Travel Blog

Motel 6 Gets an Upgrade

Motel 6 Gets an Upgrade Photo by qnr via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by qnr via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Yep, the roadside budget standby has got a flashy new interior design, described as “bold, sleek, frugal euro-modernism”—but don’t worry, the new look won’t affect the reliable prices. The Los Angeles Times has photos and a review.


British Tourists: Still ‘Pissing About’ in Latvia

And Riga’s mayor, Nils Usakovs, has had enough. Usakovs spilled to the Guardian about his frustration with the British stag parties that arrive via low-cost carrier, get good and drunk and, more often than not it seems, take a moment to urinate on the city’s Freedom Monument before flying home. “We have a stigma about British tourists,” said the mayor’s spokeswoman. “They are probably not the ones we want to see.”

Yet somehow, Americans are the ones stuck with the “ugly” label?


Freed U.S. Journalists Return Home From North Korea

Laura Ling and Euna Lee arrived in Los Angeles this morning after months of imprisonment. In the Daily Beast, World Hum contributor (and resident expert on Korean prisons) Cullen Thomas sheds some light on how the happy ending came to be.


Does the Taj Mahal Need a Ferris Wheel?

Does the Taj Mahal Need a Ferris Wheel? Photo by Koshyk via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by Koshyk via Flickr (Creative Commons)

The Telegraph’s Michael Kerr doesn’t think so. Kerr is unimpressed by the news that the Agra Development Authority is contemplating the addition of ropewalks, cable cars and a Ferris Wheel at the most famous mausoleum in the world, all in the name of “enhancing the visitor experience.” He writes: “The Taj Mahal, has, of course, long been a tourist trap, one of those sights that we can take in only as part of a swarm of camera-clicking visitors. Nearly three million people a year are drawn to visit it. Somehow, 360 years on, it is still surviving the swarm. The threat to it now has less to do with improvement than with greed, a greed that infantilises rather than enhances experience.”


Buckingham Palace: Jazz Landmark?

Buckingham Palace: Jazz Landmark? Photo by RightIndex via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by RightIndex via Flickr (Creative Commons)

So did you hear the one about Louis Armstrong and King George V? Satchmo shocked the court, in a 1932 gig at the royal residence, by offering His Majesty the following shout-out: “This one’s for you, Rex.” And that’s just one of several bizarre anecdotes in this story from the Telegraph, about the unlikely history of jazz at Buckingham Palace and its resulting nomination to a list of seminal U.K. jazz venues.

I’ve never had much urge to visit the palace when I’ve been in London, but suddenly I’m intrigued.


Travel Movie Watch: ‘The Tourist’

The French thriller Anthony Zimmer is being remixed for English speakers as “The Tourist,” starring Charlize Theron and Sam Worthington. Theron will play an agent who seduces an unwitting American tourist in order to lure a criminal mastermind out of hiding, while Worthington will play either the tourist or the agent’s dastardly quarry—either way, if the trailer for the original is anything to go by, there will be plenty of intrigue on TGV trains and other French eye candy for armchair travelers. The movie is due out in late 2010.

Here’s that original trailer, un-subtitled I’m afraid:

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Travel Song of the Day: ‘Lights’ by Journey


Safaris: Saviors of the Printed Word?

Safaris: Saviors of the Printed Word? Photo by doug88888 via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by doug88888 via Flickr (Creative Commons)

In the latest installment of Bookspotting, Book Bencher Vicky Raab spied Wired’s New York editor, Mark Horowitz, toting a stack of travel books—real ones, in hard copy!—in preparation for an African safari. What, no Kindle?

Raab writes: “Horowitz acknowledged that he was ‘totally Kindlized,’ but he was a bit worried about recharging, and none of the titles he had purchased are available as downloads. Still, he said that he may bring his along for the plane ride.”

Fair enough. The man does work for Wired, after all. His list of essential pre-safari titles is a good one, with everyone from Isak Dinesen and Peter Matthiessen to Stanley and Livingstone represented.


Harrods: ‘The Ultimate Bespoke Travel Agency’

Harrods: ‘The Ultimate Bespoke Travel Agency’ Photo by sonewfangled via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by sonewfangled via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Forget about those discount holiday packages on sale at the grocery checkout counter: Travel-retail fusion has gone upscale. The personal shoppers at Harrods, the venerable London department store, are now offering customized holiday bookings—with a low, low minimum purchase of £2,500. And the maximum? There isn’t one. Over the course of a few phony phone calls, the Times Online’s Mark Rudd took the new travel service for a test drive.


What Travelers Can Learn From Dos Equis

Do you live vicariously through yourself? World Hum contributor Kelsey Timmerman takes a look at a popular Dos Equis ad campaign and warns travelers about succumbing to The Most Interesting Man in the World Syndrome when they return home.


$20 Per Gallon? Say it Ain’t So.

A recent New York Times interview with Chris Steiner, author of the new book $20 Per Gallon, has caused a bit of a stir in the blogosphere. Andrew Sullivan buys into Steiner’s argument that higher gas prices could jump start innovation and be, on balance, a good thing, while Outside the Beltway’s James Joyner thinks that $20 per gallon “would really, really suck”:

Now, it’s quite conceivable that the forced innovation would indeed make our lives better in ways that I can’t imagine ... But the transitional impact would be absolutely devastating for most people. Even Steiner admits that whole industries—from airlines to amusement parks to sushi restaurants—would go under. Almost all homes outside urban centers would be simultaneously unlivable and unsellable. Only the independently wealthy would be able to travel abroad. Essentially, we’d set our lifestyles back a hundred years.


Has the ‘Obama Effect’ hit Hawaii?

Has the ‘Obama Effect’ hit Hawaii? Photo by mandolin davis via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by mandolin davis via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Slate’s Moneybox columnist, Daniel Gross, recently headed to Hawaii to see if the islands’ tourism industry was seeing an Obama bump.  The verdict: “This unreimbursed, hazard-filled assignment—sunburn, expensive macadamia nuts—yielded some surprising findings. Like the stimulus package, the Obama Effect, while holding the promise of gains down the road, hasn’t been able to overcome a sour economic climate.”


Travel Song of the Day: ‘Chelsea’ by Counting Crows


Contiki: ‘Backpacking is so 1997’

Contiki: ‘Backpacking is so 1997’ Photo by kreativitea via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by kreativitea via Flickr (Creative Commons)

So said a message that the popular bus tour company posted on Facebook awhile back, with the added boast that Contiki holidays were “hundreds of dollars” cheaper than independent travel in Europe. Nomadic Matt objected—and now he’s crunched the numbers to prove Contiki wrong, on the savings claim at least. As for backpacking being “so 1997”? I guess that’s subjective.


In Defense of Martha’s Vineyard

In Defense of Martha’s Vineyard Photo by twoblueday via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by twoblueday via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Tom Swick may think President Obama could have done better for a vacation spot, but Lonely Planet’s Robert Reid begs to differ. Here’s his compelling list of 22 reasons why Obama was right to pick Martha.

Incidentally, Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. would probably agree. Gates told Travel + Leisure in 2007 that the Vineyard was his favorite place.