Sam Altman, the famous Silicon Valley-based tech venture capitalist, was asked to leave a bar at The Ritz because he was wearing sneakers. The Ritz, famously, has a strict formal dress code: "Gentlemen are required to wear a jacket and tie ... trainers and sportswear are not permitted in any of the hotel or Club's restaurants or bars."
He tweeted a picture of the offending training shoes:
Low point: turned down at the bar of the Ritz for a meeting because I'm wearing "sport shoes" pic.twitter.com/01PcRMP5eD
- Sam Altman (@sama) 7 June 2016
Altman is the president of Y Combinator, one of the biggest VC funds in the US. Y Combinator has backed Airbnb, Dropbox, Zenefits and Stripe.
Paul Graham, Altman's cofounder at Y Combinator (who also happens to be English) suggested that the Ritz incident meant that London just wasn't on the same level as San Francisco and Northern California:
Shallow though this test may seem, it shows London's not a startup hub yet. No hotel in SF could afford this rule. https://t.co/kRiFpjfE5U
- Paul Graham (@paulg) 7 June 2016
It's likely that Graham was trolling because he is English, and thus knows full well that you cannot just show up at the world's most famous hotel dressed however you like.
But the tweets started a semi-serious debate on Twitter about the way tech funding has changed San Francisco but not London. Altman and Graham's tweets prompted dozens of responses. Benedict Evans, the cantankerous analyst at Silicon Valley VC fund Andreessen Horowitz (another transplanted Brit), suggested Altman was in the wrong place:
@paulg @sama The Ritz is a place for Russians and Arabs. Not a place to get any sense of 'London' - and there are many, many Londons
- Benedict Evans (@BenedictEvans) 7 June 2016
Because this took place on Twitter, some people took it waaay too seriously, with Americans generally arguing that dress codes for bars are outdated and Brits generally arguing that Americans don't know high standards when they see them:
@paulg I grew up in the SF Bay Area, live in the UK now. London has a thing called actual culture - look it up. Nothing to do with tech...
- Sue Spence (@virtualsue) 7 June 2016
Some people, however, got it just right. Here's Christian Hernandez, founder at VC firm White Star Capital:
@sama London entrepreneurs get rejected at Blue Bottle in SF all the time for wearing double monks
- Christian Hernandez (@christianhern) 7 June 2016
(Double monks are a type of posh shoe with buckles instead of laces.)