Travel Blog: News and Briefs

Nevada’s Brothels Only Want to Help

Nevada’s Brothels Only Want to Help Photo by jotor via Flickr (Creative Commons).

Tourism and other forms of revenue are dropping off in Nevada and so the state’s brothels are offering to help out by paying their fair share of taxes, the New York Times reports. The state is not jumping to accept. Over at “The New Republic,” Michelle Cottle read the story and was intrigued to note that while prostitution is legal in some Nevada counties, “no county allows brothels to have men who sell sexual services.” She calls this discrimination and a lost business opportunity.


R.I.P. John Updike

The prolific, Pulitzer Prize-winning author has died at age 76. Though probably best-known for his novels—and particularly for his “Rabbit” series—Updike also produced numerous collections of short stories, poetry, essays and literary criticism. Whether he was chronicling one man’s desperate attempts to escape his pedestrian life in Brewer, Pennsylvania (in Rabbit, Run), or the simple joys of a small-town, Friday night football game (“In Football Season”; find it in The Early Stories), John Updike never failed to make the places, and times, that his characters moved through come vividly, memorably alive. The Los Angeles Times has a thoughtful obit.


Save the Joshua Tree (Again)

Save the Joshua Tree (Again) Photo by tomsaint11 via Flickr (Creative Commons).
Photo by tomsaint11, via Flickr (Creative Commons).

We’ve noted, rather sadly, that we can’t imagine Joshua Tree National Park without its signature Joshua tree. (Who can?) Scientists have warned that the giant yucca may disappear in 50 years because global warming is changing the desert’s fragile ecosystem. U2 famously showcased a Joshua tree on the Anton Corbijn-photographed cover of its 1987 album, and I wonder if the band silently praised it during its awesome pre-inaugural concert at the Lincoln Memorial (or at least after President Obama affirmed his faith in scientists and pledged to help them deal with a planet in peril.)

Ecopreneur John Ivanko is optimistic, if guardedly so. Ivanko, who recently visited the park with his family, offered this ode, with the hope that a new outlook will help save the imperiled, iconic tree and its park, and other “great places” in the natural world.

For nostalgia’s sake, here’s some Corbijn-shot footage of (then youthful) members of U2 wandering the desert.

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Pigs for Pets or Meat!

After reading about the poor standards of pork in Europe (where England gets most of its pork from), pig-eating British journalist Alex Renton became concerned. He puts blame on British supermarkets. He writes in the Guardian: “The fact is that price discounting (you may have noticed we’re in the midst of another ‘value’ war at the moment) has forced the price of pork so low that few farmers can make a profit on a pig, even when produced in a cage on the cheapest feed possible.” The answer, of course, is to stop eating pork, which Renton refused to do. So he took matters into his own hands (or, should I say, taste buds). “My pig is 11 months old now,” he writes admiringly of the piglet he’s now raising for the slaughter.

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From ‘A Case of You’ to ‘The Hockey Song’: Canada’s National Playlist Unveiled

Despite my earlier reservations, I was curious to see the results of the CBC’s search for a Canadian national playlist. Now, more than 100,000 votes later, 49 Songs from North of the 49th Parallel has been unveiled—and, presumably, presented to an unsuspecting President Obama. It’s a mixed bag of vintage rock, classical, jazz and folkier stuff—pop music is strikingly absent, while hip-hop received only a token mention—and probably says as much about CBC Radio’s demographics as it does about Canada. Still, it makes for an interesting read (spot any artists on there that you never realized were Canucks?) and I was tickled to see a couple of my favorites—the Tragically Hip, and the aforementioned hip-hopper, Shad—included.

One final quibble: sure, they’re all by Canadian artists, but I’m not sure how many of the tracks listed here achieve that ever-elusive goal of saying something meaningful about place. The list’s most powerful song in that respect, for my money, is Neil Young’s “Helpless.” Check out video of a live, unplugged performance of the song after the jump:

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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)

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Reading America: The Scavenger’s Guide to Haute Cuisine

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U.K. to Hotels: Lighten Up, Please!

U.K. to Hotels: Lighten Up, Please! Photo by B10m via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Postcards From China

Journalist James Fallows, who has been writing from China for The Atlantic since 2006, is just out with a new book, Postcards from Tomorrow Square. It collects some of his best China essays, covering Chinese politics, technology and culture. In the introduction, Fallows says if there’ s one thing he’s learned in two years as a China correspondent, it’s this: “No one can sensibly try to present the ‘real story’ or the ‘overall picture’ of this country. It is simply too big and too contradictory.” Amen.

For more of Fallows’ thoughts on China, see this recent Q&A with the ChinaBeat blog, or visit Fallows’ own blog for The Atlantic.


Martha Stewart’s Whipping Boy?

Food writer Sylvie Bigar sits down with chef Pierre Schaedelin to talk about how he went from top toque at Le Cirque to Martha Stewart’s whipping boy ... er ... chef to cooking at Alain Ducasse’s New York outpost of famed Paris eatery Benoit. What did Schaedelin learn from being Martha’s food slave ... uh, we mean personal chef? Discipline.


Unstoppable ‘Slumdog’: From Slum Tours to the Billboard Chart

Fresh off its slew of Oscar nominations, “Slumdog Millionaire” continues to rack up the headlines. In the Telegraph, Nigel Richardson reports on the surge in business that the film’s success has—predictably—brought for Mumbai’s controversial slum tour operators. Slum tours anywhere are a tricky business to begin with; something tells me that those Indians who are already less-than-thrilled about the film’s success—calling it, among other things, “a white man’s imagined India” and “a poverty tour”—will be even less happy to hear that it’s now inspiring tourists to flock to the real-life slums.

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Morning Links: Road Tripping ‘Amexica,’ Titty Ho and More

Morning Links: Road Tripping ‘Amexica,’ Titty Ho and More Photo by Ian Muttoo via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo of Toronto by Ian Muttoo via Flickr (Creative Commons)

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World Hum’s Most Viewed: Jan. 17-23

World Hum’s Most Viewed: Jan. 17-23 Image from video by Eric Testroete
Image from video by Eric Testroete

Our five most popular videos, slideshows and photos of the week:

1) Hawaii: Holoholo Wale
2) Streets of the World: Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C.
3) Times Square, New York City
4) ‘This is Japan!’ (pictured)
5) Matt Harding’s 2008 Dancing Video


What We Loved This Week: Street Food, Obama’s Inauguration and More

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

Frank Bures
I loved my new cookbook, The World of Street Foods: Easy Quick Meals to Cook at Home, which has everything from Tanzanian mango fritters to Thai tom yam to Libyan almond cookies to Mexican hot chocolate. Based I what I know, these recipes look like the real deal.

Jim Benning
Malcolm Gladwell’s hour-long talk on Book TV—you can watch it online here—about the role culture and communication can play in plane crashes. It’s utterly fascinating and changed the way I think about such things. (It’s also, it turns out, quite controversial.) Still, it makes me want to pick up his new book, Outliers: The Story of Success.

Valerie Conners
The inauguration of President Barack Obama, of course! But really, as I’ve tried to absorb the enormity of Tuesday, I’ve been moved by images from around the globe, particularly in this slideshow from Boston.com, which have offered such great perspective on how this moment has affected people well beyond U.S. borders.

Michael Yessis
Going to the National Mall and watching the inauguration. So, so cold out, but an overwhelming, beautiful experience.

Julia Ross
Of the many high points this week, I loved that Obama hightailed it over to the State Department on day two in office, bucked up our diplomats, and broke out his Indonesian. A global president = priceless.

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A Trip to Battery Park City

Photo by Rob Verger

I live not far from the Hudson’s shore in upper Manhattan, and on Friday last week after US Airways Flight 1549 ditched successfully in the river, I took the subway down to Battery Park City, where the plane had been secured at a pier. It was a sunny but cold day, and I wandered the area. It was quite a scene: the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Katherine Walker and police boats in the Hudson, emergency services equipment and personnel, and parts of the plane’s tail and left wing (seen here, in this picture I took) sticking up out of the water.

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