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Bee's avatar

Such a great article! I visited Rome and Florence while staying with family in the Umbrian countryside about nine years ago, and I loved it…except for all the selfie stick tourism! I can only imagine it’s gotten worse since. I’d love to go back some time, but it would definitely have to be in winter time.

I feel like a lot of Europe turns into a circus in the summer months now, sadly. I’ve been thinking about this topic for some time, and especially after traveling earlier this summer. I’ve been going to Greece most years since the early 2000’s, and while the increase in tourism was slow and steady over the years (and even back then people we met were saying how much better it was back in the 90’s and 80’s), it truly exploded after social media. There was one tiny village we used to stay in, in a family home, where even the local taxis wouldn’t go because of the bad roads, it was so beautiful and serene and quiet. We went back there this year, and the first thing we noticed was the road that was already challenging was absolutely wrecked. It turned out there were hardly any locals left in the village, and nearly all the houses had been turned into Airbnb’s. We were staying for a week, and during that time people were constantly coming and going, staying one or two nights tops. People would zoom in on four wheelers, do their photo shoots and then leave (one couple we saw brought a drone to film themselves, and the woman even climbed onto the balcony of one of the houses and pranced around pretending to live there, even did a change of clothes, all for the ‘gram or TikTok I presume). It was anything but serene, it felt like the place had been reduced to a set or a stage.

Of course, I travel too and so I am part of the problem, and it’s hard to say anything without being hypocritical, but it feels like the Instagram travelers really are a separate breed.

I also live in a place that is really exploding with tourism these days (Norway), again largely thanks to social media. Obviously, it’s not anything like Italy (yet), but living in what used to feel like a sleepy little village, the contrast is huge. I live in an old historic neighborhood where Airbnb’s are popping up everywhere, and have views over the harbor where cruiseships fight for space most days. There are news stories every summer from the smaller villages up north where the infrastructure is not in place for mass tourism, of tourists taking a shit in people’s gardens for lack of public toilets. Without restrictions I really do worry about the development. I used to work as a tour guide for museums and historical sites a decade or so ago and absolutely loved interacting with tourists, but these days I don’t think I’d have the stomach for it.

I do love traveling, and it’s an experience I wish for everyone, as there is so much to gain and learn if done the right way, but like everything else in our society I think travel has been overly commodified. I really think it shouldn’t be as easily available to us as it is. We need to slow down. In my utopia, air travel would be much more expensive (or even better, rationed would be more fair), cruiseships and Airbnb would be banned, and social media would be…gone. :P

Ok, rant over from this old cynic. Thanks again for a great read.

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Gastroillogica's avatar

Very good article. A big big applause!

Stanley Tucci and his fellow “guides” are doing much damage, contributing to a mindless “catch it all” TikTok tourism.

Luckily it’s not just Italy: currently Lisbon is barely habitable due to over tourism, gigantic cruise ships vomiting hordes of mindless tourists that are just in for the picture, litter everywhere and don’t spend a cent on shore (cruises are fully catered), and cheap flights bringing in people who will queue for a pancake or anything that has been seen and is viral on TikTok trying to do the same videos and catch 15 min of celebrity.

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