Anonymous wrote:Verona, Italy
Everywhere, Costa Rica
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would invite everyone to consider the possibility that if you find somewhere overrated, it is because you are doing it wrong. Eg going in peak season, going to see shat all the tourists are seeing rather than quieter bug still interesting places etc.
People who blithely dismiss cities like Rome, which contain some of the greatest treasures of art, architecture, and history that the world has ever produced, as “overrated”…
Exactly we loved visiting Rome and Venice in the fall. Loved seeing the forum lit up at night and visiting small neighborhood bars. And walking down empty alleyways in Venice. Plus best pizza in Naples.
Yes! I loved Venice in the fall. It was so empty, and the whole "city without cars" / canals just felt magical. I wish we'd spent more time there. I could have just walked for hours.
I've been to 9 different countries, and found something to love in all of them.
A whole 9 countries? Wow!!
What a jerk!
Why? Most Americans have been to at least 30 or more, so it was kind of a weird thing for PP to say.
Pretty sure this is demonstrably false.
Only 1/3rd of the US has a valid passport - so I’m not sure how half of them got to 29 other countries
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would invite everyone to consider the possibility that if you find somewhere overrated, it is because you are doing it wrong. Eg going in peak season, going to see shat all the tourists are seeing rather than quieter bug still interesting places etc.
People who blithely dismiss cities like Rome, which contain some of the greatest treasures of art, architecture, and history that the world has ever produced, as “overrated”…
Exactly we loved visiting Rome and Venice in the fall. Loved seeing the forum lit up at night and visiting small neighborhood bars. And walking down empty alleyways in Venice. Plus best pizza in Naples.
Yes! I loved Venice in the fall. It was so empty, and the whole "city without cars" / canals just felt magical. I wish we'd spent more time there. I could have just walked for hours.
I've been to 9 different countries, and found something to love in all of them.
A whole 9 countries? Wow!!
What a jerk!
Why? Most Americans have been to at least 30 or more, so it was kind of a weird thing for PP to say.
Pretty sure this is demonstrably false.
Anonymous wrote:I would invite everyone to consider the possibility that if you find somewhere overrated, it is because you are doing it wrong. Eg going in peak season, going to see shat all the tourists are seeing rather than quieter bug still interesting places etc.
People who blithely dismiss cities like Rome, which contain some of the greatest treasures of art, architecture, and history that the world has ever produced, as “overrated”…
Anonymous wrote:Bahamas. Just boring!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Quite honestly, you can get incredible food and views in the US without all the hassle. I'd put Big Sur, CA, much of the state of Washington, Sedona, AZ, and the 30a beaches against most international destinations.
Incredible food in the US is very hard to come by, [unless you have deep pockets to pay for the best restaurants] and I say this as a New Yorker with access to the best restaurants in the world. Our food industry sucks, and our ingredients are just not as good/fresh. Even our fruit is not as good as in other parts of the world, it is never quite as sweet and flavorful. Therefore, I suspect that those claiming that the food in Paris, Spain, Italy is not good have what I call that soda/burger palette…
This! Food in the US is of poor quality which is why the majority of Americans are overweight. I recently read an article that China now refuses to import American wheat. China!
Guess where Italy gets wheat from?
Anonymous wrote:Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, Rome, Venice, Florence
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Italy
Where did you go?
Rome and Naples. Total dumps
Rome is a dump? Too many old buildings for your liking? You prefer more urban renewal I suppose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would invite everyone to consider the possibility that if you find somewhere overrated, it is because you are doing it wrong. Eg going in peak season, going to see shat all the tourists are seeing rather than quieter bug still interesting places etc.
People who blithely dismiss cities like Rome, which contain some of the greatest treasures of art, architecture, and history that the world has ever produced, as “overrated”…
Exactly we loved visiting Rome and Venice in the fall. Loved seeing the forum lit up at night and visiting small neighborhood bars. And walking down empty alleyways in Venice. Plus best pizza in Naples.
Yes! I loved Venice in the fall. It was so empty, and the whole "city without cars" / canals just felt magical. I wish we'd spent more time there. I could have just walked for hours.
I've been to 9 different countries, and found something to love in all of them.
A whole 9 countries? Wow!!
What a jerk!
Why? Most Americans have been to at least 30 or more, so it was kind of a weird thing for PP to say.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paris, Barcelona, Madrid, Rome, Venice, Florence
Barcelona, Venice, and Florence are just too overrun with tourists. I actually thought Madrid was fabulous—it seemed like a real city with actual locals and I wasn’t tripping over a tourist every two feet.
I found the people in Madrid and Barcelona and Spain in general to be assholish.
The feeling was likely mutual.
It’s OK. Portugal and the Portuguese are way better anyway. Plus Portuguese food is superior. People finally learned Portugal is better destination.
I am European, travel is my hobby, I have been everywhere and to many places multiple times, and I actually think Portugal is one of the worst countries to visit with some of the worst, unhealthy food. Zero salads to be had. Crumbling buildings and infrastructure. Sure, the people are friendly, but so are most Europeans.
I love Spain, Greece, Italy, Germany, France, Croatia, the UK, the Netherlands and many others.
I doubt you have been even close to everywhere. Who says that?
Anonymous wrote:Overrated in what capacity?
You have to manage your expectations.
We loved Manuel Antonio in Costa Rica but not Arenal. For us overrated in Arenal had to do with not a lot of great food choices. We didn't feel there was as much to do there that were better than MA for example,
I love Paris but from a perspective of there's something in the air - not literally there's anything special other than being a major city. I love this quality of romance about Paris. But it's just another big city. So you have to expect that any big city is about the same. What defines it is not about what there is to see and do there but the quality of that place.
I think Rome is amazing for its history. Take away that part and yeah it's dirty and just another big city. But how do you call it overrated in terms of its history in its architecture?
I think people like and dislike for many reasons but to call an entire country or city overrated is neither here nor there. You have to define what you were hoping to find there to be fair.