Friday, May 19, 2006

It's a going thing

There are certain things a person has to know when he chooses a place to eat. What is the menu like? How’s the food? What are the prices? And, last but certainly not least, how’s the can?
For too long, public bathrooms have been a hit-or-miss affair. Often literally. But no longer. Thanks to Minneapolis-based web site restroomratings.com, diners can find out in advance the quality of water closets from St. Paul to Seattle to Sao Paolo.
The site is flush with toilet reviews. By my quick estimate, the site currently features reviews of close to 460 toilets worldwide, including one for Minneapolis restaurant Yummy! that features an unsettling capsule review that reads, simply, “Yummy!”
The site reviews public bathrooms of all kinds, from restaurants to parks to gas stations. So, the next time you’re cruising through Breezewood, Pa. with a need to make a pit stop you’ll at least know the Shell station has a bathroom that is, according to the site, “Nothing to write home about, but decent enough to poop on.”
Don’t say you never learned anything from this column.
I have no idea, aside from the obvious cleanliness issues, what makes one bathroom superior to another. I found the facilities at El Meson, a restaurant where I ate dinner a few weeks ago, entirely ordinary. But the site’s reviewer gave it an eight out of 10, claiming it reflected the restaurant’s “rustic textures of a quaint Spanish villa.” Having spent limited time in the bathrooms of Spanish villas, I am forced to take them at their word. The cramped and generally uninspiring men’s room at The Chatterbox Pub, one of my favorite places to have a drink, got good marks for the cartoon characters painted on the walls.
I have never found a Taco Bell bathroom inspiring in any way, but one of the fast food chain’s restaurants got credit for its “sturdy and satisfying lock.” A toilet in New South Wales, Australia got bonus points because most of the water used for flushing is snow melt. And while the bathrooms at the Uptown Theater in Minneapolis lost points for being dirty and having stalls that are “uncomfortably close to each other,” it benefitted for a certain undefinable hipness.
On the flipside, the toilet at Afton State Park lost points because someone had, um, used the urinal for the wrong kind of relief. Actually, that ones is pretty easy to understand.
While I haven’t had time to thoroughly review the site, the capsule reviews for bathrooms can range from disturbing (One for Pizza Hut in Mauston Ill. gets, “Well kept place to eat and poop.” Eat? Really?) to odd (Pizzaria Uno in Phoenix, Ariz., gets, “Beware of crouching dwarves.” I have no idea what that means.) to predictable (The Phi Tau fraternity house in Hanover, NH gets, “Eewwww, just eeewww,” yet still somehow scores a six in the full review.).
The site has gotten its fair share of media attention. In a 2004 Pioneer Press story, Ami Thompson, who founded the site with her husband, Jon, explained the project began when she complained during a car trip that it was impossible to know which bathrooms were suitable for use. Making the decision where to stop, she told the reporter, was a crapshoot. I can’t be sure, but I choose to believe she intended to make a pun there.
Most of the reviews also feature pictures, although that presents certain issues. Some people, you might be surprised to know, do not take well to people taking pictures in the bathroom.
“If there’s a crowd, I plan my escape,” Jon says in the Pioneer Press article. “I’ll take a photo and run out so people don’t think I’m a pervert.”
This raises an interesting question: Are you more likely to consider someone if they snap a picture of a toilet and run out or if they take a photo, hang around and comment on the feng shui of the toilet stall? I have to imagine it’s a tossup.
Either way, we owe the Thompsons a debt of gratitude. In a world filled with disgusting bathrooms, it’s nice to have someone there to tell us where to go.

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