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download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Call it the John Smithification of naming: What was once a distinctive, literary-leaning name with nuanced shades of meaning has started to feel common and empty. AdvertisementEmily may mean “industrious, eager, ” but what I took from her is that to be an Emily (Emily Ratjakowski excluded) is to be a rule follower — at least publicly. AdvertisementMy husband dated an Emily before meBut once I joined the media world, they were everywhere — on all the magazine mastheads, in my ear as NPR reporters, sitting behind news desks, getting nominated for Oscars (Emma Stone is actually Emily, by the way). So, I’ve tasked myself with identifying a plural form for that moment when I discover several Emilys in one room.
Persons: , Emily, , It’s, John Smithification, I’ve, Susan, Emily Jean, , Karen, Emilys, Emily Dickinson, Emily Bartlett, Beverly Cleary’s, Emily Post’s, Emily Ratjakowski, Emily Good, Goods, Emma Stone, Smith ”, Em Henderson, Charitably, you’re Organizations: Service, LinkedIn, Facebook Locations: United States, America
But the majority of Americans say they tip 15% or less for a typical meal at a sit-down restaurant, according to a wide-ranging new poll on tipping attitudes from Pew Research Center. Fifty-seven percent of US adults surveyed told Pew they tip 15% or less for an average sit-down meal. By the latter part of the 20th century, a typical restaurant tip was 15%. The public is more likely to oppose than favor suggested tip amounts on screens. Forty percent of people oppose businesses suggesting tip amounts to their customers on screens.
Persons: There’s, Emily Post’s, they’re, ” Pew Organizations: New, New York CNN, Pew Research Center, Pew Locations: New York
A recent poll of 1,005 US adults found the average American spends 26 minutes a day reading and responding to group chats. For us to survive and thrive as humans, it's time to agree on the Definitive Etiquette of the Group Chat. The ultimate appeal of group chats — their necessity, really — is that they've become the only social media that's actually social. Group chats can become overwhelming, of course, especially as they creep into other apps and especially as they often duplicate participants. Don't talk about the group chat outside the group chat.
Persons: who's, Sam Bankman, Fried, siphoning, Emily Post, they've, Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter, Hua Hsu, e Organizations: Bank, Democratic, Street, Wall, Mets, New York Giants, Facebook, Adidas, Nazi, Yorker Locations: Bankman, Silicon, Indonesia, American, Business, Politics, Netherlands, Rome, Tucson, le
When John Anderson, 37, moved to a new house in September, he made an Amazon housewarming registry. He shared it with his followers online and got $600 worth of presents from people he'd never met. AdvertisementAdvertisementHe's not alone: Some new homeowners are setting up housewarming registries with wish lists of items to furnish their new pads. People with housewarming registries believe that buying a home is its own milestone nowadays, on par with getting married or having a baby. Did you have a housewarming registry?
Persons: John Anderson, he'd, , they'd, Anderson, Lizzie Post, Emily Post, Refinery29, John Anderson Anderson, Jordan Pandy Organizations: Service, Facebook Locations: New Orleans, jpandy@insider.com
Depending on how well you know them, questions about those personal details can seem forward, if not downright rude. "Asking someone how much they pay for housing is a proxy for asking them how wealthy they are," she says. Asking someone how much they pay for housing is a proxy for asking them how wealthy they are. Anita Allen Professor, University of PennsylvaniaThat's why, Allen says, she would only ask if she "knew them very well." 'We are having a housing crisis nationally'A 'For Rent' sign is posted near a home on February 07, 2022 in Houston, Texas.
Persons: Anita Allen, Allen, Brandon Bell, It's, , Don Heider, Heider, Daniel Post Senning, Emily Post's Organizations: University of Pennsylvania, Getty, U.S . Bureau, Labor, Santa Clara University, National Association of Realtors Locations: Houston , Texas, Philadelphia, New York City, York City, Oxford , Mississippi, Roseville , Michigan
Sure, there are some people — barbers, cab drivers — who etiquette experts say should always get a tip, and others — doctors, lawyers — who they say should never get one . He and other etiquette experts are here to help. With that in mind, here's what etiquette pros recommend you tip, in order of who Americans tip most often to the least. BaristasEtiquette experts say tipping at coffee shops is discretionary. 5 times it’s OK not to tip, according to etiquette experts
Persons: , Read, Thomas Farley, Manners, Daniel Post Senning, Emily Post's, Farley, Elaine Swann, Dianne Gottsman, Swann, Warren Buffett Organizations: Swann School of Protocol, Protocol, of Texas, takeout
A Traveler’s Guide to Tipping in a Changed World
  + stars: | 2023-04-25 | by ( Elaine Glusac | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Not long into the pandemic, Americans were eager to tip their front-line-working baristas and servers. “This is the hottest topic in etiquette right now,” said Daniel Post Senning, the co-author of “Emily Post Etiquette, The Centennial Edition” and the great-great grandson of the etiquette icon Emily Post. He cites the pressure of inflation, the disruption of the pandemic and the rush back to travel for the unease. “There’s growing anxiety and public discussion around tipping.”Offering guidance on when and how much to tip when you travel, etiquette experts, academics and travelers weighed in with the following advice. Make 15 to 20 percent your restaurant baselineTipping standards at restaurants vary widely around the world.
Cleveland ranked No.1 on the list with diners there adding a 20.6% gratuity to their checks, on average. San Francisco brings up the rear, with a 17% average tip. Just about every transaction you make these days, it seems, comes with a tablet being flipped in your direction with suggested tip amounts. As long as the server doesn't stick a fork in my eye, they get 20% — more if they're especially good. I recently picked a few things up at a local grocer/convenience store/deli, and when the touchscreen flipped, I was prompted to tip 20%, 22%, or 25%.
But there's a glaring catch to my support for pay transparency: I haven't actually practiced it in my own life. To find out why, I decided to commemorate the dawning age of salary transparency by telling pretty much everyone in my life what I earn. Norway responded to pay transparency with yet another level of transparency, and that brought down the level of snooping.. Thanks to its nationwide experiment, Norway has been fertile ground for scholars trying to measure the consequences of extreme pay transparency. But I do believe that as more states implement pay-disclosure laws — and as Gen Z increasingly comes to dominate the workforce — salary transparency is going to become the new norm.
How much should you tip your barista?
  + stars: | 2022-12-17 | by ( Nathaniel Meyersohn | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
There’s also often an option to leave a custom tip or no tip at all. Although consumers are accustomed to tipping waiters, bartenders and other service workers, tipping a barista or cashier may be a new phenomenon for many shoppers. Others feel guilty if they don’t tip or embarrassed if their tip is stingy. One barista in Washington State said that he understands if a customer doesn’t tip for a drip coffee order. Nearly 60% of Uber customers never tip, while only about 1% always tip, a 2019 University of Chicago study found.
During the season of giving, good etiquette dictates that you offer a tip to the people who make life a little easier throughout the year. Before you panic about adding 20 people to your budget, the first thing to know about holiday tipping is to give what you can afford. "Good tipping feels good for everyone involved," says Daniel Post Senning, co-author of "Emily Post Etiquette, The Centennial Edition." That means if any of the recommended tip amounts feel steep, it's not out of line to adjust downward to fit your budget. Remember, these aren't requirements, but suggestions meant to give you an idea of whom you might want to thank this holiday season.
You may be one of those people who, for the sake of expediency, is happy for everyone to split things evenly. "The last thing you want is a situation when the bill arrives at your table," Daniel Post Senning, co-author of "Emily Post Etiquette, The Centennial Edition," tells CNBC Make It. If you're worried you're going to foot a non-proportional part of the bill, speak up early, says Senning. Or, "I'm going to keep things really small tonight, so I'm going to ask for a separate check." "Say, 'I'm covering these two' — that way you're telling the server, not the table."
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