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Thailand Tourism and the Truth - Stacey Dooley Investigates


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Phuket Resort Maids Profiled in BBC Doco: Review

Lana Willocks

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Phuket investigator Stacey Dooley, from a previous reality show

Thailand: Tourism and the Truth - Stacey Dooley Investigates. (BBC3)

AS ANYONE arriving to rain-soaked Phuket or Samui this week will have discovered, the reality of a tourist destination is often starkly different than what's portrayed in the brochures and travel websites. Diving under the surface of the glossy sheen is what British investigative reporter Stacey Dooley tries to do in the one-hour documentary, 'Thailand: Tourism and the Truth - Stacey Dooley Investigates', which aired on BBC3 yesterday.

While the 2009 documentary series 'Big Trouble in Thailand' on Bravo Channel UK exposed the mishaps and dangers encountered by tourists to Thailand, this film gets to grips with the every-day pressures and strains faced by those working and living in a thriving Thai tourist resort.

The opener asks, "Are our two weeks of luxury abroad making life hell for the locals?" and Ms Dooley first explores this question with a visit to the Banthai Beach Resort in the Phuket west coast town of Patong, first shown with images of its inviting swimming pools, immaculate rooms and smiling staff, with Ms Dooley expressing amazement that all this could be had for as little as 30 quid a night.

After a day as a tourist with a frolic in the pool and drinks at the swim-up bar, Ms Dooley goes to work as a chambermaid, learning that she is expected to clean 14 rooms a day, taking no longer than 30 minutes per room. She gets a failing grade from the manager after a sweaty hour-plus spent scrubbing one room.

She then catches a ride on the Banthai staff bus to the worker dormitories, clean yet rather cramped and sparsely-furnished quarters where three maids share a small room. All of them, she learns, are mothers whose children live in another province. One maid, Khun Kalerb, has not seen her children in two years, and Ms Dooley stares at her with Oprah-style empathy as the maid stoically describes the stark choice between seeing her children or sending her earnings to her family.

Dooley later goes to see the grim rental room of a Banthai bartender located in a back-street Patong slum, where apparently some 100 hotel workers live. Rats and roaches make Ms Dooley jittery as the bartender explains that she prefers the freedom of life here compared to the staff dorm.

Among those familiar with the Phuket hotel industry, Banthai is known to be a fair yet exacting employer, expecting high standards from its staff yet rewarding them with free food, accommodation and transport, plus annual parties where big gifts including motorbikes are handed out. Dooley takes a balanced look at the situation, speaking with Banthai's senior managers who say they do face a lot of pressure to maintain high standards for increasingly narrow margins, but that that their wages are fair, and that it's up to the staff to manage their money.

When she probes about the possibility of allowing staff to have their family stay with them in the dorm, she is told there is no space, yet there's a vague, face-saving response that this could be a possibility in the future.

The doco makes it plain, however, that the price pressures combined with the high cost of living in Phuket unavoidably gives its hotel workers short shrift. If the Banthai workers are living like this, one shudders to think how those toiling at less reputable places are faring. Ms Dooley's proposed short-term remedy is to urge those staying here to leave good tips.

She then heads down to Rawai Beach and meets the Moken, better known as sea gypsies, whose small slice of land is under threat of being taken away for hotel development. The clash of modern property laws and ancient traditions couldn't be more clear. The Moken tell her how they were urged to put their fingerprints on papers that they couldn't read, with the promise of rice in return. Only later did they learn that they had signed away their rights to the land they had lived on for generations.

After stumbling through their crowded, concrete and corrugated tin dwellings and seeing old photos of their spacious thatch huts spread across the beach, she valiantly takes up their cause and helps them secure a meeting with the Prime Minister. The PM does not see them but sends an advisor to meet with Ms Dooley and the Moken village head, Khun Sanit.

One piece of evidence they will submit as proof of the Moken's land rights is a photo of HM the King visiting their village decades ago. After pressing the advisor to look into the case, Ms Dooley vows to keep calling back to check on its progress. Afterwards, she bids a tearful farewell to Khun Sanit.

Ms Dooley also checks out the famed Full Moon Party on Koh Phang-ngan, where images of young raving Europeans are juxtaposed with the fridge-cooled coffins where bodies are kept until they can be evacuated from the island (some 10 tourists a year die at the Full Moon parties, about 7-8 of them British, says a local rescue volunteer), and questions are asked about how the small local population can cope with the large monthly influx of tourists.

Throughout the film, the young Ms Dooley maintains a doe-eyed innocence, wonder and friendliness that is disarming to all who encounter her, and her emotional reactions to what she sees and hears add to the sense of heartbreak. Some will say that her approach is too one-sided - the bargain-hunting, insensitive tourists vs the unwitting, pure and simple hard-working locals - but overall a balanced view is presented and the documentary refreshingly avoids the usual shock-value images of the gyrating chrome-pole dancers and the leering, washed-up Western men.

It will be interesting to see how Phuket's tourism players react to the film, whether it will be viewed as a sober yet necessary look inside the industry or written off as yet another attempt by uninformed outsiders to discredit Thailand. There's nothing in this documentary that will necessarily scare off tourists - indeed, the people, the beaches and the lifestyle in Phuket are generally portrayed as enchantingly as any tourist travel show - but it will certainly make potential visitors more aware of the true value - and cost - of their holiday in paradise. Seems like a win-win for all.

If you haven't seen this and you're looking for a good laugh - or to get angry enough to yell at your computer - you should really find a torrent and download this.

As is all too common in these sappy documentaries, young Stacey comes to Thailand and thinks she can change the world in a week. Her first stop is the Ban Thai resort in Phuket where she claims that a room only costs 30 quid a night. Unfortunately the internet exists and we can check prices for ourselves and see that a basic room starts at 6,500 baht a night and suites go for 60,000 baht a night (with a 1500 baht surcharge on all rooms for peak season).

But her fantasy views of Thailand don't end there. When she works as a chambermaid we get to see the living conditions of the staff. They are given free food and lodging at a dorm and she hears the heartbreaking tale of one maid who claims she hasn't been able to go home to visit her children in 2 years?!?!? Fortunately, another maid lays some balance and says that she sees her children about twice a month.

According to Stacey this could all be remedied if the hotel allowed the staff to have their families live in the dorm as well. And she goes right off to the manager of the hotel and explains her brilliant plan. The manager tells her they might consider it in the future and she's off having solved her first problem.

She also begs tourists to leave 50 or 100 baht a day tip for the chambermaids who clean 14 rooms a day each. That would mean a chambermaid, with little or no education or job skills, would be making between 16,800 - 33,600 a month just in tips. Why get an education when you can make a killing being a chambermaid?

I'm not saying that you shouldn't leave a tip for good service or whatever or that the life of a chambermaid is easy but cleaning hotel rooms is about the lowest job in every society around the world. She could have stayed home in London and done a documentary on how shitty the life is of a British chambermaid.

But to suggest that you tip them so they can make 3x the average wage of other workers is just stupid. What about the clerk at 7-11? Here's 100 baht, darling. I know you don't make much. Oh, and you, Mr. noodles dude, here's a 100 baht because I know you're poor.

Where's the end of it? Tip everyone everywhere you go that isn't making a great salary or has some financial hardships? Should they give us our money at the exchange booths in 100 baht bills so we can walk around Thailand slapping a 100 baht on everyone we come across?

Grrrrrr . . . just watch it. It's good for a laugh.

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Stacey Dooley means well...but...to be brutally honest, she is a former shop assistant who was on another BBC3 series (Blood Sweat and T shirts) and producers were struck by that aforementioned doe eyed innocence. To call her an investigative reporter is akin to calling Stevie an international playboy; a gross exaggeration of the truth.

My feelings were that the programme was flimsy and unsubstantial. To me, the real 'horror' of the programme (and one I already knew about) was the often unscrupulous moving of villages and villagers to build new resorts when there are usually already enough. But surely a subject to be tackled by a real investigative reporter rather than a silly and overly dramatic young girl? Her programme on child soldiers in the Congo WAS shocking, but this was down mainly to the subject itself and the good work of the producers.

I don't want 'faces' fronting documentaries; I want people who have researched the subject, taken the risks and presented an unbiased and balanced story.

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Saw it a few weeks back. Found it boring and the girl was irritating.

Watched a couple of documentaries recently about Thailand, Malaysia etc...Why are the people who host them buck teethed, overly excited wankpots?

The part I found funny was Ked watched it with me and she kept shouting out stuff like "Of course they live like that. That's normal in Thailand," and "Thousands of people get moved off of their land all of the time. If she helps these people she should help all of the other people too."

I think the point that I was getting at, as well as Ked was voicing, is that this is Thailand. This is just how stuff works. If you think you're going to come over and save Thailand by asking one hotel owner to consider letting families stay together or getting some lackey government official to lie to you and tell you that 100% the people won't be moved off of their land, you're living in a fantasy world.

And people like Stacey have no idea when they're being duped. For instance, the woman who said she hasn't seen her children in two years. Come on now. She has a job at a very good hotel, lives rent free, has her meals paid for, etc. She can't save up enough money for a bus ticket back to her hometown one or twice a year? That's why I mentioned the other girl who said she sees her kids twice a month. Something doesn't add up with that story. But Stacey is too much of a sap and too much of a Thailand newbie to know something doesn't smell right.

And so much of it is out of context. For instance, what are the alternatives? Sure, it might suck being a maid in a hotel but it sucks even worse trying to find a job that pays the same back up in Issan. Yes, we might all wish that everyone makes a living wage and all but the fact that someone can support their parents, their children, and themselves on such a low wage suggests that if they didn't have to support their parents (i.e. a pension program) or they learned a little something about contraception their lives would be markedly better off.

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The part I found funny was Ked watched it with me and she kept shouting out stuff like "Of course they live like that. That's normal in Thailand," and "Thousands of people get moved off of their land all of the time. If she helps these people she should help all of the other people too."

What accent did she say this in? ;):lol:

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BBC has for a long time been employing leftie, leaning socialists as reporters. Their coverage of the 'poor, down-trodden Red Shirts' peacefully demonstrating in Bangkok last year was a prime example.

Peter Sissons (a veteran reporter for the BBC) recently retired and said that political bias was now the norm for the BBC.

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