Archive for the 'Travel News' Category

R.I.P. Ballooning Brazilian Priest

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

Father Adelir Antonio de Carli was found off the Brazilian coast this week. The priest had taken flight in April via hundreds of helium-filled balloons to “help raise money for a chapel for truckers in his highway parish,” Reuters reports.

Related on World Hum:

* Lawn Chair Ballooning: Serene or Idiotic?

A380 Makes Landmark U.S. Flight Today, But ‘White Tails’ Could Still Ensue

Saturday, August 2nd, 2008

imageAn Emirates A380 is scheduled to touch down at JFK this afternoon, marking the behemoth A380’s first commercial journey to the U.S. But that doesn’t mean all is well in the airline manufacturing industry. And that leads us to our travel lexicon lesson of the day, courtesy of the New York Times. “The spreading downturn causes some analysts to wonder if aircraft makers will be left with ‘white tails’—industry slang for planes that are built without customers to accept them, leaving their tails unpainted.” It’s like the airplane equivalent of an unpainted Easter egg. That’s just wrong.

Related on World Hum:

* The Airbus A380: ‘The Mother Load’

Photo by frielp via Flickr, (Creative Commons).

Has Paris Become a ‘Backwater’?

Monday, July 28th, 2008

imageThis New Zealand Herald story asserts that, when it comes to arts and culture, Paris has become “second string” to Berlin, New York and London. Catherine Field writes, “[T]he worshippers these days are consumers, not creators. They are mainly foreign tourists who come to see the eternal Mona Lisa, post-modern American artists, the French Impressionists and Moliere. The city chemistry that produced rawness, dynamism, change and challenge seems absent.” This comes on the heels of Donald Morrison’s Time magazine piece, The Death of French Culture.

Related on World Hum:

* David Sedaris on Flea Markets and Foods Courts in Paris

Photo by izarbeltza via Flickr, (Creative Commons)

Dave Barry in Costa Rica: ‘A Nation Located in South or Central America, or Possibly Europe’

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

The Pulitzer Prize-winning funnyman has apparently figured out where it is, because he’s been blogging from Costa Rica about his travels. He’s seen lots of monkeys, and he went zip-lining, “which is a sport where the object is to look like the world’s biggest dork,” he writes. “I was very good at it.” Judge for yourself.

Related on World Hum:

* Onion Video: Andorra is ‘Not in Africa’

Hope for Pyongyang’s ‘Hotel of Doom’?

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

imageThe pyramid-shaped, 105-story Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang, North Korea, has been languishing—unfinished—for 16 years. But now Egyptian developers have begun refurbishing what was once dubbed “the worst building in the history of mankind,” Reuters reports. It’s estimated to cost $2 billion—about 10 percent of North Korea’s annual economic output—to finish the skyline-dominating eyesore.

Related on World Hum:

* The Ryugyong Hotel: ‘The Worst Building in the History of Mankind’?

Photo via Wikipedia Commons

New Travel Book: ‘Queen of the Road’

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

imageFull title: Queen of the Road: The True Tale of 47 States, 22,000 Miles, 200 Shoes, 2 Cats, 1 Poodle, a Husband and a Bus with a Will of its Own

Author: Doreen Orion

Released: June 2008

Travel genre: Couples cross-country travel

Territory covered: North America

EcoFlight Gives ‘Big Picture’ View of Environmental Hot Spots

Saturday, July 12th, 2008

What’s it like seeing a panoramic view of Colorado’s Roan Plateau? With all that wild beauty, you’d think it would be a beautiful thing. But from the cockpit of an EcoFlight plane, you see its dismal fate: Rich with fossil fuels, it’s been dissected by gas fields. Bruce Gordon started the Aspen, Colorado-based company in 2002 to give people aerial tours of U.S. public land threatened by such development and environmental malfeasance. 

Does Creme Brulee Qualify as a Global Treasure? UNESCO Says No.

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

imageUNESCO just inscribed 27 new sites to its World Heritage List— the usual mix of archaeological, architectural, ecclesiastical and ecological places. French cuisine didn’t make the cut, despite a campaign led by President Nicolas Sarkozy to enshrine it. Did the coq au vin fail to inspire? 

The Long Descent: US Airways to Cut Movies on Domestic Flights

Wednesday, July 9th, 2008

The airline says few people are wiling to shell out $5 for headsets anymore. No surprise there. Eliminating in-flight movies will save the airline $10 million a year. Among the reasons why: Just removing the player systems, which, according to Bloomberg News, weigh about 500 pounds, will help save fuel. (via Today in the Sky)

Related on World Hum:

* The Long Descent: US Airways to Charge $2 for Soft Drinks

‘Great Orlando Wheel’ Announced With Hypnotic, Over-the-Top Promotional Video

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Oh, the hyperbole! I’ll bet the first minute and a half of this clip offers more entertainment than the 400-foot-tall Great Orlando Wheel ever will when it opens in central Florida in 2010. See for yourself.