Insights & Illuminations
What what the world be without fantastic stories? Every person, every culture, every location has something to tell. Fantastic Stories brings you some of our favorite adventure tales throughout history, from real life to the cinema.
On our drive to find Butch Cassidy’s ranch we head South. The Pre-cordillera mountains at sunset are fierce and fiery. The sky feels like passion and love. We have finally made it to the charming tourist town of Bariloche. It sits along the glacial, alpine lake Nahuel Huapi. It is immense and absolutely pristine. It reminds me of Tahoe but prettier, deeper and bigger. We pick up our car to begin the search for the ranch of Butch Cassidy, the Sundance Kid and Etta Place in Cholila, 3.5 hours south. They bought the property with the money they made robbing banks in Montana and Utah. That was when The Union Pacific hired the Pinkerton Detective Agency to bring them in dead or alive. The bounty was over $10,000 for the two bank robbers.
The human reaction to artificial intelligence (AI) ranges from ignorance to amusement to fear. Our technological advances have not achieved true intelligence yet, but the simulations are getting better. Tools are springing up everywhere and we wanted to have a closer look.
The Vagabond Adventure recently sat down with ChatGPT and Google’s Bard, the popular natural language processing tools, for an “interview”. We wanted to talk travel, what it means to move when you’re already everywhere, and get their thoughts on our own quest to travel the world.
Traveling is wonderful, but there are some places you simply can’t explore because time has left them behind. Luckily we have writers, adventurers and books. Over the years I’ve read a few. These are my 10 favorites. Each one changed the way I looked at the world. My guess is they’ll change your life too.
If you have a favorite travel book you’d like to add to our Vagabond list of classics, drop us a comment or send us an email and we’ll happily share them!
45 years later, Close Encounters of the Third Kind still entertains and thrills audiences. It’s a sci-fi classic with an epic, landmark location that audiences never forget. Steven Spielberg’s choice of Devils Tower for the finale of Close Encounters of the Third Kind remains one of modern cinema’s biggest, mind-blowing final reel moments.
Thankfully, every now and then, there is that little sleeper hit of a movie that seems to come out of nowhere. Mrs. Harris Goes to Paris fits that description.
In Lisbon today, there are monuments to Magellan, Prince Henry the Navigator and the others whose voyages of discovery took them to every corner of the globe. In the Philippines, people celebrate a man who resisted colonization just as fiercely. Both cultures consider these men heroes. History and human behavior works this way. Tribalism still abides, whether it’s football games or outright war. We seem to be making progress, but can we find a way to celebrate diversity without demonizing those who are different?
They crashed in the Sahara desert without food, water, a radio or anything but their wit and stamina to save them. The last night they began to freeze in the night wind, unable to move enough blood through their coagulating blood streams to summon up warmth. In the cold their throats closed, their saliva retreated, their tongues turned to cloth and they waited for death. But it did not come … This is rates as one of the great adventures ever.
(Photos by Chip Walter)
Disaster often walks with adventure whether we want it or not. Recent floods in Kentucky evoked old memories of previous disasters in the minds of one journalist. Old lessons revisited and new ones learned. (Supercell thunderstorm image by Laura Rowe)
One of the most interesting places to explore is our own mind, the well-spring of all dreams and nightmares. Ketamine is one of the safest anesthetics, both for its effects on the body and ease of handling. Lately, it has found an off-label use as a treatment for depression, with increasing numbers of clinics beginning to dispense the medication. But is this application helping patients or profits? Jeff Levine is an ex colleague of mine and former CNN medical correspondent investigating this question. His investigation is fascinating.
Want some excitement on steroids? Read Drew Moniot’s review of Bullet Train, and get a dose! Because sometimes we just like to be entertained, even if it means shutting down our brain’s higher functions for a couple of hours.
Sometimes adventure exacts a steep price.
Is is difficult to imagine a tougher, or luckier, man than British adventurer Apsley Cherry-Garrard. At the tender age of 23 he finagled his way onto Robert Falcon Scott’s Terra Nova expedition hoping to become among the first humans to reach the South Pole. Scott and several members of the team died. But this story is about an even more harrowing expedition — what Cherry-Garrard called the Winter Journey to retrieve the eggs of Emperor Penguins in the dead of the Antarctic Winter. It is one of the most astounding adventure stories I have ever read. I think you’ll agree.
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid was a breakout hit when it was released in 1969. Over a half century later, it remains an enduring, beloved revisionist western.
The classic Western captured the exploits of the two iconic outlaws in the early 1900s. Butch Cassidy, the clever and charismatic leader of the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang, teams up with his sharpshooting partner, the Sundance Kid. As law enforcement closes in on their criminal activities, the duo embarks on a daring escape to Bolivia in search of a new life. Blending action, humor, and a deep sense of camaraderie, the film explores friendship and the inevitable clash between romance and reality in the changing American frontier.