Apart from news and views on media covering tourism, travel, and hospitality, writers, editors, photogs, and bloggers share tips, leads, ideas, news, gripes. PR reps/journos ISO press releases/trips, see also "PR/Marketing." Opinions stated are not necessarily those of Tripatini.

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A tribute to my friend, the late travel media icon Arthur Frommer

  The legendary U.S. travel journalist and entrepreneur Arthur Frommer passed away November 18 at the age of 95. Born in Virginia and with an early boyhood in a small town in Missouri, Arthur was a lawyer who became a pioneering and great travel journalist, and who will be remembered as having helped open the joys of travel to the masses. While serving in the U.S. Army in Europe in the 1950s, he got the travel bug, came out with a travel guide for servicemen, and followed up in 1957 with…

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1 Reply · Reply by José Balido Nov 24

Free access to Encyclopaedia Britannica for journalists

My editor at Encyclopaedia Britannica has asked me to extend this offer to all my journalist colleagues. You are invited to enjoy free access to all its factchecked resources, and if you do link to a Britannica story in your articles, none of the content linked to will be paywalled. Your readers in turn will have full and free access to Britannica's content. To get your free, personal subscription, just go to britannica.com/journalists and enter the code: EXPERT-CONTENT.

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1 Reply · Reply by Michael Raviv Jul 18

What do you wear to Seven Magic Mountains?

Seven Magic Mountains is an art installation located in the Nevada desert, and the weather can be quite hot and dry. Therefore, it is recommended to wear comfortable and breathable clothing, such as shorts, t-shirts, and sandals or sneakers. You may also want to bring a hat, sunglasses, and sunscreen to protect yourself from the sun. It's also a good idea to bring a bottle of water to stay hydrated. While there is no strict dress code, it's important to dress appropriately for the weather and…

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1 Reply · Reply by Surendra Singh Aug 7, 2023

What is global entry?

Global Entry is a program that allows pre-approved travelers to expedite the process of entering the United States.To apply for Global Entry, you must be a citizen or national of the United States, Mexico, or Canada and have a valid passport. You can also be a lawful permanent resident of the U.S., Canada, or Mexico.Once you have applied for Global Entry and been approved, you will receive an email with instructions on how to complete your interview appointment at any U.S. Customs and Border…

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  • Good comments, all -- well-thought out (well, this has been on our minds) and well said. The two comments I'll make here are unrelated to each other:
    1. At a recent meeting of SATW's Editors Council, more than one panelist argued that writers will make more money creating an iPhone app than writing a guidebook.
    2. After six years living part-time in Greenwich Village, I'm still impressed by the overwhelming tendency of tourists to wander around my nabe with guidebooks in their hands. What's more, it's almost always open to the map pages.
  • On a different (bank)note, media star salaries apparently are soaring even as every other writer has seen his/her income plummet or disappear, and I'm wondering... is this a sign the Dark Ages are coming to a close, or is this the media industry equivalent of what's been happening on Wall Street (the top dogs get the fat paychecks while America collects unemployment checks)?
  • I've never been "in print" for the past 15 years of producing travel content. Mostly because it limited you mostly to text printed on paper. Internet outlets let me use text, photos and videos. My current project on Facebook is an excellent example, www.facebook.com/30daysinparis . People would much rather see it than read it. My hope is that in the future mobile device users will find it helpful.
  • Traditional Guidebooks in print are fading, not dead. I've researched and written guidebooks for 20 years. Its print hayday was until internet was in nearly every home. Even 5 years ago, you could just put lists together or organize info in some format and folks bought it - just to save time. Now, for many, time doesn't equal money...and they love the glitz of electronics. So, if the market is discovering new venues...a guidebook writer must re-discover their bent. We're currently re-inventing our company for 2011. One, offering electronic options PLUS print. Two, focusing more on what isn't on the internet - insights, cautions, organized paths...something we've done well all along but didn't have to focus on so much. My advice to newbies in guidebooks - make sure it's very unique, that you have credibility (not just a list researcher), and be prepared to have a very modest income from sales - oh, even with active author marketing. Without all that, decide to write one based on personal goals because it won't be worth the time/effort unless it's your one and only passion. Hope: Generation Y are tech savvy but are predicted to turn back to nostalgia and creating memories vs. accummulating things. Travel fits that bill.
  • I've already seen this change on a micro scale with the iPad. Friends living abroad have visited NYC--iPads in hand--and are using them as instant interactive references, complete with maps, current "where to" lists, visuals and user-generated content/e-opinions. They even accessed language and menu apps ... this will be the game-changer.
  • Cinemas and DVDs serve different purposes. We go to the movies for an experience, just as those of us who read books do so for a certain kind of experience that's different from scanning a website. Guidebooks in the book format will evolve to assume a different role, until they are replaced by digital media entirely. Sure...the pre-holiday planning stuff in books is probably near-obsolete, but the handheld book can and should provide intelligent, enlightening and informative reading for people who travel to learn, or want personal access to reliable information, facts, anecdotes and backstory. Guidebooks should help literate travelers to better understand their destination.
  • Guidebooks are dead like the movie theaters were dead after DVDs replaced them.
  • I agree that guidebook will be around for a while longer but will morph from hard copy to digital books.
  • Obviously I'm biased, since I'm currently working on a guidebook, but I still can't help feeling that there are still a reasonable number of people out there who don't have hi-tech enough phones, or want to disconnect, or want to be able to unobtrusively check out the bus route to X or the exact street location of Y without flashing an expensive bit of kit around. Maybe for big-name destinations - Paris, Venice, NYC - internet stuff and apps might be enough, but in places where finding people who speak your language is harder, or the traveller is less likely to speak the language, or that are just that bit more niche, I reckon guidebooks still have a way to go. I suspect Allan is also right, though, in that they need to get beyond being generic listings and give genuine spirit and local colour - see, for instance, the tactic which Lonely Planet seems to be using more of in recent editions, of including interviews with interesting local characters.
  • Ed, I don't think the guidebook is dead just yet. I do think that books put out today have to go beyond the obvious and point out more that the top 10 heavily visited tourist spots of a destination. Also, there are still parts of this world...many of them highly sought out by travelers...that still lack access to all of our modern electronic information capabilities.

    I still carry a pocket sized guide when I'm in an unfamiliar place. It's quicker than looking something up online when I really need an answer fast.
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