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Tag: tourists

  • When is it time to take down holiday decorations? DC locals and tourists weigh in. – WTOP News

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    WTOP polled tourists and locals at the National Christmas Tree at the Ellipse, and other D.C. locations, who gave a range of opinions.

    While Christmas was more than a week ago and we are now in a new year, there is a question a lot of us are asking ourselves: Is it time to take down the holiday decorations?

    WTOP polled tourists and locals at the National Christmas Tree at the Ellipse, and other D.C. locations, who had a lot to say on the topic.

    “That’s a good question. The older I’ve gotten, the longer I’ve sometimes left them up,” Lori, from Northern Virginia, said. “I used to be a lot more rigid when I was younger.”

    Lori said she was disappointed the National Christmas Tree is no longer lit at night. The last night for the tree was on Jan. 1.

    While normally, Lori said her family takes down their decorations after the Epiphany on Jan. 6, her husband, Rich, said he follows the golden marriage rule when it comes to decorations.

    “We’ll take them down when Lori says it’s time to take them down,” Rich said, while laughing.

    Outside the Willard Hotel, which is still decorated for the holidays, Perla from Ottawa, Canada, who’s taking in the sights, said she is on the same page as Lori.

    “A week after New Year’s. It’s a tradition, yeah,” Perla said. “We wait until Jesus’ baptism, which is supposed to be around January 6th.”

    Near the White House, Chris from Capitol Hill thinks decoration removal should be a day earlier than Lori and Perla.

    “That answer is pretty easy for me, the end of the 12 Days of Christmas,” Chris said. “So, we are liturgically in the Christmas season right now.”

    Chris pointed out that the first day of Christmas is on Christmas Day, Dec. 25.

    “Traditionally, people would set up decorations on Christmas Eve and then keep them up for the 12 days,” he said.

    It seems like Chris was a tad early with the tradition this year, because his family put up their Christmas tree on Thanksgiving weekend.

    Not far away from Chris and his family was Jamella and Anthony.

    While Jamella admitted that she doesn’t enjoy taking down decorations and has been known to keep hers up until spring, Anthony, who is visiting from Brooklyn, said he knows the best time to take them down.

    “When the tree is on the curb,” he said.

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    Jimmy Alexander

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  • Travelers reveal places that were “completely disappointing” in real life

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    Despite the frustrations noted in the post, global travel remains a booming industry, with a “robust and sustained travel demand” this year even amid growing geopolitical tension, notes the U.N. World Tourism Organization (UNWTO).

    Around 300 million tourists were reported to have traveled internationally in the first quarter of 2025, which is around 14 million more than in the same period last year, according to the UNWTO.

    From tourist traps and overcommercialized cities to underwhelming landmarks and overpriced resorts, Reddit users did not hold back.

    Hollywood Boulevard and Walk of Fame, California

    One cited Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles as a let-down, particularly the iconic Walk of Fame. “It seems so glamorous in movies and photos, but up close it’s crowded, gritty and full of pushy vendors and costumed characters,” wrote u/Substantial-Cost-429. “Interesting to see once, but definitely not like the postcard version.”

    The Alamo, Texas

    The historic Alamo site in San Antonio also came under fire. “You know how you always picture it in the middle of nowhere surrounded by sand? Well it’s not. It’s one block downtown San Antonio surrounded by high-rise buildings,” said u/False_Ad_555. “But the Riverwalk in San Antonio is amazing,” they added.

    The Mona Lisa at the Louvre, France

    Others expressed disappointment with international attractions.

    Crowd control and expectations also played a role in disillusionment. “The Mona Lisa [painting] at the Louvre [museum in Paris],” wrote u/incunabula001. “You have to wait in a long a** line full of tourists only to get a few seconds to look at a (IMO [in my opinion]) underwhelming portrait with people doing obnoxious selfies around you.”

    Oktoberfest, Germany

    Even Oktoberfest, a world-famous beer festival in Germany, didn’t escape critique. “More specifically Munich,” said u/Critical-Wolverine29. “Now I’m not saying you won’t have a good time, it’s just if you want to go to a place … with a million other Americans singing Sweet Caroline [the song] with €30 [ around $34] chicken or schnitzel getting s***faced with €15 beers under a large tent with an oompa band, and spending €20 [around $23] and an hour long wait to ride the Ferris wheel, go right ahead!!”

    A spokesperson for Oktoberfest told Newsweek: “What a shame u/Critical-Wolverine29 didn’t enjoy themself at Oktoberfest—but 6.7 million people did last year.”

    Noting that entry to the beer festival is “completely free,” the spokesperson said “no ticket is needed; you can just wander in and let the fun begin.”

    While many Americans have the famed festival on their bucket list, “around 80 percent of our guests actually come from Munich and Bavaria,” the spokesperson said. “It’s a real local celebration that everyone around the world is invited to enjoy.”

    The spokesperson added that “weekends can get extra lively,” so those who prefer a more-relaxed visit are advised to go during the week. “There’s still plenty of atmosphere, but with more room to breathe and fewer queues at the popular rides,” the spokesperson said.

    They also recommend one of the beer gardens attached to the big tents or the smaller, less-boisterous beer tents. “You can even just stroll through the festival grounds, grab some candy floss or sugar-roasted almonds, and simply soak up the atmosphere,” the spokesperson said.

    “A ride on the big Ferris wheel is highly recommended for the fantastic views over the festival grounds, the city, and, if you’re lucky, even all the way to the Alps. The fee is actually €10 [around $11.60) for an adult (not €20) and €4 [around $4.60] for a child.”

    Wave Rock, Australia

    “Wave Rock, Western Australia. Basically the promo photo is it lol [laugh out loud],” said u/sp1ffm1ff. “A cool rock that is like 7 hours drive from the nearest city, in a tiny town with nothing much.”

    Monaco

    Monaco, known for its luxury and exclusivity, also received critical remarks. “Way too expensive for what it offers tourists,” wrote u/Plane-Trip1323. “Heavily priced drinks and empty streets, feels more like a theme park than an actual country.”

    Phu Quoc, Vietnam

    Some mourned the loss of cultural integrity in places they once loved. “Phu Quoc, Vietnam … has been completely commodified for tourism’s sake,” wrote u/re3dbks. “Not what I remember from even 20 years ago …”

    The Blarney Stone, Ireland

    Other frustrations were more practical. U/RareGur3157 took issue with the famed Blarney Stone in Ireland: “You wait in long lines and dangle awkwardly over a castle ledge, but you also press your lips to a filthy, bacteria-covered slab that’s been kissed by thousands of strangers every day.”

    A spokesperson for Tourism Ireland told Newsweek: “Tourism Ireland won’t be commenting on the story, but appreciate you bringing the opportunity to us.”

    Newsweek has contacted the Los Angeles Tourism & Convention Board, the Louvre Museum, Visit Monaco, Tourism Western Australia, Vietnam National Authority of Tourism via email and the original poster via the Reddit messaging system for comment.

    Stock image: A couple of tourists appear bored while sitting outdoors looking at a map.

    Getty

    Do you have a travel-related story to share? Let us know via life@newsweek.com and your story could be featured on Newsweek.

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  • What’s Life Like in Washington, D.C., During Trump’s Takeover?

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    On Thursday evening in Washington, D.C., the weird juxtapositions of life in this city, eleven days into the Trump Administration’s unprecedented takeover of the District’s local law enforcement, were on full display. Around dinnertime, Donald Trump made a rare foray outside the White House into the streets—though only as far as a U.S. Park Police facility. Earlier in the day, his visit had sounded as if it might be a bigger production, something with some Presidential gravitas, or the flashy authoritarian menace he favors. Trump had told the conservative radio host Todd Starnes that he was “going out tonight, I think, with the police, and with the military, of course.” The right-wing activist Charlie Kirk could barely contain his excitement, posting on X that “President Trump is going out on patrol tonight in DC. Shock and awe. Force. We’re taking our country back from these cockroaches. Just the start.” In the end, Trump’s “patrol” consisted of a rambling speech to several hundred federal agents, National Guardsmen, and local police, in which he praised them for looking “healthy” and “attractive,” announced that “everybody’s safe now,” and talked about “re-grassing” the city, so that it would more closely resemble the “Trump National Golf Club.” He left pizza from a place called Wiseguy and burgers from the White House kitchen for the assembled law-enforcement agents, and split.

    Across town on the National Mall, meanwhile, soldiers from various states’ National Guard units that Trump had summoned to deal with what he’d described as “bedlam” in the city were patrolling a pastoral twilight scene: tourists in matching neon T-shirts, co-workers playing softball, locals walking dogs, on an uncharacteristically fresh and temperate late-August evening. The museums that line the Mall had closed for the day, and twenty or so Guard troops were sitting at picnic tables eating takeout barbeque—ribs, corn, mashed potatoes—in Styrofoam clamshells. When I asked where they were from, they said “Louisiana.” Earlier in the week, National Guard troops had begun arriving from six states with Republican governors who had complied with Trump’s orders to help bring D.C. to heel: Ohio, West Virginia, South Carolina, Mississippi, Tennessee, and Louisiana. Major cities in those last three states—Jackson, Memphis, and New Orleans—all have murder rates significantly higher than D.C.’s.

    I had spoken with Christina Henderson, an at-large member of the D.C. city council who had posted a video in which she strolled around the national monuments, wondering what D.C.’s own National Guard was doing there. She was even more puzzled by the introduction of the other states’ troops. “I mean, Louisiana? It’s hurricane season. The Gulf of Mexico is right there—you might have an emergency in your own state in a week,” she told me. “And Jackson, Mississippi, as far as I know, your water system still does not work, and you’re sending National Guard troops here?” If the crime emergency that Trump had invoked were “real,” and the city’s own law enforcement was incapable of handling it, Henderson said, then surely the neighboring states, Virginia and Maryland, many of whose residents commute to D.C. every day, would have sent National Guard troops. (Virginia’s Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, said that he hadn’t been asked, but that D.C. is “extremely dangerous”; Maryland’s Democratic governor, Wes Moore, told CNN he was “heartbroken” that the Guard had been deployed for these purposes, and that he sent the Maryland Guard out only “in cases of emergency and true crises.”)

    The National Guard soldiers I spoke with wouldn’t tell me what they thought of their mission, but, when I asked how they liked D.C., several proclaimed it “very nice” and said that they hoped to see more of it.

    Meanwhile, pop-up protests were happening around the city, as they had been all week. It is true, as some commentators have noted, that Washington has not yet seen a mass protest against Trump’s show of force. The resistance the city has mounted is, in some ways, a microcosm of the resistance to Trump that has been launched nationally over the last few months: intermittent, lacking in robust leadership, especially from the Democratic Party, and perhaps disillusioned by the fading impact of large-scale demonstrations such as the 2017 Women’s March.

    Still, in a Washington Post poll conducted last week, eight in ten D.C. residents said that they opposed the federal takeover of the local police and the presence of troops in the streets. And, if you drive around the city, there are plenty of signs of that disapproval. People are filming ICE arrests and confronting the agents, who are often masked and drive unmarked cars, about what they are doing. My neighborhood Nextdoor listserv, which is normally filled with recommendations for plumbers, pictures of pets, and a certain amount of handwringing about property crime, was now studded with warnings about ICE sightings around town. Fans of the local women’s pro soccer team, the Washington Spirit, spontaneously broke out into chants of “Free D.C.!” at a game last week. A Banksy-style graffiti image of a figure hurling a sub sandwich started appearing all over town—a tribute to Sean Charles Dunn, a thirty-seven-year-old former Justice Department employee who had thrown one, from Subway, at federal officers stationed on a street corner. (Jeanine Pirro, the Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney for D.C., charged Dunn with felony assault, a crime that can carry up to eight years in federal prison.)

    And on Thursday night several hundred people gathered at the corner of U and Fourteenth Streets, the hub of a famous historically Black neighborhood, for a pro-D.C. rally. The day before, the White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller had made an appearance along with Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and Vice-President J. D. Vance at Union Station, where the National Guard and its armored vehicles had been on prominent view. The event had attracted protesters, and Miller had derided them as “elderly white hippies,” who are “not part of this city and never have been.” He added that “most of the citizens who live in Washington, D.C., are Black.” (D.C. was a Black-majority city until 2011; today about forty per cent of its residents are Black.) But the rally on Thursday evening was organized by Black activists, and all the speakers were Black, as were perhaps half the attendees. It featured plenty of go-go, the funk music with a strong D.C. identity. When Kelsye Adams, of the organization D.C. Vote, spoke to the gathering, she offered energetic shout-outs to go-go, D.C. natives, and D.C. statehood. “Give us full autonomy to run our city now!” she said. “Make some noise for D.C. statehood!” As Adams checked off the names of the federal agencies, starting with ICE, that are now policing the city streets, the crowd booed. “Guess what?” she said. “We didn’t want them here!”

    It’s not hard to imagine a scenario in which Trump will treat this occupation as a performative stunt. In a few weeks, he might declare victory—something that he loves to do prematurely—and claim that he’s cleaned up the hellhole that was D.C. And he’ll try and move on to another Democratic-led city—Chicago, perhaps, or New York. He’s already been boasting about how much safer D.C., a place he’d said was on the brink of “complete and total lawlessness” a little more than a week ago, has become. “Friends are calling me up, Democrats are calling me up,” Trump said on Monday in the Oval Office, seated next to Ukraine’s President, Volodymyr Zelensky. “And they’re saying, ‘Sir, I want to thank you. My wife and I went out to dinner last night for the first time in four years, and Washington, D.C., is safe and you did that in four days.’ ” (I’ve lived in the city for thirty years and I don’t know anyone who’s afraid to eat out.) But, as it happens, restaurant bookings last week were down as much as thirty per cent over the same week last year, possibly because people aren’t eager to go out in a city where they might be stopped at a traffic checkpoint manned by ICE and Homeland Security or have to dodge one of the outsized armored transports known as MRAPs, for “mine-resistant, ambush-protected” vehicles, that the Guardsmen are tooling around in. (Last Wednesday, one of the MRAPs ran a red light and crashed into a car, injuring a civilian.) Maybe when Trump picks a new target, D.C. will go back to being what it is, a city with a largely Democratic citizenry who aren’t allowed to send a voting member to Congress—a reasonably vibrant, reasonably high-functioning American city, with housing that’s too expensive and a crime problem that is real but improving. Then again, because the President is angry at D.C.’s mayor, Muriel Bowser, for calmly pointing out that D.C.’s violent crime rate was falling before all this, he may seek to punish the District with further aggressive incursions on D.C.’s home rule. “Mayor Bowser better get her act straight,” he said on Friday, “or she won’t be mayor very long because we’ll take it over with the federal government, run it like it’s supposed to be run.”

    And besides, damage has already been done. Trump has now partially normalized the idea of using federal troops for local law enforcement, a practice for which Americans have long maintained a healthy skepticism. Joseph Nunn, a legal scholar at the Brennan Center who focusses on domestic uses of the military, told me, “I think what we are seeing here is the Trump Administration further inserting the military into routine law enforcement in a way that has no precedent in this country’s history, except perhaps for the period of military Reconstruction in the former Confederacy. The last person who asserted the authority to use military personnel for routine law enforcement anywhere in the country for any reason was King George.”

    I asked Nunn what he thought about the prospect that some of the National Guard troops deployed in D.C. would henceforth be armed. On Friday, Hegseth made it official: Guard troops can now carry weapons. “It’s already one thing to have military personnel in uniform standing on street corners,” Nunn said. “That already sends a message, and it’s not one we associate with living in a free society. If they are armed, that sends a still stronger message.”

    Trump’s project has emboldened ICE agents in frightening ways, too. On the night of August 13th, just a couple of days after Trump’s takeover began, ICE and Homeland Security agents, together with D.C. police officers, manned a hastily established traffic checkpoint in the Fourteenth Street night-life corridor, which may well have been of dubious legality. (A Supreme Court ruling in 2000, Indianapolis v. Edmond, held that traffic checkpoints for purposes of generalized crime prevention violate the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. And there would, at the very least, be questions as to whether D.C.’s location, within a hundred miles of a maritime border, had suddenly authorized customs and border-patrol agencies to conduct searches of cars in the middle of town.) In the diverse but historically Latino Mount Pleasant neighborhood, ICE agents tore down a handpainted banner condemning the agency, and then posted a video of themselves doing it. (A new version of the banner was back up by the end of the week.) The Washington Post reported that ICE is “seeking to spend millions of dollars on SUVs and custom, gold-detailed vehicle wraps emblazoned with the words ‘DEFEND THE HOMELAND.’ ” Many agents continue to be masked, to drive unmarked vehicles, to conduct snatch-and-grab arrests in broad daylight, and to answer absolutely no questions. In videos that circulated widely last week, six men—presumably ICE agents, though their vests said only “Police,” so who knows—are seen tackling a moped-riding delivery driver to the ground—he had just emerged from a café on Fourteenth Street with an order. One of the unidentified “police” tells passerbys and reporters who are asking what agency he’s with to “shut the fuck up.” When someone shouts “You guys are ruining this country,” an agent answers, “Liberals already ruined it.” (According to the Washington Post, after videos of the moped driver being hustled away in a black car were shared on social media, and reporters continued to ask questions about the incident, a Department of Homeland Security spokeswoman identified the detained man as a Venezuelan national who she said had illegally entered the United States in 2023.)

    At the rally last week, I talked with Robert White, Jr., another at-large member of the city council, who was there to address the crowd. I asked him what he and other local officials were hearing about who these agents were and what they were doing. “Federal government is telling us very little,” White said. “A part of it is that they’re not well organized, but part of it is deliberate.” He added, “For all the people that have been snatched up by ICE agents, even as a government official, I cannot tell you where they are. No one I know in the government can tell you where they are. Imagine,” he said, “if that was your family member.” ♦

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    Margaret Talbot

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  • Prayers Up! Fatal Tour Bus Crash In Upstate NY Reportedly Leaves Multiple Dead, Dozens Injured (VIDEO)

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    A trip that was meant to be filled with memories and scenic views turned into an unthinkable tragedy on Friday afternoon. A tour bus carrying more than 50 passengers overturned on Interstate 90 near Pembroke, New York, while returning from a visit to Niagara Falls. What began as a routine ride back to New York City ended with shattered glass, scattered belongings, and the loss of at least four lives, reportedly including a child.

    RELATED: Prayers Up! Married Ohio Teachers Tragically Killed In Crash While Dropping Son Off At College (VIDEO)

    What Allegedly Happened To The Tour Bus?

    According to reports, New York State Police confirmed the bus veered into the median, overcorrected, and rolled into a ditch for reasons still under investigation. Many passengers, most of whom were tourists of Indian, Chinese, and Filipino descent, were ejected or trapped in the wreckage. And, photos from the scene show the vehicle on its side. Additionally, videos show emergency helicopters landing nearby as medics rushed to assist the injured. Authorities noted that most passengers weren’t wearing seatbelts at the time of the crash—raising serious concerns about safety protocol.

    More Details On The Tragic Crash

    Mercy Flight, the region’s air ambulance service, deployed multiple helicopters, and hospitals across Western New York—including Erie County Medical Center and Oishei Children’s Hospital—received patients in critical condition. The driver of the bus survived, and efforts to identify victims and notify families are ongoing. Interpreters were brought to the scene to support non-English-speaking passengers, and officials say the rescue operation remains “very active” well into the evening.

    Public Officials Speak Out

    As the community reels from the news, the New York State Thruway near Pembroke remains closed in both directions. And, several public officials have expressed heartbreak and gratitude toward first responders in statements posted to social media.

    “I’ve been briefed on the tragic tour bus accident…My team is coordinating closely with [NYS Police] and local officials who are working to rescue and provide assistance to everyone involved,” Kathy Hochul shared in a statement via X.

    While Attorney General Letitia James said via X:

    “This bus crash is heartbreaking, and I’m praying for everyone impacted. Grateful to our first responders on the scene working to rescue and help people.”

    RELATED: Prayers Up! Brooklyn Lounge Mass Shooting Reportedly Leaves Three People Dead & Multiple Injured (VIDEO)

    What Do You Think Roomies?

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    Desjah

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  • Just ranting

    Just ranting

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    Me just ranting.
    Well my day has been a complete **** show.
    A ******* tourists rat bastard dog just killed 7 of my lambs and tore off the faces of three ewes.
    And now I have to get more ******* paperwork and legal **** to get compensation from the owner for the cost of the dead lambs.
    **** MY LIFE.

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  • Historic building in Italy damaged by parkour tourists

    Historic building in Italy damaged by parkour tourists

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    Jumping from building to building in an ancient city might seem like a dream for those who practice parkour — a sport that involves making it past obstacles — but it can cause damage to historic buildings.A London-based parkour group, Team Phat, visited the ancient Italian city of Matera, running, climbing and leaping through its streets and over its precious structures.One of the freerunners caused a segment of a historic building to fall off, sending both himself and the building part crashing to the ground.Matera, a city of stone which dates back to the Paleolithic era, is located in the Basilicata region in Southern Italy.In 1993, it was granted UNESCO World Heritage status and was the European Capital of Culture in 2019.A video of parkour stunts in the ancient city was posted by Team Phat on YouTube two months ago, along with a caption explaining that they were “in the beautiful city of Matera” where one of their members, Devon McIntosh, “had a scary fall that could have been really bad.”The video shows the freerunner jumping off a building and attempting to use a stone ledge to help him get to another building across the street. But the ledge could not withstand his force and dramatically broke off.An off-camera member of the team suggests that they “hide the evidence” and McIntosh shows his injury to his leg.The video has attracted many critical comments on social media. “This city is a UNESCO heritage site for a reason,” wrote an Instagram user named Bruno Burke. “We should enjoy our discipline as much as possible, but we should also watch where we step, not only for safety but also for respect of culture and history.”Misbehaving visitorsMany of Matera’s districts and habitable caves were renovated in the second half of the 20th century, as the city regained its charm and became a popular Instagrammable hotspot.Unsurprisingly, international cinema also pays the occasional visit. The 2021 James Bond movie, “No Time to Die” features an exciting car chase through Matera’s streets.The well curated remains of the ancient cave churches, fortified farmhouses and districts make Matera a city of universal value, according to UNESCO.CNN has reached out to Matera’s police force for comment on the parkour incident.Team Phat’s behavior has raised further questions about the conduct of travelers at sites of architectural beauty. At the start of the video, one of the Team Phat members said: “As some of you know, we’ve been banned from Venice and we can never go back.” In March 2023, a Team Phat member jumped into a canal in Venice, following which Mayor Luigi Brugnaro commented on X: “This ‘subject’ should be given a certificate of STUPIDITY…. We are trying to identify him to denounce him and his companion that made the stupid video for social media.”On April 25, entry fee tickets were introduced in Venice. Brugnaro said: “Venice is the first city in the world to start on this journey which could become an example for other fragile cities that must be preserved.”In March, a historic district in Kyoto, Japan, announced that it is banning tourists from entering, following local frustrations about visitors’ poor behavior and failure to follow Japanese customs and etiquette.

    Jumping from building to building in an ancient city might seem like a dream for those who practice parkour — a sport that involves making it past obstacles — but it can cause damage to historic buildings.

    A London-based parkour group, Team Phat, visited the ancient Italian city of Matera, running, climbing and leaping through its streets and over its precious structures.

    One of the freerunners caused a segment of a historic building to fall off, sending both himself and the building part crashing to the ground.

    Matera, a city of stone which dates back to the Paleolithic era, is located in the Basilicata region in Southern Italy.

    In 1993, it was granted UNESCO World Heritage status and was the European Capital of Culture in 2019.

    A video of parkour stunts in the ancient city was posted by Team Phat on YouTube two months ago, along with a caption explaining that they were “in the beautiful city of Matera” where one of their members, Devon McIntosh, “had a scary fall that could have been really bad.”

    The video shows the freerunner jumping off a building and attempting to use a stone ledge to help him get to another building across the street. But the ledge could not withstand his force and dramatically broke off.

    An off-camera member of the team suggests that they “hide the evidence” and McIntosh shows his injury to his leg.

    The video has attracted many critical comments on social media. “This city is a UNESCO heritage site for a reason,” wrote an Instagram user named Bruno Burke. “We should enjoy our [parkour] discipline as much as possible, but we should also watch where we step, not only for safety but also for respect of culture and history.”

    Misbehaving visitors

    Many of Matera’s districts and habitable caves were renovated in the second half of the 20th century, as the city regained its charm and became a popular Instagrammable hotspot.

    Unsurprisingly, international cinema also pays the occasional visit. The 2021 James Bond movie, “No Time to Die” features an exciting car chase through Matera’s streets.

    The well curated remains of the ancient cave churches, fortified farmhouses and districts make Matera a city of universal value, according to UNESCO.

    CNN has reached out to Matera’s police force for comment on the parkour incident.

    Team Phat’s behavior has raised further questions about the conduct of travelers at sites of architectural beauty. At the start of the video, one of the Team Phat members said: “As some of you know, we’ve been banned from Venice and we can never go back.”

    In March 2023, a Team Phat member jumped into a canal in Venice, following which Mayor Luigi Brugnaro commented on X: “This ‘subject’ should be given a certificate of STUPIDITY…. We are trying to identify him to denounce him and his companion that made the stupid video for social media.”

    On April 25, entry fee tickets were introduced in Venice. Brugnaro said: “Venice is the first city in the world to start on this journey which could become an example for other fragile cities that must be preserved.”

    In March, a historic district in Kyoto, Japan, announced that it is banning tourists from entering, following local frustrations about visitors’ poor behavior and failure to follow Japanese customs and etiquette.

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  • Hawai'i Fire Victims Evicted From Hotels To Make Room for Tourists

    Hawai'i Fire Victims Evicted From Hotels To Make Room for Tourists

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    Four months ago, a fire ripped through central and western Maui, killing 100+ people and displacing over 11,000 people. Despite the calls for years not to visit Hawai’i, many did so anyway—even immediately following the fire. Now, that unwanted tourism is resulting in families being removed from temporary shelter to accommodate visitors to the island.

    Since the start of the recovery efforts, FEMA and the Red Cross help put residents in temporary housing by making short-term deals with owners of the remaining unscathed structures. This includes hotels, Airbnbs, and timeshares. It wasn’t perfect, as at least (roughly) 400 residents didn’t receiving housing aid because they were already homeless and/or undocumented immigrants. Still, many people got temporary relief. However, as the fires that destroyed the former capital of Hawai’i (Lahaina) extinguished, the state began to welcome tourists.

    The governor and others defended this as a necessary measure to secure funding for relief efforts. This includes the rebuilding of all the public infrastructure destroyed by the fire, like the schools. However, that immediately worsened issues as hotels and other rentals sought to remove the thousands of newly houseless residents. As of December, over 6,000 Hawai’ians are forced to rely on temporary FEMA or Red Cross housing. Most will be homeless again over the next few weeks if nothing changes.

    Haoles and the Hawai’i shuffle

    Increasing tourism has exacerbated the issues with the temporary housing from the beginning—things like people being shuffled between rooms multiple times over a few weeks. One family of four profiled by The Guardian moved seven times over three months and sometimes didn’t have a kitchen. Many talking to reporters say they don’t fully unpack due to this instability.

    These anxieties, along with the mass trauma experienced, have rippled into other social issues. Children are struggling in school, suicide rates are showing signs of rising, and calls to the county domestic violence hotline have more than doubled.

    Initially, the hotels and vacation rentals signed temporary agreements to house people for three to six months. At first, this was a win-win. With relief aid footing the bill, these agreements housed people quickly. However, as tourism picked up, these places began pushing out the newly homeless population. These businesses make more money from visitors who will also spend money on amenities and services beyond the room. Vacation rental owners are pushing people out so fiercely the Hawai’i Governor Josh Green is threatening to temporarily ban this service or hike up their tax rate.

    And I will just say this: You don’t have housing in Hawaii. The short-term market is occupying tens of thousands of houses that we need to put into the workforce. Working families like nurses and teachers, firefighters that live and work and help us through these crises. And so things have to change.

    Governor Green

    In addition to people who lost their home, long-term renters left unscathed (unless their workplace also burned down) are also starting to feel the pressure. Their landlords aren’t renewing leases in order to make space for the currently unhoused victims of the fire and take advantage of government contracts.

    To encourage people to help and on top of paying for the rent, the government offered tax breaks. These property owners would not have to pay certain accommodation and property taxes for several months to two years. Critics see this pushing long-term renters into homelessness as landlords seek to cash in on government contracts. (Plus those taxes now can’t go into community services.)

    Pre-fire disaster

    Because officials estimate a two-year rebuilding process, the August 2023 fire-related housing instability is here to stay. Residents feel it too, as community-hubs reported more people requesting items like tents, sleeping bags, and more.

    This is a grim situation that’s really a disaster on top of another disaster. For years until the start of 2020, Hawai’i was number one in homelessness per capita as compared to other states. Now, they’re at fourth but nationwide homelessness has skyrocketed as pandemic aid ended.

    Exacerbating this issues by putting a strain on resources is non-Hawai’ian homeless populations buying one-way tickets to the region marketed as paradise. Additionally, on the main island, O’ahu (home of the capital city Honolulu), nearly 100,000 residents don’t have access to clean drinking water due to the U.S. Navy poisoning residential aquifers. These rates of homelessness and lack of access to basic resources are highest among Indigenous populations like the Native Hawai’ians and other Pacifica people.

    Most of the land in Hawai’i was taken in the 1890s. The children of missionaries (business men) worked with the U.S. military to overthrow the Hawai’ian Kingdom. Their story is a lot like the Native Americans across the U.S., with child separation and outlawing of customs like language. However, they didn’t even get a reservation. Within 40 years, the island became a U.S. military hub and vacation destination before eventually becoming a state.

    Like Puerto Rico, government policies also took farm land away from the residents. Bought up by investors, the areas turned into hotels and private beaches. Estimates for how much food in Hawai’i is shipped from elsewhere range from 80–90%. This prices residents out of other basic necessities. These contributing factors, plus laws on benefits based on blood quantum and institutional racism, have made homelessness disproportionately high among Native Hawai’ians.

    Responsibility of potential visitors

    Despite living in South East Texas, my partner and I never visited New Orleans and were planning our first ever trip earlier this fall. However, during the final days to secure affordable bookings, I learned about a looming drinking water emergency due to salt water contamination. (Both contributing factors caused by human-made harms.)

    That news immediately forced us to reroute, instead choosing to spend the week in Arkansas and Oklahoma. When you’re a visitor, especially to an area funded by tourism, your needs are put in front of others. I don’t tell this story to brag that we Did A Good Thing, but to remind people that you have responsibilities as a guests. This is usually only discussed in terms of visiting places abroad and learning phrases in a new language. However, this should extend to our own neighbors, too.

    In addition to not visiting Hawai’i—as requested by residents and activists for years—another way to help is by direct aid. Hawai’i People’s Fund gives direct aid via grants, and the Maui Food Bank could always use help. Also, the non-profit newspaper Honolulu Civil Beat is running a fundraising campaign and made a commitment to continue detailed, important coverage of the fire’s impact.

    (via @kalahuihawaii, featured image: Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Alyssa Shotwell

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  • Strange items that TSA will totally allow on a plane (10 GIFs)

    Strange items that TSA will totally allow on a plane (10 GIFs)

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    TSA historically has a stingy reputation when it comes to what they allow you to bring onto a plane. I once tried packing golf balls into my shoes while flying to a bachelor party, and they made me dump every single golf ball out for security purposes.

    However there are a few surprising exceptions, if for some reason you need to get these things airborne. Hope this helps.

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    Zach Nading

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