and commuting, 1x on everything else. You get expanded award availability and 2 free checked bags after $10k spend in a calendar year. 25% off in in-flight purchases. No foreign transaction fees. Many spend based promos with this card from personal experience, there is always a spend based promo going on, they never stop, love it.
The card has its annual $95 fee WAIVED for the first year. No annoying credits to deal with, it just earns 2 points everywhere. And you can earn 5x on hotels and rental cars booked on the Capital One travel portal too. And when you have a Capital One Venture X or the Venture card above, the $1,000 can be turned into 100,000 miles.
CHASE Aeroplan 100k Bonus Points. $95 annual fee. 75k points for $4k spend in 3 months. Additional 25k points for $20k total spend in 12 months.
Please help the small independent blogs like mine continue to exist by supporting them with your CREDIT CARD clicks, thank you!
BONUS OFFERS NOTIFICATIONS
Would you like to be automatically notified every time a card comes out with (or is about to remove) an elevated welcome offer? If yes, I highly encourage you to sign up if you haven’t yet. And when you apply for a credit card from a link in these emails you help support the blog.
All you have to do to receive these free notifications is:
1. Click on the link above
2. Create an account
3. Subscribe
MY ACTION AND BLOG BUZZING
I am trying to enjoy our trip. Due to a death in the family I stopped posting on Instagram and YouTube, I am going to catch up on trip videos/pics after my return to the US and over the holidays. I have A LOT to post. Just one video I posted right before I got the devastating news early Thanksgiving morning.
Very brief one paragraph review of hotels: We absolutely loved loved the Conrad in Koh Samui. Spent 2 nights here and did not want to leave. Should have stayed less nights in the Hyatt Regency Koh Samui, which does not pale in comparison to the Conrad.
Loved the Bangkok Grand Hyatt and we should have not even bothered with the Bangkok Park Hyatt, maybe one night would have been enough to experience it. Clearly, the Grand Hyatt and the Hyatt Regency are best for Bangkok for a better experience and value. Of course the two Hyatt Place properties on Soi1 and 24 are just perfect to get those Hyatt elite night credits to requalify for Globalist elite status.
Stayed 1 night at The Standard which got us a really nice suite but I had to work for it, details when I eventually catch up. Glad we checked out another Hyatt brand, very funky/hip indeed and really enjoyed the free tickets to go to the rooftop SkyWalk with its spectacular views.
Off to Kuala Lumpur Park Hyatt, hope this is better. I am starting to feel like I just don’t like Park Hyatts and love the Conrads. Maybe I get back around to Amex as Chase appears to be totally committed to punish our species, so sad. But Amex appears it does not want me back…so far at least. I just started shifting some more spend to Amex cards to help the cause.
We had two amazing dinners at the Conrad Koh Samui and paid at checkout with both my business Amex Platinum and Hilton Surpass and got $50 quarterly credit on each card #winning.
Sometime in the next 24 hours when the 3 night Park Hyatt Bangkok stay posts I am going to hit the magic 60 nights and requalify for World of Hyatt Globalist elite status. Only to be faced with the new Chase bank reality and that never ending supply of World of Hyatt points hitting the brakes, so sad.
Just a few pics from this trip. Two months of travel involving family in Greece and Thailand/Malaysia this year, so blessed. Thank you God and Chase Bank.
At Skywalk rooftop at Mahanakhon Building in Bangkok. The Standard hotel is in this building and we get free access to the rooftop, amazing views of the citySwimming in our private pool at our Conrad Koh Samui villa. Ok, all units get a private pool by the way. Did I say we absolutely loved this property?Breakfast at the Bangkok Park Hyatt
I DO have a separate page listing my affiliate links HERE for: Rakuten and Top Cash Back and more.
I am giving myself a challenge to average 5 credit card sales and 15 Buy Me a Coffee sales per month.
You can receive each blog post by entering your email address below and then clicking on SUBSCRIBE below, no spam ever!:
This site may receive compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. Travel Blogger Buzz and Your Best Credit Cards may receive a commission from card issuers. This compensation may impact how and where links appear on this site. This site does not necessarily include all financial companies or all available financial offers. The editorial content on this page is not provided by any of the companies mentioned, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities. Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone.
First time on American Airlines in memory. Perfectly pleasant. Good use for UR points. Nope, Delta does not go here!
Thanks for the ponzi update! I had the students look at Samuelson’s argument that Social security is stable ponzi. Right.
C
Carl PietrantonioDecember 5, 2025
Man! Much to read here but will take a while due to a 2-3 day trip outta town. You’ve stayed at a bunch of places but I suppose it is to see different things? Glad the trip is going well!
A
AndyDecember 5, 2025
That Koh Samui villa pool with the views surely bring up memories. Stayed for 5 days and every day it was hard to leave the property.
B
bobDecember 6, 2025
Hello from Tucson, a weekend trip to secure a new passport and evacuate from Las Vegas due to the national rodeo final and a raiders game. Will be at 40 hyatt nights by the weekend then hitting the rio to get to 60.
Good news on Hyatt expanding in Vietnam, they need a lower price point compared to what they have had of resorts and park hyatts. I’ve made a booking for next year at a new property near Ha Long Bay just to try and get the nights up so I’m not having to set up residence in Las Vegas next December. It seems Thailand is starting to get stricter on tourist visas so I see spending more time in ‘Nam in my future.
N
NickDecember 6, 2025
It’s been a pretty chilly late fall / early winter here in NC and presumably it’s been colder in Michigan. I think you picked a good time to hang out in southeast Asia.
Re ‘the 60 places you won’t believe are in the USA’ list–that eternal flame one is just a bit south of Buffalo. We thought about going there during our trip last year but decided against it. However I can tell you that it sits at the edge of the Marcellus shale formation, the largest-producing natural gas field in the United States.
G
GeorgeTBBAuthorDecember 7, 2025
Hello from the Park Hyatt in Kuala Lumpur. This is a special property, the standard suite is amazing, almost double the size the suite in the Park Hyatt in Bangkok! And the swimming pool in the 99th floor is I think the best swimming pool I have been in. Oh, we are on the 104th floor, amazing views. Need to see how the breakfast is tomorrow 🙂
@ DML: Lubock, TX, home of Texas Tech and probably the best financial planning program in the US…well, the world.
@ Nick: Still dreading the cold weather when I return in a few days. Going to miss SE Asia and sweating so much lol.
Actually, I feel good coming back home. It has been a great trip and almost a month away.
I am at 62 World of Hyatt night credits and have officially requaliied as Globalist. With pretty much no travel plans in place at all for 2026, oh oh.
@ Andy: Nice to see you again. Yeah…still dreaming about the Conrad in Koh Samui.
@ Bob: You won’t be the only one who is choosing Vietnam way more than Thailand lately, seems to be a thing.
L
LauraDecember 7, 2025
We have an Atlantic subscription, and have had one for quite a while, but I’ve been thinking about cancelling it because I am so mad about their recent RFK cover – “The Most Powerful Man in Science.” I know the article was more complex than that, but that sort of placating, knee-bending headline is not what I expected from the Atlantic….
G
GeorgeTBBAuthorDecember 8, 2025
Hope they don’t take it further.Still night and day when you compare it to the super pathetic asskissing from that FIFA dude giving Trump a peace award, sad lol.
C
ChristianDecember 8, 2025
Lovely pictures.
“I am starting to feel like I just don’t like Park Hyatts”
Try the Park Hyatt Siem Reap. It rocks!
G
GeorgeTBBAuthorDecember 8, 2025
Christian,
I take it back, I take it back….Typing this from the amazing Park Hyatt in Kuala Lumpur.
Comments (10)
Hello from Lubbock!
First time on American Airlines in memory. Perfectly pleasant. Good use for UR points. Nope, Delta does not go here!
Thanks for the ponzi update! I had the students look at Samuelson’s argument that Social security is stable ponzi. Right.
Man! Much to read here but will take a while due to a 2-3 day trip outta town. You’ve stayed at a bunch of places but I suppose it is to see different things? Glad the trip is going well!
That Koh Samui villa pool with the views surely bring up memories. Stayed for 5 days and every day it was hard to leave the property.
Hello from Tucson, a weekend trip to secure a new passport and evacuate from Las Vegas due to the national rodeo final and a raiders game. Will be at 40 hyatt nights by the weekend then hitting the rio to get to 60.
Good news on Hyatt expanding in Vietnam, they need a lower price point compared to what they have had of resorts and park hyatts. I’ve made a booking for next year at a new property near Ha Long Bay just to try and get the nights up so I’m not having to set up residence in Las Vegas next December. It seems Thailand is starting to get stricter on tourist visas so I see spending more time in ‘Nam in my future.
It’s been a pretty chilly late fall / early winter here in NC and presumably it’s been colder in Michigan. I think you picked a good time to hang out in southeast Asia.
Re ‘the 60 places you won’t believe are in the USA’ list–that eternal flame one is just a bit south of Buffalo. We thought about going there during our trip last year but decided against it. However I can tell you that it sits at the edge of the Marcellus shale formation, the largest-producing natural gas field in the United States.
Hello from the Park Hyatt in Kuala Lumpur. This is a special property, the standard suite is amazing, almost double the size the suite in the Park Hyatt in Bangkok! And the swimming pool in the 99th floor is I think the best swimming pool I have been in. Oh, we are on the 104th floor, amazing views. Need to see how the breakfast is tomorrow 🙂
@ DML: Lubock, TX, home of Texas Tech and probably the best financial planning program in the US…well, the world.
@ Nick: Still dreading the cold weather when I return in a few days. Going to miss SE Asia and sweating so much lol.
Actually, I feel good coming back home. It has been a great trip and almost a month away.
I am at 62 World of Hyatt night credits and have officially requaliied as Globalist. With pretty much no travel plans in place at all for 2026, oh oh.
@ Andy: Nice to see you again. Yeah…still dreaming about the Conrad in Koh Samui.
@ Bob: You won’t be the only one who is choosing Vietnam way more than Thailand lately, seems to be a thing.
We have an Atlantic subscription, and have had one for quite a while, but I’ve been thinking about cancelling it because I am so mad about their recent RFK cover – “The Most Powerful Man in Science.” I know the article was more complex than that, but that sort of placating, knee-bending headline is not what I expected from the Atlantic….
Hope they don’t take it further.Still night and day when you compare it to the super pathetic asskissing from that FIFA dude giving Trump a peace award, sad lol.
Lovely pictures.
“I am starting to feel like I just don’t like Park Hyatts”
Try the Park Hyatt Siem Reap. It rocks!
Christian,
I take it back, I take it back….Typing this from the amazing Park Hyatt in Kuala Lumpur.