Travel Blog: News and Briefs

Why Don’t Americans Take Vacations? This Land is Already ‘Leisure Land.’

Photo by m o d e via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

That’s the half-baked argument of
Up in the Air
author and sometime travel commentator Walter Kirn. He writes in a part-serious, part-amusing, part-you’ll-yank-your-hair-out piece in Sunday’s New York Times magazine: “Grasping the truth about why more Americans are taking holidays from their vacations is as easy as stepping outside your workplace (the lushest of which tempt employees to stay inside by offering lap pools, massage rooms and the like) and seeing that the recuperative promises of the old-style extended getaway—the cleansing, amusing, soothing, stamina-raising therapeutic interludes that Eleanor Roosevelt once touted as a way for Americans ‘to build up health and resistance’—are redeemable everywhere, in every form and so close by that it’s a wonder thousand-mile drives in gear-packed station wagons still take place at all.”

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The World Hum Travel Zeitgeist: From Cinque Terre to the Great Barrier Reef

Iconic destinations in Italy, Australia, California and the Pacific Ocean are at the top of travelers’ minds this week, as well as a topic that’s more controversial than Hillary Clinton. Here’s the Zeitgeist. 

Most E-Mailed Travel Story
New York Times (current)
36 Hours in the Cinque Terre, Italy

Most Read Feature
World Hum (posted this week)
The Lost World of Nigeria

Most E-Mailed Travel Story
USA Today (current)
Through the Roof: A Tour of the Country’s Priciest Hotel Suite
* The cost to stay in the Ty Warner Penthouse at the Four Seasons New York? $30,000 a night. 

Most Viewed Travel Story
Telegraph UK (current)
Exploring the Great Barrier Reef

Most Read Weblog Post
World Hum (posted this week)
Voluntourism: ‘Overpriced Guilt Trips’ or a ‘Real Chance to Save the World’?

“Hot This Week” Destination
Yahoo! (this week)
Hawaii

Most Viewed Travel Post
BlogHer (current)
The W Hotel: Form over Function?

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Amtrak to Overnight Travelers: Drink Up!

The last Amtrak train I took in California was delayed so long it fouled up my weekend plans and nearly drove me to drink. Now Amtrak is going out of its way to get some passengers liquored up. It’s offering $100 in alcohol credit to members of its guest rewards program traveling between November and January in sleeper cars on select legs of the California Zephyr, Southwest Chief and Silver Meteor. According to the AP, it’s “part of an effort to revive some of the luxury of old-fashioned, cross-country train trips.” And it’ll help some passengers drown their Amtrak travel sorrows.

Related on World Hum:
* ‘Hey America, Make With the !@~$ High-Speed Rail Already

Photo by tompagenet via Flickr, (Creative Commons).


Where in the World Are You, Tom Haines?

The subject of our latest nearly up-to-the-minute interview with a traveler somewhere in the world: Tom Haines, travel writer at the Boston Globe. His response landed in our inbox this morning.

World Hum: Where in the world are you?

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Interview With TSA Chief Kip Hawley

Today security expert Bruce Schneier posts the last piece of a five-part interview with Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for the Transportation Security Administration Kip Hawley. The TSA chief has taken some public flogging during his tenure, and perhaps in an effort to rehabilitate the TSA’s poor image among travelers, he traded e-mails with Schneier. For his part, Schneier asked some tough questions. His first includes this: “Can you please convince me there’s not an Office for Annoying Air Travelers?” Let us know if you think Hawley’s answers should cause us to drop or raise the World Hum Travel-Terror Fatigue Level.

Related on World Hum:
* Man Detained by TSA for Writing ‘Kip Hawley is an Idiot’ on His Clear Plastic Carry-On Bag
* Security Expert: New Passports Vulnerable to Cloning, Sabotage
* Passports and Privacy: Here Come the RFID Chips


Video: ‘Airplane!’ vs. ‘Zero Hour’

“Airplane!,” a comedy classic and one of the greatest travel movies ever made, was famously inspired by the 1957 B-movie Zero Hour. How inspired? YouTuber icecoldkatie has meticulously spliced together scenes from each movie, demonstrating Picasso’s maxim, “Bad artists copy. Great artists steal.” See for yourself after the jump.

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U.S. State Department’s New Cultural Ambassadors: Ozomatli

Never mind that members of the Los Angeles-based Latin-funk-rock band Ozomatli oppose just about everything the Bush administration stands for. At the behest of the U.S. State Department, they’re touring the Middle East and beyond, from Jordan and Egypt to India and Nepal, as cultural ambassadors. “Our world standing has deteriorated,” saxophonist Ulises Bella told the Los Angeles Times. “I’m totally willing and wanting to give a different image of America than America has given over the last five years.”

Heading…

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Russia to Plant Flag on North Pole Sea Bed

Photo of the Arctic Sea by wili_hybrid, via Flickr (Creative Commons).

It’s provocative actions like this that we had in mind when we selected the Northwest Passage as one of our Seven Wonders of the Shrinking Planet. According to the AP and other media reports, Russia’s Rossiya icebreaker has reached the North Pole, clearing way for scientists “to dive in two mini-submarines beneath the pole to a depth of more than 13,200 feet, and drop a metal capsule containing the Russian flag on the sea bed.” The goal of the expedition: to solidify a claim to the enormous oil and gas reserves that are believed to be stored beneath the floor of the Arctic Sea. Russia, however, isn’t the only country with interest in controlling the area.

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Update: Starwood Closing Virtual Aloft Hotel in Second Life

Image of Aloft Hotel via Starwood Hotels & Resorts.

That was fast. Last year, Starwood created some buzz for its new Aloft hotel brand by debuting an outpost in the virtual world Second Life. Now, according to the Los Angeles Times, the experiment is over. “There’s not a compelling reason to stay,” said Brian McGuinness, vice president of Aloft, a part of Starwood Hotels & Resorts. McGuinness says the virtual property did serve a purpose—the idea for radios in the showers at real-world Alofts, among other things, came from suggestions by Second Life users.

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New Travel Book: ‘The Year of the Goat’

Full title: “The Year of the Goat: 40,000 Miles and the Quest for the Perfect Cheese”

Authors: Margaret Hathaway, with photographs by Karl Schatz. Hathaway, according to the book’s Web site, “loves any combination of the following: reading, writing, cooking, napping, animal watching, traveling, making puppets, and being outdoors.” She also managed New York’s famed Magnolia Bakery. Schatz is “a photographer, picture editor, web designer, and journalist,” and the former online picture editor for Time Magazine. 

Released: August 1, 2007

Travel genre: Food narrative, cheese-and goat-based

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Suriname, Brand That Nation!

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Security Expert: New Passports Vulnerable to Cloning, Sabotage

Lukas Grunwald, “an e-passport consultant to the German parliament” according to a story in Wired, says the new U.S. passports have security flaws that could “allow someone to seize and clone the fingerprint image stored on the biometric e-passport, and to create a specially coded chip that attacks e-passport readers that attempt to scan it.” Grunwald is scheduled to elaborate on his findings at the DefCon conference in Las Vegas later this week. He’s one of many who have sounded alarms about the RFID chips in the new passports.


World Hum’s Most Read: July 2007

Our 10 most popular stories posted last month:
1) Seven Wonders of the Shrinking Planet
2) Ask Rolf: I’m in my Mid-40s. Am I Too Old to Stay in Hostels?
3) Chopsticks Faux Pas and Other Cultural Land Mines in Japan
4) ‘Man Overboard’: A Look at Cruise Ship Disappearances
5) The Death of the Mile-High Club
6) Three Travel Tips: Clever Uses for Your Digital Camera
7) Ask Rolf: Has Long-Term Travel Abroad Hurt My Chances of Landing a Job Back Home?
8) Leo Hickman: In Search of the True Cost of Travel
9) Honeymooning with Jaws (pictured)
10) How To: Eat Weisswurst in Munich


‘The Simpsons Movie’: From Serbia to Springfield, New Zealand

Of course, “The Simpsons” has been a near global phenomenon for years, but the recent release of “The Simpsons Movie” gave the Los Angeles Times a fine excuse to explore just how widespread the animated family’s popularity is—and the resulting challenges producers face. Today’s story notes, among other oddities, the 12-foot-tall glazed donut sculpture built by Fox at the entrance to Springfield, New Zealand, a town so small it doesn’t have a movie theater but that, nevertheless, drew more than 3,000 people last week to “eat hot dogs, doughnuts and French fries and to greet Homer and Bart, who took the train from Christchurch 65 kilometers away for the event.” The show gets dubbed into 15 languages, but the movie has been dubbed into 31 languages, including Dutch and Thai. Adding all the required voice-overs hasn’t been easy.

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Chicago’s ‘Ghetto Bus Tour’: Listening to the ‘Voices of the Voiceless’

Photo of the now-demolished Robert Taylor Homes in Chicago by ChicagoEye, via Flickr (Creative Commons)

Rio. Lagos. Mumbai. Chicago? Indeed, “poverty tourism” has reached the shores of Lake Michigan. For $20, travelers can hop on a yellow school bus with Beauty Turner, a “magnetic 50-year-old with a preacher’s gift for turning a phrase,” according to a story in the Chicago Sun Times about her “Ghetto Bus Tour.” The AP, which also ran a piece on Turner and her tour, reports that it’s her “last gasp in her crusade to tell a different story about Chicago’s notorious housing projects, something other than well-known tales about gang violence so fierce that residents slept in their bathtubs to avoid bullets.”

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