The U.S. celebrated fathers this past weekend, and Spirit Airlines is keeping the fun going with a Father’s Day sale that has one-way flights starting as low as $39.
28.05.2024 - 19:09 / insider.com
My wife and I couldn't afford the constant apartment rent increases in our city, so we started looking for a tiny home at the end of 2021.
On Christmas Eve that year, we drove from Las Vegas to Los Angeles to look at a 30-foot-long house on wheels that was for sale. We completely fell in love with the idea of a space on wheels since we didn't know where we wanted to permanently settle down and we like to travel. We bought the house for $90,000.
In March 2022, we hired movers to bring the home from Los Angeles to Portland, Oregon. We then witnessed how stressful it is to see your home on the highway. It was a long moving process, but we think it was worth it.
Take a look inside our tiny home and our journey to get it set up.
The U.S. celebrated fathers this past weekend, and Spirit Airlines is keeping the fun going with a Father’s Day sale that has one-way flights starting as low as $39.
Ultra-low-cost carrier Allegiant Air is making some big changes to its route network.
Capital One is upping the ante at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) with plans to debut its latest airport lounge at Terminal 4.
Low-cost airline Norse Atlantic Airways is turning two, and celebrating its milestone anniversary with one-way flights to Europe starting at just $149.
If you want to redeem Choice points for your Preferred Hotels & Resorts stay, unfortunately, award rates are now higher at many properties within the portfolio.
Southwest Airlines is the latest carrier to add special one-off flights for sports fans.
For the past 10 years, I've obsessed over getting my hands on a permit to hike The Wave. Although I haven't had any luck, this experience has remained at the top of my bucket list.
The US is vast, so big that choosing between coast or mountains, islands or quaint small towns can get downright overwhelming.
Not long after my 48th birthday, in August 1999, my husband Barry invited me out for a margarita at Compadre's, a Mexican restaurant near our home in Palo Alto. It turned out he had an agenda.
As I planned a birthday trip to Las Vegas, I buzzed with excitement—finally seeing the Sphere, eating at the decadent Wynn buffet, and catching the water show at the Bellagio were on my itinerary. Even with all the fun my friends and I had planned, I mulled over what I would do with my hair. I was over braids, sew-ins, and lace front wigs. I didn’t want to deal with lace glue, straighteners, or curling irons (plus there was no room for them in my luggage). I wanted to wear my natural hair out but wanted more volume and density than I have currently. And with all the walking around I planned to do, I wanted to make sure my hair would last in the desert heat and crowded spaces I might find myself in. While searching for something that would meet all my criteria, I found the Fingercomber wig units and immediately fell in love.
When Soumya Karlamangla, who lives in San Francisco, tells someone she works for The New York Times, the reaction is often the same: a look of confusion.
It’s already shaping up to be a busy summer travel season in the United States. On the Friday before Memorial Day, the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screened 2.95 million airline passengers, the highest number ever recorded in a single day. And Airlines for America, a trade group representing major U.S. airlines, has estimated a 6.3 percent increase in fliers this summer over the last. While airports are certainly going to be more crowded, one carrier is trying to make the in-flight experience a little roomier for some lucky fliers.