Travel Blog

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Interview With a Celebrity Chef: Govind Armstrong

Interview With a Celebrity Chef: Govind Armstrong Photo courtesy of Table 8 at the Cooper Square Hotel
Photo courtesy of Table 8 at the Cooper Square Hotel

Govind Armstrong may not yet be 40 years old, but the dreadlocked chef is already a veteran in the kitchen, having logged time in some of the world’s most famous restaurants.

It all started at the improbable age of 13 when Armstrong found himself working at Spago, Wolfgang Puck’s celebrated Los Angeles restaurant. Now, after working in some of the most acclaimed kitchens in Los Angeles and Spain, he’s on the verge of his own restaurant empire. The Los Angeles and South Beach outposts of Table 8 won rave reviews, and now he’s about to take his biggest leap yet: New York.

On his way up the celebrity-chef ladder, he’s found himself on Iron Chef America, as a judge on Top Chef and on People magazine’s “50 Most Beautiful People” list.

I met up with Chef Armstrong at the Cooper Square Hotel in New York’s East Village where he’s putting the finishing touches on the Big Apple outpost of Table 8.


No Shark Dives Here, Say Oahu Residents

No Shark Dives Here, Say Oahu Residents Photo by hermanusbackpacker via Flickr (Creative Commons).

There are a handful of critters I hope never to get all that close to. Sharks are on the top of that list; I’d rather share my time in the water with occupants that don’t potentially see me as food. But plenty of tourists are more than willing to shell out $120 (give or take) to get in the water with the thing I so fear, “secure cage” or no.

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Morning Links: Electric Cars, Award-Winning Toilets and More

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Flyover America: 10 (More) Songs for an American Road Trip

Flyover America: 10 (More) Songs for an American Road Trip Photo by Anonymous Account via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by Anonymous Account via Flickr (Creative Commons)

While the invention of iTunes has made things far easier than the days when we had to go through stack and stacks of cassettes to create the perfect on-the-road mix tapes, there’s still an art to creating the perfect road-trip playlist.

It takes time, thought, a sense of humor, and a wide-ranging music collection in whatever digital format you prefer. It also needs a theme. It can be about a mood, a time of day, your love for hot dogs, or whatever. You don’t even have to announce the theme. You don’t have to name the playlist “hot dog music” but, to make it all hang together, the theme must at least be in your mind during the song selection process.

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Wanted: Books From North of the 60th Parallel

Wanted: Books From North of the 60th Parallel Photo by Noel Zia Lee via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by Noel Zia Lee via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Growing up, I was fascinated by the idea of the Arctic. I can remember trying out some of the strange place names of the North—Whitehorse and Yellowknife, Great Slave Lake, Tuktoyaktuk—and reading Jack London or reciting The Cremation of Sam McGee in school.

Now, finally, I’m headed “north of 60” (that is, beyond the 60th parallel that divides Canada’s provinces from our northern territories) to spend part of the summer in the Yukon, and it occurs to me: I know almost nothing about the North in the present day.

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Southwest and JetBlue to Face Off in Guitar Hero Challenge

Photo by Byron and Tamara, via Flickr (Creative Commons)

There’s plenty of bad news out there about the airline industry these days, and things like swine flu, or the very dumb decision to buzz Lower Manhattan in a presidential 747 aren’t making people any happier.

So, I decided to focus on something a little more lighthearted here: an airline Guitar Hero showdown.

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Morning Links: Swine Flu and Travel, Antarctic Ice and More

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Travel Movie Watch: ‘The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test’


Move over, Fear and Loathing. There’s a new drug-addled, road tripping book-turned-movie in town. A film adaptation of Tom Wolfe’s The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test—which follows Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters cross-country in a school bus named “Further”—is due out in 2010. Production details are still thin on the ground, but the New York Times notes that Gus van Sant will direct, while Dustin Lance Black, who recently won an Oscar for writing van Sant’s “Milk,” will provide the screenplay.

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Morning Links: How Travel Publishing is Like Climbing Kilimanjaro, a Hasty Cleveland Video and More

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Flyover America: 10 Songs for an American Road Trip

Flyover America: 10 Songs for an American Road Trip Photo by dsearls via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by dsearls via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Forty-seven percent of road trip success is having the right soundtrack. (The rest is route, scenery, and snacks.)

This week Jenna and I offer you our Flyover America Mix—10 songs each (though we could think of many more) about flyover states. Of course, road songs needn’t have places in them, but that’s just a little extra fun.

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Dhani Tackles Poetry: ‘The Great White Caddy’

Photo by Sarah Beri, Red Line Films

NFL linebacker and Renaissance man Dhani Jones hosts the new Travel Channel show, Dhani Tackles the Globe.

Like any good Renaissance man, he’s writing poems inspired by the travel experiences featured on each show.

The topic of tonight’s journey: Surf life saving in Australia.







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May Day Is Lei Day in Hawaii

May Day Is Lei Day in Hawaii Photo by Nerd's Eye View via Flickr (Creative Commons

May 1, 1928, was the first Lei Day, the holiday that celebrates the Hawaiian tradition of making and wearing leis. Island festivities include lei-making contests and Prom King and Queen-like coronations. After the contests are over, the leis are taken to the tombs of the ali’i—the Hawaiian royalty—and left there as offerings. I’m more than a little delighted to be arriving in Kaua’i just in time for the island’s Lei Day festivities. There’s a rather nice video montage of some older and new Lei Day photos here:

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The Carter Family Fold: The Most Joyous Place in the World

The Carter Family Fold: The Most Joyous Place in the World Photo by Jenna Schnuer.
Photo by Jenna Schnuer

Try as I might, I’ve been having trouble pushing off the gray cast that seems to have settled over my brain. Damned economy. But, over the last few days, thanks to trips of days past, there’s been some relief. I’ve been clicking through my mental View-Master® (and my photos) to temporarily step back into some truly happy moments.

I’m convinced that if I keep building the stack, it’ll topple the gray. One surprise stop on my magical mood-bender tour came in Hiltons, Virginia, at the Carter Family Fold. Part of the Carter Family Memorial Music Center—owned by the first family of country music—the Fold hosts a weekly old time and bluegrass music show.

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Morning Links: Swine Flu and Travel, Viewing North Korea and More

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