Destination: London

Britney Spears: Back in Wax

Well, now the troubled pop star’s well-publicized comeback is truly complete. The London outpost of Madame Tussaud’s has unveiled a new statue that shows Spears clutching one of the MTV awards she grabbed (along with some restored dignity) last fall. “We are delighted to be featuring Britney at Madame Tussauds London for the second time,” a spokeswoman told the Telegraph. “Her original figure ... was extremely popular. However, she’s undergone a huge transformation since then and we wanted to reflect her as she is now.”


What We Loved This Week: London, New Jersey, ‘Heima’ and More

What We Loved This Week: London, New Jersey, ‘Heima’ and More Photo by Rob Verger.

World Hum contributors share a favorite travel-related experience from the past seven days.

Rob Verger
I love my new Canon G10 camera. Hello, 14.7 megapixels. It gave me an excuse to roam around my neighborhood over the weekend, taking pictures. Here’s the 125th Street subway stop in New York City:


London A-Z: Britain’s Most Stolen Book

Think of it as a glimpse into the literary tastes of the light-fingered. The Times of London has compiled a list of Britain’s most stolen books—and, as it turns out, thieves really have a thing for maps. The venerable London street atlas, London A-Z, won top honors. Said one independent bookstore owner: “I’ve been in bookselling for 20 years and the London A-Z is the most stolen book in the world ... A-Zs were like porn—you had to keep them under the till.” The “A-Z” wasn’t the only hot travel item on the most-wanted list, either. Ordnance maps and surveys landed in the no. 2 slot, Lonely Planet guides were the fifth-most-stolen books in Britain last year, and squeaking in at no. 10 was the Official Highway Code. (Via The Book Bench)


Morning Links: John Lloyd Stephens, the Bob Marley Suitcase and More

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


Remove Cute English Hanging Baskets, Save the Planet?

Remove Cute English Hanging Baskets, Save the Planet? Photo by Unhindered by Talent via Flickr (Creative Commons).
Photo by Unhindered by Talent via Flickr (Creative Commons).

The politicians of Harrow, a borough of Northwest London, say banning the (to some) quintessentially English flower baskets in the town center as well as replacing seasonal flower beds with less water-needy shrubs will help save water, land and money, The Evening Standard reports. If Harrow’s flower-basket-removal plans go through, will they catch on in the rest of England? And will the English and hanging-basket-loving Anglophiles around the world see the move as environmentally responsible or culturally obscene?

Via TreeHugger


Morning Links: Bill to End Cuba Travel Ban Introduced, Facebook ‘Flashmobs’ and More

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


Would You Like the Chicken, the Fish or the Dead Hamster?

airplane food Photo by d'n'c via Flickr (Creative Commons).
Photo by d’n'c via Flickr (Creative Commons).

Oh, airline food. Always getting the bad rap. We love to hate airline food. The hate brings us together. It’s airplane conversation starter. I might be one of the few people who doesn’t dislike airline food. Consider the context: you’re eating 30,000 feet above the earth. If I were sitting in a Michelin-starred restaurant, eating soggy croquettes out of a tin tray, I’d probably be a bit disappointed. But on a plane I’m captive. Which is why I watch (and actually enjoy) Drew Barrymore movies while I’m flying. I fork the rubbery chicken into my mouth and like it.

Then there’s this guy. The Virgin Atlantic frequent flyer who had had enough. Food, that is. He wrote a scathing—and humorous—letter to Sir Richard Branson, Virgin’s founder and CEO, about his latest meal on the London-to-Mumbai flight. An excerpt after the jump.

Read More »


Morning Links: Americans Behaving Badly, Disappointing Attractions and More

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


London, England

london REUTERS/ Eddie Keogh

Pedestrians walk across Westminster Bridge as snow falls, in central London.

See the full photo »


Morning Links: America’s Dirtiest Hotels, London From Above and More

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


Morning Links: Polish Milk Bars, Talking Travel With Thomas Friedman and More

Dempster Highway, Yukon Photo by rocco.degiacomo via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo of the Dempster Highway by rocco.degiacomo via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


British Man Jailed for Mutilating Antique Maps, Travelogues

A wealthy British book collector has been sentenced to two years in prison for stealing from the British Library. Farhad Hakimzadeh had used a scalpel to slice pages and maps out of more than 150 rare books, most dating to the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries. His subject matter of choice? “The engagement by West European travellers with Mesopotamia, Persia and the Mogul empire—roughly the area from modern Syria to Bangladesh.” A British Library staffer called Hakimzadeh’s actions “an attack on the nation’s collective memory of its own past,” and added that he had damaged “our historical record with how this country has engaged in that part of the world.” 

Sadly, cases of high-profile book vandalism and theft aren’t uncommon—but they never fail to shock me. (The theft, also from the British Library, of some of the first-ever maps of Canada a few years ago hit especially close to home.) I don’t want to get too Orwellian here, but something about the theft and destruction of irreplaceable historical documents, the literal dismantling of our physical historical record, strikes me as deeply sinister. It’s a relief to hear that there’s now one less perp running loose in the stacks.


Morning Links: Obama’s Places, Poe’s 200th Birthday and More

Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.


The Critics: ‘Last Chance Harvey’

The reviews are in for Last Chance Harvey, the travel-infused romance that hits theaters today. Opinions vary on the quality of the film overall, but everyone seems to agree that the efforts from stars Emma Thompson and Dustin Hoffman are a rare treat.

“Just about everything works in this small and surprisingly hopeful film,” writes Betsy Sharkey in the Los Angeles Times, “with beautifully attenuated performances by Dustin Hoffman and Emma Thompson, who slip into the characters Hopkins has sewn for them like an old sweater.” LA Weekly’s Aaron Hillis agrees—at least in part. “Hoffman and Thompson—despite the 20-plus years between them, and her graceful restraint in contrast to his creepy assertiveness—have a genuinely sweet chemistry,” he writes, “which is the exact and only reason to seek this one out.”

Read More »


Interview With Joel Hopkins: Seeing London Anew

St. Paul's Cathedral Photo of St. Paul's Cathedral by peter pearson via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Eva Holland talks to the writer-director of "Last Chance Harvey" about travel and his new movie

Read More »