TravelWorm Names JAY REIN its New President!
February 7, 2008
And Big News from TravelWorm! Read below:
Las Vegas, NV – TravelWorm, a leading provider of casino and leisure vacations in the United States, has recently announced the appointment of its new president, Mr. Jay Rein. Mr. Rein, in his new role, will take over the management of the company’s day-to-day operations, oversee TravelWorm’s continued growth, and direct the company’s entry into new and emerging markets.
“We’re very excited to have Jay on board. He’s an industry leader and he brings with him detailed knowledge of the entire travel sector. His added leadership will enable us to fully take advantage of both internal and external opportunities,” said Benjamin Rafter, TravelWorm’s CEO.
Before advancing to his new position at TravelWorm, Mr. Rein was the Vice President of E-commerce at Worldspan by Travelsport, a global leader in the web-based travel industry, providing travel technologies and services to thousands of travel agencies and suppliers.
“This is a very exciting time for me to join the team at TravelWorm,” Mr. Rein said. “Challenges and opportunities continue to face the online travel agency community, and the employees are at TravelWorm are uniquely positioned to win.”
During Mr. Rein’s tenure at Worldspan, he successfully advanced Worldspan’s global market leadership in providing global travel distribution, transaction processing services and IT solutions to online travel retailers around the world. Prior to that, Mr. Rein accumulated more than 15 years of experience in marketing management, customer relationship management (CRM) and finance, primarily in the technology and travel industries. He was senior director CRM & strategic marketing at GTSI Corporation, a major technology provider to the U.S. government. Additionally, he has assisted companies like Motorola and AT&T in the development of their professional and consulting services.
Mr. Rein holds a MBA in Finance and International Business from New York University. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Applied Mathematics and Engineering from the University of Vermont.
The Worm’s in the Big Apple
January 8, 2008
The Worm’s in the Big Apple
My latest TravelWorm trip finds me in frenetic New York, New York. Ah… the lights, the sounds, the smells, the rats in the subway…
New York is one of those cities you either love or hate, and I happen to love it. I love the cacophony of grit and grime and flash and brilliance. I love the contrasts and contradictions. It’s an amazing place.
But first, a warning. This isn’t going to be a typical guide to the city. I’m going to tell you about the New York neighborhoods I like, so that you can get a better idea of where to go and which New York hotel you should pick. So buckle up ladies and gents, and let me take the wheel.
Forget Broadway and Times Square – at least for one day. Think, instead, of the grit behind the flash, the slightly sordid but infinitely intriguing experiences that make up primetime plotlines, and the continuous torrent of dreams that hold the city together. Instead of dazzling stage lights and tourist bubbles, come and crawl into the underbelly of a dark, interesting, spectacular city replete with high-powered executives, hopeful immigrants from all corners of the globe, millionaire trust-fund babies, and artists without a dime to their names.
We shall start with downtown, which, in my opinion, happens to host the best compendium of neighborhoods in Manhattan.
The Village (aka Greenwich Village, located roughly between 14th street and Houston up to Sixth Avenue) is traditionally the domain of the free-spirited, the freaks, and the artists. Traditionally. Nowadays, with the gentrification of even the skiddiest of skid rows, the village has become, well, a family friendly town. Little babies in “ironic” little onesies abound. So do prams, trolleys, and celebrity mommies in smart, well-cut A&G jeans. They do tend to rub elbows with all types though, and a Sunday dinner with the family is just as likely to mean a meal of falafels from Moustache as it does a pot roast.
The L train will take you across to the eastern section of the island (yes, Manhattan really is an island). I advise a quick stop at Union Square along the way. Union Square, depending on who you ask and what time you get there, is the hangout of organic produce vendors, hipsters and yippies, small-time drug crooks, and college kids from nearby NYU (we suspect that these categories are interchangeable). It’s a prime meeting spot for blind dates, craigslist transactions, and group nights on the town.
From there it’s a short stroll to some of the landmarks of the young hip crowd: the Strand (“18 miles of books”) is just a couple of blocks away, an assortment of hip little cafes and eateries line the park, interesting boutiques and trendy retail shops dot the landscape, secondhand bookstores stand side by side with vintage clothiers, bars are aplenty for the collegiate crowd, and for the more commercial-minded among us, there’s a Starbucks, a McDonald’s and a Barnes and Noble right across the street.
Walk a little bit more, and you’ll come across the East Village, at the moment still home to tattoo parlors, geek-meets-goth “graphic novel” shops, a plethora of independent bookstores, indie publishers, indie labels, indie boutiques, and most other independent things you can imagine. Yep, you guessed it. Independence is a huge deal in this part of the city – hallmarks of hipster cred, and the harbinger of a cache of cool. Of course, how long East Village grit and grunge will last is under debate. With no more places left to gentrify, it’s just a matter of time before the fast-track yuppies swarm the scene.
For a more unadulterated “alternative” experience, we suggest the Lower East Side (LES), just a few blocks south of the East Village. The current neighborhood of choice for writers, artists, musicians, actors, rent-stabilized lifers, and a growing smattering of (que horror!) young professionals, edgy LES may be the last affordable housing stop before you get edged out to Brooklyn.
The LES scene is one of funky shops, vintage stores, and exotic and eclectic food. From the traditional cuisine of Tibet to old-time delis, the choices are vast. Holes-in-the-wall are aplenty, and the nosh is global, relatively cheap, and pretty damn good.


