CNN:

Thanks to the Streisand effect, the hotel is now "Ranked #858 of 894 Blackpool B&B and Inns." Other reviews:

By the way, here's the latest controversy about "Fawlty Towers," which really isn't fair to mention in the same breath as the Broadway Hotel. Say what you will about it, it was clean. Polly saw to that. Anyway: the classic ep about not offending the Germans has been reedited to remove offensive words. This comment on the Daily Mail nails it:

But not everyone might get the joke. So out it goes.

IMD Things like this make some writers nervous. It's difficult to know precisely how to feel and how to act, because the potential for offense is enormous. Guardian writer Michael Kimmel bravely wades in:

I am celebrating his right not to read Guardian articles that can't stop asking questions. Let's pose our own: Will he come out against IMD early in the piece? Or later? Do you think the Guardian commissioned the piece to say something nice about men? Are you going to finish those fries? What's the wifi password?

These are fine skills. You can learn to vacuum in about 45 seconds, after you've figured out where the switch is. "Childcare" might be more difficult, if there are no small children in the house, but perhaps father and son can use a small pliant house pet.

I'm still stuck on the line "fathers can invite their sons into their own homes." Is the author presuming that fathers and sons live apart? And isn't this biased against non-fathers?

You'll be missed, chap. Here's how Digg ran the story, with a helpful suggestion:

Noted.