Morning Links: R.I.P. Escapes Section, the ‘Dirtiest City in Europe’ and More
Travel Blog • World Hum • 05.04.09 | 8:10 AM ET
- In Washington D.C. tonight, World Hum columnist Eric Weiner will speak with World Hum contributor Pico Iyer about Iyer’s book, “The Open Road: The Global Journey of the Fourteenth Dalai Lama.” Tickets are $25 and an RSVP is required.
- A pilot walked away unhurt after his Cessna crash-landed onto “a cushioning group of portable lavatories.”
- For the second year in a row, London has been voted the dirtiest city in Europe in a TripAdvisor poll. The British capital also took the prizes for worst cuisine and worst-dressed locals. Ouch.
- This weekend saw the New York Times go Escapes section-free. (Via @LunaticAtLarge)
- Outside contributing editor Ian Frazier has some advice for all the young adventurers out there: old guys rule.
- Breaking news from the Onion: the unheralded sherpa who led Neil Armstrong to the moon has died at age 71.
- CNN rounds up five roadside “world’s largest” attractions; “Travelers enjoy the noncorporate, somewhat ragged nature of these eclectic attractions,” says an interviewee.
- Today in swine flu news: roughly 70 Mexican passport-holders have been detained and quarantined in China, regardless of their possible exposure to the virus; the Mexican government is sending a plane to retrieve its citizens.
- The Big Picture tackles human landscapes from above.
- Feeling overlooked on the world stage, South Korea is launching a national branding campaign. The Los Angeles Times has an idea for a slogan: “South Korea: Way better than you think it is.”
Got a suggestion? .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) your link.