Tourists are always complaining. In New York, they complain about muggers; in Paris, they don't like the snotty waiters. In Dublin, their main gripe seems to be the smelly cab drivers, and the city's tourism chief has taken it to heart. On Monday, Frank Magee publicly admonished the cabbies to wash and change their clothes regularly before jumping into their hacks. While conceding that some of the body odor in cabs may be from previous passengers, Magee wasn't backing down. "There is, overall, a problem there," he told Irish state radio.
Erin Go Bathe
Tourists are always complaining. In New York, they complain about muggers; in Paris, they don't like the snotty waiters. In Dublin, their main gripe seems to be the smelly cab drivers, and the city's tourism chief has taken it to heart. On Monday, Frank Magee publicly admonished the cabbies to wash and change their clothes regularly before jumping into their hacks. While conceding that some of the body odor in cabs may be from previous passengers, Magee wasn't backing down. "There is, overall, a problem there," he told Irish state radio.