Travel Blog

D.C.’s Obama Souvenir Trail: Good, Bad and Ugly

D.C.’s Obama Souvenir Trail: Good, Bad and Ugly Photo by Julia Ross.

There’s nothing like a presidential inauguration to stoke Washington’s entrepreneurial spirit. With the big event less than a month away, Obama souvenirs are multiplying like “real Americans” at a Sarah Palin rally. I’m keeping an eye out for particularly egregious examples, but here’s a snapshot of what I’ve seen around town thus far:

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The Three Literary Capitals of the World?

Conde Nast Traveler has chosen Berlin, Dublin and Boston as its three best cities for bookworms. They’re all worthy choices, but still, I have to ask: Was this list originally titled, “Three Best Cities for Bookworms, Not Counting Paris and London”?

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Morning Links: Wynn’s Encore, a ‘Sadistic’ Geography Quiz and More


World Hum’s Most Read: Dec. 13-19

Istanbul, Street Food iStockphoto
iStockphoto

Our five most popular features and blog posts for the week:

1) World Hum’s Top 40 Travel Songs of All Time
2) Can ‘The Moses Project’ Stop the Tides in Venice?
3) Berlin’s DDR Museum: ‘There Must Be a Microphone Around Here Someplace’
4) Subcontinental Homesick Blues
5) Eight Best Cities for Street Food (pictured)


What We Loved This Week: Christmas in Germany, ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ and More

German Christmas Market Photo by Terry Ward

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Bollywood Comes to Miami

Well here’s a new twist on an old theme. Instead of a Hollywood movie exposing American travelers to new and exotic locations (say, New Zealand, Colombia, or… Wyoming), it looks like Bollywood is set to launch some of its legions of fans towards a domestic tourism hotspot: Miami. The newest Indian blockbuster, Dostana, was shot entirely in South Florida, and the Greater Miami tourism bureau is calling it “one big postcard” for the city.

The movie follows the story of two men who pretend to be a gay couple so they can move in with their landlady’s (predictably stunning) niece. Singing, dancing, juicy beach shots, and plenty of intense gazes ensue. (And yes, we’ve got video after the jump.)

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Morning Links: GlobalPost, 3 a.m. Dining and More


Music That Migrates

We’ve been on a road music kick this week at World Hum—and we’re not the only ones. Over at Matador Nights, David Miller offers up a compelling list of musicians who have influenced travelers in the last decade.

When you travel, you come face to face (or ear to speaker) with the music that belongs to the places you go, Miller writes, but “there is also the music that seems to travel itself, migrating from one area to the next—making its way into hostels and DJ stacks, becoming part of local culture abroad, and also returning home with you.” Among his picks? Manu Chao (who’s also one of our Seven Wonders of the Shrinking Planet), Bajofondo Tango Club, Daft Punk, and the entire Marley clan.


Pigging Out

Pigging Out Photo: the_toe_stubber via Flickr, (Creative Commons)
Photo: the_toe_stubber via Flickr, (Creative Commons)

David Sedaris put it best in Me Talk Pretty One Day when he recalled meeting his boyfriend and eventually settling in France: “I wound up in Normandy the same way my mother wound up in North Carolina: you meet a guy, relinquish a tiny bit of control, and the next thing you know, you’re eating a different part of the pig.”

It’s true—at least about the pig part: I once watched a sow get slaughtered in the Czech hinterlands and the first offerings turned out to be the beast’s brains, followed by its heart, its blood (as soup), and, finally, fried nuggets of pig fat. But I’d never encountered such parts on the menus of restaurants in the United States. That is, until now.

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China-Taiwan Flights Go Daily

Travel between rivals China and Taiwan got a whole lot easier this week. Airlines launched more than 100 daily weekly flights between the two sides, stepping up a historic opening in travel kicked off last summer with weekend charter flights. Two travelers set to take advantage of the new policy: “Tuan Tuan” and “Yuan Yuan,” giant pandas expected to arrive in Taipei Dec. 23 as a gift from the mainland. Their names linked together—“tuanyuan”—mean “reunion” in Mandarin, a not-so-subtle hint that the Chinese government would like to see Taiwan return to the fold.


Morning Links: Idlewild Books, Disaster Tourism and More

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Just How Skillful Are Kidnappers in Mexico?

They reportedly kidnapped an anti-kidnapping expert from the United States who was in northern Mexico conducting security seminars. “I do a lot of security consulting, and the last thing I think of is being a victim in the process,” a fellow expert told the New York Times. “Talk about turning the tables.” Kidnappings in Mexico are at an all-time high this year.


Movie Tourism: ‘An Obsessively Ridiculous, Embarrassing, Empty, and Needy Exercise’?

Movie Tourism: ‘An Obsessively Ridiculous, Embarrassing, Empty, and Needy Exercise’? Photo by kennymatic via Flickr (Creative Commons)
Photo by Eva Holland

I’ve been thinking lately about the motivations behind movie tourism—not the “Wow, New Zealand sure looked beautiful in that elf movie” variety, but the literal, “X was filmed here” brand of movie-related travel. What is it that prompts people to run up the steps, Rocky-style, in Philadelphia, or to slide into a booth at New York’s Katz’s Deli and gigglingly declare, “I’ll have what she’s having”?

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Dirt Candy, Anyone?

Hi there. I’m David Farley, World Hum’s resident food blogger. World Hum asked me to cover dining and food after recently watching me consume food and drink with eyebrow-raising fury at a New York restaurant. When I was young—we’re talking five and six years old—I received constant accolades from my mom for my eating prowess. And while I’m not necessarily in the same league with, say, Andrew Zimmern, I’ll still try just about anything at least once. Which means I’ve eaten everything from insects to the innards of large mammals. But when it comes to food, I can be quite the fancy boy (I love foie gras) and completely unfussy (I also love burgers and fried chicken).

With that behind me, Dirt Candy, anyone?

You can’t judge a book by its cover, so should you judge a restaurant by its name? Probably not. But would you want to eat at a vegetarian restaurant called Dirt Candy? Metromix recently named the worst-named new restaurants in New York.


R.I.P. Richard Marks

Marks suffered from leprosy, aka Hansen’s Disease. Like thousands of others with the disease, he was banished to the Kalaupapa leprosy colony on the Hawaiian Island of Molokai. Marks helped overturn the quarantine, and he remained on the island, operating a tour company and educating travelers about the disease. He also “achieved his goal of establishing Kalaupapa National Historical Park in 1980 with the help of late Hawai’i congresswoman Patsy Mink,” according to the obituary in the Honolulu Advertiser. He was 79.