As a housekeeper, anything you’ve touched in your hotel room ( amenities ) we have to get rid of. That includes soap, mini shampoo / body wash bottles. Please don’t be afraid to take anything out of your room with you, heck take the sugar and tea if you really want.
The factory in the video is owned by the Clean the World organization that takes old soap bars from hotels, recycles it into clean new bars, and donates it to those who don’t have access to proper hygiene around the world. The soap bars aren’t just being thrown out or recycled for the hotel to use again, it’s going to a good cause.
But your speaking of these new users like they are agreed lesser humans. Poverty is seperate than willing sending tainted soap. This is not the typical agreed upon recycling
I'm not too good to use them. I think it's a fantastic idea. U know u live a privileged life when u can be that arrogant to say you would never use them. Talk about 1st world entitlement.
When I was still a flight attendant, I used to collect all the toiletries from the hotels and bring them home. Then once per month, I would bag them up and take them to the food pantry. The airline put us in some nice hotels so it was usually good quality products...bar soap, body wash, shampoo and conditioner but also mouthwash, toothbrushes and toothpaste, makeup remover cloths, and one hotel we stayed at frequently had scented bath salt (i keot that) Toiletries cant be purchased with food stamps. So donating your unopened toiletries to food pantries is actually quite welcome.
Yes, as a person who was formally unhoused aka homeless I can confirm this. The toiletries I'd receive from salvation army, kind souls from churches, and other drop in centers were often hotel/motel toiletries. The difference they made in my quality of life was immeasurable! I even received these exact soaps in this video! They're marbled in appearance, but HUGE! THEY SMELL GREAT TOO! I'm so glad I actually got to see the process & how they process the used soaps to make them! Very cool!
An initiative in Bombay collects opened soap bars from all the hotels and shreds them after cleaning them and fresh bars are mad and distributed free to the Slum Children to encourage them to wash their hands before touching food. This has reduced the incidence of Gastroenteritis amongst children in many slums of Bombay.
@@kgrant3184thank you! I spearheaded this back in, oh wow, 2004 I guess? A while ago anyhow! We couldn’t get the final converter slot to bow through the conveyor, so we had old soap shooting everywhere! My business partner at the time, Shundra, had one thick piece hit his glasses so hard they cracked. What a time that was. Years later we’ve got it up and running in 12 countries. My cousin, Rhina, loves cricket, so I have donated my share of the funds earned into the Royal Cricket Federation which produces cricket equipment made for kids, by kids. Crazy to think how far the “soap” industry has come. Better yet, the hotel industry. Cheers.
My mother in law recycles soap. When she gets a bar down to the tint piece, she puts it in a box with other tiny pieces and pushes it down until she has a new bar. I think recycling is awesome. I don’t see recycling soap the way this company does as unhygienic, the soap is shaved, cleaned with bleach, and heated. I love that the organization then send the soap to people in need.
I have made soap. and on letters bleach put in it it cannot be sterilized. shade in little pieces does not sterilize the soap. now if you don't use it what makes you think that is good for somebody else perhaps cannot afford a bar of soap. personally if I go so far as to want to give somebody soap I will buy them a clean bar of soap it won't break the bank!
It's gross. Now you are rubbing bleach and chemicals onto yourself to soak in your skin in addition to millions of human essences all molded together. 🤢 🤮
Ok but wait! This is actually an amazing company! What this video fails to mention is that the recycled soap bars as well as other basic hygiene items are packaged up and distributed to homeless people as well as people countries without access to resources for basic hygiene. Not only does this help with personal hygiene but it also helps stop the spread of diseases. They even have a portable shower station they drive around in Las Vegas so the homeless population can have access to showers. This organization supports multiple causes: homelessness, health, and sustainability. I mean how awesome is that?? I highly recommend checking them out or ordering some of their hygiene kits to make at home (you get to donate them to the charity of your choice).
Yes I agree. I find it makes me feel like im back at a beach hotel, and it has a calming effect on me. Lately its been crazy, violent, stressful, over politicized environment so it's nice to have things that can wash the stress away. 😊 we need a lot more GOOD NEWS! stories instead of all this nonstop bad negative stories without a break from it.
I keep shampoo and soap taken from business travel in my travel toiletry case for future use, only replenishing as required. Sometimes, however, I will "upgrade" if I come across better quality product. Extravagant I know.
My parents had a small motel in the 90s (less than 20 rooms) and they donated all the used soap to a company like this that sent the recycled soap to developing countries where people were dying disease from lack of proper sanitation. This soap can be life saving, I don't get why so many people seem to be against it in the comment section.
Well we know where the third world countries get their diseases from. Somebody has used the soap would you want to use somebody else's soap. I Always take my own personal items with me when I travel
When you pay for the hotel room, you have paid for the soap, shampoo, conditioner, lotion, coffee, tea, sugar, creamer, mouthwash, toothpaste, toothbrush, and shower cap. When you take them, it's NOT Stealing. You're Welcome 😊
@@2000mvs LOL you're funny 😀. Just Know that, when you go beyond the list of items that I named, you stand at risk of catching a charge of theft. I have worked in the hospitality industry, they try to provide items that any traveler might have need of, in the way of personal hygiene and presentation. They package the take away items in a manner for travel. They need their towels and irons, but you can keep the soap and other tiny or individually wrapped items available. You have actually paid for them 🤷🏾♀️.
@@FeekyChucker you can usually find the cost for the "complimentary" things, in the details of the contract that you sign when you pay to rent the room. The price that the establishment has to pay, in order to provide each "complimentary" thing ~ is a part of the price that every guest pays for whatever room they rent. Every guest pays, because every room has that provision.
I've actually received these EXACT brand soaps in a ziplock type bag with the "Clean the world" logo on them. A little label explained they were made from recycled soaps from the hotel industry! As a person who was formally unhoused aka homeless I can confirm these soaps are a blessing. As well as the toiletries I'd receive from salvation army, kind souls from churches, and other drop in centers that were often hotel/motel toiletries. The difference they made in my quality of life was immeasurable! Seeing the factory these soaps in this video are processed in is so cool! The bars are marbled in appearance, but HUGE! THEY SMELL GREAT TOO! I'm so glad I actually got to see how they process the used soaps to make them! These people are true heroes to so many they'll never meet. I'm one of them. Thank you!
"Unhoused aka homeless" It's just homeless. I don't know why you soyjak leftists are saying "unhoused" as if "homeless" is somehow offensive but it's just homeless.
That's how things should be. Being wasteful is just awful when anything that is on Earth can run out. I think that's really awesome that day clean up the so far as and then make new ones out of them through this long process.
@@theoriginaldashriprock not every hotel on earth will but there are a large number of hotels that participate in these programs and even pay to have them taken away because they can dispose of their soap more cheaply than if they put them together with their regular trash hauling services.
Don't know how good this is for the homeless shelters or anything but what I do know is that if the bar is completely untouched meaning that it's still in the plastic wrap or wax wrap or whatever then it will be used by the next guest.
there were these little tiny glass bottles of ketchup at one hotel i went too, i thought they were too cute so when i recieved one with my room service i asked the man if i could take the container. he said if it had been opened, they would just throw it out anyways, and then brought me an extra one so i could have a pair to take home. they’re adorable and i still use them when i remember that interaction! 😂
@callmeclove I stay in nice hotels when I travel on business. I take the soaps, shampoo, and all things which are replaced after every guest. I use them at home and love knowing that they won't go to landfill. I haven't bought shampoo or conditioner for a long time.
@@LisaFerguson-lw8il unfortunately i have very curly hair so the projects in most hotel rooms would not work for me, but i do take them for my family too! so much better to just use it so it doesnt get wasted.
I worked at Disneyworld in Florida for a while back in the day, and the big hotel kitchen I was in had cute little jars of everything for the customers. Jelly, honey, maple syrup, ketchup, mustard, etc. Nothing was in a foil squeezy tube or a plastic peel-the-lid-off tub. I took so many home! They were only headed for the trash.
@@rbud57 But don't you throw away those little containers when you're done too? They don't recycle litter containers. If the containers doesn't have a label on what kind of plastic they are they just go to the landfill. Different plastics can't be mixed together. Businesses are the ones creating so many problems. Watch DW Planet A on how only 9% of all plastic is recycled. Watch Our Changing Climate, Second Thought, and More Perfect Union on tackling companies.
I travelled for work for 15 years and would always carry the bar of soap from one hotel to use it in the next, leaving the fresh unopened. I hate waste and this kind of recycling is AWESOME!
Our hospitality company uses Clean the World to recycle soap from our hotel rooms. They send the boxes - housekeeping just tosses the soap into the box and you ship it for free. Fabulous company.
Even if I don’t use what the hotel provides as I often take my own stuff, I always pack it when I leave as it can get used at another time if necessary. Even the coffee tea and sugar I take home.
Just so everyone knows this soap doesn't go back into Hotels to be reused, this company takes the used soap and remakes new bars, and then sends them to developing countries that have NO hygiene products. They also give these out to the homeless as well.
The person behind this was a man from Africa and he had came to this country. He started working as a housekeeping, for a hotel and he noticed that we used to throw the soaps away, even if the soap was only use once... he found out that soap doesn't hold bacteria and that a lot of people from Africa could benefit from this. He later build a company to recycle soap bars from hotels. I still remember reading about it back in 5th grade for a final exam.
If you're talking about Derreck Kayongo, he was staying at the hotel. He and his wife started Global Soap Project because of the need for soap in Haiti, Uganda, Kenya, and Swaziland. It is to help protect children from disease. Sounds like a smart and good man.
@@andrewbutler5253they send it to other countries that are in need of it which don’t have perfect hygiene anyways,mand for context the soap is now brand new.
@@andrewbutler5253umm a homeless person wants used soap. They clearly said DONATE which implys it’s for homeless people and struggling people who obviously cannot afford soap. The soap was also sanitised. You should open ur eyes and grow up! You think people out there aren’t struggling and would appreciate a bar of soap, even if it’s used? You ask such a silly question “who wants used soap” that is a privileged and inconsiderate thing to say!
My family was devastated by huge flooding earlier this year and we recieved care packages with soaps that said "clean the world". Its good to know that these products do indeed make it to help those in need. ❤
How does the soap get sanitized? I only see them getting shredded and re-combine. And I dun remember germs getting killed by giant ash's metal shredders...
I had to stay in a Holiday In for 3 week's in a hurry. I was happy for the clean towels n the soap n shampoo. Very smart. My loving son n his wide were staying with me and had me arrested saying I hit him and she didn't say a word at 65 the lied and I spent the night in jail. I lost all my money and paid to have them removed from my home. I am hanging on a string with a very broken heart 💔. They were drinking all the time. I thought they loved me , it all comes out in the wash. I have nothing left at the age of 70, took 9 months in and out of court to clear my name. So those little soaps n shampoo I bought home I am still using. Thank you Guy's.
It is pretty cheap. If you are in a position where 6 dollars is hurting you, well.... there might be a different problem in your life. You may want to focus on it.
I used to work in a hotel in Clearwater and we had to throw soap bars in a specific bag. I only knew they were getting reused. So it’s so nice to watch this video now
The nurses where I worked in Canada would bring in sealed soaps, toothbrushes, combs, shampoos, etc from hotels to give to our patients who ended up in hospital without supplies (hospitals in Canada supply very little and only the poorest quality). We were ordered not to do this by our nurse manager, but we hid the stash and did it anyway. Toothbrushes and paste people get from the dentist were always welcome by patients. Not everyone has a support system.
It's a good job it gets sanitised in bleach? But then again.............. Do you really want recycled soap that's probably already been used to clean people's butts??? 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Just_Proudy07uh sir there's a pubic hair INSIDE my BAR OF SOAP. 😂😡. NAH son that's where I draw the line . This is nasty and I'm not sure how it's even legal . Must be a California company 😂
I use hotel soap and it feels like all the moisture has been stripped from my body . Edit. Guys I bring my own soap with me when I travel since some of you seem concerned. I don’t touch that soul sucking soap anymore.
It won’t be thrown out. I been working in hotels for 7 years. We don’t throw them out. They get recycled by another company. Luckily now we are transitioning to electric dispensers in the showers but the hand soap bar do remain. But none are thrown out.
I toss my used one in the trash but I do love certain hotel soaps, like at Loew’s Hollywood and the higher scale places so at those I ask for room service to bring me something, anything like an extra pillow etc then when she/he is at my room I tip them like $5-10 bucks and say “Please, bring me extra extra bar soaps, both the body bar and the oatmeal face bar ALOT OF THEM” and next thing I know I get a knock at the door and she hands me a bag with about 50 bars of soap🤷🏻♂️😀😎🧼
@@justinterested9537 wow they give you that much? They probably realize you're paying top dollar to stay there, so giving you 50 soaps isn't a big deal, and part of the package.
My Grandma. They lived through the Depression (had 4 sons in WWII) and nothing ever went to waste. The flour sacks she used to make us dresses. After she cooked a chicken or duck she'd used the feathers to stuff pillows and mattresses with. The corn cobs in the field, even the the husks were used to feed the cows and horses. Every piece of string was saved. Any leftover food from a dinner was put into a "slop jar" to feed the pigs. My grandparents farm didn't have electricity or running water and I don't think they even thought about it, there was a well for water and a cistern that kept rainwater (which made your hair incredibly soft!) Even the old catalogs or newspapers were put in the outhouse because there wasn't toilet paper. Now that I'm old I began to think about my grandparents, I don't remember them ever going to the doctor like we do today. It was a good life and of all the time I was there and working alongside all my cousins, I don't remember anyone ever saying "Grandma I'm bored!"
Its not wonderful. It’s a disaster for the people living in that country. Fun fact during the pandemic all the hotels were shut down and there were no soaps. All those countries dependent on government welfare soap didn’t have any for years.
I work at a hotel and a company comes by every week to pick up a container with used soap for recycling and it goes to countries that can’t get soap easily. It’s good to know we could help other people with that. By the way when I travel or stay at a hotel i take my own soap 😂
Worked at a hotel for almost 4 years, this is why we literally do not care if you steal the shampoo, conditioner, hand soap, and moisturizers, it's better you take em during your stay then us having to waste so much product. In one shift we collect about 100 or so each of bars of semi used soap, conditioners, shampoos, and so on
thank you for letting us know you and your entitled hotel staff have agreed to allow up to "steal" the toiletries provided to us by the hotel after we just paid $200 for a room and $20 to tip your ass. oh ur so kind
Former hotel housekeeper here. Please steal your soap bar, hand wash, body wash, shampoo, conditioner, etc. Hell, steal your toilet paper too. I threw out so many perfectly good toiletries. Also please don't try to make your bed, it's wasted effort on your part. If you wanna help your housekeeper, leave your bed as unmade as possible. Or at least pull out the hospital corners.
@@bethderr1443 some of the regular visitors would strip their beds and leave their unused pillows neatly aside for us. They were the best guests. The worst guests used every single pillow, bin and drinking cup in the room (and left half full cups everywhere).they spilled coffee all over the bed and mopped it up with the white towels.
Have you seen the chickens used for broth? I've seen a literal truckload of chicken that was used for broth turned to waste. It's loaded into a garbage truck all that chicken only to be boiled in hotels but never be used at all. Those chickens died in vain
I work in the logistics side of the hospital. You don't realise the amount of products/stock that gets wasted it's insane!!!! But it's the expiry date we have to always go by... We try to send it to the third world but most of the stuff we can't send over. Then stock changes or a recall or stuff we don't use anymore and we just (bin it) lol But on the annoying side, these simple safety scissors to cut things or even surgical scissors to cut flesh. Did once cost you, 2-3 pounds a bag. Now it's 10-15 UK pounds.... Because they can!!! Bloody stupid and unfair. But the minimum usage is never enough at times depending on the amount used due to how busy it is. Or a ward nearly ran out due to an emergency. But you need to count lead time for ordering. People don't realise we try to go from company to company for best deals and save money at the save time without getting shafted by idiots seeing the NHS as easy pickings for Money. It's never that easy but seeing this, we need more of it!!
I worked in hotels for most of my adult life. This is so true. We would throw away two or three bars of soap, per room, every day that were used maybe once. If it's open, it's trash. This is a really good idea.
Not wrong my guy I currently work at a hotel as a GSA and that’s completely true they have so much soap after a huge check out it’s crazy. Of course my property is a 485 room hotel which is like decent. But damn it’s crazy how full the bends get.
Despite rats being know for living in filthy environments, they love to eat soap. I use to work as a co at jail in New Orleans and rats use to eat soap.
My grandmother used to save all the soap bars remains .. She would clean, melt, fragrance and remold the soap .. she would make big pink bars of soap that smelled like baby powder! 🥰
Last night I was listening to this with my earphones but then fell asleep, so I heard the audio of this LOOPING in my dreams and no matter what I did it WOULDNT GO AWAYY. It was only when I woke up that I could pause the video. Never have I felt so much desperation and relief from a SOUP MAKING VIDEOO 😭😭 Edit: *soap
Honestly i dont use anything in hotels i even bring my own towels and bedding i could never use the soap or anything thats supplied iv worked in hotels the things iv seen other staff do is beyond eyebrow raising i quit a job because i felt so uncomfortable
btw as someone who worked in a hotel, dont try to remake your bed, we have to take it apart again to wash it regardless, and if you spill on the big blanket we chuck it, also leave tips we get paid garbage to get treated like shit, even a thank you note made my day when i worked there, found this note in the trash that said "thanks for cleaning our room :)" i still have it and i dont even work there anymore edit: also steal as many towels and soap as you want we NEVER notice we just replace them
I usually just strip the beds before we leave to make it a little easier for the people who have to clean up later. I usually clean with my cleaner I bring from home so there’s no big mess for them
Better yet: bring the unused ones home with you and hand out in packages to less fortunate ❤ I’ve had so many people cry over such a small act of free kindness
You're one of these people who lie on the internet it's so funny 😂 Nobody cried to you because you gave them a free hotel bar of soap. Would make sense if it was money, a hug, supplies, but a single bar or hotel soap? Yeah nah. As someone who's been homeless and now works with them I am 90% this Jones family farms figure is lying, both about them crying over it, and over him making several people cry over it. Nice try with the ego boost tho Yall, if you wanna help the homeless with free soap please do but don't lie about the reactions to get attention online afterwards. Also used soap is a no no. You're an as* if you give out used soap. Try unused soap, unopened packaged food or unopened drinks. But again, don't lie about how much youve given or what the reactions were after We live in the real world, not the la la fantasy land where apparently people on the streets cry over a used bar of soap. Weird, they get the odd bit of change, food, sometimes water, they've been through so much, but it's the hotel bar of soap from the Jones family that made them burst into tears? Yeahhhhh ok
I am also curious about how was the soap sorted? Also, this video didn't say what happens to the recycled soap. Is it donated or sold in stores? Do you know?
What a great idea for the used soap. I always take them home... especially from the higher end hotels. I once got a months-worth of Le Labo to use at home taken from a week long vacation. And what we don't open and use gets donated to a local family/women's shelter... they really can use and appreciate nice toiletry care packages.
I worked at a Marriott that sent our soap to be recycled to make new soap, it was pretty dope Edit: yall are killing me in the comments, I have been nonstop cracking up at these 🤣
For anyone complaining about it being gross because other people used it, wait until you find out that your drinking water is made from recycled sewer water.
@@Nitro2030ceThat is not true everywhere. Because water is a valuable resource, and because the water would have to be purified before dumping back into the groundwater or riverine supply, it _does_ get recycled into the potable water supply. Solids are removed, heavy metals and sediments included, chemicals are precipitated, then the water likely gets passed through an osmotic membrane, gets chlorinated, aerated, and passed back to pumping station holding tanks. Sludge is processed for landfill or other disposal. This water recycling is why New York City's birth rate dropped, because birth control chemicals did not get removed when water was recycled. Many cities are showing increases in bizarre behavior, because drug precipitates are not reduced, converted, and removed. There is one city which, years ago, began removing all pharmaceutical precipitates in the recycling process, and has the cleanest water in the United States.
😂 fr like they've been sanitized but not cleaned, that's been on someone's nuts and maybe on someone's pus, who's to say a hair might not be hidden there 😂😂😂
Not really possible. You're more likely to be eating hair or bugs in your processed foods, as for instance the FDA has set acceptable levels for blood & pus for milk, cockroaches in coffee, and even levels of poop in your spices. Everything you eat is contaminated because sterility is incompatible with organic life.
There are so many single use items that create tons of trash that can be recycled instead. This is such an innovative concept and it seriously takes advantage of a situation that would otherwise yeild tons of garbage.
I was at a hotel, in San Diego, where the smell of the soap was amaZing! I took ALL the soap w/me….I used it in my dresser drawers like a sachet! What I took, lasted me for 5 years as a sachet! Mmmmm…❤️👍🏼
Then, *that* hotel soap becomes the soap you take to your next hotel stay, so you can save the unused bars there and take them home...to be taken the next time you stay at a hotel...why does this sound familiar? 👉 🫧👈
The hotel I work at has solved this problem pretty easily. We just use liquid soap in re-fillable despensers that are locked into the walls of the bathroom so people dont steal the bottles. It's easier for us housekeepers too, instead of having to replace the soap every time, which was pretty gross to have to touch used soaps covered in hair and all that, we just swap out the empties for ones we have refilled.
@@AndWhatIsThisNow We have rooms at the hotel specifically for disabled individuals, the bottles are lower on the walls in those rooms. Not to mention we also DO have a small stock of bar soaps and such, in our stock rooms, if anyone requests them. However, I've never heard anyone mention that the bottles were difficult for disabled people. I've helped quite a few disabled people into their rooms, escorted people in wheelchairs through the elevators and hallways, asked them if they needed any extra assistance or different items, all of that, and never once have they mentioned any issues with the bottle system. If they did, however, we would accommodate them immidiatley. We can also, if its really needed, unlock the bottles and set them somewhere more reachable for someone who can't reach over the counter in the bathroom for the hand soap, but we are more likely to provide them with standard bar soap. There isn't much excuse for wasteful behaviour in the hotel industry, I've seen it firsthand.
@@WALTERBROADDUS it really does. Not to mention, less plastic packaging. The soaps and lotions all came wrapped in a plastic covering, where now the bottles just get refilled and never thrown out unless they break.
I take everything whether I use it or no. It's paid for, so I take it. I keep my used soap for hand washing but extra little stuff I donate to shelters.
I don't think they actually sell this product. I believe it is a non-profit that sends the recycled soap to areas that otherwise are so poor they would not have access to any soap at all.
I worked in a soap factory for 20 years. I love to see a product being done from beginning to end. I was 18 when I started working and I did it all. It's amazing indeed indeed
@@Abutado do you do the 3 ingredient one... i really like the looks of some of the artisan soap i see around... i would love to try... but what does it feel like, does it clean properly, and does it leave oil behind? all the ones i see are like oil and lye.
@@666dynomax there's a huge array of oils you can use in various quantities and yes, lye (sodium hydroxide) is 100% necessary, unless you do melt and pour soaps - in that case someone has already done the saponification process for you and you can't really adjust the oils in your recipe without potentially affecting the stability of it. There's a lot of factors that go into perfecting your recipe and getting that feel just right. I don't have any oily residue with my soaps, yet my skin feels great. If you want to learn, @royaltysoaps is the best teacher with basics and she has a playlist for beginners with free recipes. There's also soap and clay, ellen Ruth soaps, tellervo, and Missouri river soaps that have great basic videos for newbies with recipes. Soap and clay also breaks down the science. There's a ton of other great resources, but I recommend starting there, it's a fairly precise process that requires math, some understanding of oils and their affects on your recipe (coconut oil produces a lot of suds but can be drying, Olive oil is very low lather and can be oily, sugars and castor oil can improve the lather). Unfortunately I haven't gotten to the point I feel confident giving out my precise recipe in a tutorial format, my videos focus on designs which is also fun and requires some thought. I definitely recommend trying it out after watching some tutorials (lye is dangerous), just know it's highly addicting 😂 very quickly you'll find yourself with a year's worth of soap and you still want to make more!
When my husband traveled for work he traveled with his soap in a container! BUT he always took the products that were provided! When we collected a bunch we gave it to our church who distributed to the homeless and others who needed them! No waste!❤
Yeah, I don't like the idea either, and I make bar soap...and I would not feel comfortable selling soap that may have missed a piece of hair, but I'm not a special machine, so maybe it's not fair to say that. I still don't like the idea of using recycled soap.
I can So, So Relate to this!!! You see I spent my life’s career in a Soap Factory! Almost 36 years to be exact. This brings back so many good memories for me watching the augers mixer and I could go on and on about how much this little clip touched me! Thanks for the Memory Jolt😅
In germany, most hotels have refillable liquid sope and shampoo dispensers at the sink and in the shower. No bar of soap to throw out and no tiny one portion plastis bottles. And also no need for collecting the soap bars, transport them to that recycling factory, clean and remake them, package them and transport again. So: get liquid soap dispensers!
You know what i started doing in hotels? (Fyi: ‘ive invested/wasted over 50k usd on the app, Hotels Tonight alone…). I started altering their artwork. Just something fun. And leaving my username hidden connected to an encrypted messenger service informing the person to hit me up for a prize. Hotels are all in the NW. Pan Pacific. The Thompson. ….man im blanking. The best move us literally changing out the art for a similar but not the same thing. Altered in some odd fashion. Or the placard describing the art changed out to state something humorous to me. … I’ve also fixed quite a few things.
The soap my family uses gets taken home to be used until it's gone if there is any left. It gets put in a ziplock bag then rinsed off to put in our bathroom at home if we use it. Better than wasting it
That's what we do. Same with teas/coffees etc.. you've paid for it and may as well take it to be used at a later date rather that it end up as consumer waste. Even if an item isn't used 8/10 times it has to be discarded because of 'surface contamination '. It's a similar thing with food waste. From someone who used to work in the hotel trade
They didn't mention a very important Part. The soap, which has been sanitized, is donated to countries in need. I work at a hotel and we participate in this program. The soap in your room is brand new.
As someone who worked in hotel housekeeping, never feel bad about taking the soap if you’ve opened it. Go ahead and take it. We don’t care, and it’ll just be thrown away after you leave. ETA (again bc people are mad and misunderstanding me): if you think it’s deserved, and you want to, leave a tip for your housekeeper. We really appreciate it. If you feel it isn’t deserved, or you can’t, or don’t want to that’s completely understandable. It’s your money and your choice. You don’t see us often, but we work 10+hr shifts 7 days a week making below living wage. We’re often understaffed and don’t get much break time because of that. The hotel I worked at had 800 rooms and 5 housekeepers. We are all trained on how to handle human trafficking, search rooms for guns, explosives, and cameras, and are arguably the ones that keep the hotels running. Not only do we keep your rooms clean and sanitized, we also make sure you’re safe and secure while you stay with us.
@@parkercarron4523 I’ll let you in on a secret about towels.. unless they are covered in a biohazard, they are always washed and reused. Only time I’ve ever had to throw a towel out was when it was covered in literal shit. Everything is washed very well and sanitized, but bring your own towels if you don’t want one that is used over and over again. We also keep a count every day of towels and bedding to make sure that none is missing, at least in the hotel I worked in.
@@CaliNightMare that’s why I said “if you can.” I didn’t say you have to. I just wanted to mention it because we do a lot more than most people think. Clearly you don’t see the importance of what we do. The only reason you have a place to stay with your kids that isn’t a total mess/full of trash/bathroom walls and tubs covered in human shit, is because of us. I hate having to ask for tips, but blame the companies that refuse to pay us better with the hundreds of dollars they make per room. I quit housekeeping because at 17 I found three children bound up in the closet. They were being sex trafficked. I was making $10/hr to deal with seeing that shit, plus finding frozen used condoms in freezers, shit rubbed on the walls of the bathrooms, blood covered bedsheets, vomit, and so much more. Don’t treat us like lower class citizens when you’re the one who benefits from our work. You’d be seeing this if it weren’t for us.
@@CaliNightMarelmfao then just done order room service bc it IS pricey, as you said. buy from local restaurants or fast foods, if your kids get hungry at night, then that is why you bring snacks/food!! god i can tell yall white js from that💀 also you’re tipping the house cleaners bc of the work they do for UR safety n hygiene. if u dont want housekeepers going into ur room, then leave a “do not disturb” sign !!! you mad for what🤡🤡
I bet that soap factory did smell good. We had chocolate and bread factories, so I know what your talking about. Just out of curiosity where are you located ? Thanks !! 😊
@@kyleefritzius584why the hell not just refill them?? That doesn't make any sense. You're ripping the containers off the shower wall after every guest?? Wtf.
@@xcristinatthe ones they are most likely referring to are the mini travel size ones for the hilton && then the actual refillable containers for the motels
Yes...I saw on youtube...they have started that so that people cannot take their full shampoo bottles & soaps may be 😅 Or they use very small soap bars .
Note to myself: don’t feel guilty when taking some hotel soap with you
Deffenitly take them, all those products get thrown out unless you keep them in the packaging and don’t use them
@@cowflick1180They get thrown out but the company asks hotels to give them the bar soaps they threw out
@@cowflick1180You're a bit confused, but the spirit is there
Who feels guilty about that 😂
@@cowflick1180yes
As a housekeeper, anything you’ve touched in your hotel room ( amenities ) we have to get rid of. That includes soap, mini shampoo / body wash bottles. Please don’t be afraid to take anything out of your room with you, heck take the sugar and tea if you really want.
I DO😂
Always do 👍🏾🤓
I take fuckin everything
Twice i even took a pillow, once a coffee pot
Me taking the furniture: Don't mind if I do
@@bryantmcleancapistrano8302 you joke but we’ve actually had people steal whole beds lol like not the mattress, the actual frame
The factory in the video is owned by the Clean the World organization that takes old soap bars from hotels, recycles it into clean new bars, and donates it to those who don’t have access to proper hygiene around the world. The soap bars aren’t just being thrown out or recycled for the hotel to use again, it’s going to a good cause.
Yes we all just watched the same video
But your speaking of these new users like they are agreed lesser humans. Poverty is seperate than willing sending tainted soap. This is not the typical agreed upon recycling
@@vmac8200the video says the bars’ top layers are cleaned off for grime and hair and then the rest is bleached to disinfect it. How is that tainted???
Awesome
I'm not too good to use them. I think it's a fantastic idea. U know u live a privileged life when u can be that arrogant to say you would never use them. Talk about 1st world entitlement.
I see more and more hotels using liquid soap in bottles attached to the shower wall and around the sink. Saves so much and is very convenient.
I prefer bar soap over liquid soap as bar soap rinses better. So I bring my own soap bar.
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingForIt cleans better too. I'm a bar soap girlie as well.
Really to me it sticks @@cjohnson_
@@JustRememberWhoYoureWorkingForMe too, shampoo/conditioner & hair dryer 😁
I don't like body wash, it never feels like it washes off! Bar soap w/shea butter is great for sensitive skin!! 👍🤗
When I was still a flight attendant, I used to collect all the toiletries from the hotels and bring them home. Then once per month, I would bag them up and take them to the food pantry. The airline put us in some nice hotels so it was usually good quality products...bar soap, body wash, shampoo and conditioner but also mouthwash, toothbrushes and toothpaste, makeup remover cloths, and one hotel we stayed at frequently had scented bath salt (i keot that)
Toiletries cant be purchased with food stamps. So donating your unopened toiletries to food pantries is actually quite welcome.
Love this!
Great idea!
I'm going to be looking for hairs in the soap now... thanks a lot. 😢
Yes, as a person who was formally unhoused aka homeless I can confirm this. The toiletries I'd receive from salvation army, kind souls from churches, and other drop in centers were often hotel/motel toiletries. The difference they made in my quality of life was immeasurable! I even received these exact soaps in this video! They're marbled in appearance, but HUGE! THEY SMELL GREAT TOO! I'm so glad I actually got to see the process & how they process the used soaps to make them! Very cool!
@FixxerCompanyPlumbingService I said "unused" you donut. The housekeepers have to throw it out whether it is used or not
That machine is spitting bars!
😂 very good 😂
Underrated comment 😂👍🏾
@@Big_Zo33 that’s exactly what I thought when I read it the other day 😂
Love it!😂
Jail
An initiative in Bombay collects opened soap bars from all the hotels and shreds them after cleaning them and fresh bars are mad and distributed free to the Slum Children to encourage them to wash their hands before touching food. This has reduced the incidence of Gastroenteritis amongst children in many slums of Bombay.
Wow - EXCELLENT program!!
@@kgrant3184thank you! I spearheaded this back in, oh wow, 2004 I guess? A while ago anyhow! We couldn’t get the final converter slot to bow through the conveyor, so we had old soap shooting everywhere! My business partner at the time, Shundra, had one thick piece hit his glasses so hard they cracked. What a time that was. Years later we’ve got it up and running in 12 countries. My cousin, Rhina, loves cricket, so I have donated my share of the funds earned into the Royal Cricket Federation which produces cricket equipment made for kids, by kids. Crazy to think how far the “soap” industry has come. Better yet, the hotel industry. Cheers.
🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾
I am so amazed by the ingenuity of Indians. I was in Mumbai in 2019 and have deep respect for the culture and people.
@@sarahs5771 I lived there for a couple of years and the way the rich treat the poor is appalling
My mother in law recycles soap. When she gets a bar down to the tint piece, she puts it in a box with other tiny pieces and pushes it down until she has a new bar. I think recycling is awesome. I don’t see recycling soap the way this company does as unhygienic, the soap is shaved, cleaned with bleach, and heated. I love that the organization then send the soap to people in need.
I have made soap. and on letters bleach put in it it cannot be sterilized. shade in little pieces does not sterilize the soap. now if you don't use it what makes you think that is good for somebody else perhaps cannot afford a bar of soap. personally if I go so far as to want to give somebody soap I will buy them a clean bar of soap it won't break the bank!
Switch to liquid soap lol
It's gross. Now you are rubbing bleach and chemicals onto yourself to soak in your skin in addition to millions of human essences all molded together. 🤢 🤮
I mean if it's alot cheaper than new soap that's cool but I'm not paying extra for used soap
I put them in a sock and wet then squeeze and squash till I make a ball soap , that's how I do it
Ok but wait! This is actually an amazing company!
What this video fails to mention is that the recycled soap bars as well as other basic hygiene items are packaged up and distributed to homeless people as well as people countries without access to resources for basic hygiene. Not only does this help with personal hygiene but it also helps stop the spread of diseases. They even have a portable shower station they drive around in Las Vegas so the homeless population can have access to showers. This organization supports multiple causes: homelessness, health, and sustainability. I mean how awesome is that??
I highly recommend checking them out or ordering some of their hygiene kits to make at home (you get to donate them to the charity of your choice).
Nice
Because it's eco friendly and it's repurpased, it'll cost 3 times as much!
Thanks for typing that for us mate
And all the shipping of millions of bars has no effect on the environment, right?
@@user-sleepy33bleach your crotch for 8 minutes and see.
I usually take the toiletries with me. The scent brings back memories of my vacation when I use them back at home.
I have a shampoo bottle from a hotel I went to over 10 years ago. I kept a tiny amount in it, and still to this day, it brings back all the memories.
Saaaaame
Yes I agree. I find it makes me feel like im back at a beach hotel, and it has a calming effect on me. Lately its been crazy, violent, stressful, over politicized environment so it's nice to have things that can wash the stress away. 😊 we need a lot more GOOD NEWS! stories instead of all this nonstop bad negative stories without a break from it.
I keep shampoo and soap taken from business travel in my travel toiletry case for future use, only replenishing as required. Sometimes, however, I will "upgrade" if I come across better quality product. Extravagant I know.
So true😉 I still remember the smell of the soap in the hotel we stayed at in Paris❤
My parents had a small motel in the 90s (less than 20 rooms) and they donated all the used soap to a company like this that sent the recycled soap to developing countries where people were dying disease from lack of proper sanitation. This soap can be life saving, I don't get why so many people seem to be against it in the comment section.
Well we know where the third world countries get their diseases from.
Somebody has used the soap would you want to use somebody else's soap.
I Always take my own personal items with me when I travel
I'm not seeing the "so against it" comments, which would have their own reply section.
Somebody is selling used soap?
😢 my goodness now I don't trust any soap is new at the store
@AllyAlly-kz9ih the outside is peeled off and the untouched portion is sanitized in bleach so theoretically it is new soap, nothing to worry about
When you pay for the hotel room, you have paid for the soap, shampoo, conditioner, lotion, coffee, tea, sugar, creamer, mouthwash, toothpaste, toothbrush, and shower cap. When you take them, it's NOT Stealing. You're Welcome 😊
Exactly, nothing is free, if anything it's "complimentary".
Yep i agree, the towels bedding and iron also 😂
@@2000mvs LOL you're funny 😀. Just Know that, when you go beyond the list of items that I named, you stand at risk of catching a charge of theft.
I have worked in the hospitality industry, they try to provide items that any traveler might have need of, in the way of personal hygiene and presentation. They package the take away items in a manner for travel. They need their towels and irons, but you can keep the soap and other tiny or individually wrapped items available. You have actually paid for them 🤷🏾♀️.
@@FeekyChucker you can usually find the cost for the "complimentary" things, in the details of the contract that you sign when you pay to rent the room.
The price that the establishment has to pay, in order to provide each "complimentary" thing ~ is a part of the price that every guest pays for whatever room they rent. Every guest pays, because every room has that provision.
Dang right and you pay well for them.
I've actually received these EXACT brand soaps in a ziplock type bag with the "Clean the world" logo on them. A little label explained they were made from recycled soaps from the hotel industry! As a person who was formally unhoused aka homeless I can confirm these soaps are a blessing. As well as the toiletries I'd receive from salvation army, kind souls from churches, and other drop in centers that were often hotel/motel toiletries. The difference they made in my quality of life was immeasurable! Seeing the factory these soaps in this video are processed in is so cool! The bars are marbled in appearance, but HUGE! THEY SMELL GREAT TOO! I'm so glad I actually got to see how they process the used soaps to make them! These people are true heroes to so many they'll never meet. I'm one of them. Thank you!
Amen. People would not complain if they ever had to do without the basics!!
Jehova? Yawa? Our father
Thank you for your story!
"Unhoused aka homeless"
It's just homeless. I don't know why you soyjak leftists are saying "unhoused" as if "homeless" is somehow offensive but it's just homeless.
Thank cause the video never explained. Can you buy them I wonder
They should put a sign up saying that soap and hair products can be taken home.
Yeah but if you're not going to use it you shouldn't take it
@@RediTtora But you paid for it.Why pay for something and not take it with you?
@@BrooklynBallawhy take something you're not gonna use, it's like taking trash with you
@@nickjohns1220 Who said I don’t use it?I use them when I stay with family or friends for a few days.
Why do you need a sign. Anyone with at least a 4th grade education knows that when you pay for a hotel room, you pay for all the toiletries.
That's how things should be. Being wasteful is just awful when anything that is on Earth can run out. I think that's really awesome that day clean up the so far as and then make new ones out of them through this long process.
LMAO you really believe Hotels send all their unused soap bars to this company?
@@theoriginaldashriprock not every hotel on earth will but there are a large number of hotels that participate in these programs and even pay to have them taken away because they can dispose of their soap more cheaply than if they put them together with their regular trash hauling services.
@@jerrykwan150 LMAO no, they don't
We ain't running out of soap.
I always have my own but take the soap. Collect for a while and donate it homeless and women shelters
Awesome idea. I’ll remember that in the future since I don’t always use the hotel supplied products.
Don't know how good this is for the homeless shelters or anything but what I do know is that if the bar is completely untouched meaning that it's still in the plastic wrap or wax wrap or whatever then it will be used by the next guest.
That’s beautiful! ❤
No you don’t. Stop lying
Nice
I just take my unused soaps and products home whenever I'm at a hotel
Me too
Me too
Yeah they’re talking about the used soaps. Hence the cleaning of hair and dirt and the sanitation process
Pretty sure that is theft
@@darksouls4046 well good news for you! You’re wrong!
there were these little tiny glass bottles of ketchup at one hotel i went too, i thought they were too cute so when i recieved one with my room service i asked the man if i could take the container. he said if it had been opened, they would just throw it out anyways, and then brought me an extra one so i could have a pair to take home. they’re adorable and i still use them when i remember that interaction! 😂
@callmeclove I stay in nice hotels when I travel on business. I take the soaps, shampoo, and all things which are replaced after every guest. I use them at home and love knowing that they won't go to landfill. I haven't bought shampoo or conditioner for a long time.
@@LisaFerguson-lw8il unfortunately i have very curly hair so the projects in most hotel rooms would not work for me, but i do take them for my family too! so much better to just use it so it doesnt get wasted.
I worked at Disneyworld in Florida for a while back in the day, and the big hotel kitchen I was in had cute little jars of everything for the customers. Jelly, honey, maple syrup, ketchup, mustard, etc. Nothing was in a foil squeezy tube or a plastic peel-the-lid-off tub. I took so many home! They were only headed for the trash.
@@callmecloveClove
@@rbud57 But don't you throw away those little containers when you're done too? They don't recycle litter containers.
If the containers doesn't have a label on what kind of plastic they are they just go to the landfill.
Different plastics can't be mixed together.
Businesses are the ones creating so many problems.
Watch DW Planet A on how only 9% of all plastic is recycled.
Watch Our Changing Climate, Second Thought, and More Perfect Union on tackling companies.
I travelled for work for 15 years and would always carry the bar of soap from one hotel to use it in the next, leaving the fresh unopened. I hate waste and this kind of recycling is AWESOME!
Note to self: Always travel with your own soap.
Yep
they’re bleached, but do what you please.
Exactly 😂
@@mystxshunicant bleach away the thought of someones butt hole on my face
👇 this many people know what i said originally
Fun fact: They have a guy called Carl collect all the soap from the 1,4 million rooms. A rather fine chap
FOR KARL!!!!
ROCK AND soap
carl a real one, he helped me find a good job in sewer management
Thank you Carl 😀🫶🏽
Met him the other day. Super chill dude. Didn’t have a lot of time to chat tho
Finally the answer to the age old question…
How do you clean soap?
Wadadog doin
with soap, duh.
Underrated comment 😁😁😁👍
Bleach but then why not just use bleach to clean self
Apparently bleach
I was wary, but knowing they clean and sanitize it first? Love it
Our hospitality company uses Clean the World to recycle soap from our hotel rooms. They send the boxes - housekeeping just tosses the soap into the box and you ship it for free. Fabulous company.
Fabulous yeah,....and also very disgusting!
How is it disgusting? The soap is cleaned then sterilized.@@sandrakalnins1790
@@sandrakalnins1790 Apparently many many ppl don't mind it. 😂😂😂
@@sandrakalnins1790why is it very disgusting?
@@ladysigma9654
Thankfully 1 ! 🙄🤭
This is why whenever I’m finished with the hotel soaps I just eat them
they taste better frozen
😂
i thought i was the only one
w comment
It’s good eating
Most hotels these days are switching over to liquid bulk amenities specifically to combat this problem
the bottles are a bigger problem than the soap recycling
@@bgmike420well that just not true at all
@@Emrson1280 plastic bottles often aren't recyclable at all
@@joshuanorman2 the plastic bottles get reused we don’t throw them away
@@Emrson1280 then that is a much better alternative, good to hear
Even if I don’t use what the hotel provides as I often take my own stuff, I always pack it when I leave as it can get used at another time if necessary. Even the coffee tea and sugar I take home.
Note to self: Always take the soap home from the hotel. And finish using it.
Mine note to self is to never touch the soap in a hotel cuz it might be recycled
@@FrancisR420 it was bleached
There nothing thats gonna to hurt yiu
🤮🤮I’m not using the same soap some prostitute used
@@FrancisR420 did you know that the water you drink could have been someone's piss.
It just get recycled by nature.
@@SynthphoneyI might literally die.
Just so everyone knows this soap doesn't go back into Hotels to be reused, this company takes the used soap and remakes new bars, and then sends them to developing countries that have NO hygiene products. They also give these out to the homeless as well.
This is such a good things that they're doing.
Oh that is very cool! ❤😎🙏
Are there really countries with NO hygiene products?
@@Kpop_spice in 2023?
@@Kpop_spiceI mean kinda, most people in the country can’t afford them
The person behind this was a man from Africa and he had came to this country. He started working as a housekeeping, for a hotel and he noticed that we used to throw the soaps away, even if the soap was only use once... he found out that soap doesn't hold bacteria and that a lot of people from Africa could benefit from this. He later build a company to recycle soap bars from hotels. I still remember reading about it back in 5th grade for a final exam.
Shawn Seipler, a Puerto Rican, started this company in his garage in Orlando, FL.
@@dispeaking1she’s referring to the concept.
If you're talking about Derreck Kayongo, he was staying at the hotel. He and his wife started Global Soap Project because of the need for soap in Haiti, Uganda, Kenya, and Swaziland. It is to help protect children from disease. Sounds like a smart and good man.
@@mr.ponstan7522 ah okay, sorry it's been a while since i read that article. Thanks!!
But a white man is now capitalizing on it...lmao..... Them Africans always getting got.
If I’m not mistaken they do this and donate it where it’s needed. ❤
The bin? Who wants used soap
@@andrewbutler5253they send it to other countries that are in need of it which don’t have perfect hygiene anyways,mand for context the soap is now brand new.
@@andrewbutler5253umm a homeless person wants used soap. They clearly said DONATE which implys it’s for homeless people and struggling people who obviously cannot afford soap. The soap was also sanitised. You should open ur eyes and grow up! You think people out there aren’t struggling and would appreciate a bar of soap, even if it’s used? You ask such a silly question “who wants used soap” that is a privileged and inconsiderate thing to say!
Highly doubt, Hotels most likely sell it to them
You can’t afford soap, here is some used stuff 😂
BRILLIANT! Save time and money!! Recycling is a great way to keep world clean!!
My family was devastated by huge flooding earlier this year and we recieved care packages with soaps that said "clean the world". Its good to know that these products do indeed make it to help those in need. ❤
That good to hear❤
People need to be cleaned 🗣️" From The Inside Out !"
What diseases are in those soaps?
@@foxyplayzgames5210The video said the soaps get sanitized
How does the soap get sanitized? I only see them getting shredded and re-combine. And I dun remember germs getting killed by giant ash's metal shredders...
Note to self, bring your own soap!
The person who first used the soap might have something you don't want and sterilization may not always work
That's exactly what I do too!! 😏
Ima go out on a limb here and say yall already on your 15th booster shots right? 😂😂😂
Yes lol because where does the soap go when it's recycled lol bring your own soap
MAYBE BRING MORE THAN ONE BAR
I believe they give this soap away and they aren’t reselling it.
It’s a way to help people who don’t have access to everyday hygiene products.
Nahh man they for sure selling it, Hotel is a business they just don't give stuff away for free lol
Well that's an optimistic but totally wrong belief
Anyone who disagree wrong jus look it up before you ASSume
They will spend all that money to give it away. What's the catch
But there's also most likely not enough people to do that. It's a way better idea to sell them.
I never imagined that my germaphobia could be made worse. I stand corrected
bro even if its filthy, once you add water and foam it its no more 😭
I always take the hotel/ motel soap and get called cheap. It called financially smart and quite beneficial when you forgot shampoo on a trip
I had to stay in a Holiday In for 3 week's in a hurry. I was happy for the clean towels n the soap n shampoo. Very smart. My loving son n his wide were staying with me and had me arrested saying I hit him and she didn't say a word at 65 the lied and I spent the night in jail. I lost all my money and paid to have them removed from my home. I am hanging on a string with a very broken heart 💔. They were drinking all the time. I thought they loved me , it all comes out in the wash. I have nothing left at the age of 70, took 9 months in and out of court to clear my name. So those little soaps n shampoo I bought home I am still using. Thank you Guy's.
Yea well just take extra money with ya rich boy😂
It is pretty cheap. If you are in a position where 6 dollars is hurting you, well.... there might be a different problem in your life. You may want to focus on it.
@@InsanityContainment rich?? I wish
I take every disposable thing in the bathroom. 😂😂😂
This is why I bring my own body wash and hand soap.
I don’t get it you get a new one with your room 🤷♂️
They're likely to still throw it out unless it's pristine in it's packaging.
Who knows whats in them too
if I have small amount of leftovers at restaurant, I mix it all up so it doesn't get re-served
@@fth1013bro what???
I used to work in a hotel in Clearwater and we had to throw soap bars in a specific bag. I only knew they were getting reused. So it’s so nice to watch this video now
I loooove Clearwater. Such a nice place
I live in safety harbor!!!
@@reformedwretch2071 it is indeed🥺 loved working there but it was a bit far away since I was in Tampa
Shout out to the Tampa Bay Area
Yooo love cleaewater I live in Lakeland
The nurses where I worked in Canada would bring in sealed soaps, toothbrushes, combs, shampoos, etc from hotels to give to our patients who ended up in hospital without supplies (hospitals in Canada supply very little and only the poorest quality). We were ordered not to do this by our nurse manager, but we hid the stash and did it anyway. Toothbrushes and paste people get from the dentist were always welcome by patients. Not everyone has a support system.
I love that the recycled soap is probably cleaner than the hotel rooms they came from 😂
It's not
@@denniskreusel1456they sanitize the soap for 7-8 min but hotels don’t even change the sheets. The soap is cleaner
True.
It's a good job it gets sanitised in bleach? But then again.............. Do you really want recycled soap that's probably already been used to clean people's butts??? 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Just_Proudy07uh sir there's a pubic hair INSIDE my BAR OF SOAP. 😂😡.
NAH son that's where I draw the line . This is nasty and I'm not sure how it's even legal . Must be a California company 😂
I use hotel soap and it feels like all the moisture has been stripped from my body .
Edit. Guys I bring my own soap with me when I travel since some of you seem concerned. I don’t touch that soul sucking soap anymore.
Exactly
Ikr 😂
i absolutely hate it
Yup, * carry my own body wash. Hotel soap is a big nope!
Same
When I leave a hotel I usually take the soap with me so it won’t be thrown away.
Exactly. Not bought soap in 30 years
It won’t be thrown out. I been working in hotels for 7 years. We don’t throw them out. They get recycled by another company. Luckily now we are transitioning to electric dispensers in the showers but the hand soap bar do remain. But none are thrown out.
@@StoutProperdo you travel once a week?😂
I toss my used one in the trash but I do love certain hotel soaps, like at Loew’s Hollywood and the higher scale places so at those I ask for room service to bring me something, anything like an extra pillow etc then when she/he is at my room I tip them like $5-10 bucks and say “Please, bring me extra extra bar soaps, both the body bar and the oatmeal face bar ALOT OF THEM” and next thing I know I get a knock at the door and she hands me a bag with about 50 bars of soap🤷🏻♂️😀😎🧼
@@justinterested9537 wow they give you that much? They probably realize you're paying top dollar to stay there, so giving you 50 soaps isn't a big deal, and part of the package.
My Grandma. They lived through the Depression (had 4 sons in WWII) and nothing ever went to waste. The flour sacks she used to make us dresses. After she cooked a chicken or duck she'd used the feathers to stuff pillows and mattresses with. The corn cobs in the field, even the the husks were used to feed the cows and horses. Every piece of string was saved. Any leftover food from a dinner was put into a "slop jar" to feed the pigs. My grandparents farm didn't have electricity or running water and I don't think they even thought about it, there was a well for water and a cistern that kept rainwater (which made your hair incredibly soft!) Even the old catalogs or newspapers were put in the outhouse because there wasn't toilet paper. Now that I'm old I began to think about my grandparents, I don't remember them ever going to the doctor like we do today. It was a good life and of all the time I was there and working alongside all my cousins, I don't remember anyone ever saying "Grandma I'm bored!"
Just know this recycled soap is way cleaner than any hotel you've ever stayed in😂😂😂😂😂.
😂😂😂
😂😂😂 facts
i doubt that
@@betag24cnYou would be extremely surprised. Next time you go to a hotel bring a black light.
Don't remember smearing ground up Pubes all over myself in a hotel bed. Sure cleans off hair from top layer sure.
Ah, finally, the soap cleaning facility.
This answers the question of whether soap is inherently clean or not 😂
I always wondered why soap dishes aren't self cleaning lol
@@Sergote12no it doesn’t
They should tell the rest of the story..
This soap is donated to countries in areas where they have little or no access to soap....wonderful
I thought it was going back to hotels and I was just gonna be like "why not just have liquid soap at that point
thank you for sharing!
and destroy small businesses in the process....good intentions always lead to disaster. liberal trash
Its not wonderful. It’s a disaster for the people living in that country. Fun fact during the pandemic all the hotels were shut down and there were no soaps. All those countries dependent on government welfare soap didn’t have any for years.
Yes please don't hit the use soap.
Having to clean soap is top teir irony
Idk why this doesn’t have more likes yet lmao
I always take my hotel soap home so it's NOT DISPOSED OF...
I rub my balls on the hotel soap and put it back
You’re gonna have to go into more detail as to how it removes all the hair and dirt from the old soap before I use one of those
Thats what i was saying
They get donated to people who need them
Yes
@@movieswithmatticus5469it would be nice to give poor people NEW soap
Bleach
I work at a hotel and a company comes by every week to pick up a container with used soap for recycling and it goes to countries that can’t get soap easily. It’s good to know we could help other people with that.
By the way when I travel or stay at a hotel i take my own soap 😂
eeww
@Billyxiao how is that ew
That’s a good idea 💡👍🏼
@manuelcastro7322, so you consider giving soap away with pure bleach a good deed.?
@@hafsabadi5294dude the water you drink has "pure bleach" in it so I do not undertstand the problem with it being in soap?
Proud to have volunteered at Clean the World Orlando a couple of times. Excellent organization and a cool soap museum at their Orlando location.
Worked at a hotel for almost 4 years, this is why we literally do not care if you steal the shampoo, conditioner, hand soap, and moisturizers, it's better you take em during your stay then us having to waste so much product. In one shift we collect about 100 or so each of bars of semi used soap, conditioners, shampoos, and so on
thank you for letting us know you and your entitled hotel staff have agreed to allow up to "steal" the toiletries provided to us by the hotel after we just paid $200 for a room and $20 to tip your ass. oh ur so kind
@@murkypuddle33why be such an asshole?
@@murkypuddle33who hurt you?😂
@@murkypuddle33 must be nice to have nice friends and attitude like you
@@murkypuddle33oh wow, you must be really nice!
Hotels should have signs in the bathroom asking guests to take their toiletries home , I always take mine back with me .
That’s a good idea
Some do but idk I usually go to low pay rooms
Me too! I even help them out with their towels!
@@birdy9922We charge you for those.. Being as we already have you CC on hand and you signed something you clearly did not read.
@@birdy9922 😜
Former hotel housekeeper here. Please steal your soap bar, hand wash, body wash, shampoo, conditioner, etc. Hell, steal your toilet paper too. I threw out so many perfectly good toiletries. Also please don't try to make your bed, it's wasted effort on your part. If you wanna help your housekeeper, leave your bed as unmade as possible. Or at least pull out the hospital corners.
i didn't realize after spending $200 on a room, it was considered stealing. I always thought they just gave us these little things as a bonus.
Amen on not making the beds! I do clean for various Air B N Bs and I cannot agree more
@@murkypuddle33 it is actually covered by the room cost. some people still see it as stealing for some reason.
@@bethderr1443 some of the regular visitors would strip their beds and leave their unused pillows neatly aside for us. They were the best guests. The worst guests used every single pillow, bin and drinking cup in the room (and left half full cups everywhere).they spilled coffee all over the bed and mopped it up with the white towels.
@@RealQuin aww yay that's what I do! I used to work in hotels though so that's probably why lol.
Note to self: bring your own soap to every hotel you go to
This is so cool! There's so much waste in the hospitality industry. I always take my soap home
I do too, including the used ones. Some countries give them to homeless shelters but I like the fact that some places recycle them.
Sooooooooooo much waste! I work at a hotel and it’s disturbing how often we can fill up a dumpster or three.
Me too, I know if I break the paper and use it, they can't use it again, so I just take it home to finish it
Have you seen the chickens used for broth? I've seen a literal truckload of chicken that was used for broth turned to waste. It's loaded into a garbage truck all that chicken only to be boiled in hotels but never be used at all. Those chickens died in vain
I work in the logistics side of the hospital. You don't realise the amount of products/stock that gets wasted it's insane!!!! But it's the expiry date we have to always go by... We try to send it to the third world but most of the stuff we can't send over.
Then stock changes or a recall or stuff we don't use anymore and we just (bin it) lol
But on the annoying side, these simple safety scissors to cut things or even surgical scissors to cut flesh. Did once cost you, 2-3 pounds a bag. Now it's 10-15 UK pounds.... Because they can!!! Bloody stupid and unfair.
But the minimum usage is never enough at times depending on the amount used due to how busy it is. Or a ward nearly ran out due to an emergency. But you need to count lead time for ordering.
People don't realise we try to go from company to company for best deals and save money at the save time without getting shafted by idiots seeing the NHS as easy pickings for Money.
It's never that easy but seeing this, we need more of it!!
I worked in hotels for most of my adult life. This is so true. We would throw away two or three bars of soap, per room, every day that were used maybe once. If it's open, it's trash. This is a really good idea.
Not wrong my guy I currently work at a hotel as a GSA and that’s completely true they have so much soap after a huge check out it’s crazy. Of course my property is a 485 room hotel which is like decent. But damn it’s crazy how full the bends get.
Why not use hand wash
Why shoudl, again you would receive the same recycled one
I worked for the Four Seasons, 40 years ago. They would offer used bars of Neutrogena to the staff, available on the loading dock.
I think all hotels should use this program.
These guys actually clean soap
🤯
Kind of sounds counter-intuitive.
But they probably make a nice buck selling it back to the place that gave it to them from the start.
Despite rats being know for living in filthy environments, they love to eat soap. I use to work as a co at jail in New Orleans and rats use to eat soap.
Lol they just mash it all together cut the hair up tiny enough where it becomes micro scrubber soap 😅
Here I assumed it was self-cleaning lmao
Hey, just a suggestion. Liquid hand soap.
Everyone finding this "unsanitary" still sleeps on the hotel bed everyone else slept on 😂
Exactly, they only change the sheets never the mattress, so yeah 😅
😂😂😂
You raw dog that mattress?
I don’t put the sheets in direct contact with my asshole though. Both are unsanitary but like, used soap makes me feel a type of way
You don't sleep on a naked mattress. Totally different idea
My grandmother used to save all the soap bars remains .. She would clean, melt, fragrance and remold the soap .. she would make big pink bars of soap that smelled like baby powder! 🥰
ur grandmother must have seen poverty and hardship in her life thats why she become kind and humble
@@importantsomeone153or maybe she just knows how to economize☺
Happened to me when I was small kid, there was a soap bar that had like dozens layer of different small soap
i took a bite out of a bar of soap at a hotel once
My mom does it still. But she's not as good as your grandma in it 😅.
Last night I was listening to this with my earphones but then fell asleep, so I heard the audio of this LOOPING in my dreams and no matter what I did it WOULDNT GO AWAYY. It was only when I woke up that I could pause the video.
Never have I felt so much desperation and relief from a SOUP MAKING VIDEOO 😭😭
Edit: *soap
Am so sorry
You are hilarious. I spent a few minutes laughing at that. 😅
I hope you sleep better in the future.
Hahahahahahahahhaa I'm rollin'
i'm dying from laughing at this. thank you. i needed that.
😂😂😂
Honestly i dont use anything in hotels i even bring my own towels and bedding i could never use the soap or anything thats supplied iv worked in hotels the things iv seen other staff do is beyond eyebrow raising i quit a job because i felt so uncomfortable
That factory must smell so fresh
@@lekhagosar5088 your moms reaction seeing you for the first time after you were born
btw as someone who worked in a hotel, dont try to remake your bed, we have to take it apart again to wash it regardless, and if you spill on the big blanket we chuck it, also leave tips we get paid garbage to get treated like shit, even a thank you note made my day when i worked there, found this note in the trash that said "thanks for cleaning our room :)" i still have it and i dont even work there anymore
edit: also steal as many towels and soap as you want we NEVER notice we just replace them
The sheets are only washed, so it's still gross .
isn’t it better to strip the bed? it looks so messy i look like a slob tho so i don’t do it every time since no one’s confirmed it :(
I usually just strip the beds before we leave to make it a little easier for the people who have to clean up later. I usually clean with my cleaner I bring from home so there’s no big mess for them
🫶🏼
Yes. :) former housekeeper too.
Better yet: bring the unused ones home with you and hand out in packages to less fortunate ❤ I’ve had so many people cry over such a small act of free kindness
Our church always has hotel soap on hand, Thank you for being kind.
This is talking about used soap. Do you give out used soap?
@@Wayniesgirlthey will take it, yes
You're one of these people who lie on the internet it's so funny 😂
Nobody cried to you because you gave them a free hotel bar of soap.
Would make sense if it was money, a hug, supplies, but a single bar or hotel soap? Yeah nah. As someone who's been homeless and now works with them
I am 90% this Jones family farms figure is lying, both about them crying over it, and over him making several people cry over it.
Nice try with the ego boost tho
Yall, if you wanna help the homeless with free soap please do but don't lie about the reactions to get attention online afterwards.
Also used soap is a no no. You're an as* if you give out used soap.
Try unused soap, unopened packaged food or unopened drinks.
But again, don't lie about how much youve given or what the reactions were after
We live in the real world, not the la la fantasy land where apparently people on the streets cry over a used bar of soap.
Weird, they get the odd bit of change, food, sometimes water, they've been through so much, but it's the hotel bar of soap from the Jones family that made them burst into tears?
Yeahhhhh ok
@@Wayniesgirlbetter than no soap
Recycled bar soap? That is SO NASTY.
TAKE THE HOTEL SOAP WITH YOU! -a hotel housekeeper
No one is taking a bar of soap with them lmao
@@QuantumNetworkactually we are
@@QuantumNetworkcouldn’t be more wrong
I'd understand if its in a capsule but a bar of soap?? I take all the lotions and things in tubes but not the soap bar@@allaboutbeebo4092
I'd understand if its in a capsule but a bar of soap?? I take all the lotions and things in tubes but not the soap bar@@griffina5192
As someone who was in housekeeping I can confirm we did collect the soap from every room and sorted it 👍
How were they sorted? I was in housekeeping too, I tried to safe them and take them to homeless while working there
I am also curious about how was the soap sorted? Also, this video didn't say what happens to the recycled soap. Is it donated or sold in stores? Do you know?
@@kristenpfalzgraf1353 sold back to the hotels. We are all bathing with reused soaps.🤣
@@annhans3535 noooo! The horror! Lol
@@kristenpfalzgraf1353 🤣
What a great idea for the used soap. I always take them home... especially from the higher end hotels. I once got a months-worth of Le Labo to use at home taken from a week long vacation. And what we don't open and use gets donated to a local family/women's shelter... they really can use and appreciate nice toiletry care packages.
LMAOO LE LABO literally means “the wash” 😭 bro goes go cheap hotels
@@pablo4yugoogle “Le Labo soaps” they’re expensive
@@pablo4yudamn u really violating bro
@@pablo4yu ok?? not everyone wants to spend that much money for a room. ur childish please grow up
@@pablo4yu Tell us you have a two digit IQ without actually telling us, honey. The regrets your mom must have... I feel for her.
Turning used Toilet paper into new one
I worked at a Marriott that sent our soap to be recycled to make new soap, it was pretty dope
Edit: yall are killing me in the comments, I have been nonstop cracking up at these 🤣
Good rhyme!
@nickscraft_minecraft lmao I legitimately didn't even notice till I read this 😂 nice catch
Gross
🤮🤮I’m not using the same soap some prostitute used
Bars
For anyone complaining about it being gross because other people used it, wait until you find out that your drinking water is made from recycled sewer water.
Uh, over here, the sewage plant and fresh water intake are completely separate, using different bodies of water. Nice try
@@Nitro2030ceThat is not true everywhere. Because water is a valuable resource, and because the water would have to be purified before dumping back into the groundwater or riverine supply, it _does_ get recycled into the potable water supply. Solids are removed, heavy metals and sediments included, chemicals are precipitated, then the water likely gets passed through an osmotic membrane, gets chlorinated, aerated, and passed back to pumping station holding tanks. Sludge is processed for landfill or other disposal.
This water recycling is why New York City's birth rate dropped, because birth control chemicals did not get removed when water was recycled. Many cities are showing increases in bizarre behavior, because drug precipitates are not reduced, converted, and removed. There is one city which, years ago, began removing all pharmaceutical precipitates in the recycling process, and has the cleanest water in the United States.
Majority of the time black water isn’t reused it’s only in cases where countries are land locked or aren’t water secure
And trust me, you don’t wanna spring. The amount of diseases and parasites that I got from living on a farm that had a spring house.
In our country we don't recycle water
Imagine the horror of finding some random persons pubic hair in your brand new bar of soap.
😂 fr like they've been sanitized but not cleaned, that's been on someone's nuts and maybe on someone's pus, who's to say a hair might not be hidden there 😂😂😂
Right?!?!🤮
Was thinking the same thing 😂
Not really possible. You're more likely to be eating hair or bugs in your processed foods, as for instance the FDA has set acceptable levels for blood & pus for milk, cockroaches in coffee, and even levels of poop in your spices. Everything you eat is contaminated because sterility is incompatible with organic life.
🤮🤮🤮
There are so many single use items that create tons of trash that can be recycled instead. This is such an innovative concept and it seriously takes advantage of a situation that would otherwise yeild tons of garbage.
I always take home hotel soap. I have a soap collection and they make wonderful additions
So even the one you take home has already been recycled.
@@lisaatako3092lol exactly makes no sense
I was at a hotel, in San Diego, where the smell of the soap was amaZing! I took ALL the soap w/me….I used it in my dresser drawers like a sachet!
What I took, lasted me for 5 years as a sachet! Mmmmm…❤️👍🏼
Bro I am using these shampoos for the past 6 months and will renew my stock the next time I travel
I bring my own soap, but I also always take the soap bars with me
😂
Same
Then, *that* hotel soap becomes the soap you take to your next hotel stay, so you can save the unused bars there and take them home...to be taken the next time you stay at a hotel...why does this sound familiar?
👉 🫧👈
Same
They're also great gifts for the unhoused to have their own individual products.
The hotel I work at has solved this problem pretty easily. We just use liquid soap in re-fillable despensers that are locked into the walls of the bathroom so people dont steal the bottles. It's easier for us housekeepers too, instead of having to replace the soap every time, which was pretty gross to have to touch used soaps covered in hair and all that, we just swap out the empties for ones we have refilled.
@@AndWhatIsThisNow We have rooms at the hotel specifically for disabled individuals, the bottles are lower on the walls in those rooms. Not to mention we also DO have a small stock of bar soaps and such, in our stock rooms, if anyone requests them. However, I've never heard anyone mention that the bottles were difficult for disabled people. I've helped quite a few disabled people into their rooms, escorted people in wheelchairs through the elevators and hallways, asked them if they needed any extra assistance or different items, all of that, and never once have they mentioned any issues with the bottle system. If they did, however, we would accommodate them immidiatley. We can also, if its really needed, unlock the bottles and set them somewhere more reachable for someone who can't reach over the counter in the bathroom for the hand soap, but we are more likely to provide them with standard bar soap. There isn't much excuse for wasteful behaviour in the hotel industry, I've seen it firsthand.
Liquid soap does make a lot more sense.
@@WALTERBROADDUS it really does. Not to mention, less plastic packaging. The soaps and lotions all came wrapped in a plastic covering, where now the bottles just get refilled and never thrown out unless they break.
@@sammiewoods258liquid soap is worse to spread and more inefficient
@@Calebe311👈 this guy living in a different universe than the rest of us
Good thing I always take the free soap back home.
I take that shiz home with me. I love the teeny little bottles and soaps and stuff and I don't like to be wasteful.
I take everything whether I use it or no. It's paid for, so I take it. I keep my used soap for hand washing but extra little stuff I donate to shelters.
And THAT, friends, is why I travel with my own soap.
Why
Hope you don’t drink water my friend
@@daveulrich4623 wdym
Wait till you find out how you get potable water lol
They sanitize them xD Listen bud
I don't think they actually sell this product. I believe it is a non-profit that sends the recycled soap to areas that otherwise are so poor they would not have access to any soap at all.
I hope they wouldn't sell this. It's got bleach remnants in it for Jesus sake
@@itsdarparp depends on the bleach but regular is fine when dilute as a soap no? its not like regular soap isnt toxic
@OsirusHandle that's what I'm saying. Either way it's bad for you. You're not supposed to use regular soaps. They are terrible for you!
@@itsdarparp what are you supposed to use then?
@@itsdarparp lmfao, you hope they aren’t selling stuff that they already sell? Good point..
Liquid soap dispensers in the hotel showers makes more sense.
I worked in a soap factory for 20 years. I love to see a product being done from beginning to end. I was 18 when I started working and I did it all. It's amazing indeed indeed
I make soap for our small business and I agree that making soap beginning to end is a fun process!
you did it all, from the mixing, to the stirring, to the squishing, and the wrapping. have you ever tried Nablus soap?
@@Abutado do you do the 3 ingredient one... i really like the looks of some of the artisan soap i see around... i would love to try... but what does it feel like, does it clean properly, and does it leave oil behind? all the ones i see are like oil and lye.
@@666dynomax there's a huge array of oils you can use in various quantities and yes, lye (sodium hydroxide) is 100% necessary, unless you do melt and pour soaps - in that case someone has already done the saponification process for you and you can't really adjust the oils in your recipe without potentially affecting the stability of it. There's a lot of factors that go into perfecting your recipe and getting that feel just right. I don't have any oily residue with my soaps, yet my skin feels great. If you want to learn, @royaltysoaps is the best teacher with basics and she has a playlist for beginners with free recipes. There's also soap and clay, ellen Ruth soaps, tellervo, and Missouri river soaps that have great basic videos for newbies with recipes. Soap and clay also breaks down the science. There's a ton of other great resources, but I recommend starting there, it's a fairly precise process that requires math, some understanding of oils and their affects on your recipe (coconut oil produces a lot of suds but can be drying, Olive oil is very low lather and can be oily, sugars and castor oil can improve the lather). Unfortunately I haven't gotten to the point I feel confident giving out my precise recipe in a tutorial format, my videos focus on designs which is also fun and requires some thought. I definitely recommend trying it out after watching some tutorials (lye is dangerous), just know it's highly addicting 😂 very quickly you'll find yourself with a year's worth of soap and you still want to make more!
@@666dynomax and yes, they clean magnificently and feel wonderful 😊
When my husband traveled for work he traveled with his soap in a container! BUT he always took the products that were provided! When we collected a bunch we gave it to our church who distributed to the homeless and others who needed them! No waste!❤
Great deed!!👏👏👍🙏
Thats what i did with the soap and shampoo Bottles i received when i was in jail
Note to self- someone’s booty juice may be mixed into your new soap
Lmao
It's OK they put bleach in the soap to balance it out.
Pls😂😂😂😂
Too much information
Yeah, I don't like the idea either, and I make bar soap...and I would not feel comfortable selling soap that may have missed a piece of hair, but I'm not a special machine, so maybe it's not fair to say that. I still don't like the idea of using recycled soap.
Thank you for reduceing, reuseing, and recycling we are all custodians of the earth.
I can So, So Relate to this!!! You see I spent my life’s career in a Soap Factory! Almost 36 years to be exact. This brings back so many good memories for me watching the augers mixer and I could go on and on about how much this little clip touched me! Thanks for the Memory Jolt😅
Hey at least you made a clean living.
Aw, that’s nice. I’m happy for you that you had job you loved and made good memories
@@BuckForearm😂😂😂
That’s a LONG career! I’ve been married for 40 years to my husband and can’t fathom being married to a job that long. Kudos to you!!
@NiNitosix i just got hired to my first job for 2 months and i cant even imagine staying longer if they ask me to😭
In germany, most hotels have refillable liquid sope and shampoo dispensers at the sink and in the shower. No bar of soap to throw out and no tiny one portion plastis bottles.
And also no need for collecting the soap bars, transport them to that recycling factory, clean and remake them, package them and transport again.
So: get liquid soap dispensers!
No need to throw out the soap in the first place, put in in a Ziploc and take it home.
This makes the most sense. As long as the soap in the dispenser was sealed and tamper proof. Bar soap is wasteful and unhygienic.
@@donniev8181throw the bag away
I'm sure there's some sick freaks out there that add their own..... white liquid..... to the liquid soap dispensers 😅
Eh I like this American ingenuity right here! Keep your euro BS over there
That factory must smell amazing every day
Ball sacks?
Aside from the fishy strands of pubes 😆🤣
Used
You know what i started doing in hotels? (Fyi: ‘ive invested/wasted over 50k usd on the app, Hotels Tonight alone…).
I started altering their artwork. Just something fun. And leaving my username hidden connected to an encrypted messenger service informing the person to hit me up for a prize.
Hotels are all in the NW. Pan Pacific. The Thompson. ….man im blanking.
The best move us literally changing out the art for a similar but not the same thing. Altered in some odd fashion. Or the placard describing the art changed out to state something humorous to me. … I’ve also fixed quite a few things.
@@TheKakarikoCuccoand? The soap is clean at the end.
I forgot to take the soap from my last trip 😢
When life gives you soap, you make more soap
Soap
Kind of like KitKats 😂
They take all the rejects and mix them into the next batch
The soap my family uses gets taken home to be used until it's gone if there is any left. It gets put in a ziplock bag then rinsed off to put in our bathroom at home if we use it. Better than wasting it
Nobody believes your lies
That's what we do. Same with teas/coffees etc.. you've paid for it and may as well take it to be used at a later date rather that it end up as consumer waste. Even if an item isn't used 8/10 times it has to be discarded because of 'surface contamination '. It's a similar thing with food waste. From someone who used to work in the hotel trade
I put soap butts in those nets fruit and veggies come in, makes a ball of soap with scrubber included
@@fuggly-qg9onthat’s such a good idea! Love it!!
Do you reuse the ziplock again?
They didn't mention a very important Part. The soap, which has been sanitized, is donated to countries in need. I work at a hotel and we participate in this program. The soap in your room is brand new.
Not once someone in the jackbooted, greenie left who works in the Whitehouse sees this! Thanks for mentioning it.
I know that's most Important part. Most of that soap ends up in sub-Saharan Africa. I met the guy who started this.
You can't sanitize SOAP.
IF ITS SOLID AND OR VISCOUS IT HOLDS BACTERIA!
FUCKIN GROSS
Very great ideas of keeping the earth clean and helping the needy.🥳
Sorry, not sorry...
No used soap for me.
As someone who worked in hotel housekeeping, never feel bad about taking the soap if you’ve opened it. Go ahead and take it. We don’t care, and it’ll just be thrown away after you leave.
ETA (again bc people are mad and misunderstanding me): if you think it’s deserved, and you want to, leave a tip for your housekeeper. We really appreciate it. If you feel it isn’t deserved, or you can’t, or don’t want to that’s completely understandable. It’s your money and your choice.
You don’t see us often, but we work 10+hr shifts 7 days a week making below living wage. We’re often understaffed and don’t get much break time because of that. The hotel I worked at had 800 rooms and 5 housekeepers. We are all trained on how to handle human trafficking, search rooms for guns, explosives, and cameras, and are arguably the ones that keep the hotels running. Not only do we keep your rooms clean and sanitized, we also make sure you’re safe and secure while you stay with us.
Ok but what about the towels 😈😈😈
@@parkercarron4523 I’ll let you in on a secret about towels.. unless they are covered in a biohazard, they are always washed and reused. Only time I’ve ever had to throw a towel out was when it was covered in literal shit. Everything is washed very well and sanitized, but bring your own towels if you don’t want one that is used over and over again. We also keep a count every day of towels and bedding to make sure that none is missing, at least in the hotel I worked in.
@@motionless_horizon that’s rough 😭😭 I’m definitely bring my own towels now
@@CaliNightMare that’s why I said “if you can.” I didn’t say you have to. I just wanted to mention it because we do a lot more than most people think. Clearly you don’t see the importance of what we do. The only reason you have a place to stay with your kids that isn’t a total mess/full of trash/bathroom walls and tubs covered in human shit, is because of us. I hate having to ask for tips, but blame the companies that refuse to pay us better with the hundreds of dollars they make per room. I quit housekeeping because at 17 I found three children bound up in the closet. They were being sex trafficked. I was making $10/hr to deal with seeing that shit, plus finding frozen used condoms in freezers, shit rubbed on the walls of the bathrooms, blood covered bedsheets, vomit, and so much more. Don’t treat us like lower class citizens when you’re the one who benefits from our work. You’d be seeing this if it weren’t for us.
@@CaliNightMarelmfao then just done order room service bc it IS pricey, as you said. buy from local restaurants or fast foods, if your kids get hungry at night, then that is why you bring snacks/food!! god i can tell yall white js from that💀 also you’re tipping the house cleaners bc of the work they do for UR safety n hygiene. if u dont want housekeepers going into ur room, then leave a “do not disturb” sign !!! you mad for what🤡🤡
I remember there was a soap plant by my school, it used to smell so good!!!
I got a sewage one
We had railway, highway and a Military Factory&Base
@@someoneyoumightknow2805☠️
I bet that soap factory did smell good. We had chocolate and bread factories, so I know what your talking about. Just out of curiosity where are you located ? Thanks !! 😊
@@someoneyoumightknow2805😂
One motel I stayed at had refillable liquids-soap, shampoo, conditioner-attached to the shower wall. Thumbs up!!😊🎉
it’s becoming policy now for this! i work for hilton. we do not refill the bottles, we recycle them to this company
@@kyleefritzius584why the hell not just refill them?? That doesn't make any sense. You're ripping the containers off the shower wall after every guest?? Wtf.
@@xcristinatthe ones they are most likely referring to are the mini travel size ones for the hilton && then the actual refillable containers for the motels
I’m always afraid someone put something else in the refillable ones. Like nair in the shampoo or something like that ☠️
Yes...I saw on youtube...they have started that so that people cannot take their full shampoo bottles & soaps may be 😅 Or they use very small soap bars .
Recycling chemical soap with chemicals. Yeah that’s sounds about right 😂