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Highlights from the 2023 LA Travel & Adventure Show with Travel Expert Peter Greenberg

Discover the hottest vacation options, and costs savings tips now that travel is back from Peter Greenberg

By Reese AlexanderPublished 12 months ago 29 min read
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2023 Los Angeles Travel and Adventure Show top right: Peter Greenberg, lower left Tourism Fiji, lower right My Japan

The 2023 Los Angeles Travel and Adventure Show was held February 18-19, 2023 at The LA Convention Center. There was a great turnout of attendees looking for the best travel offers from airlines, hotels, and cruise ships, as well as regional, domestic, and international destinations.

The LA Travel and Adventure Show featured over 30 travel sessions from industry experts providing the best tips so that you can travel like a celebrity.

Peter Greenberg led a discussion on “Traveling in a World of Disruption, Higher Prices, New Rules, Airport Chaos, and Bad Service. How to Navigate the Globe and Still Have a Great Experience.” Greenberg is an Emmy-winning investigative reporter and producer who is known as “The Travel Detective.” Greenberg is one of America’s most recognizable, trusted, and respected authorities on all things travel. Here are some valuable takeaways from Greenberg’s session to assist you when booking your travel and how to get the best value:

What You Should Know About Booking Travel Online

• The internet is deceptive. When you go on the internet to book travel, you only see what the airlines or hotels want you to see. When looking online we often see only 2 seats left or only 3 rooms left. It is not true! You only see the allotment that they were given so you panic and hit the button to book.

• Most of us are motivated by price and you need to look at the web carefully. There was a flight from LA to London and it was $400, which is pretty good. But after a closer look, it said that it was a 33-hour flight. There was also a flight from Raleigh, NC to Los Angeles with a stop in Denver and the airfare was $152, which one might think is great. However, it had a 38-minute connection time in Denver. That’s suicidal. Why would the airlines be able to post a 38-minute connect time? It’s not reasonable or possible for you to get off a plane in 38 minutes because every plane is full. If you’re going to book online, you do so at your own peril. Greenberg recommends that you should do your research online. However, that doesn’t mean that you should book online. Greenberg recommends going back to the old-school method, which is the “C” word called CONVERSATION with a human being. What a concept! Call a travel agent, call a travel advisor, or even call the airline directly he recommends.

• Greenberg recently traveled from Los Angeles to Hawaii. Nearly every airline flies to Hawaii from LA; United, American, and Delta and they’re all pretty expensive. When Greenberg looked online the airfare from LA to Hawaii was $850. He then picked up the phone and called American Airlines and asked the reservations agent if she could do better than that. In fact, she was able to do a whole lot better than that, and he purchased a ticket from LA to Hawaii for $450. If you are wondering how that happened, it was because she went to her computer and she saw inventory and routing which Greenberg could not see online. The point is to have a conversation with a human being because you lose nothing for that. While some people may think that they’re going to charge $25 to talk to a human being, think of it this way, Greenberg just saved $400. Do you think it was worth it? You bet. Always have that conversation with a human being.

• Another reason for speaking to a live person is that the internet can’t answer many of your questions about anything. Those FAQs on the airlines’ websites don’t benefit you at all. For example, many people are confused about travel insurance. You can’t complete your travel unless you opt-in or opt-out of that insurance. You have no idea what you’re being covered for and what’s worse you have no idea of what you are not being covered for. Yet, many travelers hit the button to select the insurance. What happened during the pandemic was that we found out that we were not covered for anything. So, many people wasted money on insurance and they couldn’t get their money back from the airlines because they were playing games too.

What You Should Know About Travel Insurance

• When looking at travel insurance online there are 2 different types, the first one is trip cancellation and interruption insurance. We all want peace of mind when traveling. However, not many people read the policy language because it’s buried on page 95 of the airline’s website and you never get there. This is another reason to have a conversation with a travel agent or travel advisor because they can sell you the policy and give you the information on it. More importantly, they can walk you through the important points of the “hieroglyphics” of said policy so it’s easier to understand the exclusions for age, medical conditions, and other exclusions if there is a war going on, etc.

• The second type of insurance which everyone should get is medical evacuation and repatriation insurance. Not many people have that insurance and if so, not many have read the policy. What these insurances equate to in the best of both worlds, is that if you get sick or injured anywhere overseas the insurance will pay to have you medically stabilized and then the policy will have you in consultation with your own doctor because who knows your medical history better than your own physician? Then, if necessary, they will fly you in a medically equipped jet, (and here’s the best part) to the medical facility and doctor of your choice. It is imperative that everyone reads and understands their travel insurance policy because if you let them make the decision on your medical situation they will fly you to the medical facility of their choice, and now you’re the victim of the lowest bidder.

Travel Insurance Companies

• Two companies to consider for travel insurance are Medjet Assist and Travel Guard. They have an annual policy that is about $600. If that seems expensive put it in relevant terms. Recently in Cairo, there was an American tourist there who decided he wanted to climb the Pyramids. You see how high it is with all the steps. He tried to climb it and fell down and broke his hip. They had to give him 4 first-class seats, a 5th first-class seat for the stretcher, and a nurse to fly with him. If he had not had that insurance, his cost for transportation alone would have been $87,000. Consider getting Medjet insurance, but more importantly please read the fine print.

The Official Airline Guide Book

• In the world of airlines, every plane has been full, and they are adding more seats resulting in our knees nearly up near our necks. We can’t fight that, but when you’re going to fly an airline, the best tool to have is a book called “The Official Airline Guide.” They make 3 volumes a month just for the Americas. They also have a Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Asia Pacific edition. The book costs $600 annually and Greenberg stated that it saves him that much each time he flies, because of the information in the book. This book lists every possible airfare and flight in the United States and the Americas. For example, Greenberg was flying from Sao Paulo to Buenos Aires. Most people think you’d fly LATAM, Aerolineas Argentinas, or another South American carrier. But what about Turkish…what is Turkish Airways doing flying from Sao Paulo to Buenos Aires? If one wants to fly from New York to Milan, what airlines can one fly with? In the old days, you’d fly Alitalia. Now it would be best to fly Air Emirates, it makes no sense. The point is that there is a fifth freedom flight which you won’t find online. Fifth freedom flights carry passengers between two countries that are different from the home base of the airline operating the flight, and there are dozens and dozens of them which you won’t find on the internet. You’ll find them in “The Official Airline Guide” book, and it’s unbelievable. If you don’t know what’s in this book, and you don’t have this information you’re at a disadvantage when making reservations.

Travel Rule of Supply and Demand - The Importance of Clearing Your Browsers Cookies

Greenberg frequently flies from NY to LA for CBS and he wasn’t sure if he was going on a Tuesday or Wednesday so he went online to do a fare search. He found a trip online from NY to LA for $400 which seemed reasonable, but he still didn’t know which day he needed to travel on until 5 hours later. He found out that he would be leaving on a Tuesday. He goes back online and that $400 fare became $460 in 5 hours. Has that happened to you? If so, here’s why it happened to you. When he called the airline, he asked why the fare went up $60 in 5 hours. They had an answer that seemed reasonable and they said, “LA to NY is a very popular route. It’s the law of price and demand and we price it accordingly.” Greenberg took their word for it. He went online the next night and made a reservation for some time in November, 5 months later on a Wednesday at 11 am in the morning from La Guardia to Des Moines, Iowa. Not exactly the most popular flight, but he did it six or seven months in advance. He got a fare of $200. He went back online a few hours later it was $260. Within those few hours, it is highly unlikely that a huge number of people went online on a Sunday morning to book flights to Des Moines, Iowa at 11:00 o’clock in the morning on a Wednesday in November. The answer is if you want to go online and search (as many of us want to do), either clean out your cookies or use someone else’s computer when you go back online. Guess what happened, Greenberg never went to Des Moines and never had any plans to do so, but every 6 days he kept getting emails about all these great deals to Des Moines because they thought he was interested. You have to beat them at their own game, either clean out your cookies or use someone else’s computer when booking online.

Ancillary Fee Charges Overload

There are only two things that work right now, first, the airlines get away with something and it’s called ancillary fees. The fee to check your bag, the fee to breathe, and why do they have those fees? Because they make more money from those fees than they make as airlines. That’s because an airline ticket is taxed at a very high level by the federal government. So, the money that the airlines retain that they net is relatively small. But an ancillary fee, that’s not taxed at the federal excise level that’s a state sales tax. The airlines get to retain more of the money. Why do you think Frontier Airlines charges you $20 for a ticket but $100 for a bag? Because they make more money on the bags. Now, the same thing happens with hotels. It’s a state tax dodge. Every city has an occupancy tax and some occupancy taxes can be as high as 23%. If you have a $200 room that $46 dollars goes to the city, it doesn’t go to the hotel. But if they are charging a $50-a-night resort fee and it’s only taxed at 8% they retain more of the money. Let’s decipher that resort fee. There are hotels charging a resort fee that are not a resort. President Joe Biden talked about that in the State of the Union address. The point is that they’re getting away with it because it is a tax dodge.

The hotels were getting away with charging resort fees up until recently. They weren’t disclosing it when you made a reservation, when you checked in, or when you checked out. You take that $50-a-night fee and when you see it’s $250 more than you budgeted for 5 nights for what? For a free bottle of water? A key to the hotel gym that most don’t use. If you survey hotel travelers most of them say that they’ll only stay at a hotel that has a health club and a pool. However, the utilization by travelers is only 7%. Many people book at certain hotels because there is a pool there, but they’re probably not going to use it. Why would you want to pay for something that you’re going to be taxed for by the hotel that you are probably not going to use?

Many state Attorney Generals have raised this failure to disclose and lack of transparency in pricing so they sued the big hotel chains. There was a settlement with Marriot and from now on when they post a rate on their site or on the web and they have resort fee in the same position and same type font as the rate of the room, at least you know what you’re getting into. But does that mean you have to pay it even when they say it’s mandatory? That’s also not true. Everything in a hotel is negotiable. Hotels don’t make money when you stay there once, they make money when you come back and tell your friends. The difference is if you’re not staying there because of their stupid resort fee, sooner or later they’re going to wake up, and guess what, it is negotiable.

How to Get a Better Hotel Rate

Wondering whom you should call if you want to negotiate a better hotel rate. Do you call and make a reservation at the hotel in the first place? Do you call an 800 number? Hopefully not. Your call only goes to a clearing house and they have no ability to negotiate anything. You’re going to call the hotel and whom are you going to ask for? Don’t ask for reservations because they’re going to just route you back to that 800 number. You’re not going to ask for the front desk either, you’re going to call and ask for the M.O.D. (Manager on Duty) or the Director of Sales. Those two people are the best arbiters of what their inventory is. If the Smith wedding just canceled and 60 rooms just became available that won’t show up on the web, not even the clearing house. They just know that a hotel room is unsold and that is revenue that they’ll never recoup. You’re in the driver’s seat because you’re actually talking to a human being. Now you can ask questions that the internet can’t answer. For example, Can kids stay free? Can they eat for free? Can you throw in $9 worth of bottled water? Can you throw in internet and parking?

Greenberg was staying at a hotel in San Francisco and he asked a question and they threw in free parking. Had he not asked that question that would’ve cost him $46 a day. That’s significant money and that is why you need to have a conversation and everything is negotiable that way.

If you don’t do that you can’t complain later. If they don’t disclose that resort fee and it is on your bill you can dispute it because they failed to disclose it and you have that right to know.

Frequent Flyer Programs (FFP) & Redeeming Miles

Many of us are members of Frequent Flyer Programs (FFP) and many of us have more than one program.

We’re all frequent flyer program addicts and we like to brag about how many miles we have. Good luck in redeeming them. Do you think the airlines make more money on their baggage fees? No, the airlines make more money on their frequent flyer programs than they will ever make. Last year American Airlines sold part of its FFP for the largest transaction in the history of the airlines, $10 billion dollars. How are these programs worth that much? Because we played into the game. The airlines sell their miles at 1.2 cents per mile to American Express or Citibank or Chase or Southwest knowing full well that they also control the redemption and there are no rules because it’s called deregulation. They can change the rules at any time. The average redemption rate for frequent flyer miles per year is only 8% of all eligible miles.

Here’s the one that’s going to get you angry. How many unredeemed miles do you think are out there now that you have not been able to redeem? There are 34 trillion unredeemed miles. And you’re sitting on those miles right now. Here’s the news bulletin, get out your calendar and figure 330 days out, and pick a place that none of your friends want to go to. Because anywhere you want to go, they don’t want to go. Why? Do they only want to go to the usual suspects? France is the number one vacation destination for Americans. You have 196 countries to choose from. Chances are your airline is in a mileage partnership with an airline that goes there. Pick a place where none of your friends want to go, 330 days out, and redeem those miles today because if you don’t it’s only going to get more expensive to redeem them.

Recently Greenberg was going down to Antarctica and he had to go thru Santiago. He was staying in Santiago for 2 days and he has a lot of airline miles. It doesn’t matter if you brag about how many miles you have if you can’t redeem them. Greenberg got on the phone with Delta (a human being) and he asked what was the round trip from Atlanta to Santiago business class. When the mileage programs started you could conceivably get a round-trip coach ticket for 25,000 miles in the US, and 40,000 to 60,000 miles overseas. And if you wanted to go business class it was 80,000 to 100,000 miles. Delta Airlines stated for one ticket, a round trip from Atlanta to Santiago would be 749,000 miles! This is why Greenberg advises that you don’t sit on your miles. 54% of all miles earned are earned on the ground from people who are not using them and using their credit cards. By the time you get that 25,000 miles free ticket, you’ve already spent $14,000 dollars. Not counting the money, you spent to get you up to the 25,000 miles. Let’s do the math here. Many people have been solicited for magazines in exchange for their miles. For example, a certain magazine wanted 3,500 miles for a subscription. Based on that 54% figure you spent $1800 for that magazine subscription. The point is that you probably redeemed the miles for a magazine subscription out of frustration because it was better than nothing.

Delta Airlines a few years ago offered a box of Godiva Chocolates for 6,500 miles. 18 pieces of chocolate and it works out to $218 a piece per bite, for a box of chocolates that retail for $40 a box. You don’t want to play that game. You want to redeem your miles for the reason you joined the program in the first place. To go somewhere for 749,000 miles meant Greenberg spent $420,000 for that ticket. For $420,000 he could have chartered several G5 planes. This is what we are up against and why you should redeem your miles now. Again, when you look at all of the countries you can go to, you have lots of options. Greenberg recommends visiting other countries besides France and to go somewhere original because you will have bragging rights and you’ll redeem miles for the purpose that you joined the program. And you won’t be a victim of the airlines’ changing of the rules which is happening now.

Cruise Ships

Most people who take cruises (“cruisers”) are repeaters and only 13% of Americans have been on a cruise. The pandemic with the visual image of the cruise ships in Yokohama and the Princess Cruise ship where people were unable to get to the port, and the CDC no sail order for over 18 months heavily impacted the cruise ship business. Now travel has reopened and in order for the ships to sail they had to comply with more than 74 CDC regulations, and they did. In fact, they did it very well. When we hear stories of outbreaks of COVID on a cruise ship today, it’s not an outbreak. We’re managing the disease now. Generally, those people were asymptomatic and no one went to the hospital, and no one died. The largest number of cases reported per cruise ship in the last 2 years was 48 on a ship carrying 4,800 people. That’s 1%, which is really great.

The good news is that cruises are back and even during the pandemic we lost a lot of ships to the scrap yard a little too early. There are a lot of new ships now, (25 new ships built in the last year and a half) they’re coming online now which is a lot of extra cabin space to fill. The good news now is that there are 7-night cruises being sold for $449. You can’t beat that price. That doesn’t include your shore excursions or your extra liquor but that doesn’t matter because that’s the base price and you can negotiate everything else. Again, it calls for a conversation with a travel agent. It’s a buyer’s market for cruisers and you have brand-new ships too.

During the pandemic, Americans made a decision while sitting at home, that they want to travel again, but not in a vacuum. We don’t want to buy material goods as much (clothing, jewelry, or a car), we want to buy experiences. When we came out of the pandemic gate, we came out with no price sensitivity whatsoever. Whatever it costs, we were paying. This is why airfare and cruise ships are so high now. Hotels have never had better rates in 30 years because everyone wanted to go. It’s the law of supply and demand. However, that’s not sustainable and we have to plan strategically.

Here’s an example of the cruise world. As mentioned, there are cruises out there for $449 for a week, but at the high end, there was no shortage of money. When the cruise lines put out their world cruise itineraries for 180 days with a minimum cost for a cabin per person of $70,000 and the highest cost was $260,000 those cruises sold out in 6 hours. That’s a lot of money laying around. Many people during the pandemic were solicited for offers for new credit cards with bonuses, mileage, and statement credits. Many consumers said yes and when they ran out of savings from the pandemic, they started to put things on their credit cards. Consumer credit card debt is 10% short of 1 trillion dollars, and that’s all-unsecured credit. Be careful because the interest rates are running between 24% to 28%, and that’s compounded interest rates. Please plan properly when using those cards and pay off those balances in full every month otherwise, you’ll be behind the 8-ball for the rest of your life.

Rental Cars & Important Information to Know When Renting a Vehicle

During the pandemic, rental car companies looked around and saw hundreds of thousands of cars (non-performing assets) sitting in lots. So, they sold them all and then we decided to come back and travel and we had a supply chain issue. The automobile manufacturers had a problem because they couldn’t get the chips. It became supply and demand in the worst way and rental car companies were charging up to $1200 a day. The point is that they are starting to stabilize as they get more cars into the fleets. They’re still too expensive but it’s not up to the $1200 a day where it was before.

Important Vehicle Rental Advice #1 – Take Pictures With Date and Time Stamp

There are 2 pieces of advice to remember, one date before the pandemic, and the other is because of the pandemic. Piece of advice before the pandemic, you found a car that you like at the rate that you want. You go to the counter; sign the agreement and go to the lot. You get the key. Do you get into the car yet? No. First, you take your camera phone and you walk around the car and you take a picture of every ding, dent, and anything on that car. Open the car door and take a picture of the interior and make sure that your photos are date and time-stamped. If you see stuff go back to that agent and have them note that on the contract with the points and places of damage. If you don’t, you’re going to be hit with a repair bill that starts at $4000.

Important Vehicle Rental Advice #2 – Ensure Your Vehicle Has Not Been Reported Stolen

Second thing: the one that happened during the pandemic is the craziest one. Let’s say someone rented a car for 7 days and they rented it to you for 3 weeks. The person decides they’re going to keep the car for 2 more weeks after the initial 7 days and they did. The person returns it and pays it on their bill. What happened on the 8th day of rental? The rental car company reported the car as stolen and you didn’t know that. The car was returned to the car rental company, the bill was paid and we are all thinking good, and done right? But then you as the next person who comes along to rent the car, get pulled over and arrested for driving a stolen vehicle. So many people had that happen to them that Hertz recently had to do a settlement of $168 million dollars to their clients because they had been falsely arrested and imprisoned.

What you need to do now, no matter who you are renting a car from before you leave the counter ask them, “Please look into your system one more time and confirm for me that this car has not been reported stolen.” We live in different times now.

Trains

Greenberg is a fan of trains and Amtrak has some pretty good route systems. Unfortunately, there are no high-speed trains in America and there won’t be because Amtrak doesn’t own the tracks. It’s owned by the freight lines which is why Amtrak has such a poor on-time performance record. If you’re going on Amtrak, bring a book. A popular train ride is the Southern Crescent from New York and it stops in Washington D.C. and heads straight south to New Orleans. The Empire Builder is another train that runs from Chicago with stops and eventually ends in Washington, as well as the California Zephyr runs between Chicago and San Francisco Bay Area. Then you have trains in Canada such as the Rocky Mountaineer or the Via Rail and you can go all across Canada on those. Then we have the trains overseas that are accessible to all of us.

Overseas Trains

In many countries around the world, they realized that they need to get cars off the streets in places like Germany and Spain. In Luxembourg, they have made the trains free. In Amsterdam where KLM Airlines is based, they’ve taken out full-page ads begging their customers not to fly on short-haul flights, but to take the trains. You can take the train and come home on KLM. The train options today overseas are amazing.

You can now buy a Eurail Pass for 33 different countries and you can even purchase the tickets before you leave the US. You can purchase them for one week, a month, or more if you plan it properly.

More Bang for Your Buck with a Strong Dollar Against European Currency

The power of the U.S. dollar against the European currency including the British Pound has never been better. Right now, prices are down 16% from last year. One of the first things that you should do after checking into your hotel is to find a local market to stock up on your beverages, alcohol, fruit, and snacks for your hotel room. You’ll not only save lots of money but you will have access to some of the freshest local fruit.

Turkey needs us to come and travel to the areas that were not affected by the earthquake. A 3-course dinner in Lisbon with wine at an expensive restaurant is $50. In Eastern Europe countries such as Lithuania, Latvia, or Bulgaria, 5-star hotels are $75 a night. We’re in a buyer’s market at this time of the year and it typically wouldn’t be. If you’re planning trips lock those prices in now because those exchange rates are certainly going to change. It has to because it can’t get any lower against the US dollar.

The Good and The Bad with Airlines

The airlines in this country are doing one thing very, very bad and one thing very, very good.

The Bad: The airlines are canceling service to many US cities. American, Delta, and United have pulled out completely from cities like Toledo, Ohio, Eureka, and Ithaca, New York. There are at least 42 cities that have either severely diminished service or no service at all. If you live in Toledo, Ohio right now you don’t have any choices. You can’t get out. You have to drive to Detroit and then what are you going to do with the car? If you are running a business in Toledo how do your salespeople or your customers get to you? You are at a competitive disadvantage. This is happening all around America and it is not because of a pilot shortage. The reason is that they were flying the wrong kind of aircraft for those cities. Those regional jets (RJ’s) 50-seaters, were economically unviable. The airlines could only break even if they were 95% full. So, the airlines decided to park them all and there is no aircraft out there to replace them. So that’s the bad news.

The Good: The airlines have decided to double and triple down across the Atlantic. The largest transatlantic airline now in the world is United. They’re flying to Asia, and Dubrovnik, Cape Town, and other airlines are coming in to compete with them. Airlines you haven’t heard of before like “Play Airlines” out of Iceland replaced Wow Airlines. Norse Atlantic Airways which was the old Norwegian Airlines. With all of the airlines across the Atlantic, airfares are down right now because these are introductory routes.

We saw roundtrip airfares from New York to Lisbon for $398. Now is the time to do it. Book it now and if you don’t you know it always going to go up. This year we are going back with a vengeance to Europe.

The earthquake victims of Turkey and Syria still need our help.

Tips & Reminders

• Be careful of airline consolidators and read the fine print.

• Negotiate early cancellation fees when booking your hotel.

• CFAR insurance (cancel for any reason). Now you only get 50%

• Subscribe to the hardcopy version at www.oag.com – don’t do the online version.

• Clear out your computer’s cookies or use someone else’s computer when it is time to book your travel online.

• For travel to Hong Kong, you no longer need to quarantine for 2 weeks. Use Hong Kong as a hub to go to Singapore, or Bangkok.

• Rental car companies make more money on rental insurance. Look at your own insurance policy coverage because you may already be insured for rental car coverage.

Where to Find Peter Greenberg on TV & Radio

Some of you know Greenberg from CBS or his radio show or his PBS show, “The Royal Tour.” You can catch Greenberg’s segments here:

Royal Tour

On the Royal Tour, Greenberg spends a week with some of the most prominent and powerful leaders and heads of state with their schedule devoted only to him. They send their gatekeepers home and they have no right of editorial review, or control for the next week be they a king, queen, or prime minister they become Greenberg’s personal tour guide to their country. The very first time they see the show is when it premieres. Whatever happens, happens. You can find the show on PBS, Amazon, or Apple TV. You can watch the royal tour of Tanzania, and its amazing President, Samia Suluhu Hassan. A fantastic story of how she got the job and what she’s doing.

Hidden Gems Show

Hidden Gems you will love because there is no gift shop, no tour bus, no trip advisor stickers, and no books or brochures. They take you to the most amazing destinations and experiences that nobody knows about that are all accessible to you. You can find it on PBS, and Amazon and they have episodes of Hidden Turkey and Hidden Poland, Hidden Saudi Arabia, followed by Hidden Ireland, Hidden Chile, and many more.

Regular series “The Travel Detective” is an investigative series that deals with many of the travel issues Greenberg mentioned.

The Eye on Travel program is broadcast from various locations each week, taking radio listeners around the world. You can also catch Greenberg’s Eye on Travel Minute offering a daily radio segment Monday through Friday on travel tips, and the latest information on top destinations.

Follow Greenberg on his website, Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.

Upcoming Travel and Adventure Shows 2024

For tickets and to learn about upcoming show locations, visit the Travel and Adventure Show website.

• Chicago - January 13-14, 2024 – Donald E. Stephens Convention Center

• Denver – January 20-21, 2024 – Colorado Convention Center

• New York - January - 27-28, 2024 – Jacob K. Javits Convention Center

• Los Angeles – February 3-4, 2024 – Los Angeles Convention Center

• Phoenix – February 17-18, 2024 - Location TBD

• Washington D.C. – February 24-25, 2024 – Washington Convention Center

• Atlanta – March 9-10, 2024 – Cobb Galleria Centre

• San Francisco/Bay Area – March 16-17, 2024 – Santa Clara Convention Center

• Dallas – March 23-24, 2024 – Dallas Market Hall

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About the Creator

Reese Alexander

TV Host, Fashion, Lifestyle, Blogger & Writer for Vocal Media. Fashion, Beauty, & Entertainment. Follow on:

https://www.instagram.com/missreesealexander/

https://twitter.com/TheSassySuit

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