With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
After a ride went viral, a London cabbie offers some life lessons for the road
After almost six decades on the road in one of London's famous black cabs, this driver provides some priceless life lessons.
Who is he? Michael Son, 80, lives in Westcliff-on-Sea in Essex, England, and has driven one of London's ubiquitous black cabs since 1965.
Took a taxi tonight, and the driver absolutely insisted on giving me the journey for free, as it was his last ever job before retirement, and tradition is they don't charge for their first ever and last ever journey.
— dan barker (@danbarker) September 30, 2023
He began driving in 1965.
Thank you, Mike. Best wishes! pic.twitter.com/vUEg2230Po
What's the big deal?
Here's what Son told NPR about his years on the road:
1. Driving a London cab is a gift.
"You go to places you otherwise couldn't and you see people you would never have met," he said.
In Son's case, he's met a fair share of celebrities including Katharine Hepburn. "She was iconic," he said. "And we just talked, which I felt quite privileged to have spoken to her."
2. He's gathered some life lessons.
"I think you've got to be good to people. It's a cliché now. But you've got to be nice. You got to be affable, and just listen to people, listen to what they say," Son said. "The world is small. And all the more reason to be nice to people and to be honest, because you never know when you're going to meet them again."
3. He's got more than a few strange stories.
A few months ago, Son picked up a couple of older American women. One of them started to talk and listed all of the things she wanted to see in London, including Buckingham Palace and other popular sites.
"And then the other lady never said a word until we got nearer to the center of town and then she said, 'Yeah, well, I want to see Hugh Grant. He's my favorite Englishman.' But I said, 'He's not an iconic statue. He doesn't have visiting hours.'"
Son told her: "I wouldn't hold your breath."
He dropped them off and continued on, driving near one of the railway stations in London.
"And there was these two people standing on the street corner, waving to me, flagging me down. So I've just gone over to them. And who do you think it was? Hugh Grant and his wife."
So what now?
Learn more:
Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.