Home Entertainment Radio star Sami Lukis reveals the surprising household item he always takes with him when he travels

Radio star Sami Lukis reveals the surprising household item he always takes with him when he travels

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Sami Lukis (pictured) has revealed the surprising household item he always takes with him on holiday

Sami Lukis has revealed the surprising household item he always takes with him on holiday.

The 54-year-old radio star is known for her jet-setting lifestyle and has shared some of her best travel tips, including the unexpected item she always keeps on hand.

Sami revealed that she always carries a small ziplock bag filled with detergent so she can wash her delicate clothes in the sink of her hotel room.

Sharing his surprise trip, Sami said: 9TravelsYou arrive at a destination. You may not find a laundromat or a supermarket, and if you do, you have to buy a whole box of detergent.

“But if you bring a small bag of detergent from home, you can wash your underwear and small items in the sink in your hotel room.”

Sami shared some of her other top travel tips, including bringing earplugs in case of a noisy flight or hotel and rolling clothes instead of folding them in your luggage to create more space.

Last week, Sami was hit by a global computer outage during her latest trip, as her flight from Orlando was delayed amid the chaos.

Thousands of flights across the United States were delayed or canceled in the days following Microsoft’s massive service outage.

Sami Lukis (pictured) has revealed the surprising household item he always takes with him on holiday

Sami detailed the chaos at Orlando International Airport on Friday as he admitted it was not a good day to fly in posts shared on X, formerly known as Twitter.

She wrote: ‘Sitting here at Orlando airport waiting for my flight… and no one on the ground seems to know what’s going on.

‘Some flights have been cancelled. Some flights are boarding. Most are listed as delayed. For now.’

Hours later, Sami confirmed that flights were beginning to board after the blackout caused chaotic scenes at airports around the world.

“Flights are now starting to board at Orlando airport. Hopefully this will be resolved before they put the planes back in the air,” he said.

Giving insight into her top travel tips, Sami revealed that she always carries a small ziplock bag filled with detergent so she can wash her delicate clothes in the sink of her hotel room.

Giving insight into her top travel tips, Sami revealed that she always carries a small ziplock bag filled with detergent so she can wash her delicate clothes in the sink of her hotel room.

Windows is the most widely used operating system in the world, meaning the outage affected nearly every sector of the global economy.

The glitch — from an update pushed to customers of cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike — caused the Windows software to suddenly shut down, prompting departure boards to immediately go dark at many airports.

In a sign of the global impact of the computer glitch, passengers were seen sleeping in the corridors of Los Angeles International Airport, huge queues formed at terminals across Spain and in Delhi staff set up a board to record departures.

In Australia, stores closed or stopped accepting cash after digital checkouts stopped working, while in the United States, emergency service lines went down in Alaska, Arizona, Indiana, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Ohio.

Tourists faced days of travel chaos in the days following the blackout as flights continued to be cancelled or delayed amid a huge backlog of flights.

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