Wolverhampton
I am sitting in the bar area of a fundamentally depressing Novotel in Wolverhampton which is currently accommodating our little family. The Novotel is the epitome of the invisible hotel: you walk into a bland fug of white corners, cheap nineties bright sofas and pine-veneered tables, corporate banners advertising their Brand New Loyalty Programme and a wash of non-music that, if it were any more insipid, would fail to sound at all from the well-hidden ceiling speakers that are set into the uniform white foam tiles above you. The bleak hotel has been built to its soulless template next to an inexpressive roundabout just off a utilitarian dual-carriageway, next to which Wolverhampton itself seems to thrive and bustle with local character, curving charming alleyways and the hum and buzz of life and work. I remember once seeing a photograph of a similar hotel being built, an image which depicted the room units being dropped by a crane as a whole into place: each constituent of accommodation pre-built and inoffensively, mildly decorated; complete with dazzlingly worthless watercolour prints and waterproofed carpet with its practical, forgiving, busy design. All that was left for the staff to do, presumably, was to supply the miniature kettles, and the regulation two-pack of stem ginger biscuits. That and to check that the sheets are not large enough to tuck properly under the mattress, while making sure the duvet can be secured firmly thereunder on all four sides, making it a ludicrous act of strength and courage to get into bed: a process which involves standing and wrenching the quilt from beneath the heavy mattress, thereby bringing the inadequate sheet up and out with it, then continuing the course of action with the end of the bed so that you can at least get in and try to sleep on the flaccid, tangled sheets without feeling like a dog is lying on your feet; then, some time later, fight against your own weight while trying to kick the rest of the bedding free in order to have the breezy pleasure of exposing your legs to the dry cool-ish air being noisily rasped out by the room’s ineffectual air-conditioning.
The bar menu perfectly reflects in appearance the charmless corporate design of the entire hotel. Standing up like a greetings card next to my laptop, it shows a severe close-up of a sea-bass fillet, peppered temptingly and topped with a sprig of thyme; in relief but out of focus, what appears to be the fish skin, and behind that, and now severely blurred and fading into the cream tone of the menu cover itself, some green pieces of what may be bok choi. The word ‘Menu’, or rather, ‘menu’, for please sweet Baby Jesus Christ we should not begin such a word with a capital letter, is turned on its side and runs down the right side of the menu front, and ‘elements’ (small ‘e’) and ‘your choice’ (‘y’ and ‘c’ ) are printed right ways alongside it. What purpose does ‘elements’ serve? I fail to grasp this. I have looked around – the bar has not been given one of those names like ‘Mirage’ or ‘Temptations’, which might explain the inclusion of this odd word into the design – and neither does the menu itself offer separate components of a meal which I might be invited to bring together in my preferred combination that suits my unique tastes and lifestyle options. The word ‘elements’ is simply the nauseating name that someone has decided to give the menu, because ‘menu’, let alone ‘Menu’, just wouldn’t capture the cool, cosmopolitan, contemporary chic of this sophisticated brasserie. And ‘your choice’? My choice? It’s a menu – I need to be told in lower case Myriad Pro Regular that it’s my fucking choice? That’s what a menu is: a list of options. And as it’s been left here for me, I understand that it’s a list of my options.
But despite all this, despite its lacklustre awfulness, despite its charging for wi-fi (an offensive act secured by connecting to a French server which takes five minutes to bring up its page, and then you have to pay ten Euros for a couple of hours ‘Euros? In Wolverhampton?’ hence me typing this into Word to post later when I can have free hotel wi-fi as God intended), despite all this, the redeeming fact is that the staff of the Novotel are utterly delightful. They may work in an exuberantly hateful environment that has been borne out of a profoundly misjudged sense of what people find welcoming, but they are a friendly, helpful and more-than-happy-to-please team of ladies and gentlemen. Last night, which is so rare and so appreciated on tour, Gary the barman kept the kitchen open for us, and we enjoyed a post-show feast of nicely-cooked food before bed. Today, Grace who brings me hot water and honey and lemon to soothe my poor throatingtons is more than happy to go out of her way with my unusual beverage requests for bottles of room-temperature water and extra honey-pots, and they couldn’t be any more delighted to make us feel welcome. And ultimately, this human kindness outweighs all the limitations of the place and depressing choices made by the hotel designer’s penchant for corporate blandness. (And what is that? Do people that work for corporations prefer bland surrounds? Do those people behind the Novotel brand, for example, like this sort of thing? Why does everything excused as ‘corporate’ have to be like this?)
Compare this hotel to the sumptuous, boutique Hotel du Vin, where we stayed in Harrogate. These hotels are delightful: but all of the gorgeously thought-through aspects of this lovely hotel – and the occasional Hotels du Vin are the highlights of the touring calendar and probably the most charming group in the country – were marred by a bar and restaurant staff who were generally tricky, flustered and distracted. This undid so much of the enjoyment of our stay, in the same way that the delightfully warm staff at this very different place in Wolverhampton lift the experience of staying here to being perfectly pleasant.
Simple kindness makes all the difference. An hotel (even ‘a’ hotel, which is similar but not quite as fancy: no spa and you don’t get dressing gowns in your room) can be equipped with all the conveniences to satisfy the fussiest touring mind-reader, but such things are immediately forgotten when the staff are miserable or uninterested. And if hotels are there to accommodate, then this is a very human need they fulfil, and thus we can learn from hotels how to best treat each other: we may be equipped with all the intelligence and wit and talent in the world, but nothing counts for much if we’re not kind. And we may be ugly, gawky, and have horrible-looking menus, but there’s nothing as appealing as being nice to people. Kindness, despite our current fetish with persuasion, goal-setting and getting-what-you-want, will always win over. It is the unfashionable but fundamental human virtue most conducive to personal happiness and a huge, forgotten secret of success.
And the Wolverines do seem very nice. A couple of fun shows and we’re back off to Blackpool.
x
O.O
Those were some mental photographs you took there Derren. I am hoping that when you get to Glasgow you find a nice hotel to stay and not bash it >.>
So what was the down side?
Ahh, hahah….that rant @in the bedroom made me laugh, Goody me! i thought i was bad sometimes, but hey 🙂
Lovely read though Déarren…and yes in the end, Kindness is all
Enjoy your little break…
x
What a charmingly delighful little passage. The hotel bears a stark resemblance to the library in which i currently sit, yes, at 1.30am- desperately trying to finish a uni assignment before 12pm tomorrow, where they try to make it seem a happy place to be, with strange sofas and oddly positioned lights; it is a library and I would like it to feel like like a library, a place which I am in to work, we kindly have public houses for relaxing. It is a shame however that our library security guards don’t share the same kindness; i feel they fail to understand why anyone wants to be in a library until 2am, even though I clearly am not here by choice.
I apoligise for rambling on your blog about my slightly irrelevant feelings towards a library; this is the result of far too much red bull and jelly babies. I do feel slightly better though; ‘a problem shared is a problem solved’ and all that y’know.
Okay, i really better…..toodles. X
I can completely relate to this post!! I stay in hotels a lot and know exactly what you are talking about but please remember that you would have got a service that was a little bit better than we mere mortals get. I cant remember the last time a kitchen stayed open for me :/ The paintings in hotel rooms always make me lol because they are so terrible. Once I had some “art” in my room and under the right light, you could see the shadows of different sized men doing what different sized men do. I felt sullied and guilty yet I had not had the pleasure!
I’m sorry Mr. Brown, but as you clearly care about how things are written, could I please ask you not to be “sat” in a bar, but to be “sitting” there. Likewise, the bar menu is surely “standing” up, not “stood” up.
Once again, I’m sorry for my pedantry, but hope you will appreciate that my comment is borne out of a solidarity with your frustrations, rather than any grubbier motive.
With best wishes for the rest of your tour.
I’ll eat your stem ginger biscuit 🙂 (that wasn’t meant to sound as rude as it came out).
Hoping that after the second Blackpool night the first night (last Monday) will get a mention. Starting to worry we were such a bad audience that you’ve all wiped us from your minds.
x
As an English teacher, I tend to carry with me a large red texta. Current educational policy forbids me from using it to correct the miscreant’s work, however, it does provide me the opportunity to make corrections elsewhere, as I see fit.
Many a meal has been improved by making swift but exacting grammatical changes to ‘m’enues.
My dear Derren,
Just when I was feeling very sorry for you, and very shocked by the display of negativity, you turned the corner, and of course, made it all lovely. Well done.
How wonderful it is that you stay engaged in your mind and that, through this blog, we can be privy to your thoughts, so well expressed in your writing, peppered with parenthetical musings and delightful details.
amazin show in wolverhampton on wed night gl with the rest of it
Well said Mr. Brown. You have such an incredible talent for telling stories.
well at least the service is friendly there, 🙂 , hope you have a great time. 4days! 4days until we see you in Oxford counting down! keep that throat healthy! 😉 xxx
You want the moon on the stick man!
You spoilt celebrities are all the same! haha 😀
Have a great one and a few more 😉
Hugz xXx
**applause**
Spot on. Absolutely right. Never could understand the need to go “bland” in those faceless, characterless concrete blocks, yet try to cheer things up with tasteless and repetetive food choices from menus or restaurants named by randomly opening a dictionary….
Thank goodness for people. The staff usually make the difference.
On the rare occasions I stay away from home, I always collect as many tea and milk sachets as I can carry from Reception. There’s never enough in the rooms! And I always source extra pillows too.
Thank you DVB, for making me chuckle first thing this morning. (maybe not the intention, but…)
Maybe you should look for a Premier Lodge next time? Lenny Henry seems to love them (lol).
I feel your pain… I spend a lot of time on the road too.
I refuse to pay for hotel broadband too – as far as I am concerned it should be on par with water and electricity. You’ve paid enough for a room you don’t want to spend a small fortune to collect your email..
Get a Pay as You Go broandband dongle thing. I now know the most I have to pay is £2 a day.. is well worth it.
Could be worse Derren, you could be in LONDON! Gasp! ;o)
Enjoy the Black Country.
P x
All I can say to that is I must be missing something. Maybe I need a coffee…
You’re all missing the important thing here. Derren Brown just typed the word “fuck.” He has no deniability, we all saw it.
Feeling a little depressed are you Derren, now you know how I felt last night after watching an episode of “The Mentalist”.
Derren, if you found the Novotel bedding to be frustrating at best, I can only hope for the love of Jebus that you never stay in an Ibis. I once literally gave up attempting to get into the flipping thing and just slept on top of it. Possibly however after one too many bottles of Rioja though.
Paul B
The Wednesday Wolverhampton show was mind blowing. Thank you Mr DB for an amazing night. Such a giving man 🙂
Derren that was a fabulous show on Wednesday night at wolverhampton we throughly enjoyed it! Im sorry your Hotel was so rubbish but im glad you have some nice staff to look after you 🙂 makes up for it! Can’t believe their charging Euros in Wolverhampton!!! whats that about!?!!?!? LOL
Hope your throat feels better soon,
Nicky
xxxx
Oh God that was funny. I’m not much of a traveller but I’ve stayed in some shoddy hotels and you captured them perfectly and viciously. Nice one Derren, thanks for the morning laughs.
Wonderful description of chain-hotel rooms everywhere! Especially loved the description of the bedclothes – utterly spot-on!
Absolutely agree about how much of a difference the attitude of the staff makes. I stayed in an an equally ‘nice’ but bland Holiday Inn a few weeks back, which could have been tedious had it not been for the lovely staff (and lovely food, being in France).
May you have many more hotels with great staff on your tour!
In response to Julies comment, I had the pleasure of enjoying Derrens amazing show in Blackpool last nite! An enjoyable show marred somewhat by the continual coughing from the audience. Does the entire population of Blackpool have a tickly throat? It was like a fucking school assembly for Gods sake! It still didn’t stop even after Derren made a polite, light hearted reference to it, obviously not wanting to offend what appeared to be half of his noisy audience.
Anyway, enough of the rude audience members seemingly involuntary spluttering, the show itself was fantastic, climaxing in a very enjoyable finale! I saw Derren a few years ago at the Empire in Liverpool and Enigma was even better!
Bravo!
Oh my god the bedsheet thing is the worse feeling ever! We stayed in a premier inn at Salford quays when we came to see you and it was the same. What is it with trapping you in bed?! Anyway wonderfull little rant there! xx
Great show Derren. You were on top form!
I didn’t realise I hated corporate hotels so much until I read your comments. I had to live in one once it wasn’t the most enjoyable stay I have to admit. I was even referred to as Alan Partridge by my friends! Despite this I resisted the temptation to dismantle my Corby trouser press.
I hope you managed to put your hotel disapointments aside and enjoyed performing the show.
Toodles
Aw, poor Derren-san with his tickly throat requiring expert ladies in the, er, throat department! But you’re lucky to get such ‘customer service’ these days; most of the irrate ‘sales assisants’ on the street just want your money then out of the shop asap. Most don’t understand what your needs are and their faces say it all: not boovered!
And you haven’t seen anything yet in regards to accommodation that is more like a place to keep people in rather than a place accommodating to people. YMCA Barbican springs to mind (a farce in all aspects of civilised living, the street is more accomodating…)
I am a huge fan of Derren here in South Africa, and it’s the first time I’m reading the blog. Am I the only one that has this suspicion that in reading things he writes, he is somehow going to be suggesting that I do certain things, or think a certain thought. I wonder if maybe he has a game, like on the TV shows, those little flashes of picture that come on every now and then, and you just can’t help wondering – what did he just do to me??!
I must admit, if I were him, I may be tempted to embed little messages like “buy my book”, “buy my dvd”, “send me your money”!!
Wish you would come here Derren, you’d be a sure hit!
Blimey, I guess that must’ve filled a few pages in the customer comments book!
At least you got to use the bed properly… I used to work for a company that made Santa’s Grottos for shopping malls. We had to install them overnight in the weeks leading up to December, so we’d stagger into the hotel at 8 or 9am and have 2 hour’s sleep before hotel chucking-out time, then drive to the other end of the country, check into another hotel and catch another 2 hours sleep before the shift started – if we were lucky.
I think they were trying to train us for the SAS!
Anyhow, give me a fried breakfast, some complimentary biscuits and a bed I can use and I’m happy.
Next tour, bring a tent 😉
Pingback: Why be good at English? « Mr Prestney’s English Blog
The Wolverines may well be nice, but the Wulfrunians are even nicer. And there are more of them 🙂
An alternative hotel is http://www.elyhousehotel.co.uk – free wi-fi!
Like I said .. it’s not the outside that counts all the time ..
That bed you describe … did they give you the kiddy bed? You’re just not tall enough to get that problems!
Home sweet home I’d say .. although .. you will have to do without the staff that serves all your needs ofcourse … but who knows best than yourself what and when and how to do something for yourself .. service is just one phone call away in your case .. I’m sure lots would love to serve your needs if they got the oppurtunity. Not me, I myself are a handfull already .. can’t take another way too demanding person in .. not to mention the approx. 35 wild beasts that are running and flying around here … nuthouse .. to them a good nice hotel .. excellent staff .. they don’t even need to sccop their own poop ..
The Park Hotel in wolverhampton was vastly preferable in my books. I recall avoiding the Novotel on purpose. Antique furniture and a different sort of proud audi owning travelling salesmen at the Park.
Maybe you should have rented a narrowboat or six instead and stayed on water? Next time perhaps.
got it off your chest then?
Re: bedding – I discovered after visiting a lovely little sub-pensione in Venice that they had bedbugs. This was not advertised in advance.
Chris from South Africa: yeah, a totally valid concern. What you need to do is read up on NLP anchoring techniques. Most regular blog readers here use the same cue as an anchor -a quick slap across the cheek after reading an entry. If you anchor a grounded, self-aware state to that action you can undo any suggestions (apart from avoiding Novotel. That was a strong one and is hard to purge completely) with just that light slap after every entry he writes.
Ed, you failed to mention it’s “hence my typing this into Word” and not “hence me typing this into Word,” which makes me think you’re just a prick boasting himself on others’ brilliant essays. Leave it the way it is. It is the preservation of character when we write in the manner we speak.
– loved the rant, Derren.
Hey saw the show in Wolerhampton, really enjoyed it =D
massive thanks and have fun with the rest of your tour
Laura
Gosh, for a while I thought I was reading a blog by a hotel critic and that he had eaten too many lemons. I’m glad it turned into an educational story – it’s almost like being a child again.
A bit of thought makes such a difference. Stayed in a Marriot a couple of years back, it was midweek and full of business customers. As we were the only couple checked into the entire hotel the staff had rather nicely given us the honeymoon suite. Lovely.
Ah the best blog since the shaving one…. Seriously though you certainly practice what you preach when it comes to loveliness 🙂
Some of these comments are hilarious. 😀
@SimonBradbury, glad you had an equally great night. Shame about the annoying people in the audience, maybe it really was a school trip out? Doesn’t sound like it spoiled anything though thank goodness.
I have a soft spot for the Winter Gardens, reminds me of being six on an exciting day out to Blackpool, smelling of fake flavoured banana shaped rock and wearing scuffed white sandals. Happy days 🙂 x
Will we be seeing a book called “Derren Brown’s hotel guide” out soon then? (:
But I can really relate to the bed thing. And really cheap hotels always have those windows that only open a couple of inches, yet no air conditioning. So I always end up lying in the bed on top of the covers hoping if I stay really still I’ll eventually cool down enough to stop sweating like I’ve just run a marathon.
Great show on the 5th.. really enjoyed it..
by the way, its Wulfrunians not Wolverines.. I know some of us are a bit hairy.. but no metal inserts…
cant wait for the next tour..
your great..
am so glad that I’m not the only one who hates those hotel beds, I routinely have to kick my way to freedom just for a bit of air and not to feel trapped in them! Nice to know someone shares my eccentricities!! Totally agree too about kindness making all the difference, now if you come to Ireland on your next tour I’m sure we’ll all make you feel very welcome!
Breathe, Derren, breathe; and punctuate.
Hurrah, so true. *Remembers all those Travellodge sofabeds for the poor kids* :p
One day I’m determined to be the one (or maybe two :p) in that big double bed!
Derren, you should write more – I could read Derren Brown narratives all day long. In your book, my favourite line is ‘beneath the gently disappointing London Eye’ (may not be an actual quote – it’s been a while since I read it).
And to all those who cannot spell, write in irritating text speak and don’t bother or are unable to read back what you have written – perhaps you should consider reconsidering and not bother the rest of us with your annoying twaddle.
Many thanks!