Chicago Tribune

We toured The Peninsula Chicago with an AAA inspector. Here's why those formal rankings still matter — even in the Yelp era

Sitting on a couch in a nook of The Peninsula Chicago's lobby, the man in the brown sports coat could be anyone - local, tourist, salesman.

It's a chameleonlike quality that comes in handy: He's Inspector 40, an inspector with AAA, and his job is to visit hotels and restaurants - often anonymously - and score them according to the company's Diamond-rating system.

In the last three decades, Inspector 40 has doled out enough diamonds to fill a mine. Last year alone, he inspected 664 hotels in Illinois, Wisconsin and Northern California.

Today, I've been invited along because I'm curious about the value of legacy rating systems, such as AAA and Forbes Travel Guide, at a time when everyone

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune3 min read
Commentary: Why Are Some Banknotes Hot Commodities For Collectors?
Tax Day has now passed, and people have money on their minds. You may have read news reports that people should not spend certain banknotes because they may be worth thousands of dollars, far more than their face value. Before anyone opens their wall
Chicago Tribune1 min readCrime & Violence
Off-duty Chicago Police Officer Fatally Shot In Gage Park
CHICAGO — The Chicago Police Department said a police officer was shot to death while heading home from his shift early Sunday morning. A statement from Mayor Brandon Johnson identified the officer as Luis M. Huesca of the 5th District Priority Respo
Chicago Tribune9 min read
Wind And Solar In Limbo: Long Waitlists To Get On The Grid Are A ‘Leading Barrier’
Ninety miles west of Chicago, the corn and soybean fields stretch to the sky, and dreams of the clean energy future dangle — just out of reach. To the east of Route 52, there’s the first phase of the 9,500-acre Steward Creek solar farm, in the works

Related Books & Audiobooks