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Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. There's a growing chasm between travelers to sought-after destinations and the people who actually live in those places.
We are loving our favorite destinations to death. We are overrunning them. And residents are pushing back because it's impacting their livability.
That's travel industry researcher Suresh Subudi, who has spent more than 20 years studying the relationship between the places we love and the people who actually live in them. He says that the travelers and the residents who host them are on a collision course. But with technology and small behavior shifts, things don't have to be that way.
In your next trip, will you be tourists? or a joyful guest it's time we bring joy back in travel how it's coming up right after a short break
Chapter 2: What is the main issue with overtourism?
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Chapter 3: How do residents feel about the impact of tourists?
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Last July, I was in Rome. I walked from my hotel to the Trevi Fountain on the cobbled streets lined with beautiful cafes, bustling with residents and travelers drinking their espressos and cheering and greeting each other. Small souvenir shops selling beautiful replicas of the Colosseum The Sistine Chapel ceiling paintings. What an atmosphere.
I soaked it all in, reached the Trevi Fountain, grabbed my favorite pistachio gelato and looked at the marvelous views. A perfect Roman holiday. Suddenly, my alarm rang and I woke up from my dream. I was in Rome. I did walk from my hotel to the Trevi Fountain. But I felt rushed. The cafes were crowded. People had to even queue outside. The shopkeepers had no time to entertain visitors.
I reached the Trevi Fountain and forget grabbing my favorite pistachio gelato or finding a bench to sit. I couldn't get to the steps. Thousands and thousands of people all around. Have you felt the same way when you reach your dream destination? You feel as if it has been overrun. You feel as if it has become a selfie cue. I had the same feeling. And this is not an isolated incident.
I had the same exact experience in Tokyo when I went there during the cherry blossom season. Tourists crowd every park in the city to get the glimpse of the famous Sakura. I asked a resident, how does he feel seeing so many tourists all around? He told me that he doesn't bring his family anymore for a picnic under the Sakura. That response broke my heart.
We are loving our favorite destinations to death. We are overrunning them. And residents are pushing back because it's impacting their livability. Their cost of living is increasing. Congestion on the road, rental prices, food prices. They're pushing back. And they're pushing back like in Barcelona with the graffiti asking tourists to go home.
In Barcelona, in Italy, in Portugal, residents are pushing back. I have been researching the travel industry for last 20 years and my two research subjects, the residents and the traveler are on a collision course like never before. We have a travel crisis. The travel industry employs about 300 million people globally and it's going to be a 15 trillion dollar industry by 2040.
too large, too many livelihoods at stake for us to ignore this crisis. But let me pause and ask you a question. Why do we travel? We travel for joy. Joy by experiencing the diversity this world has to offer. Joy by experiencing different lives. Joy through a shared connection. My daughter, son and wife are here and I want them to experience the same joy I experienced in my Roman dream.
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Chapter 4: What personal experiences highlight the problem of overtourism?
Residents feel like how I used to feel as a child when unexpected guests arrived in my house, especially if they didn't carry any special gifts for me. I barely uttered a smile and I wished that they leave as soon as possible. I'm sure many of you, if you could find a way To contribute through your time, you would. Again, things are changing on this front.
Golden Volunteer is an example of a platform which connects volunteers with organizations and projects looking for volunteers. It in fact goes to the extent of doing volunteer background check. If we can unleash a gratitude marketplace at scale, we will create value. a deep connection between the traveler and the resident. Copenhagen is going on that path.
With CopenPay, you get points if you do gardening, you get points if you do cycling, and you can use those points for redeeming against attractions. If you had the opportunity to contribute with your time, what would you do? Some of your annual lovers, you may want to be part of the elephant rescue centers in Thailand. or want to be part of sea turtle rescue centers in India.
If you're an environment or nature lover, you may want to be part of coral reef preservation in the Great Barrier or in Maldives. And if you're a history lover like me, you may be wanting to be part of restoration of an 800-year-old temple. In fact, I will seek such an opportunity and bake it in my itinerary because I would love to be part of something like this. the possibilities are infinite.
The travel industry is going to grow. It's one industry that is probably encouraging tolerance in this highly polarized world. It's for us to shape positively the destinations we love and the people who call it their home. I've talked about the tools at hand and I've given you a few examples. I want to leave with one question. In your next trip, will you be a tourist or a joyful guest?
It's time we bring joy back in travel. Thank you.
That was Suresh Sabudi at TED at BCG in 2025. If you're curious about TED's curation, visit TED.com slash curation guidelines. And that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is a podcast from TED. This episode was fact-checked by the TED research team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Lucy Little, Emma Taubner, and Tansika Sunglarnivong.
Additional support from Daniela Balarezo, Christopher Faisy-Bogan, Valentina Bohannini, Banban Chang, Brian Green, and Lainey Lott. Learn more at podcasts.ted.com. I am Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening.
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