
11 Hotels Fans Want To See In ‘The White Lotus' Season 4
Fairmont Mayakoba's bright sands would be the perfect setting for the dark comedy.
The White Lotus just checked out of Four Seasons Resort Koh Samui in Thailand, but fans of the hit HBO show are already speculating on which luxury hotel it should check into for season four.
Each installment of the dark comedy/drama features a different fictional White Lotus resort, which has been played by Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star Four Seasons Resort Maui at Wailea and Four-Star San Domenico Palace, Taormina, a Four Seasons Hotel.
'For the fourth season, I want to get a little bit out of the 'crashing waves against rocks' vernacular,' said series creator Mike White in a Max video. 'But there's always room for more murders at The White Lotus Hotels.'
We asked our Instagram followers to share which stunning property should star as the next ill-fated White Lotus hotel, and here's their top picks:
Four Seasons Resort Punta Mita, Mexico is another great option.
Mexico was the most popular country suggestion among our followers, and this Five-Star hotel in the Riviera Nayarit is a prime contender. Red-tiled-roofed casitas reside in a 52-acre nature preserve along two beaches. Though, a lot of action likely would happen at the three pools. The Four Seasons' 'amphibious pool waiters,' who wade into the water to deliver cocktails, alone could inspire the show's intertwining stories of the hotel staff and wealthy guests.
A Mexico alternative could be this sprawling 401-room beach resort in the private luxury community of Mayakoba. The Four-Star hotel's 595-acre jungle crisscrossed by canals, the area's rich Mayan culture and the hidden cenotes in and near the property all have potential for intrigue. We also could envision Laurie, Kate and Jaclyn dining on the floating decks at La Laguna, sipping sundowners around Cielo's sunken fire pits or arguing in the temazcal (an indigenous sweat lodge).
Take the spectacle to the high seas.
One follower proposed an original idea: take the murder mystery to the high seas with Four Seasons. What better way to publicize the brand's first yacht, Four Seasons I, when it launches in 2026? The intimate 95-suite vessel would create a pressure cooker environment. And if White needs character inspiration, we suggest Four Seasons I's dynamic captain Kate McCue, the first American female captain of a mega-ton cruise ship and a social media star.
This triple Five-Star winner knows how to treat its guests.
This coastal retreat would even earn Victoria Ratliff's approval. It's a triple Five-Star winner, earning FTG's top accolade for the hotel, restaurant and spa, a distinction only achieved by 14 properties worldwide. Another rarity: Rosewood is one of California's only luxury oceanfront resorts with rooms directly on the sand. When Ratliff said, 'I just don't think at this age I'm meant to live an uncomfortable life,' she was looking to stay at a place like this.
An adventure getaway would be an interesting plot twist.
The show's partnership with Four Seasons makes it likely that the brand will continue to provide White Lotus hotel stand-ins. But this Five-Star gem makes a compelling case for a deviation if the season focused on an adventure getaway. The only hotel inside Brazil's Iguacu National Park, the pink-hued property provides a front-row seat to the world's largest waterfalls — and guests receive exclusive access to the natural wonder before the park opens and after it closes.
A ski resort backdrop could also be fun.
If the show seeks a break from beachy locales, a stateside ski resort would be a great change of pace. At this Five-Star hotel, the stories would unfold from Wyoming's picturesque peaks. Days are spent skiing, embarking on wildlife safaris and exploring the nearby Grand Teton and Yellowstone national parks, while evenings get cozy in front of the stone fireplace in wood-accented rooms or on the popular Handle Bar's terrace, which faces the towering Tetons.
Take the drama to new heights at Four Seasons' first European mountain property.
For an international ski destination, the show could relocate to the brand's first European mountain property and Megève's first hotel with direct access to the Mont d'Arbois slopes. Four Seasons Hotel Megève feels like a contemporary alpine chalet with just 55 rooms, but it also offers Idéal 1850, an après-ski spot with a tiered terrace that's at 1,850 meters (or more than 6,000 feet) on the Mont d'Arbois summit, and Suite Idéal, an inviting wooden chalet above the restaurant.
There's no better place to stage a Greek tragedy.
Show creator White layers symbolism throughout the series, borrowing from art, books and other cultural references. He'd have rich source material in the land of gods and philosophers. After all, there's no better place to stage a Greek tragedy. This Five-Star modernist Athens Riviera hotel proves up for the role with a roster of high-profile past guests like Frank Sinatra, Brigitte Bardot and Jackie Onassis; luxurious bungalows and suites; seaside pools; and Five-Star service.
Striking architecture and stunning palm trees would be the setting in Morocco.
This Four-Star hotel would serve as an excellent entrée into Africa for the show. The lush and photogenic 40-acre grounds have gardens teeming with bougainvillea, palms and olive trees; two pools along with reflection pools and floating pavilions; and the Atlas Mountains hovering in the distance. The striking architecture recalls a Moorish palace, and rooms resemble riads with courtyards and have local touches inside, from Moroccan lamps to zellige tiles.
Monkeys were a dominant symbol in season 3, and tigers could be the animal icon for the fourth installment. The safari edition of White Lotus could take place at this resort within Ranthambhore National Park, a sanctuary for about 80 of India's majestic Bengal tigers. Of course, guests like Piper wouldn't have to rough it at The Oberoi — it's a luxury tented camp inspired by the grand caravans of the royal families.
The stylish '50s- and '60s-influenced hotel would spark romance.
The Forbes Travel Guide Recommended boutique property offers a chance to bring The White Lotus to a major city, while still having a beach backdrop. The stylish '50s- and '60s-influenced hotel designed by Philippe Starck would make a romantic setting for Belinda and Pornchai's reunion, especially the rooftop white marble infinity pool that overlooks the Dois Irmãos mountains, the Corcovado and the ocean. Timing it to Rio's Carnival would make for colorful, vibrant chaos — and drama.
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Stone self-taught himself how to play an array of instruments, including the organ that can be heard wheezing away on this track. "Rock Dirge" and similar experiments from this era eventually surfaced on a 1975 compilation of Stone's early work and the song was subsequently pressed onto a seven-inch that's become popular amongst breakbeat-crazed proceeds earned from Autumn, Stone set himself and his family up in Daly City, just outside of San Francisco. This is where the Family Stone band began to cohere in the mid 1960s and their first official release came on this single for the local Loadstone label. With its snappy, uptempo backbeat and layered vocal harmonies, the song now sounds like a prescient first draft for a style that would take full form on the group's later hits. 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Instead, Stone decided to postpone that recording while moving his base of operations to Los Angeles, the first of many decisions that began to fray relationships within the band. For the next year or so, Sly stayed in seclusion, frustrating bandmates, label reps and fans. Drugs and gnawing paranoia didn't help, but this "lost" period was also a fertile creative time for Stone as he tinkered with new toys, especially emergent drum machine technology. Beatboxes were still a novelty item then, nothing a serious musician would consider using as a studio instrument. But through Sly's own Stone Flower imprint, he began to explore its musical potential on the lone single by vocal group 6ix. In a rare contemporary interview for the liner notes of I'm Just Like You, a Stone Flower anthology, Sly told Alec Palao, "All instruments are real. Anything that can express your heart, it's an instrument, man." By 1971, those ideas would come into fuller fruition on the group's epochal There's a Riot Goin' Marcus famously wrote that There's a Riot Goin' On! "was no fun. It was slow, hard to hear, and it isn't celebrating anything." In short, "It was not groovy." These were all meant as compliments since the album's dark tones – literal and figurative – felt like an unflinchingly honest expression of both the Family Stone's internal turmoil and the state of America waking up from its late Sixties high and facing the early Seventies' bleak hangover. The group's last Number One single, "Family Affair," was a sobering retreat from the sunny positivity of "Everybody Is a Star," replacing it with a meditation on human strife and weakness, cleverly masked within the mesmerizing burbling of its drum machine rhythms. In a 1971 Rolling Stone interview, Sly insisted, "I don't feel being torn apart," but many around him wondered more than "Family Affair," "Running Away" felt like a song at odds with itself. The message was unambiguous – "running away/to get away … you're wearing out your shoes" – and the "ha-ha, hee-hee" laughter feels mocking in every stanza. But in contrast, the music feels light and luminous with a jaunty guitar and bright brass section that would have been at home with Earth, Wind & Fire. Cynicism never sounded so the time Sly had disappeared into his L.A. studio, he was experimenting with playing every instrument he could lay his hands on. Riot still featured the Family players, but in many instances it was all Sly, overdubbing himself playing the various parts. With each new layer, the sound quality would gradually deteriorate into the hazy, opioid sound heard on "Time," "Thank You for Talkin' to Me Africa," "Luv N' Haight," and other songs: all slurred and half-dreamed. The affect was as alluring as it was foreboding – a journey into the heart of funk's Family Stone came undone in the Riot era, amid a string of near-mythologically disastrous concerts. To work on his next album, Fresh, Sly headed back to the Bay, but began replacing several of the key players who had been with him since at least the "Dance to the Music" days. Despite the change in personnel, Fresh was a compelling sequel to Riot's funk explorations, albeit not nearly as dark or pathos-laden. "If You Want Me to Stay," the album's modest hit, still saw Sly keeping his audience at arm's length. As the singer explained on a radio interview, "That's exactly what I meant, what I wrote. If you want me to stay, let me know. Otherwise, sayonara."The most damning-with-faint-praise for Small Talk, Sly and the Family Stone's final group album of the 1970s, may have come in Billboard's July 1974 review where an uncredited critic offers "not really much new in the way of presentation… but… there really is no need for a successful star to have to come up with something new on each LP." They weren't wrong: Small Talk mostly retread the same stylings, but the formula still had legs, especially on the tightly wound "Can't Strain My Brain," one of many Sly songs of the era where he hinted at his gradually loosening grip on the last great Sly Stone song, "Remember Who You Are" wasn't a full-fledged return to the original Family Stone. Sly had jettisoned the band several years earlier, recording under his own name, including on 1976's Heard Ya Missed Me, Well I'm Back, perhaps one of the worst on-the-nose album titles in history. Back on the Right Track, in 1979, sounds like a concession to the mistakes of the past and, at least for "Remember Who You Are," he reunited siblings Freddie and Rose Stone to share vocals, recapturing some of that old Family Stone magic. { pmcCnx({ settings: { plugins: { pmcAtlasMG: { iabPlcmt: 1, }, pmcCnx: { singleAutoPlay: 'auto' } } }, playerId: "d762a038-c1a2-4e6c-969e-b2f1c9ec6f8a", mediaId: "e4dc3aa6-3781-4d73-8332-8e311e2c5c59", }).render("connatix_player_e4dc3aa6-3781-4d73-8332-8e311e2c5c59_1"); }); Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time