Motel Guide
They were democratic. The salesman in a suit and the family in a station wagon paid the same rate. It was the great equalizer of the open road. Then came the 70s and 80s. The interstates got faster. Holiday Inns and Marriotts standardized the experience. Suddenly, the quirky motel with the broken ice machine felt risky.
But if you choose wisely—the independently owned spot, the retro revival, the place with the neon cactus out front—you get something the Hyatt can never sell you: Atmosphere.
At a motel, you know what you’re getting. There is no pretense. The paint is peeling. The Wi-Fi password is taped to the back of the door. The shower pressure is either a fire hose or a drizzle. They were democratic
Motels became synonymous with hourly rates, stained bedspreads, and the setting for every noir thriller where the detective gets shot. They became the background noise of American life—forgotten, decaying, and a little dangerous.
This was the era of the "Mom and Pop" joints. Places with names like The Starlite , The Blue Top , or The Desert Palm . They had kidney-shaped pools, vibrating beds (for a quarter), and neon signs that promised "Air Conditioning" and "Color TV" as if they were miracles. Then came the 70s and 80s
We tend to look down on motels. We call them “no-tells” or “fleabags.” We drive past them on interstates, their neon signs flickering with vacancy. But lately, I’ve started to think we’ve gotten them all wrong. The motel isn’t a failure of hospitality. It’s a specific genre of travel, and one we’re losing. The word itself tells you everything: Motor Hotel .
Unlike a traditional hotel, where you walk through a lobby, wait for an elevator, and shuffle down a carpeted hallway, the motel is brutally efficient. Your door opens to the outside. You park ten feet from your bed. Suddenly, the quirky motel with the broken ice
That isn't a bug; it’s a feature. It represents absolute freedom. You can carry your own bags. You can sit on a plastic chair at 11 PM and watch the headlights sweep across the asphalt. You can leave the curtains open just a crack to see your car—your lifeline—still sitting there.
There’s a specific kind of silence at a motel.