It's almost so that now if you don't look at the channel number you can't tell if you are watching the Travel Channel or the Food Network... If I want to watch shows about food I'll put it on the Food Network, thanks. I watch the Travel Channel to see the world, not to see food (and mostly nasty food at that).
So on the one hand we have people who want only old stuff to be shown, and on the other hand we have people who want only new stuff to be shown.![]()
Retail a la carte is likely to evicerate niche interest channels that are too deeply beholden to their niche.Efforts to allow the selling of cable channels a la carte have not been successful, but
You'd be amazed how many high-end video enthusiasts -- I'm talking about people who are significant posters on AVS Forum, for example -- are unable to comprehend that.cable subscribers aren't just the customers. We are in a very real sense the product.
That's a very common sentiment, but not one backed-up by their experience. The Travel Channel, especially, seems to have stayed too focused on its small niche, and has suffered a bit as a result.I think their viewership would greatly increase if they focused more on destinations. People would watch repeats more before tiring of them if they showed attractive scenery instead of things that are disturbing.
I do like the Rick Steves show on PBS.
I dislike the fat pig known as Andrew Zimmern. I really couldn't care less what kind of offal he chooses to pour into his outsized gut. The people in 3rd world countries eat that mess because they're poor and don't have other options. Why should someone who's not in that position do it too?



I know it can't be good for him eating those massive amounts, but it's like a train wreck. We just can't stop watching.Am I alone in my disappointment with the travel channel? Whenever I've turned it on lately, 9 times out of 10 its one of those food shows. I can only take so much of Anthony Bourdain, after a while his pretentious monologues start to grate on my nerves.
I really don't like to watch people eating gross food, or that guy who tries to eat as much as he can.
I get that these guys are 'traveling' as they do their eating, but still, I wish travel channel would tone these down a bit and show some more, just regular, travel specials.
Maybe the travel channel just doesn't have the same budget as some of the more popular channels, but it would be nice if they wouldn't just air the same specials time after time.
Am I alone in this, or do others think that the travel channel is slipping?![]()
I actually really like No Reservations. I like how he goes to restaurants off the beaten path in cities around the world. I find it totally relevant to the travel aspect of the channel.
