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All aboard, Mickey fans. Disney Cruise Lines’ fleet will be almost tripling over the next seven years, from the current 5 to 13.
Disney Experiences chairman Josh D’Amaro closed the “D23 Ultimate Fan Event” in Anaheim, CA, with a promise of four more new cruise ships, in addition to the four that already are under construction (Disney Cruise Line Announces Fleet Expansion to Continue Period of Unprecedented Growth – The Walt Disney Company).
Disney already had announced four new ships: Disney Treasure, launching in December; Disney Adventure and Disney Destiny, coming next year; and a new Disney Wish sister ship being built in partnership with Tokyo Disney Resort owner Oriental Land Company. But the D23 announcement promises four more, to launch between 2027 and 2031.
The Disney Treasure, the newest ship in the Disney Cruise Line fleet, will set sail in December 2024.© Rendering courtesy of Disney Cruise Line
Disney recently revealed that Disney Destiny will feature a “The Lion King”-themed restaurant with windows that transition from sunrise to sunset, live musicians and storytellers, and songs like the “Circle of Life” and “Hakuna Matata.” Disney Treasure, meanwhile, will have a new onboard stage production all about “Moana,” featuring a 15-foot-tall puppet version of the fiery Te Kā.
The parks, too, will get a sprinkling of fairy dust. Magic Kingdom will add a new Villains land (Villains Cast a Spell Over Magic Kingdom with New Land – Disney Parks Blog) with two major attractions, shopping and dining areas; Hollywood Studios will add the first Montsters Inc. land in any Disney park; a section of Frontierland will add a Cars Land with two attractions; a new nighttime parade called Disney Starlight will debut next summer.
D’Amaro said occupancy across the five ships currently sailing reached 97% in the second quarter of this year.
“At Disney Experiences, Imagineers dream, create, design and build these stories into real places… Everything we’re going to share with you is in active development,” D’Amaro said in a statement. “Plans are drawn. Dirt is moving.”
In addition to the newly announced ships, Disney currently operates five ships and is planning on adding four more in the near future, including the Disney Destiny, which the company plans to launch in 2025. That ship will feature a heroes and villains theme along with recently-announced new restaurants like a “The Lion King”-themed spot complete with windows that transition from sunrise to sunset as you eat, tiered risers made to look like African drums, live musicians and storytellers, and favorite songs like the “Circle of Life” and “Hakuna Matata.” At D23, D’Amaro also detailed a new “Moana” show for Disney Treasure.
At its earnings call last week, Disney reported that revenue is up 4% overall and 3% at US parks and experiences. It announced four core objectives: reinvigorating the film studios, making streaming profitable, growing the ESPN business, and “turbocharging” its experiences business. CFO Hugh Johnston said, “we wouldn’t be making capital investments in an accelerated way if we didn’t expect to accelerate growth out of those businesses. And that’s true of the cruise ships as well.”
Travel advisors now can book shore excursions and lounge facilities for clients booked on the 600 Carnival cruises that will stop at the Pearl Cove Beach Club.
When it opens in July 2025, the new adults-only area on Carnival Cruise Line’s (CCL) first private island will feature an 11,000-square-foot infinity pool lined with shaded daybeds and loungers, a swim-up bar and a spacious sun shelf, as well as a beach and a full-service restaurant.
Passengers and travel advisors now can book:
Daybeds and Water Daybeds (in Starfish Lagoon and Calypso Lagoon): Daybeds and water daybeds for two have canopies, pillows, and privacy curtains.
Cabanas (at the freshwater lagoons): Cabanas hold up to four guests and include armchairs, a sofa, two sun loungers, a cooler with chilled water, privacy curtains, a lockable cabinet, snacks, and fresh fruit.
Over-the-Lagoon Cabanas (near the Starfish and Calypso Lagoons): Cabanas that also have a ceiling fan and sunshelf.
Large Cabanas (near the Starfish and Calypso Lagoons): Large cabanas hold up to six, and include four sun loungers, stocked mini refrigerators, a lockable cabinet, a sofa, a dining table, a ceiling fan, privacy curtains, snacks, fruits and lunch.
AquaBanas (at the Starfish Lagoon): AquaBanas, which allow guests to keep their feet in the water, seat eight people under a shaded canopy.
Over-the-Lagoon Supervillas (at the Starfish Lagoon) and Beach Supervillas (at the beaches): Supervillas hold up to 10 guests with plenty of shaded seating options and extra amenities, including hammocks, lunch delivery, and stocked mini-refrigerators.
Also now bookable are kayaking, snorkeling, glass bottom boat tours, and land tours.
Unlike other private islands, admission to Pearl Cove is not included in the cost of a Carnival cruise. Prices for the least expensive package, at $99.99 per person, include club access and a welcome drink. Adding an open bar that offers up to 10 drinks—draft domestic beer, house red or white wine, well drinks, or rum punch—increases the price to $139.99 per person, and adding food from the Pearl Cove restaurant costs $179.99 per person.
With tensions in the volatile Middle East rising once again, Delta and United Airlines have canceled all flights to Tel Aviv effective today, and some European carriers are halting flights to the region as well. But despite earlier reports to the contrary, British Airways has said it will continue to fly, as will Israel’s flag carrier, El Al.
Delta in a statement said it is pausing flights between New York-JFK and Tel Aviv through Friday, Aug. 2, and suspending sales of flights for DL234 on Jul. 31 and Aug. 1, and DL235 on Aug. 1 and Aug. 2.
Delta.com notes that “our hearts are with all who are impacted as we work to find safe alternatives for customers trying to travel to/from Tel Aviv,” and offers a waiver to any customers currently booked through Sept. 6, 2024, who want to change flights.
United, which has been operating 14 flights a week to Tel Aviv, says that while its service to Tel Aviv is “currently suspended,” it still flies to Amman, Athens, and Dubai, where travelers can transfer to other carriers.
Cancellations are affecting European carriers heading to the Middle East as well. Lufthansa Group on Monday said three of its airlines — Lufthansa, Swiss, and Eurowings — have suspended flights to and from Beirut “up to and including” August 5, and Lufthansa on Wednesday night canceled a flight from Cyprus to Tel Aviv after Iran announced it was temporarily closing its airspace. Air France also suspended some of its flights, while other airlines changed their flight schedules.
Meanwhile, an ad in The Jerusalem Post notes that under EU regulations, travelers whose flights are canceled may be entitled to up to €600 compensation.
With flames licking the edges of Canada’s largest national park, officials ordered 25,000 residents, visitors and seasonal workers to evacuate the town of Jasper; Jasper National Park and the Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge have closed; and the Rocky Mountaineer train has canceled several routes.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Thursday said the government is deploying military resources and evacuation support to Alberta, as well as coordinating firefighting and airlift assistance.
Rocky Mountaineer posted on its website that it is “unable to continue our rail journeys to or from Jasper for the foreseeable future” and is “moving as quickly as possible to work through the impact to guest itineraries,” in sequential order. It has canceled Journey through the Clouds departures on July 25: Jasper to Vancouver, July 26: Vancouver to Jasper and July 28: Jasper to Vancouver, and changed the itineraries for Rainforest to Gold Rush departures July 27: Vancouver to Jasper and July 30: Jasper to Vancouver.
“We will continue to work through other departures of Journey through the Clouds and Rainforest to Gold Rush and reach out to those guests as quickly as possible,” the company said.
The First Passage to the West route from Vancouver to Lake Louise and Banff, and The Rockies to the Red Rocks route from Denver to Moab, Utah, will proceed as scheduled.
Rocky Mountaineer also noted that a potential strike by the employees of Canadian Pacific Kansas City and Canadian National, which own and operate the rail lines on which Rocky Mountaineer travels, are facing potential strike action by unionized workers. “Rocky Mountaineer employees are not involved; however, if there is labor action, it could impact our train operations,” the company said. “Our team is working on a contingency plan should there be an impact to our rail journeys,” but negotiations are ongoing and the unions are required to provide 72 hours’ notice before striking.
Meanwhile, Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge—home to the largest golf course in Canada—said the fire has reached the property and everyone has been evacuated. But most of the lodge structures, including the main lodge, remain intact. For more information, call the Fairmont Banff Springs at 1-403-762-2211.
September will bring two new all-inclusive options to Jamaica, as the Princess Hotels & Resorts Group debuts the adults-only Princess Senses the Mangrove (Princess Senses The Mangrove | Only adults hotel Jamaica (princess-hotels.com) and the family-friendly Princess Grand Jamaica (Princess Grand Jamaica Hotel en Negril (princess-hotels.com).
Scheduled to open on Sept. 15, the two properties will be next to one another in Green Island, a town on the western tip of Jamaica in Hanover.
Princess Senses The Mangrove has 401 oceanview suites and 14 overwater villas with private infinity pools. Among them are Pleasure Suites, which promise a sensual ambiance, and more exclusive Platinum Club Suites offering private areas, upgraded amenities and butler service.
Also on site will be a spa, a fitness and wellness center, a water park, a convention center and a nightclub, along with 14 restaurants and 15 bars serving everything from steak to food truck fare.
The Princess Grand Jamaica, meanwhile, has 590 oceanview suites, including Platinum Suites as well as Family and Master Suite options. It also has nine restaurants and a food truck, eight bars, three pools, a water park, a kids club and teens center, and a spa.
To keep guests busy, both properties offer beach volleyball, yoga, water aerobics, dance classes, cocktail-making and cooking classes, motorized and nonmotorized watersports, soccer, tennis, basketball, pickleball and archery.
Starting rates are $579 for a deluxe junior Suite at Princess Senses The Mangrove or $505 for a Princess Junior Suite at Princess Grand Jamaica.
Based in Spain, Princess Hotels & Resorts has a total of 11,000 guest rooms in the Canary Islands (Gran Canaria, Fuerteventura, Tenerife, La Palma), Barcelona, Dominican Republic (Punta Cana), Jamaica (Negril) and Mexico’s Riviera Maya.
“The World’s Largest Cruise Company” is growing even larger, introducing a new class of ships that hold 8,000 passengers each – and ordering three of them for Carnival Cruise Line from Italian shipbuilder Fincantieri.
At 230,000 gross registered tons each, and with more than 3,000 guest staterooms apiece, the new ships will be the largest in the Carnival fleet when they arrive in 2029, 2031 and 2033. They will be powered by liquefied natural gas (LNG) and feature advanced energy efficiency, waste management, and emission reduction technologies.
Carnival Cruise Line earlier this year placed its first newbuild order in five years, for two more Excel-class ships scheduled to join the fleet in 2027 and 2028. In addition, five vessels are being transferred over from sister brands between 2023 and March 2025.
When you’re on a roll, said Carnival Corporation & plc CEO Josh Weinstein, you stick with it. And so the company is “doubling down on the growth of Carnival Cruise Line – our highest-returning brand – to keep up with the incredibly strong demand we continue to see for the world’s most popular cruise line. At this point, our newbuild pipeline is just one delivery in each of 2025, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2031 and 2033. We continue to take a disciplined approach to growth, strategically directing new capacity to the areas of highest demand at a rate of one to two new ships per year.”
Carnival Cruise Line president Christine Duffy, meanwhile, promised “innovative guest experiences that will take Carnival Cruise Line into the future with new FUN features and excitement that we know our guests will LOVE.”
With five years to go until the ships debut, the company did not yet share details on the ships’ designs or itineraries.
Until recently, the sleepy and tired port of Nassau in the Bahamas was the stop many cruisers chose to skip. Some ponied up for a pricey excursion to Atlantis or a day pass to Margaritaville, while many repeat visitors just spent the day onboard their ship, saying there was nothing they cared to do in Nassau.
But no more. Just a year after a $330-million port redevelopment began luring travelers to downtown, the Nassau Cruise Port now is adding a $35-million water park and a Royal Caribbean private island.
Aimed at everyone from little tykes to their grandparents, the water park will offer a family-friendly venue open to the public, and including everything from exhilarating slides to tranquil pools. It is scheduled to debut in time for Christmas 2025.
The water park will built on the cleared site on the western side of the downtown area of the port, behind the amphitheater, according to media reports.
Also opening next December, the 17-acre Royal Beach Club Paradise Island will offer a private and beautiful destination for up to 2,700 Royal Caribbean guests, with multiple swimming pools and beachfront facilities.
Nassau is the largest port in the Bahamas, and growing rapidly. It hosted the most visitors ever, 29,316, one day in December 2023; a record seven cruise ships at the same time in March 2024; and 800,000 more cruise passengers in the first six months of 2024 than in the same period in 2019.
“Peculiar travel suggestions are dancing lessons from God.” ~ Kurt Vonnegut, Cat’s Cradle.
You probably think of yourself as a travel agent, travel advisor, a travel counselor or a travel planner or some variation thereof. People entrust you with their vacations, their dreams, travel plans, their travel ambitions. You, in turn, access the tools at hand and make your clients’ dreams come true. Your tools are your experience, your relationships with suppliers, your sense of detail and customer service. Every now and then, however, maybe you glimpse that you are something more than a travel agent, counselor or planner. Sometimes you might just sense that you pass right over into the realm of the magician – that ability to transform travel from a trip into an experience. Read the rest of this entry »
Remember when you had to have a paper ticket to get on a plane? Seems like ages ago that e-tickets took over—and now perhaps the paper passport book is headed the same way.
The tech world is abuzz this week with reports that Google and Apple are developing technology to bring your passport to your phone.
Google Wallet is rolling out technology that will let you scan your passport to your phone, according to reports in Biometric News (Google Wallet takes next step with US biometric passports | Biometric Update) and other technology media this week. And, they say, Apple is not far behind.
The articles cite “code leaker Assemble Debug,” who already has posted pictures of what the Google Wallet page will look like.
AndroidAuthority.com, meanwhile, reports that the Google system will allow users to create an “ID Pass” and then tap their phones to an NFC readers or scan a QR code to present it to authorities. The feature will work for US passports at “various TSA checkpoints” when it becomes available—but for now, and likely as the technology rolls out, you’ll need the hard copy backup, it says (Google Wallet could soon add e-Passport support, but you’re still going to need the real thing (androidauthority.com). In Europe, it will store national ID cards used by the EU countries.
Code for integrating passports was shipped with the beta version of the Google Wallet, and Apple Wallet has reportedly already begun building a similar capability into its APIs, they say.
Google Wallet already can upload mobile driver’s licenses from several states, including Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, and Maryland.
But alas, AndroidAuthority reports, “the new e-Passport feature is not currently live within the Google Wallet app. Google is currently testing it within the app, and it may or may not roll out in the future.”
Disney will continue its expansion into Asia with year-round cruise vacations in the Land of the Rising Sun, under a new agreement with the owner of Tokyo Disney Resort, Oriental Land Co., Ltd. (OLC).
“Disney Cruise Line has ambitious plans to bring family vacations and Disney storytelling to more guests around the world than ever before,” Disney Experiences chairman Josh D’Amaro said.
Under the terms of the agreement, OLC will operate a new ship that will be registered and based in Japan year-round. With about 1,250 staterooms, the ship will be a sister to Disney Wish, but also feature “imaginative designs created by Walt Disney Imagineering,” including “select modifications specially designed with Japanese guests in mind.”
More details about the maiden voyage, itineraries and onboard experiences will be announced at a later date, Disney said.
The ship will be the ninth in the Disney fleet, which will almost double in size from the current five ships — Disney Magic, Disney Wonder, Disney Dream, Disney Fantasy and Disney Wish by 2029, with three more ships expected by the end of 2025. It will be owned by OLC, however, and leased to Disney.
It also will be the fourth in the Wish class, which will add two more ships by next year, Disney Treasure later this year and Disney Destiny in 2025. These ships are slightly larger than Disney Dream and Fantasy, holding about 4,000 guests in 1,250 staterooms. Disney Wish features the AquaMouse water coaster, a Marvel-themed restaurant and a Frozen-themed dinner theater.
Disney Cruise Line also plans to begin year-round cruises from Singapore in 2025 and this summer debuted a private island, Lookout Cay at Lighthouse Point, in The Bahamas. Its fleet sails the Caribbean, Europe, Alaska, Mexico, Canada, Hawaii, the South Pacific, and Australia and New Zealand.
Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated failures. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.
~ Calvin Coolidge
All manner of personalities take on travel consulting. Those who remain in the business for more than a couple of years, however, share some common traits that serve to explain their ability to remain in place in an industry so challenging. As President Coolidge indicated, if you are not persistent, there is no other quality to take its place. Read the rest of this entry »
Caribbean resorts are hunkering down and cruise ships are scrambling out of the way as Hurricane Beryl roils the skies and seas around the Windward Islands on Monday.
The only Category 4 hurricane ever recorded in June, with 130 mph winds, has sent up warnings for Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Grenada, St. Lucia, and Tobago, and tropical storm warnings for Martinique and Trinidad. Hotel guests are hunkering down—but cruise passengers are sailing away.
Royal Caribbean on June 29 said Beryl’s “high waves and strong winds” were causing changes in Eastern Caribbean itineraries; instead of visiting St. Thomas and St. Maarten, Icon of the Seas will call at Cozumel and Costa Maya, Mexico, and then Perfect Day at CocoCay as planned. Wonder of the Seas will replace scheduled stops at Roatán and Costa Maya with Nassau; Harmony of the Seas will skip Roatán, Honduras and arrive in Cozumel and Costa Maya ahead of schedule.
Norwegian Cruise Line too, is making changes. Norwegian Jade will skip Falmouth, Jamaica; George Town, Grand Cayman; and Cozumel, Mexico, and instead head for the Eastern Caribbean, with calls at San Juan, Puerto Rico; Tortola, BVI; and Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic. Norwegian Breakaway also will head for the DR, instead of Honduras.
And Disney Fantasy will skip Falmouth, Jamaica and instead spend an extra day at sea.
As of 8:00am EST on Monday, Beryl was approximately 70 miles east of Grenada, hitting Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines before taking a west-by-northwest route toward the Yucatan Peninsula later this week, then through the Bay of Campeche late Friday and toward the east coast of Mexico.
Luxury expeditions are a hot item for 2025, and PONANT has met the challenge by adding 18 new itineraries plus nine exclusive polar experiences in its new catalog, and promising at least one excursion in every port of call.
Ponant sailings next year will include Northern Europe and the Atlantic, the Mediterranean, Asia, Oceania & Polynesia, and nine polar itineraries aboard Le Commandant Charcot, the world’s only luxury icebreaker. Several of the new itineraries include shoulder-season sailings to popular destinations including the Mediterranean and the Aegean.
The newest itineraries include a 12-day Mediterranean Heritage and Archaeological Sites that visits Greece, Italy, Malta, Tunisia, Algeria, and Spain, April 23-May 4; an 8-day Europe Autumn in the Aegean Sea to Greece in September and October; The Fascinating Nature of Melanesia, including the Kei Islands, the Raja Ampat Islands, and the remote Banda archipelago, from September 10–21; and the 8-day Secular Treasures in the Land of the Rising Sun from Osaka to Kobe, April 5-12.
The polar itineraries will take guests as well as naturalists, historians and photo ambassadors to the ice floes of Baffin Bay and Disko Bay; to Ammassalik and the Blosseville Coast, whose ice cap extends to the North Pole; ashore to meet with two Greenlandic communities; and to an all-new port of call, Corner Brook on Newfoundland.
A unique journey, the 12-night Encounter with the Last Guardians of the North Pole, sailing April 5-17, will allow travelers to interact with local communities and explore Greenland’s ice sheet with hunters from the Inuit community. José Sarica, expedition experience director, and Mathieu Tsingrilaras, staff captain on the Ponant fleet, will join French polar expert Nicolas Dubreuil for this scouting expedition, with the goal of developing new polar activities in collaboration with “the last guardians of the pole.”
This trip includes a four-day visit to Kullorsuaq, where guests will stay overnight with locals or in expedition tents on the ice, and participate in village life through dog-sled rides, traditional Inuit kayak outings, snowshoe hikes, snorkeling in a wetsuit, and a night in an Inuit tent to explore Nunanutaat, remote areas reachable by dog sled.
There isn’t a single wisp of smoke curling out of the top of Mount Vesuvius as we walk up its stony brown slopes.
A few birds are twittering in the bushes, but we leave we them behind as the path rises above fertile ground. It’s silent, except for the scrunch of feet on clinker. It’s too quiet, too calm. Are we about to get taken out in an unexpected rumble of smoke, ash, flames and lava spewing into the skies and tumbling down upon us? Read the rest of this entry »
There is probably no aspect of the entire spectrum of marketing that is as problematic as advertising. Done properly, travel agency advertising will influence a target audience. Done poorly, it will, well, make you poor. It’s no wonder that so many travel agencies advertise so minimally, and thereby lose out on a significant opportunity to make people aware of their services.
One of the secrets to an advertising campaign that works is to have the proper expectations going into the campaign. Understand what advertising can, and cannot, do for your travel agency. Advertising can interest people in travel. Advertising can make people aware of your existence. Advertising can motivate people to call your office. Advertising can bring a consumer to the doorstep of your travel agency. Read the rest of this entry »
National journalist Charles Kuralt once said, ” Thanks to the Interstate Highway System, it is now possible to travel across the country from coast to coast without seeing anything. ”
While US highways provide an undeniably efficient method of travel, it’s true that unless you journey off the beaten path, you may never see the amazing natural wonders found in the United States of America, Canada, South America, or even in your favorite destinations of Europe. Camping and “Glamping” (luxury camping) is widely known as one of the best ways to truly experience the outdoors, with easy access to the greatest attractions you can only see here: waterfalls, forests, swimming holes, hot springs, cold springs, canyons, mountain tops… rocks for climbing, rivers for rafting, trails for riding. There is truly something for everybody. Read the rest of this entry »
International travel becomes a bit more complicated when navigating with a DUI (Driving Under the Influence) conviction in your client’s rearview mirror. DUIs, seemingly straightforward in their nature, can actually vary significantly in their impact on travel opportunities, depending on the destination and the severity of the offense.
While some nations may treat a DUI as a minor offense, akin to a misdemeanor, others elevate its seriousness to that of a felony, especially if it involved harm to others or property. This distinction is crucial, as it directly impacts a traveler’s eligibility to enter certain countries. Read the rest of this entry »
Disney Cruise Line shared details of its 2025 schedule this week, including plans to homeport three ships in Port Canaveral, as Disney Treasure debuts this winter and joins Disney Wish, while Disney Magic and Disney Fantasy take turns there.
Two more new ships will join the fleet in 2025. Disney Wish will get a sister, Disney Destiny, and Disney Adventure will head for Asia, where it will homeport in Singapore in early 2025.
Disney Treasure will sail seven-night Caribbean sailings, while Wish sails three- and four-night Bahamas trips.
Disney Magic will be in Port Canaveral for the summer months and into September and October, then head to Puerto Rico for a series of seven-night Caribbean sailings, and then on to Galveston, Texas, for four- to seven-night western Caribbean trips through May 2026.
Disney Fantasy will sail four- and five-night itineraries out of Port Canaveral from November 2025 through May 2026.
Disney Dream will sail from its new home in Port Everglades on three- to five-night Bahamas itineraries through May 2026.
Disney Wonder will spend the summer of 2025 in Alaska before heading Australia, New Zealand and the South Pacific in late 2025 and then homeporting in San Diego beginning in March 2026 for three- and four-night Mexican Riviera sailings.
Bookings for the new itineraries open to the public June 28, with earlier dates available for the line’s variety of club-level members, but details can already be found on disneycruise.com.
Also this week, Disney shared that its Castaway Cay private island in the Bahamas has brought in $220 million in dividends from DCL Island Development since 2014, though it does not share figures on how much revenue was generated. The island debuted in July 1998 as the first private island to allow ships to dock directly at the shore, so guests did not need tenders to come ashore. Disney’s CFO Hugh Johnston said on its second quarter earnings call last month that “the cruise business, frankly, is one that has an enormous number of opportunities for us over time. And that is why we’re leaning more heavily into that business.” It is no exaggeration.
A trial program by the US State Department will allow a limited number of travelers to renew their passport online and get a new one in six to eight weeks.
Beginning on Wednesday, June 19, a beta test of the online process will open seven days a week at 1 p.m. Eastern time. The system will accept a limited number of applications each day and then close. But the number of applications accepted each day will grow over time, as the system proves effective, the State Department promises.
The online system is not meant to expedite the processing of passports and it will not be faster than mail-in applications, except for the time saved in the mail.
To be eligible, travelers must be applying for a passport renewal, and not their first passport. Applicants must be 25 or older and have a passport issued between 2009 and 2015 that was valid for 10 years at the time of issuance; live in the United States; and pay with a valid credit card.
Users of the online option cannot update biographical information such as their name, gender, or date of birth.
For more information or to apply, go to Renew my Passport Online (state.gov).
Mooresville, NC, May 16, 2024 – Gifted Travel Network is excited to announce its partnership with Voyager Social, known for its innovative artificial intelligence engine Toby AI. This strategic alliance is set to launch the Voyager Content Portal in tandem with Toby AI, equipping Gifted Travel Network’s advisors with state-of-the-art technological tools and an extensive content library to enhance their service offerings.
At the core of this partnership is Toby AI, a bespoke artificial intelligence platform meticulously crafted for the travel sector. Toby AI is designed to aid travel advisors in delivering unmatched service and insightful guidance, elevating the travel planning and advisory experience. With the integration of Toby AI into their toolkit, Gifted Travel Network advisors are at the forefront of the industry, set to redefine travel consultation through advanced AI capabilities.
Richard Earls, president of Arqiteqt Software, the pioneering force behind Toby AI, shared his enthusiasm for the collaboration: “We couldn’t be happier working with Gifted Travel Network. They are an organization that embodies integrity and professionalism each day. The chance to incorporate our Content Portal into their suite of tools is a thrilling opportunity for us. I eagerly anticipate the response from the Gifted Travel advisors as they welcome Toby as their newest collaborator.”
As the travel industry continues to adapt and evolve, the collaboration between Voyager Social and Gifted Travel Network signals a new era of travel advisory, where technology and human expertise intersect to create meaningful, memorable travel experiences.
“I am so happy to be able to offer this innovative product created by Richard and his team to our advisors,” said Sandy Saburn GTN’s Chief Strategic Alliances Officer. “We all know that it is beneficial to harness the power of AI to create efficiencies in our everyday lives, and there is no better way to do it for travel advisors than to utilize an AI tool that has “learned” from more than 20 years of travel industry content.”
About Voyager Social
Voyager Social is a leader in the development of advanced artificial intelligence solutions for the travel industry. With its flagship AI engine, Toby AI, Voyager Social is at the forefront of revolutionizing travel advisory and planning services.
About Gifted Travel Network
Gifted Travel Network is the premier host agency for luxury travel advisors. Specializing in providing an elevated hosting experience, GTN has swiftly emerged as a leader within Virtuoso. Through their innovative approach to educating and supporting successful travel entrepreneurs, Gifted Travel Network takes pride in leading the way and attracting new-to-industry professionals to enter the dynamic world of luxury travel.
When a stick doesn’t work, reach for a carrot—and apparently that’s the smart new approach to its travel-agency partners at American Airlines. The carrier has followed up the recall of its highly unpopular NDC booking strategy by promising to pay 10% commission on NDC-enabled bookings of Main Plus, Main Select, and Flagship Business Plus ticket bundles through the third quarter of 2024.
Main Plus NDC bundles include a Main Cabin Extra or preferred seat and a checked bag. Main Select offer refundable fares, same-day flight changes, priority boarding, priority check-in and a choice of any seat in the main cabin at the time of booking, including Main Cabin Extra. Flagship Business Plus includes a business-class seat, access to a private check-in area, expedited security screening, Flagship First dining in a Flagship Lounge and a free third checked bag.
The news comes as a welcome bow to the role of travel advisors in the industry. Just two weeks ago, AA’s CEO Robert Isom canceled a set of proposed procedural changes that would have denied frequent-traveler points to travelers on bookings not made by preferred travel agencies through the NDC direct channel. In a quarterly call on May 29, Isom acknowledged that the changes—meant to push travelers and travel agencies to use direct channels instead of GDSs—had resulted in falling revenues and forced a cut in AA’s profit forecast.
By the next day, Vasu Raja, author of the stick approach, was gone—and Isom apparently already was reaching out to travel advisors, instead offering commissions to reward those who showed support.
The business travel blog The Beat first broke the story that several travel agencies, all of whom requested anonymity per their contracts with AA, received a memo from American Airlines introducing the program on May 30. It will last through the third quarter of 2024.