From Worldometer (new COVID-19 deaths yesterday):
DAY USA WORLD Brazil India South Africa
June 9 1093 4732 1185 246 82
July 22 1205 7128 1293 1120 572
Aug 12 1504 6556 1242 835 130
Sept 9 1208 6222 1136 1168 82
Oct 21 1225 6849 571 703 85
Nov 25 2304 12025 620 518 118
Dec 30 3880 14748 1224 299 465
Jan 14 4142 15512 1151 189 712
Feb 3 4005 14265 1209 107 398
Mar 2 1989 9490 1726 110 194
April 6 906 11787 4211 631 37
May 4 853 13667 3025 3786 59
June 1 287 10637 2346 3205 95
July 7 251 8440 1595 817 411
Aug 4 656 10120 1118 532 423
Sept 22 2228 9326 839 279 124
Oct 6 2102 8255 543 315 59
Nov 3 1436 7830 186 458 23
Dec 1 1633 8475 266 477 28
Jan 7 2025 6729 148 285 140
Feb 2 2990 12012 946 991 175
Mar 2 1778 7756 335 173 28
Apr 1 439 4056 290 52 12
May 5 225 2404 151 ? 64
June 2 216 1413 130 10 31
July 6 316 1627 335 35 12
Aug 4 311 2138 258 70 ?
Sep 1 272 1732 174 ? ?
Oct 6 281 1305 119 9 ?
13 246 1240 44 10 52
19 297 1444 102 20 ?
20 175 1301 66 10 ?
Summary:
- Yesterday, Germany was #1 in new deaths (178) and new cases (92,293).
- #2 in new deaths was the U.S. (175) and #3 the UK (143).
- #2 in new cases was France (56,793) and #3 Italy (40,560).
- #4 Taiwan 39,782.
- #5 Japan 36,110.
- #6 USA 25,626.
- When the COVID pandemic began in 2020, the death rate rise was exponential and deadly.
- But times have changed, and the COVID death rate has dropped by a factor of 6 from the peak. Those 175 new U.S. deaths shown above is the lowest number in the table. According to the CDC, regarding the seasonal flu, from 2010 to 2020:
- From 12,000 to 52,000 Americans died/year.
- At the high end, this would be 142 deaths/day.
- But the season only lasts about 6 months, and there is a definite peak month, such as:
- As such, then, almost half the deaths occur in one month, or for that high end case, we might see as many as perhaps 1,000 deaths/day in that peak month, or 200 deaths/day in a low-death year.
- Yesterday the U.S. had 175 deaths, or a number LOWER than flu deaths/day in the peak month of a very low year for the seasonal flu.
- President Biden might have been right: the pandemic is over.
- Is it time for the World Health Organization to make a similar declaration for the world? Maybe not, for WHO is headquartered in Switzerland, and Europe continues to have high case counts
- I might note that the 2020 flu season (October 2020 to July 2021) only had 748 flu-related deaths.
- It's still too early to predict what the 2022/23 flu season will be, but there are indications that it will be much higher than 2020/21, but probably on the low end relative to normal flu seasons.
So on to the topic of today...here are Condé Nast's Best Hotels from the 2022 Readers' Choice Awards.
- #50 Shangri-La Bosphorus, Istanbul Turkey: provides a copy of James Hilton's 1933 novel, Lost Horizon, which introduced to the world that mythical paradise, Shangri-La, the name of the hotel chain with headquarters in Hong Kong. Has a Shang Palace, which in Paris, also in a Shangri-la, is the best Chinese restaurant in France.
- #48 Four Seasons Hotel Bangkok. There are 7 Four Seasons in this list. This chain since 2007 has been owned by Bill Gates and Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal of Saudi Arabia.
- #47 The Drake Oak Brook, Autograph Collection, Chicago is one of around 200 premium hotels run by Marriott. You want to order a Drake Manhattan in their Polo Lounge. When you add all the Autograph Collections, Luxury Collections, Ws and J.W. Marriotts, the chain I belong to, Marriott, also has 7 in this list.
- #46 Sofitel Washington on DC Lafayette Square. Sofitel originally opened in Strasbourg as the first 5-star hotel in the city. They rapidly expanded, and in my early travel days, I thought it was a mediocre chain. In 2008, when they had 200 properties, they sold off 111 of them, and became a brand of luxury hotels only.
- #40 Nobu Hotel London Portman Square is linked to Chef Nobu Matsuhisa and Actor Robert DeNiro. Can you believe there are now 30 Nobu hotels? First opening in 1994, there are 50 Nobu restaurants, all very expensive.
- #33 Suiran, a Luxury Collection, Kyoto, Japan...the only hotel I've stayed in among this list of 50. My breakfast to the right.
- #8 JW Marriott Austin, Texas, is nicely located and features a Texas Wagyu tomahawk ribeye.
- #6 W Doha, Qatar, unlike the others in this top 50, offers rooms, now and then, for $150/night.
- #5 Four Seasons Doha, Qatar, sort of starts at $400/night, still not that high compared to others in this list.
- #4 Raffles Istanbul, Turkey is sleek and modern with impeccable high-tech.
- #3 The Driskill, Austin, Texas is authentically Texan in downtown Austin. Famous for its 1886 Chocolate Cake, which costs $8/slice. Room starts north of $300/night.
- #2 Sofitel Legend Santa Clara Cartegena, Columbia is close to the beach, and is a former 17th-century convent.
- #1 Cheval Blanc St-Tropez, France opened in 1936, and reopened in 2019 by LVMH. A room can be had for $230/night, but try to get a reservation. Good luck.
Finally, the best hotel chains by Bounce. Note that of the top 8 chains, 4 are operated by Marriott.
- #1 Marriott International has the most number of hotel rooms:
- 30 brands.
- 7,642 hotels.
- 1.4 million rooms.
- 131 countries.
- #2 You'd never be able to guess who is #2. With more hotels than Marriott, Jin Jiang of China has more than 10,000, with almost 1.1 million rooms.
- #3 Hilton Hotels with 1 million rooms.
- #4 InterContinental Hotels Group = 0.9 million rooms.
- #5 Wyndham Hotels and Resorts = 0.8 million rooms.
- #6 Accor, a French chain = 0.75 million rooms. Runs various hotel chains, and here is one of their hotels, the combined Raffles Doha and Fairmont Doha. Note that Accor also owns Sofitel.
- #7 Huazhu Hotels Group of China = 0.6 million rooms.
Oh, if you feel a little sorry that Liz Truss had to resign her prime ministership after 45 days, she will still get $129,000 for the rest of her life, and extend her life by maybe 10 years, if not longer.
Two on Netflix worth your consideration, both gaining a 100% rating from Rotten Tomatoes reviewers. I am on episode 3 for the first, and will watch the second the next chance I get. Both have 8 chapters.
- Kleo is one of those shows that has this wide discrepancy in Rotten Tomatoes, with a 100% rating from reviewers and only 56% from the audience. First appeared as a German television series, and was recently picked up by Netflix. A revenge journey of Kleo Straub, an East German Stasi assassin who is suddenly imprisoned, but released when the Berlin Wall fell. She uses her professional skills to dispose of those authorities who did her in. So far, I side with the reviewers.
- From Scratch got a 100% rating from Rotten Tomatoes, and is too new to get a number from audiences. Will premier today on Netflix. Reese Witherspoon and Zoe Saldana are co-producers, with Zoe as the lead. The Hollywood Reporter says it is a blandly pleasant romantic weepie. Saldana plays an American artist who falls in love with a Sicilian chef. Filmed partially in Florence, and also Los Angeles. While there are depressing moments, somewhat balanced by Italian cuisine. Spend eight hours of your life this weekend if you want to swoon and weep. I have baseball, football and volleyball to watch on TV.
Tropical Storm Roslyn in the East Pacific will strengthen into Category 2 status and plow into Mexico late this weekend.
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