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New York City - The most beguiling city in the
world, New York is an adrenaline-charged, history-laden place
that holds immense romantic appeal for visitors. Wandering the
streets here, you'll cut between buildings that are icons to the
modern age - and whether gazing at the flickering lights of the
midtown skyscrapers as you speed across the Queensboro bridge,
experiencing the 4am half-life downtown, or just wasting the morning
on the Staten Island ferry, you really would have to be made of
stone not to be moved by it all. There's no place quite like it.
You could spend weeks in New York and still barely scratch the
surface, but there are some key attractions - and some pleasures
- that you won't want to miss. There are the different ethnic
neighborhoods , like lower Manhattan's Chinatown and the traditionally
Jewish Lower East Side (not so much anymore); and the more artsy
concentrations of SoHo, TriBeCa, and the East and West Villages.
Of course, there is the celebrated architecture of corporate Manhattan,
with the skyscrapers in downtown and midtown forming the most
indelible images. There are the museums , not just the Metropolitan
and MoMA, but countless other smaller collections that afford
weeks of happy wandering. In between sights, you can eat just
about anything, at any time, cooked in any style; you can drink
in any kind of company; and sit through any number of obscure
movies . The more established arts - dance, theater, music - are
superbly catered for; and New York's clubs are as varied and exciting
as you might expect. And for the avid consumer, the choice of
shops is vast, almost numbingly exhaustive in this heartland of
the great capitalist dream.
Los Angeles - The rambling metropolis of Los
Angeles sprawls across the thousand square miles of a great desert
basin, knitted together by an intricate network of congested freeways
between the ocean and the snowcapped mountains. Its colorful melange
of shopping malls, palm trees and swimming pools is both mildly
surreal and startlingly familiar, thanks to the celluloid self-image
that it has spread all over the world.
The first-time visitor may well find Los Angeles thrilling and
threatening in equal proportions; it's a place that picks you
up and sweeps you along whether you want it to or not. While it
has its fine-art museums, California cuisine and a few old-fashioned
urban plazas, what people really come here for is to experience
the city that has come to epitomize the American Dream the fantasy
worlds of Disneyland and Hollywood , as well as the gilded opulence
of Beverly Hills and Malibu .
Miami - Far and away the most exciting city in
Florida, Miami is a stunning and often intoxicatingly beautiful
place. Awash with sunlight-intensified natural colors, there are
moments - when the neon-flashed South Beach skyline glows in the
warm night and the palm trees sway in the breeze - when a better-looking
city is hard to imagine. Even so, people, not climate or landscape,
are what make Miami unique. Half of the two million population
is Hispanic, the vast majority Cubans. Spanish is the predominant
language almost everywhere - in many places it's the only language
you'll hear, and you'll be expected to speak at least a few words
- and news from Havana, Caracas or Managua frequently gets more
attention than the latest word from Washington, DC.
Orlando - Orlando , a quiet farming town in 1970,
now has more visitors than any other place in the state. The reason,
of course, is Walt Disney World , which, along with Universal
Studios Escape, Sea World and a host of themed attractions, pulls
more than 25 million people a year to a previously featureless
plot of scrubland. Few people head to Orlando proper, choosing
instead one of the countless motels along Hwy-192 , fifteen miles
south, or International Drive , five miles southwest. Despite
enormous expansion over the last decade, the town itself remains
free of the commercialism that surrounds it.
San Francisco - San Francisco proper occupies
just 48 hilly square miles at the tip of a slender peninsula,
almost perfectly centered along the California coast. Arguably
the most beautiful, certainly the most liberal city in the US,
it remains true to itself: a funky, individualistic, surprisingly
small city whose people pride themselves on being the cultured
counterparts to their cousins in LA the last bastion of civilization
on the lunatic fringe of America. It's a compact and approachable
place, where downtown streets rise on impossible gradients to
reveal stunning views of the city, the bay and beyond, and blanket
fogs roll in unexpectedly to envelop the city in mist. This is
not the California of mono-tonous blue skies and slothful warmth
the temperatures rarely exceed the seventies, and even during
summer can drop much lower.
Honolulu - Until the Europeans came, Honolulu
was insignificant; soon so many foreign ships were frequenting
its waters that it had become Kamehameha's capital, and it remains
the economic center of the island. The city covers a long (if
narrow) strip of southern Oahu, but downtown is a manageable size,
and a lot quieter than its glamorous image might suggest. The
tourist hotels, and most of Honolulu's hustle, are concentrated
among the skyscrapers of very distinct WAIKIKI , a couple of miles
east.
The setting
is beautiful, right on the Pacific and backed by dramatic cliffs
and the extinct volcanoes of Punchbowl (a military cemetery) and
Diamond Head ; but then beauty is not so rare a commodity on Hawaii,
and you can see this sort of scenery in plenty of other places
without a city in the middle of it.
Las Vegas - Shimmering from the desert haze of
Nevada like a latter-day El Dorado, Las Vegas is the most dynamic,
spectacular city on earth. At the start of the twentieth century,
it didn't even exist; at the start of the twenty-first, it's home
to well over one million people, with enough newcomers arriving
to need a new school every month.
Las Vegas
is not like other cities. No city in history has so explicitly
valued the needs of visitors above those of its own population.
All its growth has been fueled by tourism, but the tourists haven't
spoiled the "real" city; there is no real city. Las
Vegas doesn't have fascinating little-known neighborhoods, and
it's not a place where visitors can go off the beaten track to
have more authentic experiences. Instead, the whole thing is completely
self-referential; the reason Las Vegas boasts the vast majority
of the world's largest hotels is that around thirty-seven million
tourists each year come to see the hotels themselves.
Washington,
DC - Other than the federal government, tourism is DC's
biggest industry. The city attracts almost twenty million visitors
each year. Conveniently, most arrive in midsummer, when the lawmakers
have gone home, so overcrowding is rarely a problem. The nation's
showcase puts on quite a display for its guests, and admission
to virtually all major attractions is free. The most famous sites
are concentrated along the central Mall , including the White
House, individual memorials to four of the greatest presidents,
and the superb museums of the Smithsonian Institution. Downtown,
however (broadly speaking the area immediately north of the Mall,
between the White House and the Capitol), can seem very empty,
even intimidating, at night, and you're more likely to spend your
evenings in the hotels and restaurants of the city's more motherly
neighborhoods, such as historic Georgetown , arty Dupont Circle
and the funkier Adams -Morgan district.
Chicago - Chicago is in many ways the nation's
last great city. Sarah Bernhardt called it "the pulse of
America" and, though long eclipsed by Los Angeles as the
nation's second most populous city after New York, Chicago really
does have it all, with less of the hassle and infrastructural
problems of its coastal rivals.
Founded in
the early 1800s, Chicago grew up with the country, serving as
the main connection between the established east coast cities
and the wide open Wild West frontier. This position on the sharp
edge between civilization and wilderness made the city into a
crucible of innovation. Many aspects of modern life, from skyscrapers
to suburbia, had their start, and perhaps their finest expression,
here on the shores of Lake Michigan.
Boston - Although the metropolitan area of Boston
has long since expanded to fill the shoreline of Massachusetts
Bay , and stretches for miles inland as well, the seventeenth-century
port at its heart is still discernible. Forget the neat grids
of modern urban America; the twisting streets clustered around
Boston Common are a reminder of how the nation started out, and
the city is enjoyably human in scale.
Boston was,
until 1755, the biggest city in America; as the one most directly
affected by the latest whims of the British Crown, it was the
natural birthplace for the opposition that culminated in the Revolutionary
War . Numerous evocative sites from that era are preserved along
the Freedom Trail through downtown
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