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90's to Now! How Travel Has Changed in the Past 25 Years 

Wolters World
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e-tickets? Travel apps? Low cost airlines? Yes, international travel has changed a lot in the past 25 years, here we go through some of the biggest changes we have seen in travel over the past two decades whether it is how many people are traveling or where people are traveling to.
Filmed in Turku, Finland
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9 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 300   
@Michaelpalmer4k
@Michaelpalmer4k Месяц назад
90s mark wolters had surfer dude vibes
@pmr9591
@pmr9591 Месяц назад
I wonder what rock band he played in. =)
@FalconsEye58094
@FalconsEye58094 Месяц назад
he could have been on a magazine cover back in the day
@WaqarDepp
@WaqarDepp Месяц назад
😂
@RetiKingKnight
@RetiKingKnight День назад
How do you think he snagged that cutie of a wife?
@BellotaVerde
@BellotaVerde День назад
@@RetiKingKnighthave you seen his pics when younger?
@asvtravellingtheworld
@asvtravellingtheworld Месяц назад
For us Eastern-Europeans, a big change in the last 25 years is the EU enlargement and the Schengen zone. Before you had to wait at embassies and apply for visas to visit most of Europe, now you just need your ID card.
@ingi2785
@ingi2785 Месяц назад
Right. And the average family couldn't even dream about it. Even before that, in the socialist era, literally only a few were allowed to go outside of the border, with limited destinations, money and time. I'm 33 and the first time I was abroad was in the middle 2000's. I flew the first time at age 25. No chance before. I still have family members who haven't been abroad, ever (I'm Hungarian).
@asvtravellingtheworld
@asvtravellingtheworld Месяц назад
@@ingi2785 Indeed, apart from waiting at foreign embassies, hoping to get visas, you had to get the permission from your own government. Foreign currency was not available as well.😕
@user-bu3sn6kd5n
@user-bu3sn6kd5n 3 дня назад
⁠@@asvtravellingtheworldYou are talking like of 40 yrs ago, not 25. 25 years back, people could travel freely, but the borders were still there, as Schengen area was much smaller. We would travel by bus, as both planes and trains were crazy expensive. Very few people in the East had a normal Visa or Mastercard, so we would have cash on us. A lot of different notes and coins, as there was no Euro yet. And while some people already had mobile phones (GSM was already there), the roaming prices were astronomical. You would not want to even answer the phone, yet alone call from it…
@JeffC-fq1be
@JeffC-fq1be Месяц назад
The biggest change from the '90s is that we now have Wolters World.
@jesse1834
@jesse1834 Месяц назад
I remember the airlines being friendlier pre 9-11 and bags flying free.
@badczech6681
@badczech6681 Месяц назад
The whole airport experience declined after 9-11, at least in the US.
@Entername-md1ev
@Entername-md1ev Месяц назад
@@badczech6681thank the TSA for that they basically treat everyone like terrorists until proven otherwise
@tonymassara4018
@tonymassara4018 Месяц назад
I remember walking into AAA to have them plan my trip on paper and then getting Traveler’s Checks.
@woltersworld
@woltersworld Месяц назад
same here :)
@derronstravels21
@derronstravels21 Месяц назад
Ahh the memories. I'll never forget traveling in 2006 going to internet cafes, using MCI calling cards with 20+ digits to enter, asking every hotel front-desk person for a city map, and exchanging dollars for all the different European currencies.
@blakemorris2328
@blakemorris2328 Месяц назад
@@derronstravels21 didn't the switch to the Euro happen in 1999?
@derronstravels21
@derronstravels21 Месяц назад
@@blakemorris2328 Correct.
@louisn1368
@louisn1368 Месяц назад
@@derronstravels21did each country using euro’s have their own version of euros?
@derronstravels21
@derronstravels21 Месяц назад
@@louisn1368 Don't think so
@alistairhenry709
@alistairhenry709 Месяц назад
@@blakemorris2328 inconvenient truth haha!
@FalconsEye58094
@FalconsEye58094 Месяц назад
Mark with hair is a 90s icon that we never had
@scottlarrabee9527
@scottlarrabee9527 Месяц назад
The ease of access to your bank, and Google maps have been the two biggest changes to me.
@Steve56179
@Steve56179 Месяц назад
and Google Translate!
@laurag9526
@laurag9526 Месяц назад
Having so much technology while traveling is handy but you do miss out on some of the quirky and fun aspects of travel. Like getting lost in a new city and finding places by chance. Navigating with a paper map. Learning basic travel phrases from a book or a cassette/CD. Learning about a destination from a travel book. There's something special about these things that is missing from all the tiktok and Instagram travel posts. The younger generation will miss out on these experiences.
@j.s.7335
@j.s.7335 21 день назад
Excellent point! I remember always arriving in a place and having to acquire a map somewhere. One of the best places I ever found while traveling was a great scenic overlook of Portland, Oregon because I made a wrong turn driving.
@Larzh220469
@Larzh220469 Месяц назад
European here. I hit the road for the first time in 1987, with our famous "Interrail" ticket. In those days, Interrail meant that you could travel for free on the railways of all participating countries. It still exist, but it is no longer valid for all trains. The biggest difference to travel definitely came with the Internet. In the old days, you really went away from your family and friends when you went on a foreign trip. I remember that I would call my parents from overpriced public telephone booths, about twice a month, just to tell them that I was okay... Another thing from pre-Internet times: We didn't book anything in advance, but since nobody did, you could normally just pop in at a hostel, even in popular tourist destinations, and get a bed or a room for the night. Cheap air fares are obviously also something which has changed a lot. Even in the mid-1990s, I would first check the availability of night trains or coaches rather than flights if I wanted to travel between European cities.
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt Месяц назад
I hit the road in 1970 and travelled round the world without prebooking a thing - those days are over!
@solracer66
@solracer66 8 часов назад
I do miss the ability to travel with no idea where I was sleeping that night and no worry that I would not be able to find a room for the evening!
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt 8 часов назад
@@solracer66 How I miss when you got to a station not to met with 'You want hotel?' Never been stranded by this ad hoc travel - and at least you saw where you stayed before you booked it!
@inuitplus
@inuitplus Месяц назад
My first flight 52 years ago was so different from now. Near no women other than the flight crew, no children, and men generally wore javkets and ties! Times have changed.
@NoSugarThanks
@NoSugarThanks Месяц назад
I remember as child choking on the cigarette smoke
@louisn1368
@louisn1368 Месяц назад
@@NoSugarThanksme too lol but I was young and smokers for me were at the most southern end of the plane (as if smoke doesn’t travel)
@livinginvancouverbc2247
@livinginvancouverbc2247 Месяц назад
I had a man in the seat next to me smoke a pipe non-stop across the Atlantic in 1977. I never wanted fly again after that, but I did once smoking was banned. Now I manage to get a screaming baby behind every flight, even when I paid thousands for a first class pod, someone put a screaming baby in the pod behind me.
@MaxPower-11
@MaxPower-11 Месяц назад
Of course one of the biggest differences has been the internet, which made travel much cheaper by reducing “friction” in the travel industry. 25-30 years ago, arranging travel usually involved travel agents and other middlemen. Nowadays it’s mostly DIY with travel applications/sites electronically connecting travelers and travel providers or travelers interacting directly with service providers over the internet.
@louisrios5546
@louisrios5546 Месяц назад
@@MaxPower-11 Yes, those travel agents knew all the cryptic commands to enter into their SABRE computer systems.
@ericl5512
@ericl5512 Месяц назад
I was backpacking in Europe around 2000 you could go to the louvre, coliseum, rijks museum by just waiting in line. Now it’s hours long or sold out you have to get tickets ahead of time. Some things are better now but I like the times when you could go with no itinerary and just see what you want without the crowds.
@msmith2654
@msmith2654 Месяц назад
Both 9-11 and Covid have had a big impact on my travels
@user-kc1tf7zm3b
@user-kc1tf7zm3b Месяц назад
Why? Did the 1988 Pan Am Lockerbie bombing and the 2003 SARS outbreak affect your 1990s and 2000s travels at all? Don’t be hysterical.
@duffman9
@duffman9 Месяц назад
Lockerbie plane almost hit me while I was driving.
@user-kc1tf7zm3b
@user-kc1tf7zm3b Месяц назад
@@duffman9 As it turned out, the Americans and the British finally avenged the Pan Am bombing 23 years later. People have long memories. 🇺🇸 🇬🇧
@theorderofthebees7308
@theorderofthebees7308 Месяц назад
I love how you showed both the positive and negatives that have happened with travel in the past 30 years. I travelled out to Spain from. The United States before the shoe incident in which someone attempted to put a bomb in a shoe, I remember keeping your shoes on and being able to travel with a big old water bottle filled with water. Times have changed
@VampireGamer1
@VampireGamer1 Месяц назад
Google maps not only shows you where restaurants are, but also gives you reviews and most importantly, prices, so there is no excuse for over paying in the touristy areas.
@randjnoel2833
@randjnoel2833 22 дня назад
OMG, Mark, I had a visceral flashback to shoving a plastic card into a slot on a payphone on the roadside somewhere in Ireland. We can't afford to travel as much as we would like but we definitely prioritize it, and as you said I love all of the resources we have available to us. We spend more time researching and planning a trip then we do on the ground and we love it. It's harder to find places with no tourists for sure, but it's super exciting to connect with local people in little ways and see that our curious hearts are rewarded when we are genuinely interested in their places and their lives.
@ugoewulonu4936
@ugoewulonu4936 Месяц назад
Brother I hear you, I can’t believe saying “30 years ago” now puts us the 90’s! I feel old. The great thing about traveling is that it shows you how people are pretty much the same wherever you go, the only real difference is geography and how they adapt to it.
@serdip
@serdip Месяц назад
Security at airports and other public places is much stricter these days than in the past, I believe. Great video! Kiitoksia paljon.
@richardjames3022
@richardjames3022 Месяц назад
Things have changed way-beyond recognition in my life time, but then I am a grumpy old man, but have been lucky to have been travelling all my life because, first of all my fathers job and then my job. I am now home in England to stay as it's no longer fun to travel as planes are more cramped, fellow travellers often have little or no respect for staff on the journey of the locals where they are visiting. A few trips in and around Europe cannot be ruled out.
@MsTimelady71
@MsTimelady71 Месяц назад
Yep. Air rage was never a thing before the internet. Now everyone has an attitude on the plane.
@jennyoshea1958
@jennyoshea1958 Месяц назад
What a wonderful life, seeing such amazing places from all over the world. Great achievement; and kudos to you and Jocelyn for sharing your knowledge with all of us 🌟👌✨
@frederickhart-ys5yr
@frederickhart-ys5yr Месяц назад
I remember when travelers used to dress up in nice clothing when flying 😂 Being on an airplane was an event! Also still so hard to believe but people used to be allowed to smoke on airplanes. My first flight was from Boston to Orlando and I swear almost half the folks on the plane were smoking!
@slm6261
@slm6261 Месяц назад
I am 65 and was fortunate enough to travel with the airlines starting as a kid. I often think how funny it would be if I could go to the airport now with my mother who passed away decades ago. I remember her going on a week long trip with eight pieces of luggage minimum. Taking your shoes off for security would shock her. My Dad had the bar/cocktail luggage that had a shaker and bar tools and fasteners to hold quart bottles of vodka and martini glasses. When I was in college I remember sitting in the smoking section of the plane and you could ring the call button for a cocktail. I am grateful tickets are affordable now, I don't have the budget my parents did. It is like a bus on wings now. In fact the tourist busses in Europe have seats far more comfortable than most airplanes.
@SherriLyle80s
@SherriLyle80s Месяц назад
So true. I remember when Mapquest was the only thing that can give you turn by turn directions. Before that it was just gas station maps. Don't get me wrong, we still have to use them once in a blue moon for places that have no GPS service like out in pockets of western US or the east like the Appalachian mountains. Otherwise, I don't know how I got along without GPS.
@j.s.7335
@j.s.7335 21 день назад
Yes, I learned my lesson to not go without a paper map driving through New Mexico, USA!
@psantosd1
@psantosd1 Месяц назад
Hey Teach! Good to see that Wolters World is still kicking!
@RetroMorticia
@RetroMorticia 20 дней назад
One change that's happened more recently but tends to get taken for granted is the emphasis on traveling carry-on only. I definitely understand the appeal of packing lighter while also avoiding luggage fees, but it's funny to think that even a decade ago, I never saw people fighting for space in the overhead bins.
@pamelagoodson9034
@pamelagoodson9034 6 дней назад
Wishing I would check a bag but after multiple baggage delays sometimes for a whole trip of almost two weeks I avoid checking my bag unless I would be forced to. AND this was more than two decades ago. So not all of us are carryon to save baggage fees.
@JohnCash001
@JohnCash001 Месяц назад
I will always be grateful to have traveled a lot before everyone had smartphones and Wifi was everywhere. The deep connections with other travelers and locals. The excitement of not knowing much about a place before you got there, walking around and just discovering places, people not having their hand in a phone but in the moment walking around.. It was magical. I no longer feel that magic when traveling.
@alex31245
@alex31245 Месяц назад
The point you made about absolutely needing a smartphone to travel nowadays, I agree with in part but it's a double-edged sword. It can lead to analysis paralysis because you're constantly checking videos, blogs, Google reviews and it just takes out the mystery of discovering that new restaurant, a lesser known museum, etc. Another thing "ruined" by technology is that before you even get to your destination you look up pictures, videos, etc. online but then when you get there it already took some of the magic away because you've already seen hundreds of pictures/videos of it at home. The worst example is those VR-tours more and more museums are offering, which I understand decreases the masses of people visiting, but again takes away the magic of actually seeing it in person. Looking at those pictures,videos, etc. also builds up a lot of expectations and then when you're actually at, say, the tower of Pisa, you're slightly disappointed because the pictures/videos you saw were (heavily) filtered and you feel "catfished".😂
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt Месяц назад
I agree with your comments, I have been travelling for decades and it so much more exciting when you have no idea what will be at the end of the journey. Sometimes mind blowingly brilliant, other times not so great.
@louisrios5546
@louisrios5546 Месяц назад
I agree, but I think the Tower of Pisa is kind of disappointing regardless.
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt Месяц назад
@@louisrios5546 One of the things I try to do is to find something memorably good about the disapointing places I've visited. It could be a great cup of coffee/friendliness of people! Some are so dire they make a good story though.
@MsTimelady71
@MsTimelady71 Месяц назад
It also ruined personal interactions. I remember getting lost in London years ago and having a lovely old man in an antiques shop close his shop and walk me to the nearest Underground station. I doubt that would happen now.
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt Месяц назад
@@MsTimelady71 The kindness of strangers is also what I miss in travelling abroad. Tourists are now seen as either a source of income or at worst destroyers of the housing market and community.
@priscilabee583
@priscilabee583 Месяц назад
I love how you keep making such interesting and relevant content, thank you so much!
@NewMexico-FrankJen
@NewMexico-FrankJen Месяц назад
I spent a year as an exchange student in Finland not far from Turku....Paimio was the town I stayed in. Visited Turku many times! Keep up the great work you do ❤️
@laughterontheroad5034
@laughterontheroad5034 Месяц назад
I find hidden gems everywhere I travel, when I ask locals about their lives and families.
@pad9x
@pad9x Месяц назад
oh man i still fondly remember those days of before budget travel and over tourism. places just seemed more exotic back then
@wncjan
@wncjan Месяц назад
The last 25 years most of my travels has been to USA. What has changed for me is that in the last 10 years I've tried to avoid touristy places for more rural areas with much less or no tourists.
@esseferio
@esseferio Месяц назад
It's less fun, somehow. Less of an adventure or a journey. 20 years ago, going to places like Bydgoszcz in Poland was really something. :)
@shawn.champagne
@shawn.champagne 26 дней назад
The only way you're gonna find "hidden gems" nowadays is largely by going to countries that are a bit rough around the edges and/or harder to get into.
@tracywyman9887
@tracywyman9887 Месяц назад
Unfortunately, in Canada, airfare is prohibitive with few airlines - air travel is not deregulated as in other places. For example, travel between Vancouver and Toronto is about the same as a ticket to Europe.
@eaglenoimoto
@eaglenoimoto Месяц назад
It's also about the same distance as flying from Toronto to Europe, so it makes sense to me
@Entername-md1ev
@Entername-md1ev Месяц назад
Domestic travel is insanely expensive in Canada. That’s why it’s not uncommon to meet Canadians who have been to 30+ countries but never to another province in the country
@BradThePitts
@BradThePitts Месяц назад
Mark, I can't imagine planning international travel without your videos. Thanks!!! Hope to see you somewhere 👍
@the_meccaneer
@the_meccaneer Месяц назад
The other negatives of more travel: trash and pollution.
@pad9x
@pad9x Месяц назад
absolutely
@GratiaCountryman
@GratiaCountryman Месяц назад
I remember who my mom’s college roommate went to Denmark for the weekend in the 70s. That was a huge flex.
@mikemoccio9169
@mikemoccio9169 Месяц назад
Airline sales used to require a Saturday night stay.
@joeysawdust
@joeysawdust Месяц назад
The concept of travel is much better than the actual travel.
@blankface_
@blankface_ Месяц назад
That’s true with most things in life
@petek5523
@petek5523 Месяц назад
I’ve been traveling since the 70’s , cheap airlines and Airbnb have ruined travel 😢. People are actually going into debt just to see the latest and greatest Instagram destinations
@joshlunt7827
@joshlunt7827 Месяц назад
I've flown with Ryanair to Krakow in Poland from Liverpool with my Mum before now and came back into Liverpool with Easyjet. I've also flown with easyJet from Manchester 🙂
@sarak.1742
@sarak.1742 Месяц назад
I legit don't know how I used to travel 15 years ago... Smart phones, unlimited data and wifi changed the game!
@AntonioHernandez-xh8lj
@AntonioHernandez-xh8lj Месяц назад
Your videos inspired me to start traveling the world… especially as I got ready to study abroad in Spain in 2019!
@charlesbaran1106
@charlesbaran1106 Месяц назад
There were a few low cost airlines in 1980. Our first overseas trip was on Laker Airways from New York to Gatwick. No reservations were possible. Show up at the ticket counter when the next day's flight went on sale. Something called People Express operated in the Northeast U.S.; I took it between Buffalo and Newark (but not LaGuardia) for $19 or $29. International travel meant stocking up on maps and brochures at the various countries' tourism bureaus in New York. Getting off the train in a city, you would go to the local tourism office to find a B&B or hotel. We also carried American Express travelers cheques, which enabled us to receive mail at AmEx offices throughout Europe. The internet provides so much information in advance, and enables you to book transportation and accommodations, showing places on Google Street View, etc., but it does take away the mystique and surprises about new places.
@jaysterling26
@jaysterling26 Месяц назад
Go to that unique place where no one else goes: home.
@woltersworld
@woltersworld Месяц назад
Sounds like a plan 😀
@drat9191
@drat9191 Месяц назад
THIS! Used to be you could find true "hidden gems" either by accident along the way, or with real effort. Now, (no) thanks to the Internet, those gems have all been "unhidden" by articles, videos, and (especially) social media. I love your videos, Mark, but you get my point.
@Greatpacificnorthwesterner
@Greatpacificnorthwesterner Месяц назад
In the 90s, I was one of probably 2 foreigners on the subway in Sapporo, Japan. Learning Japanese was a must in Hokkaido!
@sl4193
@sl4193 7 дней назад
Thank you Mark, for covering so many of the pros and cons of travel both past and present. Glad I was able to visit (as a teenager) Naples, Athens, Istanbul and Venice in the late 1960s - I was part of a school group on a Mediterranean cruise. It is great to travel and learn about cities and their people but don't think I'd cope well with the crowds that are visiting these days. Appreciate your insights on world travel, especially the "loves and hates" content. Looking forward to your next video.
@WifeMamaArtist
@WifeMamaArtist Месяц назад
It’s even changed massively in the last FIVE years!! We did a weekend to Lisbon with the kids about 5-6 years ago and it was a fun, chilled weekend. Inexpensive (and we used a hotel) and not overly crowded. It’s COMPLETELY the opposite now! And probably a place to avoid.
@bougiebohemian5393
@bougiebohemian5393 7 часов назад
The internet and specifically, social media, has completely changed the travel dynamic and made the world more accessible.
@timol437
@timol437 26 дней назад
Wish we had crossed path during my 40 years of flying for a legeacy carrier on how travel (and airlines) have changed. If you get up to Naperville.....I enjoy your work and efforts. So glad you have covered "overtourism" and the dark side instead of the usual 'rah-rah' other content creaters do. Keep up the good work Mark.
@TMD3453
@TMD3453 22 дня назад
Having to book at some museums is a change. Great for cultural travel for visiting places thoughtfully. The world has changed,,,
@joshlunt7827
@joshlunt7827 Месяц назад
Great video as always, Mark!
@stevenporter863
@stevenporter863 Месяц назад
Mark says there is so much more information about your destination available: all the information in the world doesn't offset the decrease in quality, delays, crouds and general negatives.
@HoldMySoda
@HoldMySoda Месяц назад
I can not say that flights became cheaper in general. Back in 1994 I paid about 1000 German Marks, wich is about $500 for a flight from Frankfurt, Germany to San Francisco, USA. Back in the day traveling offered more adventure, sometimes. You were less prepared, it was more exciting and full of new and unique experiences.
@GuillermoLG552
@GuillermoLG552 Месяц назад
Everything you said is true. In China a few years ago, I was surprised by how many could speak at least a little English. Yes there are more tourist and more crowded places, however as Rick Steves says, travel opens your mind and challenges your perception of the world and other people. After living abroad for most of my life, I have a much different perspective of my homeland.
@jackmeeellleee4896
@jackmeeellleee4896 Месяц назад
I want to travel back in time and have enough money to go to all the big places before they were overrun with so many tourists. My goodness hyper hyper hyper enthusiasm...WOW!!!! WOW!!! WOW!!!
@nicolarobinson3931
@nicolarobinson3931 Месяц назад
First up from Norwich, UK. Thanks for helpful summary!👍🏻👍🏻
@philip1065
@philip1065 5 дней назад
I’m Canadian and we don’t get cheap flights like that, they are cheaper than they used to be but still very expensive for anything international
@travelvideos
@travelvideos Месяц назад
25 years ago, mostly business people were flying. Now, it's mostly tourists and kids, especially on class excursions. When I was in middle school, the furthest we went on class trips was to the theater or for a hike, but now middle schoolers travel to the other side of the world for their class excursions: Paris, NYC, etc.
@martinmaynard141
@martinmaynard141 Месяц назад
I first came to Spain in 1986 - almost no English spoken, 90%of British tourist stuck to the coast. In 1987 I travelled to Salamanca via Madrid and I think I was the first Brit my pension family in Madrid had ever met. They were so nice. As you said their are pros and cons for the changes over the last 30 / 40 years although I do get irritated by people who try to speak to me in bad English when my Spanish is more than ok
@georgiafrye2815
@georgiafrye2815 Месяц назад
I was in Spain one summer exchange in 1970 and no one spoke any English. A few spoke French as tourism on the Alicante coast. Still under Franco and very safe and primitive in small towns. Wine was a cheap as coke or bottled water. They loved Americans. I have been back 40 years later and not the quaint laid back life there any more.
@sc100ott
@sc100ott Месяц назад
Now that we have RU-vid, I can travel everywhere without leaving my house!
@katesleuth1156
@katesleuth1156 Месяц назад
Mark, I too have seen much change in travel since the time I went on a school trip to Paris in 1975. Just imagine the changes in the next 50 yrs.
@dantheman8279
@dantheman8279 Месяц назад
Very impressive analysis of how travel has evolved to where we are today. Excellent!
@robcig
@robcig Месяц назад
Good to see you made it to Sydney Australia. Would love to hear your thoughts on the land Down Under.
@annmajek5203
@annmajek5203 Месяц назад
Learned how to make croissants and pain au chocolate in Paris❤❤
@ConanNYC
@ConanNYC Месяц назад
Over crowding is a big problem. Airbnb is also at fault
@joshlunt7827
@joshlunt7827 Месяц назад
I miss my local telephone box ☹️
@tr1ck5h07
@tr1ck5h07 Месяц назад
“Bus with wings” or you could say… AirBus
@Reazzurro90
@Reazzurro90 Месяц назад
The phone cards for international calls. My parents used it all the time to call family in Italy 😂. Security is also a huge change. Before 2001 I feel that air travel was much more relaxed. But maybe I'm just being nostalgic.
@Joker-yw9hl
@Joker-yw9hl Месяц назад
Always love the vids!
@lauracru
@lauracru Месяц назад
I really appreciate your channel. It's always great information and you deliver it with heart. Thanks for making all our vacations better and inspiring the exploration bug! 🙏
@aircraft2
@aircraft2 Месяц назад
I was just in Iceland and the amount of overtourism there is sad to see... (yes I know its ironic coming from a tourist) I can't imagine places like Italy or Japan which are being bombarded by tourists...
@hassanalihusseini1717
@hassanalihusseini1717 Месяц назад
I started solo travelling in the early nineteen eighties. Have a lot of stories, but what is most different is of course communication. I was studying Arabic in Amman (1989 to 1991), Jordan. When I wanted to phone my parents people nowadays would call it a project. First I had to walk from my flat to the shared taxi station (around 1½km). Then take the shared taxi to the town centre. Then walk around a little kilometre to the main post office. Then waiting in a queue. Then telling the employee the number I want to call. Three minutes for five Jordanian Dinar, incredible around may be 10€ or 12$ in todays money (and for one Dinar I could have half a chicken with salad and a Pepsi). The waiting - depending of how many people were there - 10min to 30min until my call was ready. And then the way home again. You had to be patient that time.
@epeck1115
@epeck1115 2 дня назад
There's been a leveling. Back in the day (pre-2000) international travel was challenging. Travel infrastructures were archaic and there was wild variation in accomodations, sanitation, transportation systems, etc. For information you relied on a "Let's Go" guidebook. But with all that effort came higher highs. The joy of discovering places and people rarely visited. The sense of being a traveler, not a tourist. Everything is easier today, but in exchange, much of the adventure has been lost.
@atilcanmalak6432
@atilcanmalak6432 Месяц назад
Fantastic video, Professor! As one who works in travel, #2 is such a prevalent one. Especially the more “purposed” travel with Northern Lights or Safaris for example. You will find groups of safari vans at one spot searching for game. I look forward to reflecting on this in 20 years myself. Hope my pictures turn out as awesome as yours did!!
@MsTimelady71
@MsTimelady71 Месяц назад
IMO traveling has gone downhill since the 2000s. Rise of cameraphones blocking views and people posing everywhere. And lack of interactions. On trains, in hotels or just sitting in restaurants folks were just more friendly and made conversation. With smartphones-everyone is looking down instead of looking around and interacting with each other. Lucky I was able to travel back then.
@Suomilady88
@Suomilady88 Месяц назад
One important thing that improved about travel in 90s is that there are no more smoking zones on planes and trains 🚭 At least in the countries I've been to. That used to be so disgusting 🤢
@briandemodulated
@briandemodulated Месяц назад
I remember when flights had smoking sections, and at the beginning of the flight they'd announce which movie would be playing on projectors throughout the cabin. Onward and upward!
@JJR93
@JJR93 Месяц назад
I was an exchange student in Tübingen, Germany for 1992-1993 academic year. Fun times.
@quilmes99
@quilmes99 Месяц назад
The food just keeps getting better
@dutchigamemania
@dutchigamemania Месяц назад
That’s why I like visiting Central Asia, for us westerners it’s still so unknown
@Zatara47
@Zatara47 Месяц назад
I totally relate to the “hidden gems” point you made. It feels like because of tourism and travel content vibrant cities have become solely reliant on the tourist season and as a result have become very globalized. For example places like Hallstatt and Rothenburg used to be actual stunning places filled with mainly local travelers and filled with local-run accommodation but because of the democratization of travel they just cater to the masses and the charm is lost. I still try to experience local culture by renting a car and stopping in random towns and villages.
@TheMonkdad
@TheMonkdad Месяц назад
I love traveling to Europe but hate the crowds. I think the new trend may be trying to find the off season places. I'm considering visiting places in the winter because there are less crowds but also a completely different scene when there's snow.
@wotajared
@wotajared Месяц назад
I live in Scandinavia, but am from Spain and attempt to snowbird as much as possible (no kids). Folk I know still ask about my summer vacations despite me usually saying that I take them offseason. This year is an autumn SE Asia trip which gives me 5 weeks of extra warm weather. Aside of that, Summer in Spain (and most of the beloved Europe) is HOT. Add the crowds, and things being expensive due to high season. Climate change also makes the shoulder season much more mild. Used to travel to Asia as a kid in the late 90s-00s. Proportionally it seems, discussing low cost, that 2012-19 was the best for long haul low cost and nowadays those 500€ round trip fares EU-Asia are long gone. Within Europe it's the low cost, but as of summer '24, it seems the LLCs (Ryanair) are seeing decreased profits so might be forced to lower pricing. Of course, 2022-24 is marked by inflation and 202-21 by COVID. I still did travel, just back home, during the Pandemic and looking back to it it was eerie with the liminal emptiness of travel infrastructure.
@edschermerhorn5415
@edschermerhorn5415 Месяц назад
I would say the global nature of so many companies enables people to add some personal time onto business trips. I have had the blessing of being able to travel places I never imagined for work, and connect with colleagues all over. In turn, I have been able to take colleagues to do things like see Hover Dam when we were in Las Vegas, or take an Irish colleague to see the monuments in DC
@msworldtraveller3264
@msworldtraveller3264 Месяц назад
In the 90s people were very fashionable when travelling - especially on cruises. Nowadays, people dress on cruises as if they're going to the grocery store.
@masulliv55
@masulliv55 Месяц назад
I remember going to Europe in the 70s..we dressed up
@juriskigurs9440
@juriskigurs9440 Месяц назад
For us, people from former USSR, it is unbelievable change. We used to be behind the Iron Curtain, in Warsaw Pact, under the Communist Party and KGB rule. Now we are in NATO and EU, and we can freely travel, work, study anywhere we want. Unbelievable.
@judyhorstmann6332
@judyhorstmann6332 Месяц назад
No smoking on planes and restaurants 🙂
@bluesdoggg
@bluesdoggg Месяц назад
I recall being stationed in W.Germany in the mid eighties putting 15-20 Deutsche Marks in the pay phone just to call home.
@gustavoheberle6265
@gustavoheberle6265 Месяц назад
True !!! Every aspect you brought up is amazing ! When you remember that to call someone overseas, you had to go to a telefone booth … your getting old ! 😂😂 Take care !
@kleinemonnik
@kleinemonnik 9 дней назад
Your last point, that you have to have a mobile phone, rings more true with every passing. year. I still don't have a mobile phone, but have travelled to every country in Europe the past ten years, and I've seen things getting more and more reliant upon it. Especially after covid. I still manage without it, but it gets more difficult with each trip.
@spondoolie6450
@spondoolie6450 Месяц назад
It's not the stress level of being in cramped tourist spots ... let's be real, people/society is more vitriolic in general these days.
@bethdibartolomeo2042
@bethdibartolomeo2042 Месяц назад
Wow, I've heard about really long-haired Mark from when he was younger but I could never picture it. 🤯
@larrydalton2205
@larrydalton2205 Месяц назад
Great video Mark. Tech really has made things easier. In fall 2021, I researched and booked an entire trip to Northern Italy (airfare, schefule, lodging, trains) in a few hours only 3 weeks before travel. Of course, that was coming out of the pandemic, so only 3 weeks ahead would not work well now.
@jwinters9974
@jwinters9974 Месяц назад
For me the biggest game changer has been the smartphone. Most wouldn't even consider going on a trip today without one. Having everything (gps/camera/mail/phone/entertainment) in one compact device is remarkable, and is a huge enabler of travel.
@MsTimelady71
@MsTimelady71 Месяц назад
But also inhibitor as before people interacted with each other and strangers. Now everyone just does selfies and moves on looking down at their phones.
@yaowsers77
@yaowsers77 Месяц назад
I'm going to need teleportation to come to fruition. I was just talking with someone from Ohio going to NYC for the first and overwhelmed because she didn't know about Google maps and making lists. I explained how to do it and how it gives transportation options so now she can group things and not crisscross the city. We were saying how back in the day, you'd have to grab a paper map and circle and highlight everything. Thank God for tech!
@flower-ss2jt
@flower-ss2jt Месяц назад
Having travelled since the 60's, and even though I never booked a hotel in advance I never had to sleep on a park bench. At most ports/train stations were people who were touting for you to stay in their hotel and in some, well most, places you needed to speak a little of the language to understand what you were offered. English, French and Spanish are languages to know as in many countries which were 'colonies' those languages are still spoken. There were no Guide books - so had to look at maps to see the terrain and where churches/Roman ruins etc were. You also needed to understand the politics/culture of a country. I found most people really helpful. Sadly the big change to me is not just the amount of tourists, but the lack of knowledge that many tourists have of the culture/language/politics of the country they are visiting.
@legionrider2010
@legionrider2010 Месяц назад
I'm with you as I lived in Munich and other places in Germany during the 90's. Heading back there for a HS reunion in Sept and I know it's changed a great deal. DM to Euros and wayyy so much more.
@blankface_
@blankface_ Месяц назад
No time like now. Also the tourist infrastructure is so much better in so many places now
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