Every Hotel Has
a Ghost Story.
A microphone on a mahogany bar top. Hoteliers, sommeliers, line cooks, and general managers telling the real story — one service at a time.

214
Episodes Aired

187
Guests on the Mic
Featured Episodes
Voices From the Floor

Director of Food & Beverage · The Beaumont, London
Marguerite Fontaine
"You never actually close a restaurant. You just hand it to the morning crew and pray they don't find what you left them."
Marguerite has run the F&B operation at The Beaumont for eleven years — through two Michelin inspections, a pandemic that nearly shuttered the dining room, and a kitchen fire on New Year's Eve 2019. She sat down with us between lunch and dinner service, still in her whites, and talked about the night everything nearly fell apart and what she learned about leadership in the hour after.

Head Sommelier · Auberge du Soleil, Napa Valley
Tobias Wren
"A guest once asked me what wine pairs with grief. I spent twenty minutes finding the right bottle. That's the job."
Tobias came to wine sideways — through a philosophy degree, a stint washing dishes in Lyon, and a chance conversation with a Burgundy négociant who handed him a 1999 Gevrey-Chambertin and changed the direction of his life. He talks about building a list that tells a story, the guest who taught him more than any sommelier exam, and why he thinks most wine programs in America are still afraid of the customer.

General Manager · The Godfrey Hotel, Chicago
Darnell Hughes
"The lobby is a stage. Every person who walks through that door is the audience and the cast at the same time."
Darnell started as a bellman at seventeen. He's now responsible for 221 rooms, 140 employees, and a rooftop bar that Condé Nast Traveler called "the most democratic luxury in Chicago." He talks about the moment he decided to stay in hospitality when every mentor told him to leave, what he looks for when he hires front desk agents, and why he still works a shift himself once a month.
Assessment
Find Your Hospitality Story
Five questions. Industry vernacular. Your archetype — and a curated episode playlist built for the way you work.
Editorial
Beyond the Microphone
All EssaysThe Last Grand Hotels: What Disappears When a Property Sells
When a family-owned hotel changes hands, what leaves with the founders isn't furniture or fixtures — it's the institutional memory that lived in the staff who knew every guest by name.
Claire Ashworth
Contributing Editor
February 2026
18 min read

Mise en Place: The Kitchen at 5 AM
Before the guests wake, before the first ticket prints, there are hands already working. A portrait series of the cooks who set the stage.
Tomás Guerrero
Photographer
January 2026
42 images

The Ritz, Four Seasons, and the Art of Training Staff to Forget They're Working
The best service is invisible. Three weeks embedded in the training programs of luxury hospitality's most studied institutions.
Nadia Osei
Special Correspondent
December 2025
12 min read
On Tips, Dignity, and the Economy Behind the Pass
The tipping debate in American hospitality isn't really about percentages. It's about what we've decided labor is worth — and who we've decided gets to decide.
Darnell Hughes
Guest Contributor
November 2025
9 min read
Listener Voices
"I drove home after a double and listened to the Marguerite episode in the parking lot for twenty minutes because I didn't want it to end. That doesn't happen with podcasts."
Kezia Okonkwo
Front Office Manager · The Whitby Hotel, NYC
New episodes every Tuesday
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