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.
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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On Spain's east coast, you say? That's news to me. Worse, this is not from some fly-by-night little blog; this is from about.com:
http://goeurope.about.com/gi/o.htm?zi=1/XJ&zTi=1&sdn=goeuro...
What other goofs have you found lately?
This had to be stopped, of course, but I'm concerned this kind of story will be used by a certain political party to bash welfare and justify further cuts. Of course we have to curb the abuse, but isn't there a real need to protect the neediest in our society?
Yep, Lee was one of the panelists. The other panelists were from Sutro Media which produces iPhone guidebook apps.
Betcha a quarter one of those Bay Area journalists was Lee Foster.
1) I've just returned from a trip to British Columbia. I took along a print guidebook (Lonely Planet) and an e-guidebook (Frommers). I used both, but consulted the printed guidebook more often.
2) At a Bay Area Travel Writers/American Society of Media Photographers meeting in San Francisco earlier this year, two guidebook writers gave a detailed comparison of their printed guidebooks and iPhone apps. They were spending far less time updating the iPhone apps, which would potentially have greater sales and produce more income than their print versions.
3) I recently wrote a three part blog post entitled "The Guidebook In Your iPhone". Here's the link to the first installment: http://bit.ly/bg8ago
"Earlier this year, I uploaded a fictitious nine-bedroom guesthouse – the 111 Hotel – using the address of the Telegraph Media Group and a picture of the office canteen. I added a couple of "over-the-top" reviews (with blatant hyperbole and five-star ratings). After 10 days of my constant tinkering it was finally spotted – but it was time enough for it to be rated in London's top 70 guesthouses (out of more than 300) and time enough for an unsuspecting traveller to be potentially duped into parting with a deposit or turning up at an address to be met by someone whose intentions would be unclear."
And now it looks like there'll be a class action suit against Tripadvisor because of unsubstantiated, business-killing comments.