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Imagine the fare
By adamg on Sat, 11/24/2012 - 2:52pm
CraigglesofDoom presents us with today's mystery: What was a New York City cab doing in the South End today?
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CraigglesofDoom presents us with today's mystery: What was a New York City cab doing in the South End today?
Comments
Cabbies have families, too
Might be the only car this person owns.
I assumed as much.
Thinking about the fare was funnier. I'd think that taking the lucky star would be a better deal though - unless he can write off the travel on his taxes since it's a taxi.
I agree with Swirly
It's not the first time I've seen a NYC cab in Boston over Thanksgiving weekend.
And in Roslindale
Ed Gryzb spots one on his block.
Betcha it's stolen.
Betcha it's stolen.
Hopefully they brought enough
Hopefully they brought enough cash since the credit card machine won't be working when they reach their destination here!
prop car or the owner was travelling
Duhhhh? Are twitter kids born naive or do they just get that way?
Where is the sense of adventure?
Hey, it's happened. Granted, almost never, but still.
Not quite as long a trip...
It's happened more recently as well - I dare say there was probably more than this one post-Sandy case.
Joke:
It was a joke!
Dear NYC,
Give the MBTA their logo back!
For decades, NYC taxis had
For decades, NYC taxis had the fare printed on the doors.
Who's the idiot graphic designer who thought it would be better to replace it with a tiny picture of someone hailing a cab, and the text "Metered fare, Flat fare to JFK"?
Too clean, undented and shiny to be....
anything but a Bloomberg NYC taxi. Can you imagine a Boston taxi in that condition.
Imagine the fare
That is not the color of the T logo. The MBTA T logo is a black T with a white background.
It's not as bad as you think
they charge you a flat rate, probably $575 max.
$700.80
Boston has a flat rate book which you can Google and look up any community in Massachusetts and major cities in the Northeast (complete with directions). If it was a Boston cab going to NYC, the fare would be $700.80. For NYC, long distance fares are negotiable, but this should give you an idea of what's expected.
I wonder
With an 8-10 hour round trip, would that $700 compare favorably with a standard shift - with potentially less hassle?
Probably be more fun anyway.
As the woman in the above cited article mentioned, she talked religion and philosophy with the cabbie during their drive.
I'd imagine that it'd be pretty comparable.
Cash cab!
Cash cab!