When it comes to travel TV, few names are more well-known than Samantha Brown. Since the year 2000, she has hosted almost a dozen different travel series. Now she's back with her latest on PBS called "Samantha Brown's Places To Love." Brown says this time around she is taking a more personal look at travel.
Since 2000, Brown has traveled to over 260 cities in more than 60 countries. Her favorite place to visit? Southeast Asia. Brown says it's an entirely different world that contrasts so strongly--physically and culturally--from the U.S.
To make the most out of travel, Brown says, "don't go for the exclamation points. Look for the commas." The best experiences are in the side streets, not in the main squares.
Jill and Carlo cover the latest on the negotiations over Biden's economic agenda, workers on strike across America, and Love, Hate, Ate...at the movies!
All the news you Need2Know for Friday, October 15, 2021.
What to Stream — or attend — this weekend with "No Time to Die," Netflix's Rita Moreno documentary, "Crawl," "Zodiac," and "Star Trek V."
With prices surging worldwide for heating oil, natural gas and other fuels, the U.S. government said Wednesday it expects households to see their heating bills jump as much as 54% compared to last winter.
Officials say at least 46 people were killed and another 41 injured after a fire broke out in a decades-old mixed commercial and residential building in the Taiwanese port city of Kaohsiunging.
Biden tries to get out in front of the supply-chain shortages as the cost of living keeps going up, Trump tells Republicans not to bother voting, terror in Norway and more.
A man armed with a bow and arrows killed several people and wounded others near the Norwegian capital of Oslo.
Why are so many Americans quitting their jobs? Jill and Carlo discuss, plus the coming Christmas supply chain disaster, and William Shatner gets his chance to go to space for real.
A coroner in Wyoming says slain cross-country traveler Gabby Petito died as a result of strangulation.
Colorado wildlife officials say an elusive elk that has been wandering the hills with a car tire around its neck for at least two years has finally been freed of the obstruction.
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