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Everything tennis icon Roger Federer eats and drinks for breakfast, lunch, and dinner

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Roger Federer

  • Roger Federer remains an elite competitor at the highest echelons of world tennis.
  • But to stay on top of his game at 37 years old, he has to eat right.
  • For Federer, that means cheese.

Roger Federer remains a fierce competitor at the highest echelons of world tennis.

He won the Dubai Tennis Championships in March, the Miami Open weeks later, and has competed in two clay court events this summer after three years away from the soft surface.

Federer has 20 Grand Slam titles on his record and is currently attempting to win a 21st at the 2019 French Open in Roland Garros. He will also be one of the favorites at the Wimbledon Championships in the summer.

Read more: One moment in Roger Federer's first clay match in 3 years shows how wrong he was to fear his return to the soft surface

Even at 37, Federer continues to marvel on the courts. But to maintain his sporting dominance, he has to eat right. So what sort of food does the face of tennis eat?

Here's everything Federer likes to have for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

SEE ALSO: People are asking who would win in a match between Roger Federer and Serena Williams — and the winner is clear

DON'T MISS: This is the one record Roger Federer has set that future tennis players will struggle to beat

This is 20-time Grand Slam champion Roger Federer, who is widely considered as the best male tennis player of all time.



To start his day, Federer prefers to go sweet rather than savoury and reportedly enjoys homemade waffles with a fresh fruit compote on the morning of a match.

Source: The Guardian



To wash the waffles down, Federer has fresh juice, coffee, and a vinegar shot.

Source: The Guardian



Before tennis, Federer will eat a plate of pasta. "Two hours before every match, I eat pasta with light sauce … I have been doing it for 20 years."

Source: International Business Times



In between practice sessions or competition matches, Federer is no stranger to snack bars.



He also eats bananas, which are a good source of carbohydrate and potassium. When tennis players contest long matches, their energy levels may lull and they may succumb to cramp if they lose too much potassium. Bananas help players like Federer refuel.

Source: BBC



However, research suggests that energy drinks may be a superior way of replenishing an athlete's body during competition. This is because the body absorbs liquids quicker than solid foods, like a banana.

Source: BBC



When Federer goes out for dinner, variety is clearly the spice of life. "I am a lover of Italian, Japanese, and Indian restaurants," he said recently.

Source: International Business Times



He even likes to take selfies with his naan bread.

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Source: Instagram



It's not all health foods, though. Federer does have a sweet tooth and can't resist ice cream. "I like my ice cream, I like my chocolate," he said in 2017. "That’s my diet. I like my treats. I don’t feel bad about it. I can do it and play tennis at the same time."

Source: News



Being Swiss, he is no stranger to cheeses and likes to eat fonduta, a dish that combines milk, cream, cheese, and egg yolk. He also has raclette (pictured), a cheese that's melted and scraped onto a plate.

Source: International Business Times



Federer has also tried local delicacies in other countries, including Scotland. He once received Irn-Bru and a tin of shortbread biscuits made especially by Andy Murray's grandmother.


Source: Twitter



One thing Federer doesn't eat is wombat meat. It was an allegation he denied during a bizarre interview conducted by Will Ferrell, who channeled Ron Bergundy, his character in the hit comedy movie "Anchorman," at the 2018 Australian Open.

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Source: Australian Open TV



Federer drinks alcohol if he is celebrating success. He may look dapper here in his tuxedo and his glass of champagne, but sometimes he doesn't just have one glass and suffered a "head-ringing" hangover when he mixed his drinks until 5 a.m., the morning after his eighth Wimbledon title, in 2017.


Source: Twitter and Business Insider



Sometimes there's not a trophy big enough for Federer's champagne diet ...



But that doesn't seem to be holding him back.




10 things hotel maids wish they could tell you, but can't

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hotel maid

Hotel maids have to put up with a lot, from filthy rooms to entitled customers.

And as it turns out, there are a lot of things they wish they could tell their guests.

We reached out to current and former hotel housekeepers to find out the things they secretly wish they could tell guests to make their lives easier. Each requested anonymity for fear of reprisal from their employer.

Read on to see 10 things hotel maids wish they could tell guests but can't.

SEE ALSO: I'm a bartender who's witnessed countless first dates — here are all the things you're doing wrong

DON'T MISS: 15 celebrities who came from famous families and are worth millions

At checkout, shut everything off in your room

"Don't leave your TV on as you're leaving to check out," a maid at a Hampton Inn told Business Insider. "We can't tell if that means you're in the room or not, and will leave us guessing (until we are able to contact the front desk staff, who are usually very busy at that time). Also, please don't leave a 'Do Not Disturb' sign up if you're checking out."



Don't dye your hair in a hotel sink

"Please don't dye your hair at the hotel. It takes an hour to bleach the tub and more magic erasers than I'd like to admit," a Hampton Inn housekeeper told Business Insider.



If you want to be nice, leave your housekeepers a snack

"We work hard, and (especially in hot areas) there's nothing better than finding a cold drink or ice cream during your shift. If you want to be nice to your housekeeper, then leave them an ice cream in the freezer when you leave or an unopened drink," a former housekeeper at an Australian resort told Business Insider.



Make a pile of used linens, towels, and sheets

"It's not necessary or expected, but it's really sweet when a guest takes apart their bed before they leave because you have to clean so many rooms in a certain amount of time. It helps a lot. Also, put all your used towels in a pile together on the floor," a Holiday Inn housekeeper told Business Insider.



And on that note, don't make your bed before you check out

"If you've slept in your bed, you don't need to make it when you leave. If we think you haven't used the bed at all, we may not change the sheet. So it's better if it looks slept in," a former housekeeper at an Australian resort told Business Insider.



Don't be afraid to ask for extra trash and laundry bags

"Plenty of people fill up the trashes and then throw trash into the floor instead of just asking for a new bag. We don't mind helping you keep your room clean, and we don't want to walk all over your dirty clothes on the floor," a housekeeper at a Hampton Inn told Business Insider.



Pick up after yourself, and keep the trash in one place

"If you want to do us a favor, put all the trash in one place so that we don't have to run around the room picking it up. That actually saves us time," a housekeeper at a Quality Inn told Business Insider.



Dispose of single-use medical items

"It's very common to find insulin needles from diabetic patients thrown into the trash uncapped. I personally got a needle-stick injury from one and spent six months getting blood work and taking medication to protect myself from that mistake," a maid at a Hampton Inn told Business Insider.



Use your 'Do Not Disturb' Sign

"Use your 'Do Not Disturb' signs if you don't want us to disturb you. I've been yelled at plenty of times when people didn't want room service but also didn't have their sign up," a housekeeper at a Hampton Inn told Business Insider.



Most importantly, treat housekeepers like human beings

"I know we're maids. Some of us don't speak great English, and some of us do. I know it's awkward when we come in to clean your room while you're there, and it's awkward for us too. We have a job to do, and taking care of you and your room is that job," a Hampton Inn housekeeper said.



8 tips on mortgages for first-time home buyers, according to an expert

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financial advisor counseling mortgage accountant

  • Buying a home might be the most important financial transaction of your life. 
  • Many people need mortgages to help finance their homes. 
  • We asked an expert for advice on mortgages for first-time home buyers. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Buying a home might be the most important financial transaction you'll make in your life.

If you're looking to become a homeowner, you'll likely be considering a mortgage to help you finance the purchase.

We asked Danny Gardner, Freddie Mac's senior vice president of single-family affordable lending and access to credit, for his best advice on mortgages for first-time home buyers.

From finding down-payment resources to understanding lender fees, here are eight things Gardner thinks every home buyer should know about mortgages:

SEE ALSO: 24 products to buy at Trader Joe's — and 7 you should avoid at all costs

DON'T MISS: I moved from New England to San Francisco — here are the 7 things that surprised me most

A 20% down payment is not a requirement

"The one prevailing myth about home purchasing is that you are required to put down 20%," Gardner said. While you will usually get a lower interest rate if you have a 20% down payment, he noted, "that is not the threshold for achieving mortgage financing."

Freddie Mac provides a secondary market to buy mortgages from lenders so they can write more mortgages. While you will never deal directly with Freddie Mac, it has programs designed to help low income borrowers and first-time home buyers qualify for loans with down payments as low as 3%.



There are thousands of programs to help homebuyers make down payments

Many states and cities have down payment assistance programs to help you with financing. Gardner recommends checking this listing of programs to see if there's one you qualify for.

"Not all lenders participate in these programs," Gardner said, adding that "matching a lender to a program by yourself can be challenging."

If you want to take advantage of a down payment assistance program, he recommends getting a list of approved lenders from the agency.

Read more: 11 things to do before you downsize your home, according to an expert who gets hired by seniors to help them declutter

Down payment assistance can be substantial: Gardner pointed to San Francisco's program, which offers up to $375,000 in a silent second mortgage. Don't leave this money on the table.



If you're not careful, your mortgage applications could hurt your credit score.

If your credit report is pulled too many times, it can negatively affect your score.

To combat this, Gardner suggests pulling your own credit report (which you can do for free) and bringing that to lenders to get informal rate quotes.

Once you're ready to apply for a loan, your lender will need to pull your official credit report, but you can avoid having it pulled repeatedly, and you can also avoid lenders' credit check fees by pulling your credit score on your own.



Understanding lender fees and shopping around can save you money

Not all lenders charge the same fees. Gardner recommends shopping around, since most of the fees associated with buying a home are paid by the buyer.

"If a buyer gets at least two quotes, they are likely to save at least $1,500 over the life of the mortgage," he said, adding that, if you get five quotes, you could save $3,000.

To compare loans, look at their varying annual percentage rates, which incorporate the lender fees.



You might not need an appraisal

Gardner said an appraisal often isn't necessary today because "we have so much better access to data and information" than in the past.

Read more: 8 of the biggest scams to avoid when buying a car

An appraisal can cost you up to $1,000 in some cases. Gardner noted that an appraisal, for the lender to determine the value of the property, is different from a home inspection, which is for the buyer.



If you can close quickly, you could score a lower interest rate

Because of the amount of online data available to lenders, the time to process mortgage applications has shrunk. This could save you money.

Once you have a rate lock from your lender, Gardner said, "the longer the length of time for which a lender has to commit a rate to a borrower versus the time that is likely to close, the higher the cost to the buyer."

In other words, if you can close quickly, you could score a lower interest rate. The efficiencies in mortgage processing are one of the reasons for our very low mortgage rates in the US, according to Gardner.



You should prequalify for a mortgage, but you should still shop around

You'll need to prequalify for a mortgage before you make an offer on a house. But you don't have to be married to the lender who granted you that prequalification letter, according to Gardner.

"You still have the opportunity to shop rate after you have that contract in hand," he said. "Before you commit to a rate lock, shop your rate."

You'll have to do this quickly, since you'll want to secure your loan, so you don't lose the property. But you can get comparison quotes in a couple of days and you could save money over the life of your loan.



Educating yourself about the home-buying process will increase your chances of getting your dream home

The more you know about buying a home before you start the process, the better your chances of making a winning bid in a competitive housing market.

"The environment today is very difficult for the first-time home buyer," Gardner said, adding that if you start out informed, you can be a better partner to your real estate agent.

Read more: 11 tax deductions every independent contractor should know about

Gardner recommends a HUD-approved home buyer education provider, for unbiased information about the purchase process. Freddie Mac also offers online home buyer educational resources.



Save an extra 25% on sale styles at Nike and 10% on Casper mattresses — plus 6 other sales and deals happening now

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Insider Picks writes about products and services to help you navigate when shopping online. Insider Inc. receives a commission from our affiliate partners when you buy through our links, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective. This list includes Sponsored Products that have been suggested by Casper Sleep and that also meet our editorial criteria in terms of quality and value.*

We rounded up the eight best sales and deals happening online today, with savings on Nike sneakers and apparel, Dell computers and electronics, and Casper mattresses and sheets. For even more deals and savings across the web, check out Business Insider Coupons.

Nike

1. Save an extra 25% on sale styles at Nike

Just in time for Memorial Day Weekend, Nike is having a huge sale on sneakers and apparel. Now through May 29, you can save an extra 25% on sale styles by using the promo code "SAVE25" at checkout. The sale includes everything from popular runners like the Air VaporMax 19 and Epic React Flyknit 2 to Air Jordans and workout gear. To potentially save more at Nike, visit Business Insider Coupons here

Shop the Nike sale now

dell

2. Save up to 45% on PCs, laptops, and electronics at Dell

Memorial Day is always a good time to save on electronics ,and Dell's current sale is a prime example of why. For a limited time, you can save up to 45% on PCs, laptops, and other electronics like keyboards, mice, and monitors. For other great deals and savings at Dell, visit Business Insider Coupons here

Shop the Dell sale now

Casper Sleep

3. Save 10% on mattress orders at Casper

Casper, the leading mattress-in-a-box startup, is celebrating Memorial Day with a sale on all of its mattresses. You can save 10% on any order that includes a mattress by using the promo code "MEMORIAL19" at checkout. Casper also makes sheets, pillows, bed frames, and even nightstands, so it's possible to save on all the essentials for your bedroom at one time. The sale runs until May 27, so you only have this holiday weekend to save. For more deals and savings at Casper, visit Business Insider Coupons here

*Sponsored by Casper

Shop the Casper sale now

Lacoste

4. Save 30% sitewide at Lacoste

Founded in 1933 by French tennis player Jean René Lacoste and French knitter André Gillier, Lacoste popularized the polo shirt with its sporty aesthetic and iconic crocodile logo. This Memorial Day weekend, the summertime staple (and everything else) is on sale. Until May 27, you can save 30% and get free shipping on all orders by using the promo code "SUMMER30" at checkout. 

Shop the Lacoste sale now

embark dna test

5. Save $30 on Embark Dog DNA Kits

For mixed breed dog owners, knowing your best friend's genetic makeup has several benefits. It'll give you the answer to the question you get asked regularly at the dog park, and it can help you better understand their health and how to care for them over time. This Memorial Day Weekend, you can save $30 on the Emark Dog DNA Test Kit by using the promo code "MEMORIAL30" at checkout. Insider Picks reporter Mara Leighton used the kit to learn the breed of her family's rescue dog. Read her full review here

Shop the Embark sale now.  

Timberland

6. Save 25% on select styles at Timberland

Timberland might be a brand that only comes to mind more in the fall and winter, but the current Memorial Day sale will save you on plenty of styles for the summer, too. For a limited time, you can save 25% on select styles for men, women, and kids. From hiking shoes and sandals to rugged boots and apparel, you can find great items for tackling the outdoors in style. For more deals and savings at Timberland, visit Business Insider Coupons here

Shop the Timberland sale now

Parachute

7. Save 20% sitewide at Parachute

Parachute has developed a cult following of customers for its comfortable home essentials. The brand only has two sales a year — and one is happening this Memorial Day weekend. Now through May 27, you can save 20% on everything automatically. With sheets, towels, robes, pillows, mattresses, rugs, and more, you're sure to find a cozy addition to your home.

Shop the Parachute sale now

Target

8. Save 30% on home and patio furniture, plus an extra 15% off at Target

If you're on a budget, Target is a wonderful place to shop for furnishings around your home — and this Memorial Day, the prices are even better. Now through May 27, you can save 30% on home good and patio furniture. Plus, you can save an extra 15% on select items by using the promo code "HOME" at checkout. For more deals and savings at Target, visit Business Insider Coupons here

Shop the Target sale now

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This stunning visualization breaks down all the ingredients in your favorite processed foods

9 mind-blowing facts that show just how wealthy Mark Zuckerberg really is

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mark zuckerbergjpg

Facebook CEO and co-founder Mark Zuckerberg lost more money than any of the world's 500 richest billionaires during Facebook's catastrophic year. But even though Zuckerberg's net worth has been on a rollercoaster ride recently, he still remains one of the world's richest people.

His estimated net worth is currently $67.3 billion, according to Forbes. In spite of his billions, Zuckerberg doesn't have a taste for opulence, especially when it comes to cars, clothes, and travel, reported Business Insider's Tanza Loudenback. He does, however, have an affinity for developing his real estate portfolio— he recently dropped $60 million on two Lake Tahoe properties.

As a member of the Giving Pledge and cofounder of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, which he started with his wife Priscilla Chan, Zuckerberg has dedicated much of his fortune to charitable causes.

No matter how he spends his money, it seems that Zuckerberg will always have billions left over. Here, nine mind-blowing facts that show just how rich Zuckerberg really is.

 

SEE ALSO: Mark Zuckerberg spent almost $60 million on 2 waterfront estates in Tahoe last winter. Here's a look at the 10 properties he owns across the US, from a modest Palo Alto home to a Hawaiian plantation

DON'T MISS: We did the math to calculate exactly how much money billionaires and celebrities like Jeff Bezos and Kylie Jenner make an hour

1. Zuckerberg is so rich that he's able to live off an annual salary of $1.

He previously made a reported $770,000 from his Facebook salary and bonuses, but he slashed his salary to its current rate in 2013. That means a huge chunk of his wealth is tied to Facebook stock, of which he owns nearly 17%, reported Business Insider's Jake Kanter.



2. Each year since Facebook's IPO in 2012, Zuckerberg has added an average of $9 billion to his net worth.

At $16 billion, Facebook is the second biggest tech IPO in history. Since then, the stock has increased by more than 408% for a current market capitalization of $547 billion, reported Lucinda Shen for Fortune.

 



3. However, Zuckerberg's 2019 net worth sank by nearly $9 billion compared to the previous year — but he still retained a spot in the world's top 10 richest people.

Zuckerberg's net worth fell following a year of Facebook scandals, reported KanterHe dropped three places down Forbes' 2019 billionaire's list from 5th to 8th place.



4. Last year, Zuckerberg earned roughly $1.7 million an hour, according to previous Business Insider calculations.

Business Insider found the difference between Zuckerberg's 2017 and 2018 net worths (as provided by the Forbes' 2017 and 2018 richest people in the world lists, published every March) to determine his annual earnings. Zuckerberg's annual earnings came to roughly $15 billion.

We then divided all annual earnings by 8,760, the number of hours in a year, to calculate how much he earned an hour. 

 

 



5. It took Zuckerberg less than an hour-and-a half to earn what the average American man with a bachelor's degree will earn in his lifetime — $2.2 million, according to the Social Security Administration.

The average American woman with a bachelor's degree will earn $1.3 million in her lifetime, according to the SSA.

Mark Zuckerberg dropped out of college during his sophomore year.



6. In less than two minutes, Zuckerberg makes what it takes the median US worker a year to earn — $46,696.

That's based on data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Zuckerberg earned $28,538 per minute last year, according to Business Insider's calculations.

 



7. The average American household spending $1 is similar to Zuckerberg spending $700,000.

The median net worth of an average US household is $97,300. Dividing that number into $67.3  billion comes to about $700,000.



8. Zuckerberg's net worth is greater than the GDP of Jordan, Nicaragua, and Barbados — combined.

Jordan's GDP is about $46.9 billion, Nicaragua's is $15.4 billion, and Barbados is $5.5 billion.



9. Zuckerberg could give every single living person in the US $100 — and still have more than half of his $67.3 billion net worth left over.

The US population is currently 328,938,134, according to the US Census. Giving every American $100 would cost Zuckerberg roughly $32.8 billion.



We taste-tested 5 of Trader Joe's organic Shaw wines. Here's how they ranked from worst to best.

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trader joes organic shaw

Trader Joe's is famous for its super cheap Charles Shaw wines, better known as "Two-Buck Chuck."

But the popular grocery store also stocks an organic option known as Shaw, which sells for the same price of $3.99.

So how do the two lines of wine compare?

Read more: We taste-tested 8 of Trader Joe's 'Two-Buck Chuck' wines. Here's how they ranked from worst to best.

To find out, I ran to a Trader Joe's wine shop in New York City and picked up five bottles of Shaw. Then I grabbed four colleagues from Business Insider's retail desk for a quick tasting in one of our office's conferences rooms last week.

Here's what we thought of Trader Joe's organic Shaw wines:

SEE ALSO: This is the best red wine we tried from Costco's Kirkland brand lineup

DON'T MISS: Costco wine experts dish on their favorite picks and deals that you can only get at the warehouse chain

The rosé was bland but stinging.

The rosé was probably the most divisive wine we tried, and ended up ranking last place.

Mostly, we agreed that the taste was inoffensive, if lacking. One taster even described it as the "Russell Crowe of rosés."

Descriptions of this rosé focused on its "watery" quality and "dominant alcohol note," with one reviewer describing it more generously as a medium-bodied "grassy and dry" wine with a "sweet aftertaste."

I personally thought it'd make a good, cheap spritzer wine; you could douse it with some cranberry juice for your next boozy Netflix binge. One of my colleagues added that this would make an excellent "beach drink," as it's conducive to "easy chugging." 

With the exception of one holdout, we agreed that this wine is worth its low price, but we were largely divided on whether we'd serve it to friends.



We weren't sold on the cabernet.

We unanimously concluded that Shaw's cabernet was worth $3.99, despite our lukewarm reaction to the wine.

"Not my favorite cab at all," one taster said. "Honestly not a big fan."

Adjectives like "woody," "puckery," "bitter," and "watery" were thrown around in the retail section's reviews of the cab, but all but one person said they'd serve it to friends or bring it to a party.



And the group was split on the pinot noir.

Given how much we enjoyed the Charles Shaw line of red wines, the Shaw reds felt like a bit of a step down.

That being said, reviews were mixed to positive on the organic pinot noir, and all tasters agreed that this bottle was worth the low price. One person speculated they could "get a better cheap red."

One reviewer concluded that this drink was "definitely a pinot noir, but there's not much else to be said about it." Describing the wine as "okay," another taster wrote that the wine was "nice and fruity" off the bat, but added that it "really dries up your mouth."

Another colleague added a few descriptors to their review, saying that the pinot noir featured a "savory first note," a "bitter, dry mid-note that tapers into a buttery aftertaste," as well as "grapey," "cheesy," and "bready" undertones.



The pinot grigio, however, was an intriguing beverage.

The pinot grigio was hard to nail down, in a good way.

"The flavor changes like three times and is very complex," one taster wrote, adding that they thought the wine was "really, really nice" despite the fact that they normally don't enjoy pinot grigio.

Other descriptors that got thrown around were "fruity," "floral," and "fresh," with a "buttery" and "hearty" aftertaste. This Shaw selection also packs a bit of a bite. 

One reviewer wrote that the wine tastes "bright to start," only to devolve into a less appealing "broad mineral" taste, and ended with "a lovely, buttery, vegetable aftertaste."

Then again, not everyone was a fan, with one taster likening the beverage to "grassy gasoline."

Four out of five tasters said they'd bring this wine to a party and serve it to friends, and we all concurred that the Shaw pinot grigio is well worth $3.99.



We were happy with the chardonnay, too.

Most of the Business Insider employees who attended the Shaw tasting confessed to preferring red wine to white.  

So we were surprised to find that we largely enjoyed both the pinot grigio and the chardonnay more than the red wines that would follow. The chardonnay, in particular, carried the day, and it was our top pick of the tasting.

Everyone agreed that the chardonnay was worth its price, and all but one holdout said they'd share this beverage with friends.

"It's a pretty good, down-the-line chard," one reviewer wrote.

In terms of taste, this wine makes a bold entrance, only to quietly slink off in retreat. One taster called the wine "decent," albeit "flat at the end"; another agreed that, while the first note "smashes you in the face," the taste "slowly fades away" the more you sip.

As a group, we picked up "earthy," "floral," "sweet," and "woody" notes, with one reviewer comparing the first note to "sharp cheddar."



We thought that the Shaw wines outpaced their "two-buck-Chuck" counterparts in several areas.

So how did Shaw compare to its "Two Buck Chuck" counterpart? We picked out a few key differences. 

For one, Shaw's white wines were "far better, but the reds were not as good" as their non-organic rivals. But as a whole, reviewers wrote that the organic wines were "more cohesive" and felt "fancier" than the "Two Buck Chucks," despite being somewhat "less flavorful."

"None were undrinkable, and that is a positive in and of itself," one taster wrote.

And on an aesthetic note, we also enjoyed Shaw's branding, with one taster describing its bold, sans-serif label as "very nice."

One reviewer who hadn't attended our previous Charles Shaw tasting came to a different conclusion.

"The primary note in all of these wines: alcohol. Sure there's a difference, but in the end you're not really buying $4 for the flavor."



Wayfair's Memorial Day weekend sale is officially on — here are 21 of the best deals on furniture, decor, and mattresses

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Insider Picks writes about products and services to help you navigate when shopping online. Insider, Inc. receives a commission from our affiliate partners when you buy through our links, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective.

Screen Shot 2019 05 20 at 3.59.10 PM

Memorial Day weekend is one herald of summer — bringing to mind vacation time, melting popsicles, and the happy tedium of catching up with friends and family over backyard cookouts. 

It also ushers in one of the few times of the year when you can use seasonality to save up to 80% on big purchases — just by buying them this weekend rather than next. If you've been waiting for an excuse to commit to a pricey dining room table for the new apartment or a replacement for the dorm-like storage you're currently making do with, now is a good time. 

One of the biggest sales is happening at Wayfair. While the site typically has great budget-friendly deals, some of its steepest annual discounts are happening now through May 28. If you're looking to do a total interior design upgrade, or even if you're just on the hunt for a very specific piece of furniture like a couch or ottoman, Wayfair is a solid place to start searching for a deal.

Now through May 28, save up to 80% on the following categories:

Screen Shot 2019 05 20 at 3.54.14 PM

You can shop the full Wayfair Memorial Day weekend sale here, and below are some of its most noteworthy deals:

  1. Huckaby Blaxlands Right Hand Facing Sectional, $788.99 (originally $2,969) [You save  2,180.01]
  2. Kade Armchair, $191.94 (originally $300.04)[You save $108.10]
  3. Bedias Solid Wood Platform Bed, $413.99 (originally $718.20) [You save $304.21]
  4. Lucid 12" Plush Gel Memory Foam Mattress, $270.99 (originally $323.99) [You save $53]
  5. Brandt Light Blue/Ivory Area Rug, $19.99 (originally $58) [You save $38.01]
  6. Cazenovia Reversible Sectional, $475.99 (originally $1,049) [You save $573.01]
  7. Zara Coffee Table, $117.63 (originally $269) [You save $151.37]
  8. Crispin Chaise Lounge, Set of 2, $445.99 (originally $2,098.10)[You save $1,652.11]
  9. Rebello Reclining Chaise Lounge, Set of 4, $576.99 (originally $1,609)[You save $1,032.01]
  10. Ismay Outdoor Chair with Cushions, Set of 2, $191.99 (originally $839) [You save $647.01]
  11. Kiril Duvet Cover Set, $26.72 (originally $99.99)[You save $73.27]
  12. Gino Rectangular Dining Table, $453.99 (originally $549.99) [You save $96]
  13. Harkless Standard Bookcase, $30.27 (originally $79.99) [You save $49.72]
  14. Cloer Upholstered Panel Bed, $149.40 (originally $355) [You save $205.60]
  15. Mateer Coffee Table, $127.75 (originally $234.26) [You save $106.51]
  16. Minerva Accent Mirror, $184.49 (originally $345.05) [You save $160.56]
  17. Keurig K-Cafe, Single Serve K-Cup Pod Coffee, Latte, & Cappuccino Maker, $159.99 (originally $179.99) [You save $20]
  18. Rachael Ray 12-Piece Non-Stick Cookware Set, $135.99 (originally $359.99) [You save $224]
  19. Ian Double Bowl Elevated Feeder, $52.33 (originally $131.98) [You save $76.95]
  20. Wayfair Basics Solid Blackout Rod Pocket Single Curtain Panel, $8.54 (originally $34.99) [You save $26.45]
  21. Sevigny 3-Piece Pub Table Set, $169.94 (originally $446.99) [You save $277.05]

Shop the Wayfair sale

Looking for more deals? We've rounded up the best Memorial Day weekend deals on the internet.

Join the conversation about this story »

26 Memorial Day furniture sales worth shopping right now

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burrow

  • Memorial Day weekend is when you'll get the most bang for your buck as far as furniture purchases go.
  • Deals from across the web run the gamut, with discounts as deep as 80% off items like new couches, bed frames, and dining room tables.
  • Shop the furniture deals below directly. Find all Memorial Day Weekend sales we know of here.

Memorial Day Weekend is a great time to shop for the expensive, cumbersome, and necessary purchases you've been putting off — like new furniture.

You'll pay up to 80% less just by buying it this week rather than next week. That means you'll either be able to afford nicer options, feel a little bit better about a big purchase you didn't necessarily want to make, or get to reallocate the savings for another portion of your home decoration budget.

We rounded up the best furniture and home decor sales happening this Memorial Day Weekend, which you can find below.

Shop all the furniture discounts for Memorial Day Weekend 2019:

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  • Allswell: 15% off mattresses and 30% off bedding with code "SUMMERTIME" through May 27
  • Birch Lane: Up to 70% off living room, bedroom, dining, and more from May 16 through May 22; take an extra 15% off + free shipping with code "HATSOFF" from May 23 through May 28
  • Boll & Branch: 20% off sitewide with code "MDW20" through May 27 
  • Buffy: $20 off the Buffy Comforter with code "MEMORIALDAY" through May 28 
  • Burrow: 10% off sitewide, 15% off orders of $1,500+, and 20% off orders of $2,500+ with code "SUMMER19" from May 15 through May 27 
  • Casper: 10% off any order with a mattress with code "MEMORIAL19" through May 27 
  • Crane & Canopy: Up to 60% off sitewide through May 27 
  • Crate & Barrel: Take up to 40% off outdoor furniture for a limited time
  • Dormify: 20% off sitewide with code "SUMMERISHERE" from May 24 through May 28 
  • Floyd: $150 off The Sofa, $75 off The Bed, and $50 off all Tables through May 27 
  • The Home Depot: Up to 40% off patio, 20% off bath, and 35% off furniture and decor
  • Houzz: Up to 75% off living room favorites, area rugs, dining furniture, outdoor essentials, and more now through May 29
  • Joss & Main: Up to 80% off sitewide, including outdoor furniture, rugs, sofas, bed frames, and more from May 22 through May 30.
  • Kassatex: 15% off all orders of $100+ with code "EXTRA15" through May 28
  • Leesa: 15% off mattresses + 2 free pillows 
  • Modsy: 20% off all design packages with code "MEMORIAL" from May 20 through May 27; free shipping on orders of $500+ with code "YESWAY" through May 31
  • Overstock: Up to 70% off sitewide and free shipping, plus an extra 20% off almost every department now through May 27

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  • Parachute: 20% sitewide from May 24 through May 27
  • Pier 1 Imports: Up to 50% off sitewide + an extra 25% off Clearance items from May 22 through May 27 
  • Saatchi Art: 10% off originals under $1,000 with code "MEM10" and 15% off originals $1,000+ with code "MEM15" from May 23 through May 25; 15% off originals under $5,000 with code "MEMSALE15" and 20% off originals $5,000+ with code "MEMSALE20" from May 26 through May 28 
  • Serena & Lily: 20% off sitewide with code "SUMMERPREP" from May 22 through May 28 
  • Society6: from May 26 through May 28 get 40% tapestries, posters, phone cases, and throw pillows; 30% off art prints, shower curtains, tote bags, and comforters; 20% off everything else
  • Snowe: Get a $50 gift card with a $300 purchase with code "MDW50" through May 27
  • Target: 25% off bedding and bath and up to 30% off home and patio items with code "HOME" now through May 28
  • Walmart: Up to 60% off the home section from May 18 through May 27
  • Wayfair: from May 20 through May 28
    • Up to 70% off bedding, curtains, wall art, mattresses, and kitchen essentials
    • Up to 65% off living room furniture, patio furniture, and pet essentials
    • Up to 60% off coffee tables and end tables
    • Up to 50% off grills and kitchen upgrades

Shop all the Memorial Day Weekend 2019 sales here.

Shop all the Memorial Day Weekend mattress sales here.

Join the conversation about this story »


Nordstrom's huge 'Half Yearly Sale' is going on right now — here are the best things you can get for up to 50% off

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Outside of its big summer Anniversary Sale, Nordstrom doesn't often hold sitewide sales, which is why when we see something like its Half Yearly Sale, we take advantage of it. 

Today through Sunday, June 2, you can take up to 50% off select products sitewide. Whether you're looking for summer wardrobe essentials, a Father's Day gift, or designer brands, you'll be able to save big by shopping the sale right now.

Though the sale runs for more than a week, the most popular brands and best deals will likely sell out, so don't hesitate to grab that special dress, bag, or pair of shoes. 

Below, we rounded up some of the best individual deals you should take advantage of, but if you prefer to shop by yourself, here's where to shop by category:

Shop Nordstrom's Half Yearly Sale here>>

Women's clothing

Shop all women's clothing deals here



Men's clothing

Shop all men's clothing deals here



Women's shoes, bags, and accessories

Shop all women's shoe deals here and women's bag and accessory deals here

Shoes 

Bags and accessories



Men's shoes and accessories

Shop all men's shoe deals here and men's accessory deals here

Shoes

Accessories



Home and kitchen products

Shop all home and kitchen deals here and baby deals here

Home and kitchen

Baby 



6 Memorial Day appliance sales you can shop right now, and some of the best deals you'll find at each

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  • Memorial Day is a great time to shop for big-ticket items like mattresses, furniture, and appliances.
  • Retailers like Wayfair, The Home Depot, Walmart, and more are already offering steep discounts on large and small appliances like ovens, refrigerators, blenders, and more.
  • Check out our roundup of all the Memorial Day 2019 sales we know of so far for more deals.

It's not even Memorial Day yet, but plenty of stores are getting a head-start on the long weekend by slashing prices early and offering steep discounts on all kinds of products. Whether you're searching for a nice pair of shoes to step into summer with or a new set of outdoor furniture to prep your patio for the warm nights ahead, you'll find some steals. 

If you've been waiting for prices to drop on big-ticket appliances, now is the time to do some shopping. You can save hundreds of dollars on pricey pieces, and at many retailers you can snag even more deals like free shipping. Savings like this don't come around often, so we're outlining the major Memorial Day appliance sales and some of the standout deals you'll find there. 

Keep reading for the best Memorial Day appliance sales, or find info on more Memorial Day sales here

To potentially save more on Memorial Day, you can visit Business Insider Coupons to find up-to-date promo codes for a range of online stores.

Best Buy

Shop all appliance Top Deals at Best Buy

Save up to 40% on cooktops, wall ovens, dishwashers, refrigerators, and more appliances now through June 5. Plus, get free delivery on appliance purchases of $399 and more and a free $100 gift card when you buy two or more appliances totaling $1,500 or more. 

Standout Deals:

 

 



Lowe's

Shop all Appliance Special Values at Lowe's

Now through June 5, save up to 40% on Appliance Special Values including microwaves, refrigerators, cooktops, and more.

Standout Deals:



Sears

Shop all appliance deals at Sears

Save up to 40% on dishwashers, washers, appliance bundles, and more. Plus, get an extra 10% off appliances of $399 or more.  

Standout Deals:



The Home Depot

Shop all Appliance Special Buys at The Home Depot

Now through June 5, get up to 40% off select refrigerators, dishwashers, wall ovens, microwaves, and more appliances with Appliance Special Buys.

Standout Deals:



Walmart

Shop all Memorial Day savings on appliances at Walmart

Now through May 27, save up to 40% on vacuums, freezers, small kitchen appliances, and more at Walmart. 

Standout Deals:



Wayfair

Shop all Memorial Day clearance appliances at Wayfair

Save up to 70% on kitchen appliances, small appliances, air conditioners, and more now through May 27. From May 20 through 27, you'll get free shipping on your Wayfair purchases. 

Standout Deals:



16 books about the biggest business scams of our time — including Enron, Bernie Madoff, and Theranos

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  • Greed and the desire for power often lead to unconscionable acts of fraud and deceit. This theme isn't new, but the popular book "Bad Blood," detailing the rise and fall of healthcare startup Theranos, certainly reminds us of its truth.
  • If you're interested in similarly well-written and well-researched books about business scams and scandals, these 16 fascinating books tell you everything you need to know.
  • From the financial industry to cars to sports, they paint a picture of how business scams are built, how they subsequently crash, and how all the involved players are affected.

Like scores of other readers across America, I was recently enraptured by the Silicon Valley nightmare tale of Theranos, the healthcare startup that promised to revolutionize blood testing and seduced notable investors, large pharmacy partners, and hopeful customers alike. It never delivered on its promise, blew through hundreds of millions of dollars, and harmed countless livelihoods along the way.

Instances of corporate deceit and fraud like this aren't new. When power and money are at stake, people often trade in their consciences for more immediately gratifying rewards — and face the consequences when their elaborate schemes spiral out of control.

Theranos now joins names like Bernie Madoff and Enron, cemented in history and the syllabi of business-ethics courses as lessons of questionable business practices that you don't want to believe took place. You often hear only about the devastating result of these scandals, but these books bring you back to the beginning and weave fair, thoughtful tales about how they all transpired.

For a fascinating and often horrifying look into how not to run a business, read these 16 books about some of the biggest corporate scandals and scams of our time.

Book descriptions provided by Amazon and edited for length.

"Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup" by John Carreyou

Buy it here >>

In 2014, Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes was widely seen as the female Steve Jobs: a brilliant Stanford dropout whose startup "unicorn" promised to revolutionize the medical industry with a machine that would make blood testing significantly faster and easier.

Backed by investors such as Larry Ellison and Tim Draper, Theranos sold shares in a fundraising round that valued the company at more than $9 billion, putting Holmes's worth at an estimated $4.7 billion. There was just one problem: The technology didn't work. A riveting story of the biggest corporate fraud since Enron, a tale of ambition and hubris set amid the bold promises of Silicon Valley.



"The Wizard of Lies" by Diana B. Henriques

Buy it here >>

Who is Bernie Madoff, and how did he pull off the biggest Ponzi scheme in history? These questions have fascinated people ever since the news broke about the respected New York financier who swindled his friends, relatives, and other investors out of $65 billion through a fraud that lasted for decades. Many have speculated about what might have happened or what must have happened, but no reporter has been able to get the full story — until now.

A true-life financial thriller, "The Wizard of Lies" contrasts Madoff's remarkable rise on Wall Street, where he became one of the country’s most trusted and respected traders, with dramatic scenes from his accelerating slide toward self-destruction.



"Smartest Guys in the Room: The Amazing Rise and Scandalous Fall of Enron" by Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind

Buy it here >>

Like its subject, "The Smartest Guys in the Room" is ambitious, grand in scope, and ruthless in its dealings. Unlike Enron, the Texas-based energy giant that has come to represent the post-millennium collapse of 1990s go-go corporate culture, it's also ultimately successful. Penned by Fortune scribes Bethany McLean and Peter Elkind, the 400-page-plus chronicle of the scandal digs deep inside the numbers while, wisely, maintaining focus on the "smart guys" deep-frying the books.

The likes of paternal but disengaged CEO Ken Lay, cutthroat man-behind-the-curtain Jeff Skilling, and ethically blind numbers whiz Andy Fastow vividly come to life as they make a mockery of conventional accounting practices and grow increasingly arrogant and bind to their collective hubris.  



"The Spider Network" by David Enrich

Buy it here >>

The Wall Street Journal's award-winning business reporter unveils the bizarre and sinister story of how a math genius named Tom Hayes, a handful of outrageous confederates, and a deeply corrupt banking system ignited one of the greatest financial scandals in history.

In 2006, an oddball group of bankers, traders and brokers from some of the world’s largest financial institutions made a startling realization: Libor — the London interbank offered rate, which determines interest rates on trillions in loans worldwide — was set daily by a small group of easily manipulated functionaries. Eventually known as the “Spider Network,” Hayes’s circle generated untold riches — until it all unraveled in spectacularly vicious, backstabbing fashion.

 



"Red Card: How the U.S. Blew the Whistle on the World's Biggest Sports Scandal" by Ken Besinger

Buy it here >>

The definitive, shocking account of the FIFA scandal — the biggest international corruption case of recent years, spearheaded by US investigators, involving dozens of countries, and implicating nearly every aspect of the world’s most popular sport, soccer, including its biggest event, the World Cup.

The FIFA case began small, boosted by an IRS agent’s review of an American soccer official’s tax returns. But that humble investigation eventually led to a huge worldwide corruption scandal that crossed continents and reached the highest levels of the soccer’s world governing body in Switzerland.



"Billion Dollar Whale: The Man Who Fooled Wall Street, Hollywood, and the World" by Tom Wright and Bradley Hope

Buy it here >>

In 2009, a chubby, mild-mannered graduate of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business named Jho Low set in motion a fraud of unprecedented gall and magnitude — one that would come to symbolize the next great threat to the global financial system. Over a decade, Low, with the aid of Goldman Sachs and others, siphoned billions of dollars from an investment fund — right under the nose of global financial industry watchdogs.

By early 2019, with his yacht and private jet reportedly seized by authorities and facing criminal charges in Malaysia and in the United States, Low had become an international fugitive, even as the U.S. Department of Justice continued its investigation.



"The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine" by Michael Lewis

Buy it here >>

The real story of the crash began in bizarre feeder markets where the sun doesn't shine and the SEC doesn't dare, or bother, to tread: the bond and real estate derivative markets where geeks invent impenetrable securities to profit from the misery of lower- and middle-class Americans who can't pay their debts. The smart people who understood what was or might be happening were paralyzed by hope and fear; in any case, they weren't talking.

Out of a handful of unlikely-really unlikely-heroes, Lewis fashions a story as compelling and unusual as any of his earlier bestsellers, proving yet again that he is the finest and funniest chronicler of our time.



"American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road" by Nick Bilton

Buy it here >>

In 2011, a twenty-six-year-old libertarian programmer named Ross Ulbricht launched the ultimate free market: the Silk Road, a clandestine Web site hosted on the Dark Web where anyone could trade anything — drugs, hacking software, forged passports, counterfeit cash, poisons — free of the government’s watchful eye. 

It’s a story of the boy next door’s ambition gone criminal, spurred on by the clash between the new world of libertarian-leaning, anonymous, decentralized Web advocates and the old world of government control, order, and the rule of law. Filled with unforgettable characters and capped by an astonishing climax, "American Kingpin" might be dismissed as too outrageous for fiction. But it’s all too real. 



"Black Edge" by Sheelah Kolhatkar

Buy it here >>

In hedge fund circles, Steven A. Cohen was revered as one of the greatest traders who ever lived. But that image was shattered when his fund, SAC Capital, became the target of a seven-year government investigation. Prosecutors labeled SAC a “magnet for market cheaters” whose culture encouraged the relentless pursuit of “edge”— and even “black edge,” which is inside information — and the firm was ultimately indicted and pleaded guilty to charges related to a vast insider trading scheme.

Cohen, himself, however, was never charged. "Black Edge" is a riveting legal thriller that raises urgent questions about the power and wealth of those who sit at the pinnacle of high finance and how they have reshaped the economy.



"Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco" by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar

Buy it here >>

The fight to control RJR Nabisco during October and November of 1988 was more than just the largest takeover in Wall Street history. Marked by brazen displays of ego not seen in American business for decades, it became the high point of a new gilded age and its repercussions are still being felt. The tale remains the ultimate story of greed and glory — a story and a cast of characters that determined the course of global business and redefined how deals would be done and fortunes made in the decades to come.

Burrough and Helyar provide an unprecedentedly detailed look at how financial operations at the highest levels are conducted but also a richly textured social history of wealth at the twilight of the Reagan era.



"The Big Lie: Spying, Scandal, and Ethical Collapse at Hewlett Packard" by Anthony Bianco

Buy it here >>

In 2003, HP began a transition from the family management style of its founders. It made a bold statement by hiring as its new CEO the most visible female business executive in America: Carly Fiorina. Less than two years later, the board fired her, amid accusations of imperiousness that had begun damagingly to leak into the business media.

Anthony Bianco gets to heart of the ethical morass at HP that ended up damning the entire board that created it. Almost every American has an interest in how the country’s greatest corporations are run, and the character of the people entrusted with them. The story of Hewlett-Packard reflects power struggles that shape corporate America and is an alarming morality tale for our times.



"Too Big to Fail" by Andrew Ross Sorkin

Buy it here >>

Andrew Ross Sorkin delivers the first true behind-the-scenes, moment-by-moment account of how the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression developed into a global tsunami. From inside the corner office at Lehman Brothers to secret meetings in South Korea, and the corridors of Washington, "Too Big to Fail" is the definitive story of the most powerful men and women in finance and politics grappling with success and failure, ego and greed, and, ultimately, the fate of the world’s economy.



"Healthsouth: The Wagon to Disaster" by Aaron Beam and Chris Warner

Buy it here >>

Corporate greed is the Black Plague of the modern financial world threatening America's ability to maintain free market capitalism in an increasingly distrusting, changing, and socialistic world economy. Told by former co-founder and CFO Aaron Beam, it's the untold story of HealthSouth, one of America's most successful health care companies and consequently, the perpetrator of one of its biggest frauds in history.

How big was the fraud? In 2003, just before news of the crime broke in the mainstream media, HealthSouth paid more money in taxes to the federal government than it legitimately earned the previous year. Beam takes the reader from HealthSouth's humble beginnings, through its meteoric rise and to its disastrous revelation, subsequent trial and his three-month incarceration in a federal prison. 



"Faster, Higher, Farther: The Volkswagen Scandal" by Jack Ewing

Buy it here >>

In mid-2015, Volkswagen proudly reached its goal of surpassing Toyota as the world’s largest automaker. A few months later, the EPA disclosed that Volkswagen had installed software in 11 million cars that deceived emissions-testing mechanisms. By early 2017, VW had settled with American regulators and car owners for $20 billion, with additional lawsuits still looming. 

"Faster, Higher, Farther" rips the lid off the conspiracy and reveals how the succeed-at-all-costs mentality prevalent in modern boardrooms led to one of corporate history’s farthest-reaching cases of fraud — with potentially devastating consequences.



"Taking Down the Lion: The Triumphant Rise and Tragic Fall of Tyco's Dennis Kozlowski" by Catherine S. Neal

Buy it here >>

As the widely-admired CEO of Tyco International, Dennis Kozlowski grew a little-known New Hampshire conglomerate into a global giant. In a stunning series of events, Kozlowski suddenly lost his job along with his favored public status when he was indicted by legendary Manhattan DA Robert Morgenthau — it was an inglorious end to an otherwise brilliant career.

In an unfiltered view of corporate America, Catherine Neal pulls back the curtain to reveal a world of big business, ambition, money, and an epidemic of questionable ethics that infected not only business dealings but extended to attorneys, journalists, politicians, and the criminal justice system.

 



"Extraordinary Circumstances: The Journey of a Corporate Whistleblower" by Cynthia Cooper

Buy it here >>

Former WorldCom Chief Audit Executive Cynthia Cooper recounts for the first time her journey from her close family upbringing in a small Mississippi town, to working motherhood and corporate success, to the pressures of becoming a whistleblower, to being named one of Time's 2002 Persons of the Year. She also provides a rare insider's glimpse into the spectacular rise and fall of WorldCom, a telecom titan, the darling of Wall Street, and a Cinderella story for Mississippi.

 This book reminds us all that ethical decision-making is not forged at the crossroads of major events but starts in childhood, "decision by decision and brick by brick."



Billie vs. Flamingo razors — how 2 startups trying to change women's shaving stack up

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  • Billie and Flamingo are two new women's shaving startups making sharp and affordable razors. 
  • Billie is a subscription service, offering a $9 razor with $9 refills, while Flamingo is not, but also sells a $9 razor with $9 refills. 
  • The similarities and differences don't stop there. We compared other aspects of these two companies so you can decide which is better for your shaving needs. 

Shaving, if you choose to do it, is usually an inefficient and time-intensive process. It's also one of those personal-care habits that quietly sucks the money out of your wallet (for some, more quickly than others depending on how often you shave). 

Online startups like Harry's and Dollar Shave Club brought fresh changes to the shaving industry by making sharp, high-quality razors and sending them to your door for less. Not only men used their products. Women did, too, but there was always the sense the razor designs and skin-care products could be better tailored to women's needs. 

Two new startups, Billie and Flamingo, are finally making women's lives easier with their affordable shaving solutions. As the two biggest disruptors of the women's shaving scene, they're often compared — which is better, Billie or Flamingo? 

To help you decide which new women's shaving brand is for you, we put them side by side and looked more closely at what products they sell, how much you'll pay, and the shaving experiences themselves.

We've tried the razors and body-care products from both companies (you can read our Billie review here and our Flamingo review here), so we can offer our personal takes alongside the factual details. 

Learn about the similarities and differences between these two leading women's shaving startups below. 

Shop razors and shaving products at Billie here

Shop razors and shaving products at Flamingo here 

SEE ALSO: 8 retail startups that are the brainchilds of Wharton grads — from Harry's to Warby Parker

How Billie and Flamingo came into existence

Billie, founded in 2017, is taking a stand against the pink tax — which upcharges women's personal-care products — by creating a razor priced in line with affordable men's razors. It offers realistic portrayals of body hair in its ads and images, and it donates 1% of all revenue to women's causes around the world. 

Flamingowas introduced in 2018 by Harry's, the men's grooming brand that first launched its subscription-based razor products in 2013. Though more than a million women were using Harry's products for themselves, the Harry's team knew that they could be better optimized for how women shave their legs, armpits, and bikini lines. Flamingo is led by two Harry's veterans who have been with the company since its start, and it uses the same blades as Harry's razors. 



How the services and products work

Billie is a subscription service that sells shaving and body products. After getting its $9 Starter Kit, you'll receive four replacement cartridges for $9 on an ongoing basis. 

To get started, you'll choose your favorite handle color and how often you'd like to receive the replacement cartridges. If you shave every day, Billie will deliver once a month; a few times a week, every two months; and once a week, every three months. You can change this frequency at any point later. Then, add an optional shave cream ($8), lotion ($12), or travel bag ($10) to your order. 

Flamingo lets you buy all of its shaving, waxing, and body products a la carte. There is no subscription plan, so you can buy refills whenever you need them. Most new customers start with the $16 Shave Set.

 



Taking a closer look at their starter shave kits

Billie's Starter Kit costs $9 and includes a handle, two five-blade cartridges, and a magnetic holder. 

Flamingo's Shave Set costs $16 and includes a handle, two five-blade cartridges, 1 oz. foaming shave gel, 3 oz. body lotion, a shower hook, and a reusable pouch. 



What the razor looks like

The Billie razor handle comes in five colors, in various shades of pink and blue. It has a five-blade cartridge made with USA-sharpened and assembled steel. The blades are encased in a charcoal shave soap and the cartridge has rounded edges. 

The Flamingo razor handle comes in three colors, with metallic accents. Its five-blade cartridge features German-engineered blades (Harry's owns the German factory where the blades are made), a hydrating strip formulated with aloe vera, rounded edges, and a flexible hinge. 



I shaved with both Billie's and Flamingo's products to compare the experiences. Both gave me a smooth, close shave but in different ways.

I used the Billie razor with the Shave Cream ($8), a non-aerosol cream made with soothing and gentle ingredients like aloe, sage, shea butter, and grapefruit and free from synthetic fragrances, parabens, and sulfates. I'm a sucker for anything grapefruit-flavored or scented, so right away I loved the cream. It's not super thick, but since the blades already have soap built into them, you don't need to use a lot of cream. 

The Billie razor felt comfortable in my hand. Though the cartridge has a hinge, I thought the angle and design didn't allow it to go as far back as I would've liked. I was still able to tackle every inch of hair on my legs and armpits thanks to its sharp blades — I just had to be more careful and intentional. 

Meanwhile, the Flamingo razor pairs with a Foaming Shave Gel ($5), which comes in an aerosol can. Its key ingredients include aloe vera as well as conditioning emollients. Its gel is also paraben- and sulfate-free. This thick gel foamed up nicely and felt luxuriously smooth on my skin. 

I found the Flamingo razor handle, with its textured rubber grip, was easier to hold and less likely to slip from my fingers. The flexible hinge also helped me better get into tricky curves and corners. Like my experience with Billie, the sharp blades were ultimately the most impressive and important feature of the razor. 

 

 



The accessories and other body-care products are also factors worth considering.

Both Billie and Flamingo razors come with a wall accessory to hold it and keep it within reach in your shower. Billie's is a triangular magnetic holder that your razor sticks to, while Flamingo's is a circular suction grip that your razor clicks into. 

Whether because my shower wall was too wet when I stuck these holders to it, or these accessories simply weren't strong enough, either the holder or the razor often fell off. While the idea is great, I wouldn't rely too much on these holders. 

To supplement your body-care routine, I do recommend trying both companies' lotions and body washes. The Billie Sudsy Body Wash ($9), made with grapefruit, coconut, rosa canina, and aloe vera, cleanses and preps your skin before you shave, and the Dry-Bye Body Lotion ($12) is formulated with grape seed, chamomile, shea butter, and aloe vera for perfect post-shave moisturization.

Flamingo doesn't have a body wash, but its Body Lotion ($9) features the key ingredients of white willowbark extract and papaya fruit extract (for hydration) and a derivative of sugar cane (for moisturization). 

 

 



Overall, the pricing is similar — and affordable.

Billie:

Flamingo:



Which company's razors should you shave with? Here's the bottom line.

The best women's shaving brand for you depends on your shaving habits and preferences. With both Billie and Flamingo, you're getting sharp blades that will get rid of your body hair efficiently, at an affordable price. 

If you shave at a consistent schedule, Billie will be better for you because of its convenient and automatic subscription service. It's easy to add on supplementary products to your order, and subscribing is also the only way to get replacement cartridges. 

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Equinox charges members over $3,000 per year for access to its luxurious gyms. This is why I think it's worth it.

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  • Equinox has branded itself as one of the top luxury gyms in the world, with typical members in New York City paying over $3,000 a year.
  • I visited every Equinox location in the city to see if it lived up to the hype.
  • I found that people pay a premium for convenience, space, and an all-in-one experience — and the price is worth it if you can afford it.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.

In New York City, Equinox carries a certain mystique.

The uninitiated are likely to hear bits and pieces about the gym, either from friends or through the rumor mill.

They have eucalyptus towels. There's a special Equinox with an iris scanner. Shawn Mendes and Anderson Cooper work out there.

But for most, the high price — starting at $185 per month for access to a single location and topping out at $500 per month for the premier experience — acts as a gilded gate that keeps those outside wondering what resplendent luxuries lie inside.

For years, I was one of those people.

My journalism career hadn't necessarily given me mountains of cash, and I thought I could get almost as good for much cheaper.

But in February, I took the plunge.

Read more: I worked out at every Equinox in New York City to see if the luxury gym lived up to the hype

As a fitness-oriented person who had recently lost my motivation to go to the gym, I had to know if Equinox's special sauce could possibly be worth it and re-invigorate my interest in "Wellness."

Out of my own curiosity, and for the potential of a good story, I signed up for one of Equinox's top memberships and committed to experiencing everything Equinox had to offer.

I wanted to know — Why are so many people willing to pay Equinox's high price? Would I be willing to pay that price at the end of all this?

I worked out at all 34 New York City locations, took dozens of classes, swam in four of their six pools that were open, had two spa treatments, a five-hour fitness assessment, and one personal training session.

This is my journey to the center of the world of Equinox, and how I ended up a convert.

Equinox's pitch

Equinox printing house

When I first visited Equinox in Williamsburg, I wasn't sold.

As the friendly salesperson, JV, showed me around, he touted the small luxuries — the chilled eucalyptus towels, the Kiehl's products in the locker rooms, and a nicely lit and tiered cycling studio that made spin class feel like the Roman Colosseum. He even talked about how Equinox had affected his own fitness, but I couldn't shake the feeling that I was being ripped off.

I'd be paying over double for what my gym down the street charged for roughly the same size workout area and only a slightly "elevated" experience, with bigger locker rooms and a steam room.

Base memberships that only grant you access to one club still cost at least $2,200 a year, plus a $500 initiation fee. If you want to go to multiple Equinox locations in the US, an "all access" membership runs $3,120 a year.

But that still won't get you in to the most luxurious locations in the city — to get into those, you need a "destination" membership that grants you access to all locations worldwide, which costs $3,600 a year. And then, you can also get an executive membership with even more exclusive benefits for $5,220 a year.

As I sat down to discuss the details, I think JV could sense that my interest was waning. He switched gears from touting the virtues of the Williamsburg gym specifically and started to trace a rough outline of how I could integrate multiple Equinox locations into my life, identifying classes based on my interest at other locations that fit into my daily commute.

Despite the higher price of "global membership" that would allow me access to all of Equinox's normal-tier gyms, the level of convenience it would add to my routine was significant.

I'd venture to argue that no Equinox gym by itself (except for the uber-nice Sports Club New York, which includes an outdoor track, rock climbing wall, pool, and more) is worth the monthly floor price of $200 alone.

Equinox's real value is in space and convenience.

What people are really paying for at Equinox

Equinox Flatiron

According to GQ, the Errico siblings, who founded Equinox in 1991, philosophized that Equinox could endlessly expand because customers weren't willing to travel over 10 blocks to work out.

Now, with 31 locations spanning Manhattan's 262 blocks, the company actually has roughly one gym per every eight blocks, making it extremely convenient for members to work out across the borough.

When I considered the added value of this convenience, the high price tag became much more palatable.

For me, stopping by the Wall Street or TriBeCa Equinoxes, which are blocks away from the INSIDER office, makes working out much easier than when I was previously enrolled at my local Williamsburg gym. The added variety was also appealing. Tired of ogling the same gym crush? Equinox has over 30 other locations waiting for you if you're willing to cough up the money.

While the number of gyms definitely doesn't disqualify the possibility of crowding, it does allow for a pretty good variety of amenities that other gyms probably don't offer.

You can do an exhausting CrossFit-style class in one of the handful of gyms that have a "playground" space, take a competitive and interactive cycling class, play basketball, swim in a saltwater pool, or even go rock climbing.

If you tend to spend your money to maintain fitness variety, Equinox can easily be worth it in the face of individual classes at other gyms that frequently run above $30 a pop.

East 43rd Equinox

Besides convenience and variety, Equinox's biggest draw is physical space.

At the base-tier locations, it's not uncommon to experience a "rush hour." Like at most gyms, the number of people during these times can be prohibitive to a workout.

At the Williamsburg location, the bottleneck created by awaiting yoga classes got so bad that I witnessed a salesperson actively avoiding showing potential members the locker rooms until a crowd had cleared.

This is, however, something you can avoid if you're willing to pay more.

equinox_williamsburg_bottleneck_edit

As I explored Equinox's upper-tier gyms, I noticed that there were significantly fewer people in the gyms and locker rooms. When I went to Equinox's higher-tier locations — including Printing House, Sports Club New York, or E Madison — I never felt like there was any crowding. It's no coincidence that it costs more to access these premium locations.

In a city of 9 million people, free space is the ultimate luxury.

E customer Steve Motino, who is a student and chief technology officer of small startup Chaply, told me this was one of the main reasons he ended up signing up for the gym's most premium membership, costing $500 per month plus a $750 initiation. Personal training fees are extra on top of that.

"[Printing House] has this sense of exclusivity and comfort. There were never more than 20 people there when I went," he said. "It drains most of my income, but it's worth it because I feel like my life has changed since I had it."

In the last 2 years, Motino has lost 45 pounds, which he credits to his Equinox membership.

Equinox controls its brand with an iron fist

Equinox Ad

Equinox's ads have repeatedly gone viral, featuring nearly nude models flashing signs of wealth, sex, and excess.

Celebrities are routinely reported to attend Equinox in gossip publications, and some even name-drop the gym freely, like when Tina Fey said she burst into tears at an Equinox when she found out "Mean Girls" was nominated for a Tony award.

Before starting my project, I discussed the idea of going to every Equinox gym in New York with my editors and the company's PR. Equinox's representatives came off as excited and helpful.

But shortly after starting my project, a coworker sent me something surprising they had received from a tipster.

Equinox had distributed my photo to every location in New York City with instructions to show all staff and notify management if I was conducting interviews.

The handout was creepy, to say the least, but the shrewd commitment to protecting the brand also kind of impressed me.

Equinox PR poster

Equinox's brand, as it's recognized in the culture, is hard to live up to in real life — How do you evoke money, sex, and luxury in an everyday gym experience?

The sex appeal that Equinox has branded itself with isn't actually meant for the gym. While Equinox certainly has numerous models and celebrities who are customers, the gym is explicitly un-sexy. Tiny placards remind patrons that "silence is golden," reinforcing a sort of cold and anonymous individualism that dominated most of the locations I visited.

But that's not necessarily a bad thing. Equinox caters to the individual who is striving toward a personal goal, and who prioritizes efficiency over community. The sexiness that Equinox is selling isn't meant to come at the gym itself, but rather as a result of it.

The difference between the top-tier membership and a regular one

The luxury experience at Equinox, however, depends on the level of membership you get, which of course depends on how much you pay.

At Equinox's most expensive locations — which require memberships costing between $300 and $500 per month — special amenities and features are included that actually are notably luxurious. At the top-tier E by Equinox on Madison Avenue, the nearly empty locker room features personal vanities and full-body showers with three shower heads and digital temperature controls. You can also get your shoes shined and suits pressed while you work out.

e equinox madison locker room

At the mid-tier Printing House location in the West Village, a sundeck and rooftop pool evoke a SoHo House vibe. Of course, the pool isn't big enough to swim laps and is only open three months out of the year.

At Equinox's normal locations, meanwhile, amenities may signal luxury, but they don't always mean you're actually getting it.

You can get Kiehl's products (which some Yelp reviewers allege are watered down), cool eucalyptus towels, and similar West-Elm-style aesthetics. And yet throngs of people are waiting to use the same machine as you, or a swamp of sock lint is floating outside the shower stalls (as I recently experienced at Equinox's Wall Street location).

But after fighting tooth-and-nail in New York just to get a seat on the subway, those sorts of small luxuries can be a breath of fresh air.

This evocation of extravagance is strategically and firmly managed from the top of the company.

When I visited the luxurious E Madison, they were in the process of changing the color of the floors to gray under direct orders from Equinox CEO Harvey Spevak, according to two separate employees, who is said to have seen the color at E's Columbus Circle training space and liked it so much that he ordered the change.

e by equinox madison avenue

It was rare that employees didn't say my name and smile when I checked in, and nearly every class I took was high-quality with a great instructor. I've taken yoga classes for years, and Equinox's instructors were still able to teach me things I didn't know about poses that I've done countless times before.

But on Yelp, some Equinox customers have alleged predatory and upsetting billing practices. Federal Trade Commission records obtained and analyzed by Business Insider back up those complaints.

Out of 97 complaints from the last 7 years, the vast majority allege that Equinox's cancellation policy, requiring notification 45 days in advance, was overly restrictive and out of line with what salespeople promised customers. In the documents, multiple consumers complained that even after presenting evidence of medical reasons for cancellation, they continued to be charged dues.

When asked about the complaints, Equinox responded by saying, "Our cancellation process is clearly disclosed in the membership agreement that each member reviews and signs upon joining Equinox. Cancellation procedures may differ by state to ensure compliance with applicable state laws but in general, cancellations must be done in-club with a club manager or via registered or certified mail. Our clubs allow cancellation for medical reasons, and this process is also clearly disclosed in each membership agreement."

How Equinox makes working out better and easier

Spin class Equinox

It was 8 a.m. at Equinox SoHo, and Marquis Johnson was twirling, spinning, and dancing on top of a lit spin class bike.

"The only person you're here to compete against is yourself," he told me and the other riders as we pushed against a Florence + The Machine remix he had chosen for the "hill" we were climbing. "Ask yourself, 'Am I giving my all right now?'"

The encouragements could easily be dismissed as empty fitness platitudes, but in combination with the pure joy Johnson brought to the class, I was buying what he was selling.

I was about halfway through my project to visit every Equinox in New York, but I still wasn't bored or miserable. How was that possible?

I had found that the pure number and variety of classes offered at the various locations in New York had made it easy to switch things up and prevent boredom, meaning that I kept visiting the gym. On top of that, the sheer number of instructors kept things interesting.

While Johnson brought his own dancing flair to spin class, one instructor in Williamsburg freely recounted her unorthodox opinions on Amazon's HQ2 pull-out, which she bemoaned because it meant it was less likely an Equinox would open in Long Island City. Weird and potentially politically incorrect? Definitely. Amusing? Certainly.

Besides the sheer scale of Equinox as an organization, there were a few other things that kept me going back.

While at some gyms, the app may be an afterthought, for Equinox, it's clearly a focus. Not only does it allow you to search and schedule classes by location, type, and instructor, it also holds you accountable once you've booked them. After three missed classes, you're locked out of class scheduling online for a week (you can still do it in person).

While for some, this may seem overly punitive, but for those who have trouble sticking to their resolutions, the small push can be helpful for making and sticking to your fitness schedule.

Equinox's app will automatically show you how far you traveled and what calories you burned in your latest spin or treadmill class, and can connect with the company's digital scales. All that is to say that Equinox makes it extremely easy to track your own personal fitness.

Equinox also uses its app to surveil classes and instructors. "Instructor on point?" the app will ask after a class. Was that a "two towel class?"

All of your answers presumably feedback into how the class is taught, and what instructors are kept doing what class. Sources told me that it's not uncommon for trainers to get feedback on how hard they're training customers, and are frequently encouraged to push clients as hard as possible.

Knowledge is power at Equinox

Ben Goggin tier x equinox evaluation

It was near the end of my project, and I was proud of myself. I had visited every Equinox location and worked out pretty hard nearly every day of the week for two months.

One of the final aspects of my project was doing a "Tier X evaluation." This is the top tier of training available at Equinox and costs over $150 per hour. Part of the training is a five-hour full-body evaluation of your health and lifestyle to inform your training, diet, and sleep.

The company set me up with Tier X trainer and program manager Michael Ryan for a battery of tests. 

Ryan, who has been with Equinox for over 10 years and has a Masters of Science in kinesiology and exercise science,  put me through multiple metabolic rate tests, body fat tests, and mobility tests over the span of a few hours, I was asked to return for a separate results session.

Despite my self-directed workout regime over the last month, what he told me was a gut punch — I needed to lose body fat or I would be at risk for certain negative health outcomes.

The news was frustrating. I'd been working out like crazy for the last month and I still had more to do? How?

My shock revealed the utility of the session — despite my hard work, there were things I didn't know about my nutrition, my body, and my workouts that could increase how efficiently I was working toward my fitness goals. Ryan also gave me specific guidance on my workout routine, diet, and other habits based on the information he gathered during the evaluation.

Having those pointers has already shown results, and taken a lot of the mystery out of working out. Instead of hopelessly not really knowing what to eat or which workouts to try and just hoping my work pays off, I'm able to use the information and have a certain amount of faith that results will follow. That's proven to be a good motivator.

Why I'm keeping my $300 a month membership

Over the course of a few months, Equinox had given me more than I bargained for.

I tried new workouts, experienced my first 3D-body scan and personal training workout, explored over 30 locations, and had the best turkey burger of my life at Sports Club New York.

Some may balk at the expense, and it's not cheap, but for those who choose to take advantage of what Equinox has to offer (and can afford it), a motivating, data-driven, luxurious fitness universe awaits you.

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I worked out at every Equinox in New York City to see if the luxury gym lived up to the hype

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  • Equinox Fitness has established itself as the go-to luxury fitness location in major US cities and around the world.
  • There are 34 Equinox locations in Manhattan and Brooklyn, and I worked out at all of them to see if their airtight brand identity lived up to its reputation.
  • I found that most of the gyms, even at the base level, provide an elevated experience compared with other brands, but there were definitely some that are not worth the price alone.
  • My favorite gym was the Sports Club, which is part of Equinox's middle-tier membership.
  • Equinox's top-tier locations provided a superb experience, but the $500 per month price tag with a $750 initiation fee doesn't seem worth it unless you have excessive amounts of cash and can afford personal training every week of the year.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.

In New York City, going to Equinox, a high-end gym chain, is an undeniable signal of status. They have expertly crafted a brand that truly evokes luxury, sex, and wellness even when brought up in casual conversation.

The gyms are notoriously expensive — Equinox's top membership costs $500 per month with a $750 initiation fee — and it's not uncommon to hear people quip that they can't afford it.

For a long time, that reputation kept me away, but in February, with my local Williamsburg gym membership feeling a bit ragged, I decided to dip my toe into Equinox's waters.

What I discovered was a vast network of gyms at various price points with different amenities, aesthetics, and services.

Read more:I immersed myself in Equinox's world of eucalyptus towels and infrared saunas to discover why people drop thousands of dollars on a gym membership

Paying for a single gym can cost anywhere between $185 and $220 per month, typically with a $300 initiation fee, varying by gym and offers available. An "All Access" membership costs $260 per month plus a $500 initiation fee and gives you a membership at all 29 regular locations in New York City and clubs nationally, but doesn't allow access to premium "E" clubs, Sports Clubs, or other special locations. A destination membership allows you access to all clubs except for E clubs and costs $300 per month on top of a $500 initiation fee. And an E membership gives you access to all clubs, costing $500 per month on top of a $750 initiation fee.

During the enrollment process, the scope of options left me a bit baffled — How was I supposed to choose to have access to a set of gyms that I've never been to?

So, I decided to embark on a nearly two-month journey exploring all of Equinox's offerings in New York City. I worked out at all 34 Equinox locations in the city (not counting Long Island or Westchester).

Here's an overall guide to Equinox memberships in New York, what every location is like, and my personal rating of every gym out of 10.

Equinox has 29 locations in Brooklyn and New York that are accessible with their $260 a month "all access" membership.

Compared with other popular gym chains in New York City, only New York Sports Clubs has more total locations (49) in Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens. While Crunch and Planet Fitness have an abundance of locations in Brooklyn and Queens, Equinox has focused on Manhattan locations.

Equinox's core amenities include cardio equipment, strength equipment, Khiel's products in the locker rooms, a steam room, showers, a cycling studio, and a group fitness studio. Some base-level gyms have other features like boxing rooms, barre rooms, heated yoga rooms, and pools.



Downtown Manhattan has a lot of fancy new locations geared toward young wealth.

Nearly all of the Equinox locations in Downtown Manhattan had a unique feel, seemingly catering to the younger crowd that lives and works below 40th street.



Bond Street: A spacious playground for NoHo bros.

Built in the 2016 Equinox boom, the year the company built or acquired five different locations in New York City, the Bond Street location is large, spacious, has tons of natural light, and has a strong aesthetic centered around its red brick interior.

Its three functional fitness floors had ample room for stretching and all the necessary equipment without feeling cramped. Each time I visited, it didn't feel crowded, but there was also a ton of space if needed — Yelp reviewers testify that the after-work rush can get crazy.

When I visited, the crowd tended to be a mix of fitness obsessives in the late 20s to early 30s, and fashionable women in their 40s and 50s.

In my heated yoga class, nearly everyone left all their clothes on — a far cry from other Bikram-style classes I've taken at studios where practitioners show up nearly naked. This probably had less to do with the location and more to do with the nature of Equinox classes, where everyone is a dabbler.

The locker rooms felt like huge dungeons in the basement — in a chic way — but the steam room was notably small, and the on/off button on the digital scale was physically punched out somehow.

"Queer Eye's" Antoni Porowski, who is a sponsored brand ambassador, and Anderson Cooper have been photographed here multiple times.

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Bond Street gets 7.5/10 for a spacious and open design and good light.



Brookfield Place: A nicer mall gym.

Equinox's Brookfield Place location was appropriately part of the development of the luxury mall on the west side of the World Trade Center. You actually have to walk through the mall to enter the Equinox, but that can be a benefit because it connects directly to the subway.

The first floor of the space feels like a West Elm showroom with a Juice Press inside, and serves as a great place to relax or do some work, along with other similar spaces upstairs.

The gym itself is on the top floor, and has an interesting layout. After walking up a twisting staircase, the gym splays out through what is essentially a wide hallway. At the end of the cardio and stretching tunnel, from which a group fitness, yoga, and spin studio crop off of, is a more traditionally square free weight floor that overlooks the Hudson River and New Jersey.

The views are nice, but at peak times the floors becomes oppressively crowded.

 



Brookfield Place has a stray towel problem.

The locker rooms at Brookfield Place weren't small, but there was a clutter issue. Each time I went, there were tons of towels on the ground. The gym had someone cleaning them up, but it seemed like they couldn't keep up with the situation.

This almost seems like a local habit that has formed among members at this particular gym.

Brookfield Place gets a 4/10 for a cramped feeling and experience.



Flatiron: a lot of equipment, but kind of cramped.

Equinox Flatiron packs a lot into a small space and places a priority on creating room for classes and equipment. The result is minimal space to chill and a cramped locker room.

The front includes a full juice press with cafe seating, where anyone can come in and grab something to drink. This is similar to a lot of other Equinox locations, but in Flatiron, home to New York's own brand of startup hustle and grind, it's turned into a full-on workspace.

When I arrived, the cafe area was also playing host to around 10 high schoolers on their lunch break. I didn't mind, but the openness might bother those who are looking for a more serene gym experience.

Likewise, the gym itself also appeared to be constantly well trafficked. I visited at multiple times of the day and it seemed like it was always bustling.

The gym didn't feel overly cramped because of the space given to the equipment, but the locker rooms felt like they were overflowing, and when I left, there was a line nearly 12 people long waiting at the complimentary coat check.

Flatiron gets a 5/10 for a large gym floor but cramped locker room.



Gramercy: One of the nicest of Equinox's corporate convenience locations.

As you begin to move above 14th Street towards Midtown, Equinox's locations take on a decidedly more corporate, cookie-cutter feel, and the economy seems to shift from prioritizing luxury and character to convenience for the bankers and finance crowd that packs into the area every day.

The Gramercy location, on 24th Street and Park Avenue, is appropriately a middle ground between these two aesthetics.

The three functional floors don't feel like anything special, but they maintained a crisp design and weren't overly crowded. The locker rooms were surprisingly spacious and featured freestanding black marble sinks and mirrors. There were also multiple large spaces for hanging out or working.

The yoga room had a conspicuous lack of windows, which felt a bit claustrophobic and detracted from the vibe I prefer.

Compared to other locations catering to the Midtown crowd, though, the Gramercy location came off as pretty nice if you're looking for a convenient, nice location.

Alone I wouldn't say a membership to this gym would be worth nearly $200 per month, but taken together with other gyms, this location could be a good fit if you work in the area.

Gramercy gets a 5/10 for a fairly average experience that was on brand, but with minimal crowding.



Greenwich Ave.: Feels like an old YMCA, for better or for worse.

Equinox's West Village location feels like a time machine to what the neighborhood might have felt like before it became a hub for the rich and famous.

Opening in 2001, the large complex includes ample natural light and a basement pool, but feels more like a community center than a pleasure palace.

Part of that is because of the decor, which clearly hasn't been updated with the rest of the brand's aesthetic. I didn't mind simply for novelty's sake, but that's a matter of taste.

The locker rooms were moderately clean, with a few towels lying around, and slightly more water on the floors given the pool, but the state wasn't egregious.

The other reason it could be compared to a community center is because more than almost any other Equinox location that I visited, there seemed to be a sense of community at this location. Each time I've visited, I've noticed friends greeting each other like old pals. There was even a gift exchange in the locker room the last time I visited.

The crowd ranged between college-aged students and older West Village holdout, among a thriving community of gay men who clearly hold court at the location.

The staff was friendly, but somewhat uninformed, not being able to tell me about the swim classes that were available in the pool. But one staff member gave me a free t-shirt when I forgot to bring a change of clothes during my pre-work workout. That's good service!

Greenwich Ave. gets a 7/10 for a friendly vibe and pool, despite the slightly outdated facilities.



High Line: Beautiful with a weird layout

The entrance of Equinox Highline doesn't feel glamorous, falling under the elevated park and looking onto 10th Avenue, but once inside, the location is striking.

Spacious with sharp lines, green space, wood, and concrete — Equinox Highline is on brand for the area and the company.

Early morning yoga overlooking the Highline is a super cool and unique experience. I'd imagine I wouldn't feel the same once the attraction is flooded with tourists taking pictures of you in tree pose, but it's still a fun novelty.

The class I took was full of chiseled Chelsea regulars who the yoga instructor knew by name. As they competed for the best handstand in the front, I stayed in child's pose in the back.

The gyms weight floor is a bit less glamorous, put on the basement level and mostly lit with artificial light. One member griped about the fact that you actually need to walk across the weight floor to access the locker rooms, which is true, and potentially annoying if you're just trying to make it to a yoga class.

The locker rooms themselves feel spacious, and the steam room is literally designed as a large glass cube with what's basically a pedestal in the center. Notably, the lockers at this location didn't have built-in locks, which was surprising considering how new it felt inside. It was actually built in 2007.

High Line gets a 7.5/10 for a beautiful and interesting space.



Orchard St.: A bespoke space that could use some tidying up.

The Orchard Street Equinox in the Lower East Side of Manhattan is a capstone in the rapid gentrification of what was once considered the center of New York City's counter-culture.

The gym occupies the first few floors of the new luxury condo development 196 Orchard, where the average sale price has come to nearly $2.4 million per unit, according to StreetEasy. The association lends an air of luxury to the condos themselves and vice versa, and were surely key in the gym's development.

The gym itself is big, beautiful, and clearly designed to provide a luxury gym experience, with plenty of floor room, high ceilings, and unique art in the lobby.

The crowd was generally young, with an interesting mix of bros who frequent the Lower East Side these days, and creatives who Equinox might try to attract with the location. I spotted two prominent digital journalists who were there on my first visit.



Surprisingly, Orchard Street's locker rooms felt cramped and were kind of messy.

Equinox Orchard's locker rooms did not live up to expectations set by the rest of the gym. The layout felt notably cramped, with huge benches creating gridlock near lockers, and towels were strewn about among what appeared to be dried, spilled coffee on the floor.

One thing I noticed at this Equinox location, among others, is that certain clientele felt entitled to leave a certain level of mess because of an expectation that it would be cleaned up and handled.

Orchard St. gets a 6.5/10 for a lot of space and a beautiful environment, mixed with an unusual level of untidiness and cramped locker rooms.



SoHo: as crowded as SoHo is generally, but still nice.

Equinox's SoHo location is probably the best indication that the company is reaching its desired demographic.

The beautiful concrete, metal, and wood location is crammed with 20- and 30-something fashion and tech employees donning Yeezies and Balenciaga sweaters.

The spin instructor there posed and twirled to Florence and the Machine in front of a devoted audience of SoHo girls and guys.

The gym is huge, and feels more like how a spacious office in the neighborhood would feel, with concrete, wood, and metal making up the chic interior.

But much like Soho itself, Equinox Soho is overcrowded. When I visited on an average weekday morning there was a line of over 10 people waiting to take a shower.

On off-hours, though, the ample chill-out space, the large gym floor, and the yoga studio that looks out over the neighborhood make the gym generally pleasant.

SoHo gets a 6/10 for a generally pleasing aesthetic and open spaces.



Tribeca: Barebones but gets the job done in a pinch.

Equinox Tribeca doesn't feel luxurious, but it's not bottom-of-the-barrel, either. It's functional.

Built in 2003, it feels like little but the recently replaced lockers have been updated.

Newer features that many gyms have, like the specially lit pedestal for spin classes, are nowhere to be found here. Instead, it's one rectangular floor of free weights, machines, and cardio equipment that's plainly laid out.

One of the pros of the location is that it doesn't seem like too many people are ever there, but the single floor for all machines creates a cramped effect.

For not being very busy, the locker rooms are not the cleanest they could be, with towels and scraps frequently lying around. When visiting, I also happened to slip on a puddle in the locker room.

As one Yelp reviewer noted, the location feels more like a Blink than an Equinox, which could be a problem if this is the most convenient location for you.

In 2016, Equinox Tribeca's landlord attempted to evict the gym, citing noise complaints. The gym filed suit attempting to block the eviction. Their attorney told The New York Post that only a handful of residents had complained about what he claimed was routine noise. The case was eventually dropped.

Tribeca gets 3/10 for an unbearable sense of averageness.



Wall Street: Unique architecture in a historic space.

Equinox bought the ground floor of 14 Wall Street in 2000, what was originally used as a bank in the early 1900s. The historic 1910 building has gold-leaf detailing on beautiful vaulted ceilings and features windows looking down onto Wall Street.

Now, a diverse set of Wall Street workers use the space to train in the early morning hours.

The space is huge and undeniably unique.

It includes a large functional training floor, multiple levels for machines and weight training, and all-glass studios. It doesn't have a separate yoga studio, so yoga classes are held in the group fitness studio adjacent to the spin classes.

The locker rooms are large, but frequently packed with people and moderately messy. The last time I went there was a soggy lint swamp outside the showers.

Along with the steam room (large at this location) that can be found at every Equinox, the Wall Street location offers a single large jacuzzi and sauna that's shared between the men's and women's locker rooms.

There are also multiple infrared saunas available to use for an additional charge. The person working the sauna told me that it "blasts away our finance guys' stress."

Wall Street gets a 7/10 for its unique architecture, space, and amenities.



Midtown has a few gems scattered among crowded, corporate cookie-cutter gyms full of finance bros.

In the New York map of Equinox locations, Midtown isn't short of outposts — Equinox isn't blind to the opportune convenience they can provide to the throngs of midtown white-collar workers. But it's clear that most locations are meant to provide an easy place to work out near work and not much more. Only a few are notable for the experience they provide.



Bryant Park: the Apple store of Equinoxes

It's hard not to compare Equinox Bryant Park to an Apple store, with its cubic glass facade jutting out of the ground in Midtown.

Unlike some of its nearby Equinox neighbors, the Bryant Park location feels spacious and warm, with a concrete and wood interior that is almost entirely subterranean.

A notably high number of staff members kept this location very clean — even the steam room, which wasn't the case for most locations.

The after-work crowd was typical midtown fare, and I overheard some people talking about how they planned to return to work after the gym.

If that were me I would be happy to have this location to break up my night.

This location doesn't have any frills like a sauna, pool, or hot tub, but still felt very nice.

Bryant Park gets an 8/10 for spaciousness, cleanliness, and aesthetic qualities. 



East 43rd: Equinox's testing ground for CrossFit-style training is proof-of-concept.

Equinox East 43rd would come off as another normal midtown Equinox, except for the fact that it has "the playground."

The playground is seemingly modeled off of a CrossFit-style gym, with all the equipment necessary for a circuit-style weight and cardio workout.

"The Playground Experience," the class hosted there, was an impressive, lighter weight modification of a CrossFit class, which seemed to create a lot of excitement, and was a great workout.

People who were in attendance had clearly become regulars of the class, and the two trainers who coached knew nearly everyone who was there — rare for an Equinox class. This was one of the best classes I went to at Equinox.

The rest of the gym was underwhelming. The locker rooms were nice and spacious, but the steam room was super small. This was one of the few Equinox's I've been to with no Juice Press, just vending machines.

East 43rd gets a 7/10 for the unique playground experience.

 



East 44th Street: The one with the cool light fixture.

Equinox East 44th Street is conveniently located right next to Grand Central station — a blessing for some, a reason to stay away for others.

The exterior matches its surrounding with a huge gilded Equinox sign that sticks out over the sidewalk.

Inside, the location felt large and had a lot of equipment. From what I could tell, it had a lot of cardio machines, some cable-assisted weight equipment, and fewer free weights.

The cable machine I used felt like it needed to be serviced, and created more resistance than felt natural.

The cycling studio had a weird vibe. The class I took was nearly empty, and the instructor asked everyone to move up to the front so we could "ride as a pack." A few people refused. The studio itself felt cramped, and the lighting was such that it felt like you were riding almost completely in darkness. There was no lit pedestal like there is at many other Equinoxes, adding to the slight dingey feeling of the room.

The staff was super friendly, and went out of their way to try to find materials about the gym that I requested, and the Executive Locker Room (an extra you can pay for at select gyms) was the only one I had been in that felt worth the extra money. Unlike most Executive Locker Rooms, East 44th's had its own steam room and showers, along with a nice looking lounge area. When I visited one person was inside, unlike the normal room, which was cramped.

East 44th Street gets a 4/10 for a less than ideal spin experience, and machines that need work.



East 54th Street: The worst Equinox in New York.

When Equinoxes are good, they feel like the best gyms in the world. When they're bad, it's confounding considering the prices people pay to be there.

The East 54th Street location was definitely in the latter category.

Each time I visited, over a month apart, large mobile HVAC machines were scattered everywhere in the gym: on the weight floor, in hallways, and in the locker rooms. It was really unclear why they were there, but everyone acted as if the sight of them was normal.

The floors and locker rooms themselves were also notably tiny, with a small amount of equipment and space on each floor.



The locker rooms were also dirty.

The locker rooms at the East 54th location were also dirty. Towels were thrown around everywhere and bits of lint and paper freely floated around on the floor.

The steam room was packed, and there was only standing room when I visited.

East 54th Street gets a 1/10 for setting the low bar.



East 53rd Street: A chicer version of East 54th street.

Equinox East 53rd Street feels like a chicer version of East 54th street — the worst Equinox in New York.

It has large floors, wider stairs and hallways, and a cohesive gold aesthetic that runs throughout.

The yoga class I took seemed much more crowded than what I saw at East 53rd, suggesting that maybe the Midtown crowd had caught on to which location may provide a better experience.

Compared to Equinox's top offerings, 53rd doesn't feel like anything special, but it seemingly provides the luxurious experience Equinox has promised to customers who won't be able to find it at the location one block north.

East 53rd Street gets a 5/10 for getting the job done as promised.



Park Avenue: Always full.

The Park Avenue Equinox was the epitome of the problem I found at most Midtown locations  — it was packed at all times.

Arriving after work, the lounge area was completely full and being used, the locker rooms were crawling with people, and the gym floor itself was overflowing.

People were arm-to-arm in the stretching area, and personal trainers resorted to having their clients do floor exercises on the tile floor that was supposed to serve as a walkway that ran along one side of the weight floor.



The locker rooms were untidy and outdated.

Making things worse, the locker rooms at Park Avenue were fairly untidy. There were towels everywhere and gum in the shower.

The steam room, which was huge and in the center of the locker room, contained masses of soggy newspaper and leftover towels, and the lockers were the old version where you needed your old personal lock.

If you ask, they let you borrow a lock at the front desk.

Park Avenue gets a 3/10 for having nice elements, but being overcrowded and dirty.



Rockefeller Center: Feels like the office of a white-shoe law firm, but is actually a gym.

Equinox's Rockefeller Center location has the layout and feel of a corporate law firm, but the exercise equipment is a dead giveaway.

The location itself is difficult to locate because it blends in with the rest of the Rockefeller Center complex. Once inside, though, two elevators are below large letters that spell "Equinox," and the instructions are obvious — take the elevators.

Once upstairs, you're met with a large lobby with tons of furniture and space to relax. Past the lobby is a hair salon along with the store found in every Equinox where you can buy premium sportswear and Kiehl's products.

The locker rooms, found on a lower level, felt like an MLB locker room for bankers. Wood-paneled lockers lined the room as the finance crowd either watched ESPN on the TVs or chatted about work. Two strangers next to me traded war tales: "I'm at Merrill," one said, before the other chimed in, "It's not called Merrill anymore."

The locker room was cavernous, having at least 18 showers, a sauna, steam room, and lounge chairs.



The gym itself feels like the floor of an office, with great views to boot.

The gym floor feels like a large office space, with two sides of weights and cardio connected by a hallway in the middle, a frequent layout found in office buildings. The giant group fitness studio overlooks the famous Atlas statue, which is pretty cool when it comes to gym ambiance.

Rockefeller Center gets an 8.5/10 for size, amenities offered, cleanliness, and ambiance. 



West 50th Street: small, but close to the M&M's store.

Just north of the famed Times Square Olive Garden and the M&M's store is Equinox's West 50th location.

While the facade gives the impression that the Equinox occupies a vast vault under the Paramount Plaza, the gym is actually quite small.

Occupying two small floors, machines and free weights are crammed into what's essentially a fancy hallway. The group fitness and cycling studio were also pint-sized, comparatively speaking.

For the small size of the gym itself, I was surprised that the locker rooms were as spacious as other locations.

The crowd appeared to be a young Hells Kitchen, Broadway crowd who were there for its convenient location. I could see myself stopping by for a quick workout if I worked or lived near there, but would never seek this gym out.

West 50th Street gets a 3/10 for cramped quarters.



Uptown has unique, spacious locations targeting moms and older customers.

Equinox's uptown locations are markedly more spacious and unique.



Columbus Circle: If Spy Kids had a gym.

Equinox does a great job of making you feel like you're entering clandestine spaces.

At their Columbus Circle location, you sneak past the juice press to an elevator that takes you underground to its eye-shaped facility, which includes a pool, a sauna and steam room, and a private training space that requires an iris scan for those who pay for Tier X training.

The locker rooms were moderately clean, but there was a puddle problem outside the steam room both times I visited, where I almost slipped.

Like many Manhattan locations, there was somewhat of a crowding issue, particularly in the pool. When I swam, there was a verbal dispute about lane preference, which isn't necessarily uncommon at shared pools, but still detracted from the ambiance. Still, it can be hard to come by a pool in Manhattan, so I wasn't complaining.

Anderson Cooper reportedly frequents this location, as it shares a building with the CNN studios. He told The Hollywood Reporter that he frequently needs to tell other customers to stop taking pictures of him doing pilates.

In November, Mark Walberg posted a video of himself working out there.

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Columbus Circle gets a 7/10 for ritzy amenities and a fun vibe.



East 61st Street: A hidden Equinox gem available for the price of the lowest tier.

Equinox East 61st has all the amenities of a sports club but is available for All Access members.

It may be because of the location, which was acquired from Sports Club/LA in 2014 and first branded by Equinox as "Sports Club Upper East Side," but this one lacks the aesthetic polish of most other Equinox locations in the city.

Despite looking like a community center from the '80s, including carpet covered seating pyramids, the location is giant, clean, and full of almost everything Equinox has to offer — including a pool, sauna, steam room, a rock climbing wall, basketball courts, boxing studio, pilates studio, yoga studio, squash courts, and more. There's even a hair salon on the first floor.

The locker rooms have an old-school feel and include an attendant who assigns you a locker and hands you a key. The showers have slightly older fixtures and features and seemed to have modulation pressure issues, but all in all the expansiveness and cleanliness was impressive.

The group class I took there (in the middle of the day on a weekday) felt like a fitness class out of "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel", full of Upper East Side housewives and grandmas. It probably had something to do with the time of day I went, but it added to the charming vibe.

East 61st Street gets an 8.5/10 for cleanliness, amenities, and price.



East 63rd Street: Upper east side charm without the pretension.

The East 63rd Street location was under construction when I visited, so its basement pool was completely dug up and just a concrete hole, but despite that, the rest of the gym felt spacious and clean. The top floor was where most of the equipment was, and large windows let a lot of light in.

The architecture, along with the recently updated locker rooms, created a luxurious feeling, but the clientele, a mix of young and old, didn't come off as pretentious.

Appropriately, the store at this location was the biggest I had ever seen, and the cheapest pair of shorts was around $88.

In 2017, tenants of the building who live above the gym sued Equinox, according to The New York Post, claiming that the noise from weights dropping and group fitness classes has impacted their daily lives and broke New York City's noise code. The issue was eventually resolved outside of court.

East 63rd Street gets a 7/10 for cleanliness, a nice crowd, and pending amenities.



East 74th Street: Made and designed for yoga moms.

Equinox East 74th has five floors, three of which are underground. The levels fit a smart design that segments different classes on different floors, which is great for parents who want to leave their kids at daycare on one floor, and fit in a yoga class without being bothered by the group fitness class in the basement.

The design was striking considering other Equinox locations, some of which have heavy noise pollution that can do a lot to ruin a zen moment.

The locker rooms were truly unique to other Equinox locations, with a boxy, nearly all-glass steam room (which seemed pretty cool) but toilets and showers were housed in the same section, which created an obvious smell problem.

One long mirror created a sort of group vanity situation, which was a better option than most Equinox locker rooms that have a handful of vanity stations at the end of each row of locker room, which usually end up not being enough.

East 74th Street got a 7/10 for a unique and smart layout, for the most part.



East 85th Street: Old but good.

This was the third Equinox built in New York City, and according to customers, it's starting to show its age.

Like some other Equinox locations, this East 85th Street still forces people to bring their own lock or borrow one at the front desk, which is a main complaint of the gym's Yelp page. The locker rooms also featured older fixtures, which were clean and in working order, but the difference was still noticeable.

Besides the locks, the locker rooms were nice when I visited, and laid out for space — but each time I visited the gym was nearly empty anyways.

The equipment was in good condition and the staff was friendly. One floor trainer helped me move and rerack weights after my sets.

My only complaint besides the locks was that you have to walk up stairs to get to the actual gym.

East 85th Street gets a 7/10 for general cleanliness and functionality.



East 92nd Street: One of the nicest base-tier Equinoxes out there.

East 92nd Street was another hidden gem, far removed from most other Equinox locations.

Housed in a luxury tower built by its parent company, Related Companies, this Equinox spans multiple floors. In the basement level is one of two "playgrounds" for Equinox's CrossFit-Style PGX classes.

On the ground level is the hotel-like lobby, which includes a lounge space and bar where you can charge your phone or laptop (like I did after hiking all over Manhattan). Up an elevator, are the gym, locker rooms, yoga studio, daycare center, and even more lounge space that truly does feel luxurious.

Everything felt brand new and was incredibly clean. It was mostly a ghost town.

The natural light, and new and clean interior was super impressive, and I was surprised that this gem was hidden away at the northern tip of Manhattan (I usually stick to downtown and Brooklyn).

The locker rooms were average size, but the steam room was notably large. There weren't special or outrageous luxuries, but after I completely forgot which locker I had put my stuff in (I blame brain fog from visiting 15 Equinoxes that day), the attendant patiently unlocked literally every locker in the locker room for me until we found my stuff. Hard to beat great service like that.

East 92nd Street gets a 9/10 for luxury, space, design, and service.



West 76th Street: If an orchestra hall was a gym.

The interior of the West 76th Street Equinox looks like the inside of an orchestra hall when you walk in. Artfully shaped and warped wooden walls jut into a large lounge space, with a glass, cubic cycling studio overlooking it.

Go either way and you'll run into the sunny weight floor, stretching area, and group fitness studio, or the locker rooms or yoga studio.

The locker rooms were huge and had their own lounge space inside. The floors were a bit wet, and only moderately clean. There appeared to be an accumulation of rusty water by the steam room.

Downstairs was a full and impressive spa, where they offered massages and highly technical facial treatments. This was probably one of the best spa locations Equinox had to offer.

West 76th Street gets a 7/10 for a nice, spacious design, and good facilities.



West 92nd Street: The company's second location in the city feels one of a kind.

The West 92nd Street location was the second Equinox, built in 1995, following the Flatiron location.

The open streets of the Upper West Side give it a sunny vibe, and it's non-Juice-Press juice bar makes it feel like one of a kind.

For a normal-tier Equinox the location was nice. Not many people were there and it had seperate rooms for boxing, barre, pilates, yoga, and group fitness. Most locations I've seen at least combine their barre and group fitness rooms into one.

The upper floor had a lot of light, and the locker room came off as standard issue — except for the fact that it had old lockers that required a padlock and didn't have a digital scale.

In November 2018, a gas line in the building exploded and blew out the front windows, but there were no reported injuries and everyone was evacuated. When I visited a few months later I saw no signs of the incident.

West 92nd Street gets a 6.5/10 for spaciousness and cleanliness.



Brooklyn has three locations — two are pretty nice and one feels like a motel gym.

Interestingly, there are no Equinox locations in Queens, the Bronx, or Staten Island. But there are three in both Westchester and Long Island.



Brooklyn Heights: Similar to a slightly elevated hotel gym.

The first time I went to the Brooklyn Heights Equinox, I was underwhelmed.

The yellow walls, and unserviced cable machines, along with a much older and weirder clientele (who were few and far between), gave it the feeling of a hotel gym.

Making matters worse, despite my best efforts, the steam room didn't appear to be working and smelled like a foot. When I asked the front desk person about it, he said you have to spray the thermostat.

The locker rooms were fine, but average aesthetically. You had to bring your own lock, but at least the front desk offered me one without me having to ask. My thoughts were, "I wouldn't pay $190 to go to this gym alone."

When I returned a month later, I realized the early morning light of 6 a.m. may have clouded my vision slightly, and that it wasn't awful, it was just average.

The staff was friendly and roamed around handing out towels, there was a daycare, and the steam room worked, but felt weak, probably because it was too big and cavernous to feel the small amount of steam that was being emitted.

Brooklyn Heights gets a 2.5/10 for being outdated and dysfunctional.



Dumbo: An updated version of the Tribeca location.

Built in 2016 and reportedly frequented by superstar Shawn Mendes, Equinox Dumbo feels like an updated version of Equinox's Tribeca location.

Like Tribeca, all of Dumbo's equipment and facilities are laid out on a wide single floor, but unlike Tribeca, Dumbo features a fresh wood and metal interior design with huge, beautiful locker rooms.

On my first visit, the location was hard to fault — it was beautiful, sparkling clean, and basically empty.

My second time around was not so good. An overzealous toilet paper user had seemingly ripped off more than he could use, and there were scraps of toilet paper all over the bathroom floor.

Clearly, this problem was at least partly with the member, but it represents an issue that I encountered pretty frequently at Equinox: once a gym reaches a certain number of members, it's hard to control for people who choose to make a mess. This seems to pose a particular issue for Equinox, which seems to attract a user base that feels entitled to leave messes for other people to clean up.

7/10 for a nice layout, locker rooms, and great aesthetic.



Williamsburg: Next to a Whole Foods and across from an Apple store, but very cramped.

Equinox has been slow to expand into Brooklyn, perhaps because its brand clashes with much of Brooklyn's counter-cultural, or at least closer-to-working-class, sensibility. But as the borough rapidly gentrifies, the companhy has invested in a few locations in the borough.

Perhaps most sensibly of these has been its Williamsburg location, targeting the young "creatives" who have elected to live in the neighborhood because of its hipster reputation and proximity to Manhattan.

Appropriately, its Equinox Williamsburg is right next to a Whole Foods and directly across from an Apple Store. Despite rumors I've heard, there isn't a direct passageway between the two, according to employees.

The gym itself is squeezed into the recent development that houses it, and has the shape of a skinny sliver of cake.

Patrons are forced to check in on the ground floor, walk up to the second floor, and then walk across the entire gym, so they can go down another flight of stairs to the locker rooms. The layout isn't ideal, but isn't awfully burdensome because of the gym's small size.

Where the size does become an issue, however, is crowding. During peak hours, the number of people crammed into the small space feels ridiculous.

The photo above shows a yoga class waiting to be let into the studio, but because of the gym's small size, the crowd was forced to wait in the hallway leading to the locker rooms, making for an awkward walk for people who are just trying to put their gym clothes on.

It appears as if Equinox is at least aware of the problem, as I saw a salesperson divert a customer away from the hallway before the bottleneck cleared.

The spacious locker rooms are able to accommodate everyone, but the steam room is one of the smallest I've seen at any Equinox. I've seen people having to stand multiple times.

The yoga and group studios were spacious, but the yoga studio's placement right outside the locker rooms and directly under the group fitness rooms makes for a somewhat distracting experience.

The real standout of the gym is its tiered spin studio, which makes for a cinematic cycling experience.

Williamsburg gets a 6/10 for the cool cycling studio, cleanliness, and new features.

 

 



Destination Membership: $300 per month gets you access to Equinox Sports Clubs and other special locations.

The Destination membership is a tier below E, but still gives you access to Equinoxes special locations and Sports Clubs, which have unique features and amenities.

In New York City, there are two locations that are bundled with the membership — Sports Club New York and Printing House.

Members end up paying around $40 more per month to run into fewer members, and gain access to a few more amenities.



Sports Club New York: The most impressive Equinox in New York.

Equinox's Sports Club New York, found a few blocks from Columbus Circle on the Upper West Side, is arguably Equinox's most impressive location, even though it falls a tier below the brand's top offerings.

On their off-time, Equinox trainers and employees often go to the Sports Club for their workouts, along with ABC's David Muir, who I personally spotted in the lobby, and CNN's Chris Cuomo, according to Page Six.

The sheer size of the Sports Club, which used to be owned by Reebok before Equinox acquired it in 2014, is impressive. Its six floors house a 25-yard indoor pool, an entire level for saunas, steam rooms, jacuzzis, and showers (lockers are on another floor), a rock climbing wall, basketball courts, a cafe, and outdoor running track, a functional fitness room, a boxing space, a cycling studio, yoga studio, a group fitness studio, and more.

In New York City, where space is the most valuable asset around, Sports Club New York feels like a goldmine. The effect is only amplified by the fact that fewer people (presumably) can afford the membership, which creates more space than the average Equinox gym.

 



If you have the money, the $40 extra you'll pay per month seems fair for the upgrade you get at the Sports Club.

The cleanliness, space, and pure number of amenities at the Sports Club make you feel like you want to stay longer. This is seemingly the overarching idea of Equinox's luxury brand, but the concept is actually realized at the Sports Club.

Each time I've been, I've found myself wandering around and enjoying the space. That's a hard feat for a New York City gym.

If you have the money, the extra $40 dollars spent on a Destination Membership are definitely worth it for the Sports Club alone.

Equinox Sports Club gets a 10/10 for luxury and amenities.



Printing House: you're basically paying for access to an outdoor pool and sundeck.

Equinox bought its Printing House location in 2010 and reportedly remodeled the one-time home to lower Manhattan's squash scene into a gym-lounge space that includes a rooftop pool and a "zen suite."

Like the Sports Club, access to Printing House comes through either a destination membership or a membership to the gym that's $210, slightly higher than Equinox's average gym.

Unlike the Sports Club, however, Printing House's selling points rest squarely on two features — the outdoor pool and the views.

 



Most of Printing House is on the 9th and 10th floors. You need to take an unmarked elevator to get there.

Besides a functional fitness floor and the cycling studio, which are on the ground floor, most of Printing House's amenities are on the 9th and 10th floors of the building. Only one elevator will get you there, and it can take awhile for it to come fetch you.

Once you get to the floors with the actual equipment, the selling point is clear. The views of the water and the city are great for a gym.

The equipment itself is pretty limited. There are tons of cardio machines, but only a medium-sized collection of cable-machines and free weights on the top floors.



The outdoor pool seems to be a main feature of Printing House, but due to weather, it's only open 3 months out of the year.

The outdoor pool, which includes lounge and sun-bathing space, is probably the other main selling point in the summer, but it's only open 3 months out of the year, and definitely isn't big enough to swim laps in.

It's hard to justify paying an inflated gym price for a feature you can only use one-fourth of the year.

Despite Printing House leaning into Equinox's reputation of prioritizing luxury, the locker rooms (what's typically Equinox's focus when creating a luxurious experience), were surprisingly out of date.

While the locker room was nearly empty when I first visited (on a weekday morning in the winter), I was surprised that the lockers were the older version I'd seen in many other Equinox locations — requiring a combination lock instead of having built-in locks. The scale was also an old analog one rather than the fancy digital scales I saw at a majority of locations.

The locker room wasn't incredibly dirty, but there were still scraps of paper and towels lying on the ground, which was surprising for a gym that charges a higher rate for admission than most.

As a standalone gym, Printing House doesn't justify paying a higher price than any other Equinox. If you really want an outdoor pool to relax in, one membership adviser told me that it was common for members to upgrade their membership to include Printing House during the summer and then downgrade during the winter.

Printing House is reportedly no stranger to celebrity sightings, with Claire Danes and Will Arnett being spotted there. One Yelp reviewer wrote that they heard Lady Gaga could be found there from time to time.

Like a handful of other locations, Equinox Printing House has been sued by tenants of the building it occupies. The New York Post cites court papers referring to group fitness classes, "the particular song is easily identifiable, and I can even follow along with the lyrics." Like similar cases, the issue was resolved out of court.

Printing House gets a 8/10 for nice views, the pool, and the sun deck.



The most expensive membership is called 'E by Equinox,' which gives you access to two exclusive New York gyms and every other Equinox in the world.

Equinox memberships are based on access to different levels of gyms. The most expensive membership is called "E by Equinox," at $500 per month with a $750 initiation fee (it used to be $5,000 according to one gym manager).

With the membership, you have access to every Equinox gym around the world, including the E clubs and spaces.

The idea is that E members have access to Equinox's highest level of luxury, along with their highest level of training — Tier X (which members have to pay extra for, of course), which the company claims is a comprehensive and unparalleled wellness and training program.

Tier X is the real selling point, but an E membership comes with a heightened level of luxury according to the company.

With twice-weekly training sessions that Equinox recommends, the membership costs $23,620 the year of enrollment — $20,000 more than Equinox's standard membership.



E Madison: an oasis of luxury that will cost you.

E Madison, located near Central Park on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, is essentially a concept location created to test the waters of whether or not the ultra-rich will pay for extreme luxury in a gym setting, along with fees for personal training.

Appropriately, the level of luxury at E Madison is pretty much unparalleled for New York consumer gyms.

Immediately when you walk in, staff greet you and offer coffee, fruit, or water.

There's a large lounge with trendy furniture and art on the walls from Equinox's rotating art collection.

Daily laundry service is included in the membership, meaning you can leave your dirty clothes there after a workout one day, and they will be clean and ready to use for your next workout when you arrive, handed to you by their on-staff coat checker.

Complimentary shoe shining and clothes steaming is also included if you leave your garments in special bureaus in the locker room.

The lockers themselves have jewelry drawers and USB plugs so you can charge your devices, along with a separate section for your shoes — all amenities that you won't find in other Equinox locations.

Unlike other Equinox locations, E Madison has personal vanities in the locker room for primping.



E Madison's products cost nearly double the products at their other locations.

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Equinox has also set E Madison by partnering with a separate product line for its lotions and cleansers, going with the pricier Grown Alchemist rather than Kiehl's, which Equinox provides for members at all of its traditional locations.

The bottle of body cleanser in each shower at E Madison retails for $44, while the cleanser bottle of the same size from Kiehl's found at most Equinox locations retails for $25.

Also setting E Madison apart are the types of freebies given, such as toothpicks, toothbrushes, combs, sewing kits, and more. Some of these are found at specific Equinox locations, but E Madison has clearly integrated this into part of their brand.

Notably, the hair products were Equinox's standard unlabeled hair spray and gel.



E Madison has one of the fanciest showers I've ever used.

E Madison has three shower heads per shower that you can control with a digital temperature module. This was definitely the fanciest shower I've ever used, but it still just felt like taking a shower. Despite the fancy control pad, you could still feel changes in pressure as you requested hotter water.

Notably, each shower has its own changing area unlike other Equinox locations, but the lighting is less than ideal.

Each time I visited, there were only between one or two other people in the locker room along with the permanent attendant who is there to assist with anything you might need.



E clubs are designed around Tier X training, and E Madison's floor is sparse by design.

The gym itself at E seems surprisingly sparse, but that's by design.

E as a concept is designed around Equinox's top-tier of personal training called Tier X, which includes coaching on fitness, sleep, and nutrition, and can include consultation on physical therapy, medical needs, and probably anything else you can think of.

Members of E don't necessarily need to join Tier X, but E's Membership Director Zach Nelson tells me that the majority of members end up doing it at $170 per session. They encourage a yearly package that would allow for two sessions per week, at the price of $16,120.

For that reason, Nelson told me, there's more open floor space, free weights, and treadmills, and fewer cable-assisted or guided machines. But the few machines they have are covered in custom luxury leather, according to Nelson.

Nelson also showed off the group studio, which has double-paned glass to prevent street noise and fully customizable mood lighting. He said most classes only have a handful of people in them because of the emphasis the gym places on personal training.

There are no frills like a pool or rock climbing wall — the E experience is about hands-on training.

When I visited, most members I saw seemed to be between 35 and 60, probably because of the high cost and location, but each time there were only three to five other people using the gym at the same time as me.

9/10 for an incredibly luxurious experience, with a limited number of fitness options.



E Columbus Circle: Spartan compared to E Madison.

E by Equinox members also get access to an exclusive training space that's inside Equinox's Columbus Circle location, accessible by retina scan secured door off the main lobby.

This was the original E, founded in 2004 when Tier X used to be called Tier 4, and when the club stood alone. Before E Madison, it found glowing praise among those covering luxury. GQ fawned over it in 2016, noting the "endless river of refrigerated eucalyptus towels" and private "changing cabanas," as they're referred to by the club.

In the harsh reflection of the shiny new E Madison, though, the training space comes off as spartan.

It also seems to contradict what is now a core tenant of E's brand — privacy. Throughout my experience, E was off limits in terms of photos because of privacy concerns for their members, according to the company. But the training space at Columbus Circle was wholly viewable from the pool open to all Equinox members.

The fitness area is simply a square floor with weights, resistance bands, some cardio equipment, and not much else. Where E Madison's sparseness felt elevated, the Columbus Circle location simply felt empty. 

Compared to E Madison's luxurious locker room, the "changing cabanas" came off more as private bathrooms — only one showerhead included. The products found were Fresh brand when I visited, but the manager told me they would be changed to match the line in E Madison.

Despite a private bathroom for each visitor, having only one staff member meant that the cleanliness fell below E Madison's standard. The one I was showed had hair in the sink, and some scraps of paper on the floor.

More glaring was the fact that there were no private saunas or steam rooms for E members. If an E enrollee wanted a steam, they'd have to walk a few yards to the plebian locker room open to all Equinox Columbus Circle members.

The manager who showed me the space wasn't blind to the disparity between E Madison and Columbus Circle. He openly complained about how Equinox's efforts to build out the E brand left his space in a rut. The training space is exclusively for training and is by appointment only. Now, he says, members who joined through E Madison are showing up expecting to be able to access the training space without an appointment. Since there are no locker rooms, only cabanas, this presents a logistical problem.

While I actually believe in the value of training provided for E members, the Columbus Circle training space has fallen behind in Equinox's quest to set the E brand apart in privacy and luxury.

Equinox says the space is set for renovation in the next few months to be more in line with updated to the E brand. 

5/10 for a slightly elevated experience at an unrealistic price.



The price of Equinox's top membership seems like a steep climb for marginal differences in training quality and luxury and is probably only worth it for the uber-wealthy.

E by Equinox is certainly one of the highest levels of luxury and training available in the consumer gym market, but the leap to spending over $20,000 is a big one that's essentially only available to the uber-wealthy.

For the average person, this expense wouldn't be worth it for the marginal amount of luxury and training quality that you receive.

But for clients who have the ability to spend that much on their gym membership, it's probably normal to fork over an abundance of cash for a product that's just slightly better.



L.L.Bean has extended its Memorial Day sale and everything is 20% off — here are 11 standout deals

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Insider Picks writes about products and services to help you navigate when shopping online. Insider Inc. receives a commission from our affiliate partners when you buy through our links, but our reporting and recommendations are always independent and objective.

L.L.Bean

L.L.Bean is kicking off summer with a sitewide sale. Now through May 28, you can save 20% on your order by using the promo code "SUMMER" at checkout. Along with apparel and footwear (including the iconic Bean Boot) for men, women, and kids, the sale also includes bags and travel accessories, outdoor equipment, and home goods.

The code is valid on full-price and sale styles, so you'll save regardless of your budget or what you're shopping for. You can choose summer styles to wear now, past-season fall and winter styles for later in the year, or a combination of both.

To help you get to the best deals quickly, we rounded up 11 of our favorite products on sale. And if you're looking for something specific, you can jump directly to the product categories listed, below.

Shop the extended L.L.Bean Memorial Day sale now.

Bean Boots

Men's: $108 (originally $135) [You save $27]

Women's: $108 (originally $135) [You save $27]

 



Men's Signature Anorak Windbreaker

$63.99 (Originally $99) [You save $35.01]



Men's Traverse 10-inch Swim Trunks

$31.99 (Originally $44.95) [You save $12.96]



Men's Rapid River Technical Fishing Shirt

$23.99 (Originally $79) [You save $55.01]



Men's Casco Bay Boat Mocs

$55.99 (Originally $89) [You save $33.01]



Women's Squareneck Tanksuit

$47.99 (Originally $74.95) [You save $26.96]



Women's Premium Washable Linen Shirt

$27.99 (Originally $64.95) [You save $36.96]



Women's Essential Sun Hat

$15.99 (Originally $39.95) [You save $23.96]



Women's Signature Handsewn Suede Loafers

$71.99 (Originally $159) [You save $87.01]



Everyday Lightweight Tote

$23.99 (Originally $34.95) [You save $10.96]



Sportsman's Medium Spinner Pullman

$223.20 (Originally $319) [You save $95.80]




What the top of Mount Everest is really like, according to the woman who's been there a record-breaking 9 times

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lhakpa sherpa at the top of everest

  • More than 300 people are known to have died trying to reach the top of Mount Everest
  • Lhakpa Sherpa, who's reached the summit a record-breaking nine times, described her latest climb to Business Insider.
  • She said Everest climbers pass frozen bodies as they near the top of the mountain.
  • Warning: this post contains graphic descriptions of those bodies, as well as a photo of one.

Climbing Mount Everest, a rock that soars five and a half miles off the ground, takes a considerable amount of money and time, along with guts of steel.

People who attempt to summit the mountain typically spend upwards of $25,000 on the experience, buying $850 oxygen tanks, securing $11,000 permits (when climbing from Nepal), and hiring local guides called sherpas to help them carry gear and lead the way. Then, hikers usually stay at Everest base camp for several weeks to acclimate to the thin air before they try to reach the 29,029-foot-high peak. 

Lhakpa Sherpa knows what it's like on top of Everest better than few others on the planet — she has reached the summit of the world's tallest mountain more times than any other woman. In 2018, she trudged her way up, clients in tow, for the ninth time, breaking her previous record. 

Sherpa told Business Insider that the day a group attempts to summit Everest is by far the most difficult section of the trek.

"We say [it's] the dead zone," she said, referring to the dangerous final 2,780-foot stretch of the climb. At that point, hikers are above 8,000 meters (26,250 feet) high.

What it's like to summit Everest

climbing up everest

The hard work begins after nightfall, around 10 p.m., when Sherpa and her clients begin climbing up that last stretch in the dark. Starting at night allows teams to reach the top by daybreak and see better when they climb back down.

The trek to the summit takes about seven hours. Sherpa said she doesn't eat any food or drink any water during that section of the climb, even though she's pulling her body over rocks and breathing in thinner and thinner air. 

Read more:This record-breaking Everest climber has reached the summit nine times. She makes $11.50 per hour washing dishes at Whole Foods.

Here, people can suffer from an oxygen-starved delirium that some experts consider a form of high-altitude psychosis. Climbers have been known to do strange things like start shedding their clothes or talking to imaginary friends.

"Their life is in our hands and we must protect them from their own insanity," Sherpa said.

All the while, climbers pass a morbid kind of mile marker: dead corpses of fallen hikers that littler the trail.

The frozen bodies of people who've fallen prey to the mountain's death zone serve as a grim reminder that even with ample preparation, experienced guides, and expensive gear, Everest is deadly. 

Sherpa, who's been scaling the mountain regularly since 2000, said she saw seven bodies during the final stretch of her climb in 2018. One body was an especially eerie site.

"He looked alive, because the wind was blowing his hair," Sherpa said. Upon closer inspection, she realized his face was frozen and disfigured. 

Deaths on Everest

According to the Himalayan Database, which was last updated in 2018, there have been 295 recorded deaths on Everest. Add to that the 11 people who've reportedly died trying to scale the mountain this spring, and the count soars to 306 bodies. That's a steep death rate for a mountain that only about 5,000 people have ever scaled. 

everest dead body Green Boots

Sherpa isn't the only one who thinks about the bodies. For years, Everest climbers have spoken of a dead man they called "Green Boots" who lay in a cave roughly 1,130 feet from the top.

Many of these bodies have remained on Everest because hiking up to recover bodies at that altitude (or carrying people down) can also be a deadly chore. More than 200 permanently frozen corpses litter the mountain, according to one 2015 estimate from the BBC

The most cited cause of death on Everest is avalanches. In 2014, one such event killed 16 sherpas, putting Everest climbing on hold for that season.

Other people have perished from the various health consequences of hiking at an altitude that's usually reserved for airplanes. The air has so little oxygen that even with tanks, it can feel like "running on a treadmill and breathing through a straw," American mountaineer and filmmaker David Breashears once said.

Climbers can experience violent, rib-cracking coughs and dangerous swelling in the brain and lungs. 

everest summit

A brief moment on top before climbing back down

Despite the challenges that a lack of oxygen poses, hikers must climb fairly quickly to reach the summit around 5 a.m., as the timeline requires.

Once at the top, Sherpa said, the feeling she gets is unmatched.

"I feel like a zombie who has stumbled into heaven. At the summit, I truly feel on top of the world," she said. "A euphoria I cannot find anywhere else."

Even though most climbers would like to linger at the top, Sherpa knows they can only spend 20 minutes there — time to snap a few photos — before heading back down out of the death zone.

The 2-mile trek back to the safety of base camp takes 12 hours. Sherpa's teams usually reaches camp just as the sun sets, and she breathes easier than she has all day.

everest camp

This post was originally published on August 2, 2018, and has been updated with new death tolls. 

SEE ALSO: This record-breaking Everest climber has reached the summit nine times. She makes $11.50 per hour washing dishes at Whole Foods.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Mount Everest is not the tallest mountain in the world

The $25 MSR Pika Teapot uses simple physics to prevent water from ever spilling onto your feet

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Mrs. Pika Teapot

  • The MSR Pika Teapot ($24.95 at REI, and currently on sale at Backcountry for $18.95) is incredibly well-designed, featuring an insulated handle and a lid that won't fall off.
  • The cleverly designed spout also allows for perfect pouring so you won't accidentally spill boiling water on bare feet, which I unfortunately did last year.
  • The pot is also so pretty that you'll want to use it even when you're at home.

As much as it pains me to admit, there are things I'd learned in physics class at school that are pretty useful in my adult life now. When camping, it's helpful to know that levers help move heavy objects with ease, heat rises, and lenses can help take great photos and start fires.

With that said, I hadn't really thought about fluid dynamics much in the past decade or so though, and it's certainly not something that I think about when I'm out hiking or sipping a cup of tea — and I'm British so I think rather a lot about tea.

There are some things I do remember about tea from high school, notably that it played a major role during the Industrial Revolution. Supplying caffeine and sugar, and ensuring that water was boiled and therefore safe to drink, it became the fuel of the British working class. Now, I don't work in a coal mine, but I do know that long days on the trail are much better when punctuated with stops for tea and snacks.

So, what does any of this have to do with the MSR Pika Teapot ($24.95)?

Well, for those of you who also spent physics class trying to ignite your friends with Bunsen burners, laminar flow occurs when fluid particles follow smooth paths in layers that slide past each other like playing cards. It's a very orderly flow with no cross currents so particles flow parallel to the solid surface nearby. In this case, when you pour hot water from an MSR Pika Teapot, you'll know exactly where that water is going to go and you know that it won't dribble when you stop. Laminar flow can make a big difference in your tea — and just about anything else you do with hot water.

Honestly, I really should have worked this out a long time ago — before I accidentally poured boiling water from a Jetboil onto my bare feet in the desert last winter, but at least now, I'll have a scar to help me remember what my physics teacher never could get me to.

MSR Pika teapot

But it's not just the predictable pouring that makes the Pika my favorite piece of outdoor cooking gear, nor is it my British affection for tea.

The Pika has a whole host of really well-thought out design elements. Sit the pot down and the lid comes right off to easily refill, but when correctly aligned, it never falls off even when you're pouring thanks to a clever lip which helps prevent boiling water from spilling out of the top, which can happen with cheaper camping kettles. There's also a handle, but unlike basic kettles, it stays upright and is insulated, removing another way that I have burned myself in the past.

This teapot might only weigh a hair over five ounces, but it can easily boil a liter of water, which is enough for three cups of coffee. A wide opening lets me store camping stove parts, coffee filters, and a collapsible pour-over cone inside the pot. For a lot of camping trips, my only need for a stove is to heat water for hot drinks and dehydrated meals, so that means that everything I need fits inside the Pika.

Although I have used the Pika a lot out in the field, it's simply too enjoyable for it to stay in my gear shed all week and only come out on weekends. The simple design looks good enough to leave out on my stove at home and the precision pouring is much better than a standard kettle for making Hario V60 coffee in the morning.

Unfortunately, the aesthetics also led to its downfall — kind of. According to designers Owen Mesdag and Evan Williams, "All of [our] samples were stolen when [we] sent them to friends to ask for feedback on the design." Mesdag also told Business Insider, "Even my mother stole one to use at home!"

Tea might have been a proletarian pleasure in the Industrial Revolution, but today, it can be a decidedly bourgeois indulgence. At $24.95, the Pika is reasonably-priced and makes a great gift for anyone who likes tea, camping, or honestly, just well-made products.

Buy MSR Pika Teapot - 1 Liter from REI for $24.95

Buy MSR Pika 1L Teapot from Backcountry for $18.95

Join the conversation about this story »

The best closet and drawer organizers you can buy

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  • Proper drawer and closet organization can make the difference between a calm, enjoyable morning routine and a frenzied mess to find the right clothes and accessories before you rush out the door wearing less than your best outfit.
  • Our top pick for drawer organization are the low cost, easily customized Soydnee Foldable Cloth Bins, while our favorite closet organizer is the refined and stylish John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer.
  • For more tips on how to organize your bedroom closet, check out our how-to guide.

In my college years, my system of clothes organization was a well-oiled machine. Clean clothing went from the laundromat into a pile on one side of my tiny bedroom in a four-story walkup in Boston's Beacon Hill neighborhood. From the clean pile, I would dress myself for the day, and then at day's end, my clothing went into the dirty pile. Once the dirty pile was towering and the clean nearly depleted, it was back to coin-operated washers and dryers across the street.

Once married and settled into a new home with my wife, the system evolved. Now, suddenly, I was using drawers and hangers and all manner of newfangled hardware to keep my clothing organized. Much to my surprise, I actually found closet and drawer organization a relief, not a burden.

When you know exactly where each type of clothing belongs, the process of choosing an outfit is quicker and easier. And while dumping clean clothes on the floor may be easier than putting each article away in its place, clothing tends to stay more crisp and clean looking when folded or hung than lying in a mound of fabric, I've noticed.

Whether you are looking to start a closet and drawer organization system from scratch or you just need a bit of assistance straightening out your accessories or underwear, we've got you covered. Our guide features a range of hardware ideal for all sorts of garments and for all sorts of closets and dressers, too. We have included options from up and down the price spectrum as well as those that are ideal for permanent installation in your home or for temporary use in an apartment or dorm.

The only thing you'll need to worry about when it comes to drawer and closet organization is actually sticking to the system you create.

Here are the best organizers you can buy in 2019:

Updated on 05/28/2019 by Malarie Gokey: Updated prices and formatting. Added related buying guides and a how-to article on closet organization.

Keep scrolling to check out our top picks.

The best overall

The John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer looks like a custom-built unit, but it arrives mostly constructed and requires little assembly.

At around $300, the John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer isn't what you would call cheap, but compared to a custom closet organization system build, it's a veritable steal. Especially because this handsome solid wood system has the look of a custom-built closet organizer.

The unit has a 12-inch shelf depth and creates an overall 20 feet of shelf space, while it's hanging bars create as much as 10 feet of hanging storage space. The system can be altered to fit a closet measuring six, eight, or 10 feet in overall width.

The John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer comes in two finish options: a warm honey maple or a classed red mahogany. It features an angled shelf ideal for shoes and two adjustable shelves that can be raised or lowered to best accommodate folded clothes, bins, blankets, and more. Every time you look into your closet, you'll love the organization offered by this hardware as well as the handsome look of the organizer itself.

Amazon shoppers have given the John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer an overall averaged rating of 4.3 stars, with a reviewer named Tina calling it "beautiful" and "super easy to install," adding that the unit was "worth every penny."

Just be careful during the install and as you hang clothes or take them off hangers, as the rather soft wood dents and scratches easily.

Pros: Handsome and stylish design, easy customization, good price for the quality

Cons: Wood dents and scratches easily

Buy the John Louis Home Deep Simplicity Closet Organizer at Walmart for $319.99



The best drawer organizer

The Sodynee Foldable Cloth Drawer Bins can be used for T-shirts, ties, underwear, and more, and the six-bin system is yours for less than $15.

Unless every item of clothing you wear is the exact same size, then you need storage bins of varied sizes to help you properly organize your drawers. The Sodynee Foldable Cloth Drawer Bins set comes with two bins each in three different sizes, the largest of which are ideal for shirts, the smallest of which are good for socks or ties, while the medium bins will accommodate scarves, underwear, and more.

While many drawer organizing systems are designed to fit into a single drawer, I like the idea of splitting up the bins in this set. You could use each of the larger bins, which measure 11 inches by 11 inches, to divide different drawers in half, and then use the mid-sized bins, measuring 11 inches by 5 inches, to create varied storage areas in other drawers.

Anyone shopping for drawer organizers will like the fact that the Sodynee Foldable Cloth Drawer Bins cost less than 15 bucks.

With more than 200 reviews posted on Amazon, the Sodynee Foldable Cloth Drawer Bins enjoy a 4.4-star average rating. A reviewer named Alise called them "incredible quality for the price," while another owner said these bins are ideal for "keeping everything well organized."

Do note that a few shoppers complained of a chemical odor when the bins were new, so plan to allow some time for them to air out before use.

Pros: Easily customizable, great low price, bins collapse for easy storage

Cons: Unpleasant odor when new

Buy a set of Sodynee Foldable Cloth Drawer Bins on Amazon for $14.99



The best basic closet organizer

The Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer sets up in a matter of minutes with no tools or drilling needed.

If you want to enjoy better closet organization but you don't want to spend much cash, consider the Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer.

If you want decent clothing organization in a location where you can't install hardware permanently, such as in an apartment or dorm, then definitely look at the Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer, because this unit sets up and breaks down in mere minutes, requires no use of tools in its build, and does not need to be affixed to the walls either.

The freestanding Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer might not be all that stylish, but it provides ample space for the clothes that keep you looking that way. It has four square shaped wire shelves and a large rectangular shelf on top and two rows of bars that create plenty of space for hanging shirts, slacks, coats, and more. At less than $43, it's hard to beat the price here.

Dozens of Amazon shoppers have reviewed the Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer and at the time of this writing, it has a solid 4.10-star overall rating. A reviewer named Natasha calls it "very sturdy and easy to put together" while a man named Michael said it has "plenty of hanging space, plenty of shelf space," and seconded the sentiments about easy installation.

Just don't load the shelves with too much weight, because they may well buckle under the pressure, according to a few other owners.

Pros: Quick and easy assembly, low price point, perfect for temporary use

Cons: Shelves can't support much weight

Buy the Simple Houseware Freestanding Garment Organizer on Amazon for $47.87



The best underwear organizer

The Simple Housewares Underwear Organizer has multiple compartments for socks, briefs, boxers, bras, and  other small clothing.

Whether you're a man with lots of socks, boxers, and belts or a woman looking to organize bras, panties, stockings, and so forth, the Simple Housewares Underwear Organizer is a perfect system.

The set comes with four separate bins, each of which has a different layout within. One of the larger bins has broad, narrow slots perfect for bras or boxers, while another has no fewer than 20 small compartments perfect for pairs of socks. The way you use each individual slot and compartment is up to you, but if you're using this four-piece set for your undergarments, you're doing it right.

If you have smaller drawers, you can always split the set up, using the individual draw organizers in different locations. Beyond underwear, many of the compartments are ideal for ties, scarves, winter hats and gloves, and other such accessories. Just don't plan to put any pairs of pants or sweatshirts or anything into these organizers, because their size does limit them to smaller items of apparel.

With more than 1,700 reviews on Amazon, the Simple Housewares Underwear Organizer enjoys a shining 4.6-star overall rating. A customer named Nicole loved how the compartments are "flexible but sturdy enough to keep the items separated" while a gentleman called Ali said they were "amazing for organization."

A writer with Mashable called the Simple Housewares Underwear Organizer a "great way to stay organized at a glance" and appreciated how the set allows you to "customize your space."

Pros: Accommodate large number of items, great price, lightweight yet sturdy

Cons: Not large enough for many apparel items

Buy the Simple Housewares Underwear Organizer on Amazon for $14.87



The best modular closet organizer

The Rubbermaid Configurations Custom Closet Deluxe Kit can be configured in many ways, so you can make your closet work for you.

Once you get a Rubbermaid Configurations Custom Closet Deluxe Kit, you can create just about any closet organization layout you can imagine, provided you have a closet that's at least 3.5 feet wide on one wall. 

Thanks to the telescoping hanging rods and expandable shelves, the system can create as much as 18 feet of additional shelving space and 12 feet of hanging space, and it works for both walk-in and reach-in closets.

Installation won't take most people more than an hour or two, and even once the main support hardware is installed, most of the shelves can be moved around in just a few seconds as your storage and organization needs change. If you ever need more hanging and shelf space, you can just get another organizer set. It's easy to blend hardware from more than one Rubbermaid Configurations Custom Closet Deluxe Kit.

With several dozen reviews posted on Home Depot, the Rubbermaid Configurations Custom Closet Deluxe Kit has an excellent 4.6-star overall rating. One owner loved "that it can be customized as necessary," while another was thrilled to be able to single-handedly manage the installation process.

A writer from The Spruce called Rubbermaid's closet system "adjustable to the size of your closet" and noted how many accessory storage options were available.

Pros: Easily adjustable components, fits closets of almost any size, multiple additional components available

Cons: Not aesthetically pleasing

Buy the Rubbermaid Configurations Custom Closet Deluxe Kit at Home Depot for $115.05



The best drawer organizer for accessories

The Seville Classics 5-Piece Bamboo Drawer Organizer has seven different-sized compartments, making it perfect for storing everything from watches and wallets to jewelry and more.

Organizing your clothing is important, but apparel is only part of your everyday ensemble. Your accessories deserve proper storage, too, and the Seville Classics 5-Piece Bamboo Drawer Organizer provides just that.

Whether you use a few of its sturdy wooden bins in a nightstand or a sideboard near the front door or you use all five inserts in a single larger drawer, this set will give you ample space for organizing items like your wallet, watches, glasses, and all the other things you don't leave home without but that you might easily misplace with a system in place.

The handsome bamboo bins in this Seville Classics set were designed to be used in a drawer, but they can also be set out on a desk for handy management of notes, business cards, pens, and other such sundries, so these organizers are ideal for use at home or at the office. Wherever and however you use this organizer system, it will reduce clutter and restore order, which will bring some welcome peace of mind.

One Bed, Bath & Beyond shopper said that the Seville Classics 5-Piece Bamboo Drawer Organizer was "perfect," adding that it "fit perfectly in his top drawer [and] will keep the drawer nice and organized." Another loved how "the compartments can be rearranged to accommodate your drawer space."

A product tester from TopTenReviewPro praised the bamboo bins' "sturdy quality" and "stylish design."

Pros: Ideal for all sorts of accessory items, handsome bamboo construction, easy customization

Cons: Reported measurements are slightly too small

Buy the Seville Classics 5-Piece Bamboo Drawer Organizer at Bed, Bath & Beyond for $26.99



Check out our guides to the best storage containers and hangers

The best clothes hangers you can buy

There's nothing worse than a messy, disorganized closet. Having high-quality clothes hangers that match is an absolute must.

Hangers come in all kinds of materials and styles. There are hangers for skirts, pants, coats, and regular clothes. Whether you want wooden or velvet hangers we have a pick for you.

Here are the best hangers you can buy:


The best storage containers you can buy

Organization is a challenge for the best of us, but good quality storage containers can help you get your stuff organized and make it all easier to access when you need it.

There are so many storage container options out there, from stackable plastic boxes that hold a ton of stuff to decorative bins that sneakily house items you use often but want to keep out of sight.

These are the best storage containers your money can buy — They'll make you feel like an amateur organization expert in no time.

Here are the best storage containers:



9 Father's Day experience gifts that you and Dad can enjoy together — from concert tickets to cooking classes

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picnic time

Out of all the gifts Dad could ask for this Father's Day, the one that probably tops the list is one of the easiest and most affordable: to spend more time with you!

This Father's Day, treat Dad to a fun activity that you've arranged. Whether you choose to plan a big family affair on Father's Day or block out a date in the calendar to schedule a fun experience for just the two of you, you can be sure Dad will appreciate the thoughtfulness of an experiential gift. 

You can always pair one of these activities with a small gift if you still want to make sure Dad gets to unwrap something. But, the good news is, planning a fun activity for Father's Day doesn't need to be super expensive or elaborate — all that matters is that you get some quality family time. 

Here are nine awesome activities you and Dad can enjoy together for a memorable Father's Day gift:

A movie night

Buy movie tickets at Fandango

For the ultimate movie buff, there's nothing better than catching a good flick at the theater. If that sounds like your Dad's idea of a fun night out, treat him to a real cinematic experience. Buy the tickets in advance at Fandango so you can skip the lines and spend your time waiting at the concession stand instead. 



A family dinner

Get the Juntos Box at Bespoke Post for $55

Holidays like Father's Day are the perfect excuse to get the whole family around the table to enjoy a delicious, home-cooked meal together. Impress Dad with your cooking chops by whipping up a classic Spanish Paella. This kit has almost everything you need to make the dish, like the classic paella pan, rice paddle, Bomba rice, chorizo, and smoked paprika. 



A cooking class

Book a cooking classes in your area with Cozymeal

Whether he can whip up a beef bourguignon with ease or counts peanut butter and jelly as his signature dish, he'll probably enjoy stepping up his kitchen repertoire and picking up some new cooking skills. Cozymeal offers a wide range of cooking classes — everything from basic knife skills to pasta-making — for home cooks of all levels taught by professional chefs in cities all over the US. 

Find a full review of Cozymeal here

 



A live show

Explore tickets to sports games and concerts at Stubhub

Whether it's baseball or classic rock that he loves best, tickets to a live show of any sort are a surefire way to make Dad smile. It's a fun way to spend some time together and get to see your favorite team play or your favorite musicians and actors perform. Stubhub has tickets to just about every sports game, concert, and play, so it's a reliable spot to grab a pair for a fun event near you.



A beer tasting

Find beer tastings near you at Groupon

If craft beers are his thing, he'll love learning about how they're made — and getting to taste them, too. If you're too young to join him, give him an extra ticket to bring a partner or friend. If you're old enough, make it a fun family affair. 



A staycation

Book a unique home experience at Airbnb

You don't have to take Dad too far to make him feel like he's on a vacation. Book a cool Airbnb somewhere nearby, or even in your own hometown, for a little staycation. Dine at some new restaurants, check out some local attractions, and just enjoy some leisurely activities together. 



A family picnic

Get a Picnic Time Picnic Basket for 4 at Bed Bath & Beyond for $39.99

A family picnic is a fun, affordable, and low-key activity that's just special enough for Father's Day. Bring Dad to his favorite park or grassy spot and surprise him with a picnic basket with the works — a blanket, flatware, utensils, and all of his favorite foods inside. Let him keep the basket so he's prepared for all of his picnic adventures to come.



A spa day

Find massages in your area on Groupon

Being a dad can be a tough job. If he deserves some extra relaxation, treat him to a spa day this Father's Day. Go for a calming massage, a detoxifying sauna session, or let him pick whatever treatment is his favorite. 



A workout class

Get a ClassPass gift card here

If he loves getting in a good sweat, he'll enjoy trying out all kinds of exciting new workouts. ClassPass lets you try exercise classes at the trendy, fun boutique studios in your area for a fraction of the usual price — so he can bounce between yoga, pilates, boxing, or whatever else he's feeling. Get Dad a ClassPass gift card, which he can put towards a membership. Set a date and book the same class, or a few classes, with your favorite workout buddy.



How to change or customize the alarm sound on your iPhone, and customize the way it vibrates

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FILE - This Sept. 12, 2018, file photo shows an Apple iPhone XR on display at the Steve Jobs Theater after an event to announce new products, in Cupertino, Calif. A Chinese national in Oregon sent hundreds of supposedly broken iPhones to Apple over two years, and got replacements under warranty of almost 1,500 devices. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)

  • You can choose from several dozen alarm tones to use as the alarm sound on your iPhone.
  • You can also change the vibration pattern, or create a custom vibration pattern.
  • In Apple's Tone Store, you can buy custom ringtones. You can also use the music from your iTunes library for your alarm sounds.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

When you set a new alarm on your iPhone, you can choose the sound that will play when the alarm goes off. The default alarm tone is Radar and the default vibration is Alert.

If you have multiple alarms set on your phone, you can choose a different sound for each one. You can set an alarm to vibrate only, have a sound only, or to vibrate and alert you through sound.

Here's how to change your iPhone's alarm sound and vibration. 

How to change your alarm sound on an iPhone

1. Open the Clock app on your iPhone.

2. Tap the alarm icon at the bottom of your screen to edit your alarm sound.

3. Tap Edit at the top right of your screen, then tap the alarm you want to edit. This will open the Edit Alarm screen.

4. Tap the Sound option on the Edit Alarm screen.

change alarm sound on iphone

5. You'll drop into the next screen at the spot where your current alarm sound falls on the list. You can scroll up and down to see more options.

6. Tap the alarm sound you want. A sample will play for each tone. Tap "Classic" in the tone menu to see even more alarm sound options.

Standard tone choices

7. To turn off the alarm sound, scroll to the bottom of the Sound screen and choose "None."

8. When you are done, go back to the Edit Alarm screen and tap Save to save your changes.

How to add a custom alarm sound on an iPhone

You don't have to choose between Sencha, Crystals, Night Owl, or any of the other alarm tones that come with your iPhone. When you edit your alarm sound, you can download new tones.

1. Scroll to the top of the Sound menu in the Edit Sound menu of your Clock app pictured in the above section.

2. Tap Tone Store. This will take you to the iTunes Store app.

Top_of_the_Sound_screen_ _choose_Vibrate__Tone_Store__and_Song

3. Choose "Tones" from the menu. This navigates to a store where you can use your iTunes account to buy ringtones from a wide range of musical options. You can also choose alert tones of a favorite character's voice.

Tone store tones

4. If you've previously bought tones that aren't downloaded onto your current phone, tap "Download All Purchased Tones." Apple will check your account and download your tones.

You can also set your alarm to play a song from your iTunes library.

1. Scroll to the top of the Sound menu in the Edit Sound menu of your Clock app.

2. Under SONGS, tap "Pick a song." This will take you to your iTunes library.

3. Choose the song you want to use as an alarm tone. A list of songs you have previously chosen will appear above Pick a song. You can choose any of those with one tap.

If you have multiple alarms, you can set different songs or tones for each alarm.

How to change or customize your alarm vibration on an iPhone

You can also customize the way your phone vibrates for each alarm.

1. Scroll to the top of the Sound menu in the Edit Sound menu of your Clock app.

2. Tap Vibration to see a list of possible vibration patterns.

3. Tap the pattern you want. You will get a short sample of each vibration when you tap it.

Vibration choices

4. To turn off vibrate, scroll to the bottom of the Vibration screen and choose None.

You can also create a custom vibration.

1. Scroll to the top of the Sound menu in the Edit Sound menu of your Clock app.

2. Tap Vibration. Scroll down. Under CUSTOM, tap "Create New Vibration."

3. Tap, hold, and release the screen to create a vibration pattern. Your pattern is visualized in the bar at the bottom of the screen. Taps appear as dots. Longer vibrations, created by holding your finger down, are bars.

Custom vibration screen showing short and long vibration pattern

4. Choose "Play" to play back your custom vibration. Choose "Record" to delete it and record another.

5. When you tap "Save," a window will pop up that allows you to name your custom vibration. Type in the name and tap Save. Your saved custom vibrations will appear under CUSTOM in the Vibration menu.

Related coverage from How To Do Everything: Tech:

SEE ALSO: The best iPhone for every type of person and budget

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