Abstract
Travel journalism is one source travellers turn to in order to research a destination, alongside friends who have been there, guidebooks, websites, blogs, user review sites, and chat rooms. But the travel journalists they consult would also have consulted these sources and planned their trip based on what they find there. This paper examines whether homogeneous tourism reports maintain existing power relations, or whether travel journalists challenge this via heterogeneous, alternative reports. It questions travel journalism students about their use of and attitudes towards online travel media. Employing interviews and a survey, it finds that homogeneous travel attitudes and reports are highly influential in directing them in what to see and what to think about it, maintaining existing power relations and ideologies of tourism. Even when they actively expressed a desire for heterogeneous alternative viewpoints and agendas, Internet media directed them back towards mainstream tourist themes. The implications for more self-reflexive and varied attitudes towards tourism and tourism media are discussed.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1. Travel journalism is a contested term (Hanusch Citation2010) and here we use it to mean primarily factual writing about leisure travel, appearing on a credible gatekeepered platform, written for a specific audience, and designed to entertain and guide travellers. This affords it a multiplier effect that makes practitioners opinion formers.