Latest news with #ITheAsshole

Sydney Morning Herald
22-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Sydney Morning Herald
If you can afford to travel overseas, you're rich
It's pretty clear that this power imbalance and the advantages we take from it is not confined to high-end tourism. It happens everywhere, from the cheap-as-chips guesthouse in Vietnam to the safari camp in Botswana to the high-end hotel in Taormina. There are the servants and the served. The haves and the have-nots. We tourists tell ourselves stories about the smiling, happy locals who don't need anything more so we don't have to think too deeply about the wild financial and social imbalance at play here, and the fact we're doing very little to change it, because it's to our benefit. Loading In that way, The White Lotus is a lot like The Menu, the biting satire of fine-dining that made me think so differently about the high-end food experiences I'm sometimes able to have around the world. This whole thing is a farce, you realise. It's ridiculous. Luxury resorts are the same. I am very privileged in this job as a travel writer to stay in some places that I, some chump from central Queensland, really have no right to have access to. And now those incredible – and incredibly expensive – resorts are ruined. There's a popular sub-Reddit – 24 million members and counting – called Am I The Asshole? in which people write about a tricky social situation they're in and then ask that question of readers. And in this situation, yes: I, the guest at these beautiful resorts, am. Unfortunately, much like The Menu, it's not just your opinion of yourself that changes after watching The White Lotus. Obviously, I suspect myself of being a massive wanker. But now I also suspect that my fellow resort guests fit neatly into that category. This whole ecosystem is questionable. I stayed in a very expensive resort in northern Argentina recently and listened uncomfortably as my guide talked to me about the Guarani people, the indigenous inhabitants of the area, many of whom now live in abject poverty so close to those fancy hotels. 'They're quite primitive,' she said, 'but if you look closely at their huts you will see a TV antenna on the top. Some of them have mobile phones. So they're just like us, really. Do you still have natives in Australia?' Loading Am I the asshole? I certainly feel like it now. Travel is a complicated thing, and not one you can summarise in a single idea. Those fancy resorts create employment, they prop up entire communities in some places, and they do good for the places they exist in, particularly if they're locally owned. The travel industry can be vital to entire nations' economies. Move around the world in the right way and you as a tourist can do plenty of good while also really enjoying yourself. You can meet people from all walks of life, swap ideas, transfer wealth, and gain a far better knowledge of yourself and your place in the world. All of that is true. But still, if watching The White Lotus makes you want to go on a 'set-jetting' holiday, you're probably missing the point.

The Age
22-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Age
If you can afford to travel overseas, you're rich
It's pretty clear that this power imbalance and the advantages we take from it is not confined to high-end tourism. It happens everywhere, from the cheap-as-chips guesthouse in Vietnam to the safari camp in Botswana to the high-end hotel in Taormina. There are the servants and the served. The haves and the have-nots. We tourists tell ourselves stories about the smiling, happy locals who don't need anything more so we don't have to think too deeply about the wild financial and social imbalance at play here, and the fact we're doing very little to change it, because it's to our benefit. Loading In that way, The White Lotus is a lot like The Menu, the biting satire of fine-dining that made me think so differently about the high-end food experiences I'm sometimes able to have around the world. This whole thing is a farce, you realise. It's ridiculous. Luxury resorts are the same. I am very privileged in this job as a travel writer to stay in some places that I, some chump from central Queensland, really have no right to have access to. And now those incredible – and incredibly expensive – resorts are ruined. There's a popular sub-Reddit – 24 million members and counting – called Am I The Asshole? in which people write about a tricky social situation they're in and then ask that question of readers. And in this situation, yes: I, the guest at these beautiful resorts, am. Unfortunately, much like The Menu, it's not just your opinion of yourself that changes after watching The White Lotus. Obviously, I suspect myself of being a massive wanker. But now I also suspect that my fellow resort guests fit neatly into that category. This whole ecosystem is questionable. I stayed in a very expensive resort in northern Argentina recently and listened uncomfortably as my guide talked to me about the Guarani people, the indigenous inhabitants of the area, many of whom now live in abject poverty so close to those fancy hotels. 'They're quite primitive,' she said, 'but if you look closely at their huts you will see a TV antenna on the top. Some of them have mobile phones. So they're just like us, really. Do you still have natives in Australia?' Loading Am I the asshole? I certainly feel like it now. Travel is a complicated thing, and not one you can summarise in a single idea. Those fancy resorts create employment, they prop up entire communities in some places, and they do good for the places they exist in, particularly if they're locally owned. The travel industry can be vital to entire nations' economies. Move around the world in the right way and you as a tourist can do plenty of good while also really enjoying yourself. You can meet people from all walks of life, swap ideas, transfer wealth, and gain a far better knowledge of yourself and your place in the world. All of that is true. But still, if watching The White Lotus makes you want to go on a 'set-jetting' holiday, you're probably missing the point.