Housekeeping Didn't Come copertina

Housekeeping Didn't Come

Housekeeping Didn't Come

Di: Rob Powell
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Lessons from the road, the classroom, and the minibar.


Welcome to Housekeeping Didn’t Come — where hospitality, adventure, and a little chaos all check in for the night.


Hosted by Rob W. Powell, former casino exec, improv comic, mountaineer, and hospitality professor (aka the Indiana Jones of hospitality education), this podcast dives into the wild, weird, and wonderfully human side of the hospitality world. From luxury lodges to national park cabins, cruise ships to classroom chaos, we explore what it really takes to deliver unforgettable guest experiences—and what happens when things go hilariously off script.


Whether you're a student, a hospitality pro, a curious traveler, or just here for the stories, you'll find something to love. Expect candid interviews, bite-sized insights, unforgettable blunders, and the kind of wisdom that only comes from years in the trenches (and a few nights without housekeeping).


So grab a coffee (or a cocktail), and join Rob as he unpacks the business of making people feel welcome, even when the bed isn’t made.



© 2026 Housekeeping Didn't Come
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  • Why Hospitality Demands More Than A Smile
    Jan 20 2026

    Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit.

    Think hospitality begins and ends with a smile? We open the door on what the work truly demands: operations, logistics, finance, labor management, risk, and leadership under pressure. The goal isn’t to look friendly while chaos swirls. The goal is to build systems so guests feel ease while teams shoulder the load with calm precision.

    Rob Powell, lecturer at the University of Arkansas Hospitality Management Program, shares the day-one talk that jolts students and steadies careers. We unpack the real trade of weekends and holidays, not as a warning but as a calling to create the milestones others remember. From the front desk to the pass, we explore how consistency, recovery, and emotional intelligence outperform the myth of perfection. You’ll hear a vivid Saturday night snapshot where a packed dining room glides while the back of house paces, a server stretches, and a manager dissolves conflict without a ripple—success measured by what the guest never sees.

    This conversation gets specific about the habits that make service resilient: prep discipline, par levels, station design, training for failure modes, and leadership that lowers the temperature when pressure spikes. We talk about building a career that respects craft, values invisible excellence, and turns tough hours into meaningful growth. If you’re deciding whether hospitality is your path, or you’re a veteran seeking language for what you already know, you’ll find clarity and fuel here.

    Subscribe for more unvarnished insights, share this with a teammate who needs a lift, and leave a review to help others find the show. If you’re learning, welcome to the profession. If you’re operating, thank you for the invisible work. And if you’re teaching, keep telling the truth early.

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    11 min
  • Mardi Gras 101: The Business of Beads, Balls, and Organized Chaos.
    Jan 11 2026

    Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit.

    We unpack how Mardi Gras actually runs: krewes as volunteer-driven engines, throws as branded inventory, and citywide logistics that keep guests delighted while operators manage risk and cost. The result is a playbook for festivals, hotels at peak demand, and large events under pressure.

    • Krewes as nonprofit producers with bylaws, committees, insurance, and budgets
    • Scale of floats, fleet management, storage, maintenance, and safety
    • Throws as inventory, branding, and guest memory design
    • Parade formats as market segmentation and audience strategy
    • Royal courts and celebrity monarchs as media amplification
    • Economic impact vs thin margins during peak demand
    • Workforce access, parking, barricades, and shift design
    • Industrial overnight cleanup and city reset operations
    • Balls as dome-scale productions with major headliners
    • Rider costs, discretionary spend, and participatory value
    • Volunteer leadership structures and transferable skills
    • Key lessons for hospitality under pressure

    Until next time, take care of your people, respect the data, and always tip housekeeping


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    11 min
  • New Year’s Eve Chaos
    Jan 11 2026

    Got podcast love, a plot twist, or a lost-and-found tale? Send fan mail here. Bonus points for wit.

    New Year’s Eve looks like glitter from the front and a pressure cooker from the back. We open the doors on the most volatile night in hospitality and map the patterns that repeat every year: surging crowds, elastic time, drinks that multiply problems, and expectations that leap past capacity. I walk through “Operational Disaster Bingo” not as a joke, but as a practical field guide to recurring failure points—lost phones and shoes, ice machines quitting, bathroom lines turning diplomatic, DJs blaming gear, and the occasional fire alarm pulled like it’s party décor.

    Rather than promise control, I lean into readiness. We break down how great managers set the tone with a calm voice, clear directions, and ruthless triage. You’ll hear how I assign roles for guest flow, bar throughput, and back-of-house comms, and why short radio language beats frantic over-talking when midnight compresses minutes into seconds. We talk pre-staged fixes—backup ice, queue management, quick-clean kits at choke points, and a fast-response pair to neutralize “moment killers” before they ripple.

    Then we sit with the paradox of midnight itself. For ninety seconds the room hums with connection, and then reality snaps back—the mess, the spill, the guest who wants to rewind time. The work is to protect safety and dignity without losing the joy. That’s where hospitality shines: pulling off something truly memorable under maximum strain, and making meaning from the madness. If you’ve survived a New Year’s in ops, you know the pride that lingers long after the confetti. If you’re heading into one, this playbook will help you brace, not break.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a teammate who’s on the NYE roster, and leave a quick review—what’s the one bingo square you always prepare for?

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    3 min
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