‘We Out Here’: Inside the New Black Travel Movement

BlackAchilles

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lol it's incredibly sad. They act like they stumbled upon some new fascinating part of life. Join the rest of the world. Go backpack. Act like y'all been here before.

100 percent positive these are the bottle service muhfukkas that I tend to avoid on my nights out.

I see you reppin Gaithersburg, and that fully explains your comment. Growing up black and fairly well off in DC had me simultaneously thankful to live around such a collection of black intellects, and disgusted by how many others were just empty materialistic people consumed by status.
 

dora_da_destroyer

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Considering how little Americans travel, it's a big deal.
not really, both logistically and culturally, it's hard for Americans to travel abroad, but people with means or who prioritize travel, travel. this is not new, this is how it has always been. these people made a group based on black folks traveling (people who were doing it before a "movement" was deemed) and act like they're some anomaly worthy of praise, i mean did you go to the site? they have actually have a "high council", sorry, but wtf, if that ain't some feeling yourself for nothing ass shyt, then i don't know what is. this group is seriously nothing more than the increasing number of overly self important, showing my success groups/cliques/collectives that are born out of the educated "professional" buppies that occupy cities like chicago, dc, atlanta, ny.
 
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tru_m.a.c

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I see you reppin Gaithersburg, and that fully explains your comment. Growing up black and fairly well off in DC had me simultaneously thankful to live around such a collection of black intellects, and disgusted by how many others were just empty materialistic people consumed by status.

Grew up in queens and LI. Just moved out here a year ago at the age of 25. In manhattan you deal with the same shyt as DC.

Bruh, the first place cats took me to in DC was Park. They straight up were like "you're gonna hate this place. It's a fake ass Atl scene. But the bytches are bad."
 

blackzeus

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I remember when a nikka used to be special in these little Asian towns, now you got nikkaz from your block cheesin' with the bish that used to be yours before she met your homey that can dunk :mjcry:
 

blackzeus

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not really, both logistically and culturally, it's hard for Americans to travel abroad, but people with means or who prioritize travel, travel. this is not new, this is how it has always been. these people made a group based on black folks traveling (people who were doing it before a "movement" was deemed) and act like they're some anomaly worthy of praise, i mean did you go to the site? they have actually have a "high council", sorry, but wtf, if that ain't some feeling yourself for nothing ass shyt, then i don't know what is. this group is seriously nothing more than the increasing number of overly self important, showing my success groups/cliques/collectives that are born out of the educated "professional" buppies that occupy cities like chicago, dc, atlanta, ny.

Paying $187 for a flight is success? :mjlol: With that said, how often we talk sh*t about our own, let's :clap: for a group of young positive black people using their brains and financial means to see the world :salute: Let's build, not destroy. For some of those people who ended up in Abu Dhabi, I'm sure there's people who told them they'd never leave their hood.
 

blackzeus

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Moreso Frenchies than Euros in general. Think about the Malaysia flight that just went down, there was one French person among all those Asians. If any plane goes down, rest assured there was a French person on-board. I meet more of them when I travel than any other nationality. The Dutch a far second. I see a lot of Japanese too but they stick to western/rich countries. Frenchies will go anywhere.

I meet more Germans than anything personally :manny:
 

blackzeus

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Packing Up

01.04.15
‘We Out Here’: Inside the New Black Travel Movement
Young, hip, urban millennials are using tools like Instagram to become one of the fastest growing travel markets.
In the wee hours of Christmas morning, a flight deal was shared in an exclusive Facebook group for urban travelers. An unbelievable fare glitch priced round trip flights on Etihad Airways from select U.S. cities to Abu Dhabi as low as $187, nonstop, taxes and fees included. Whoa.
This is the kind of thing Nomadness Travel Tribe, a stealth crew of 9,000 predominately African American globetrotters, ages 25 to 40, lives for. At last count, the tight-knit travel clique has collectively visited all but a dozen countries on the map, hosting meet-ups in cities around the world, from New York to Dubai. They even have matching tattoos. And they booked hundreds of tickets within hours.
“We’re here,” says Evita Robinson, 30, the creator of Nomadness Travel Tribe. “We may be the only black people in India, but we in here. We may be the only black people in Tokyo getting all the looks, but we’re still in here.”
Thanks to a new crop of emerging online communities, international travel is becoming more real than ever for social media savvy African Americans, a demographic The New York Times noted last year is largely untapped by the trillion-dollar travel industry. Members of Nomadness Travel Tribe booked over 400 flights to the Middle East, Asia and Africa for leisure travel in 2015 over the past two months alone, and that doesn’t even include family, friends, and the folks on Black Twitter, tagging along with them.
All of black Twitter will be in Abu Dhabi, and I love it!!! If you're going the first wk in Sept hmu
— justified agitator (@Awkward_Duck) December 25, 2014
Every young, Black professional I know is going to Abu Dhabi some time in the spring lol
— Slayonce (@fairySLAYmother) December 25, 2014
Black Twitter I'm officially mad at you. Why did you buy up all the Dubai and Abu Dhabi plane tickets last night? I wanted to go lol
— LaTasha (@downtown7thave) December 26, 2014
A quick glance at the Instagram feed of Travel Noire, another emerging community for unconventional travelers of color, confirms black travelers are, indeed, out here. And the reason they’re flocking to niche communities is because of “representation,” says Zim Ugochukwu, 26, the creator of Travel Noire, a digital publishing platform with over 100 contributors. “When you see somebody who looks like you doing something you never thought you could do, then that thing becomes possible.”
These days, to be featured by Travel Noire on Instagram is like a badge of honor for many black millennial travelers. “People will spend their entire vacation trying to get on the Travel Noire Instagram,” says Zim, who is humbled by the community’s growth on the photo-sharing platform to nearly 60,000 followers in little over a year. (Full disclosure: I've been a member of Nomadness the last eight months and several of my photos have been featured on Travel Noire.)
Nomadness boasts similar bragging rights. A running joke inside the tribe is that the group is like that club with a hundred people waiting outside to get in. You don’t want to wait on line, but all of your friends are inside telling you how poppin’ it is. Except, Nomadness currently has 3,000 pending membership requests. And the wait is about 3 months long, as the tribe’s “high council” reviews prospective members.
Unlike Travel Noire, which caters to newbie, largely millennial, travelers who may have never ventured outside of the country, Nomadness members must have at least one passport stamp to join the tribe. “There are some people who even make my passport—which has 40 pages added to it—look like child’s play,” says Evita, a three-times expat and former backpacker. “We have members who have been to over 100 countries.” And they all travel affordably, busting the myth that travel is only for the elite.
“The tribe is really made of people who put travel as a priority in their entire lifestyle,” says Evita. People who barter with their employers for more PTO and telecommuting options instead of salary increases, so they can work remotely from the beaches of Jamaica. People who have, at one point or another, thought: “You know what? I don’t want to be a slave to a 9-to-5 schedule. I want to create my life so that I have more freedom to be able to travel the world, and work and live wherever I want,” she says.
For the Travel Noire set, it’s about stepping outside of your comfort zone, and realizing what’s possible. “Instead of going to Miami or Las Vegas, you take that same money, catch a flight deal, and you’re off in Johannesburg for the same price,” says Zim, who teaches newbies how to travel hack through Travel Noire’s fellowship program, which is currently accepting applications for the first class of 2015. “By the time they’re finished, they know exactly how to spot glitch fares—they know everything I know, pretty much,” she says. Travel Noire fellows earned about a half million travel miles in 2014.
“It blows my mind sometimes how fast we move,” says Evita. Her travel clique has been known to arrive at an airport, bags packed, passport-in-hand, within hours of spotting a deal. After a few tribe members missed out on a November fare glitch, pricing round trip flights from D.C. to Nairobi below $400, the tribe launched phone trees on WhatsApp to distribute deal alerts. There are currently seven trees with 100 members each, and one strict rule: no random chatter—no “thank you,” no “yasss”—just deals.
"We may be the only black people in India, but we in here. We may be the only black people in Tokyo gettingallthe looks, but we’re still in here
Within five minutes of the Christmas Etihad fare glitch, Diamond Tokuda, who runs two Nomadness trees, booked a flight from Chicago to Abu Dhabi for $208. An hour later, he scored a second flight to Johannesburg for $380. “I honestly wasn’t thinking about specifics,” says Diamond, who is Japanese (Nomadness Travel Tribe welcomes all travelers who live an urban lifestyle). “I just booked the deal.” And so did the tribe. By the end of the day, the names of over 200 members, who booked flights, was neatly organized in a shared Facebook document, and sorted by departure dates, so the tribe could break off into smaller groups to coordinate travel plans and meet ups in Abu Dhabi, Johannesburg, Mumbai, Manila, and New Delhi (all fare glitch cities) through November 2015.
But it’s not all travel hacking and flight deals. These online communities are establishing familial bonds between strangers. “We’re going to Arkansas to visit the Japanese internment camp where my family was in World War II,” says Diamond, 30. “I’ve been looking for someone to go with forever, but tribe people were just like, ‘Let’s go.’” And that’s the beauty of finding your “people” in niche spaces. “You don’t have to wait for your friends,” says Evita. “You can roll with us.”
Essentially, what Evita and Zim have created with Nomadness Travel Tribe and Travel Noire, respectively, is not only shifting perceptions on black travel —it’s changing lives. “There are a ton of testimonials,” says Zim, who recalled an 18-year-old girl, who didn’t have a passport before following Travel Noire, but decided to take a year off before college to live in Ecuador because the community inspired her. “I’ve cried over a lot of them.”
And there’s more to come in 2015. Brands like Lo & Sons and Delsey are already tapping Travel Noire to connect with black travelers. “A lot of brands didn’t think that people of color traveled beyond the Caribbean islands, Miami, Atlanta and Las Vegas. As such, they didn’t spend money advertising,” says Zim. “This is almost a $50 billion market annually spent on travel in the U.S. alone. For people not to build that into their strategies is a huge missed opportunity.”
Evita, who recently announced a partnership between Nomadness Travel Tribe and the creator of the wildly popular YouTube series “Awkward Black Girl,” Issa Rae, hopes to capture the same attention, when she launches a one day, paid, #NMDN travel conference in fall 2015.
This all sounds ambitious, but it reflects the attitude of the travel community these two black millennial women represent, which is, as Evita puts it: “I’m going to make whatever moves it takes, no matter how scary, or how big, and shape my life the way I want it.”

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...ere-inside-the-new-black-travel-movement.html


I fully salute this Evita chick :salute: #blackexcellence :obama:
 

dora_da_destroyer

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Paying $187 for a flight is success? :mjlol: With that said, how often we talk sh*t about our own, let's :clap: for a group of young positive black people using their brains and financial means to see the world :salute: Let's build, not destroy. For some of those people who ended up in Abu Dhabi, I'm sure there's people who told them they'd never leave their hood.
No one is talking shyt about the travelers, I'm talking shyt about creating an exclusive group governed by a high council to speak on behalf of black american travelers. I was 10 toes down in Cuba at the age of 14...I don't need a fukking online group membership to validate my international status :birdman:
 

blackzeus

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Maybe they just want people to travel with?


nothing to get bent out of shape over...

Tupac - Blasphemy

My family tree, consists of drug dealers, thugs and killers
Strugglin, known to hustle screamin fukk they feelings
I got advice from my father, all he told me was this
nikkas, get off your ass if you plan to be rich
There's ten rules to the game, but I'll share with you two
Know, nikkas gon' hate you for whatever you do

That whole quote is so applicable to this situation. :wow: Let's support our own :obama:
 

blackzeus

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No one is talking shyt about the travelers, I'm talking shyt about creating an exclusive group governed by a high council to speak on behalf of black american travelers. I was 10 toes down in Cuba at the age of 14...I don't need a fukking online group membership to validate my international status :birdman:

Yeah, but you probably ain't the average hood nikka. For some kid in 8 mile Detroit or West Side Chicago to be in Abu Dhabi, and Malaysia is a BIG F*CKIN' DEAL. It gives nikkaz a different perspective on life, on humanity, on people, you realize life is more than your block, than your set, than your whip, than your bank account. I've been to almost 30 countries myself, this travelin' sh*t ain't sh*t to me, but I'm not going to gloat about my experiences to someone just tryin' to do something positive with their lives. There's two quotes in the OP about people who've been positively affected by this group. Let's keep it 100 and give her her props :clap:
 

bouncy

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not really, both logistically and culturally, it's hard for Americans to travel abroad, but people with means or who prioritize travel, travel. this is not new, this is how it has always been. these people made a group based on black folks traveling (people who were doing it before a "movement" was deemed) and act like they're some anomaly worthy of praise, i mean did you go to the site? they have actually have a "high council", sorry, but wtf, if that ain't some feeling yourself for nothing ass shyt, then i don't know what is. this group is seriously nothing more than the increasing number of overly self important, showing my success groups/cliques/collectives that are born out of the educated "professional" buppies that occupy cities like chicago, dc, atlanta, ny.
I see what you're saying but, you have to realize Black americans come from a different set of circumstances then others in this country. We just really got freedom when you think about it. NOW, is the time most of us can really say we have freedom, our people in the past couldn't really say this. That group is just playing with being one of the first in their family tree to be able to do this stuff. If certain people take it too far, that's on them but, its still good to praise your accomplishments, in a playful way. It keeps you aware but, grounded.

Being childish in enjoyment is what keeps you young, and growing!
 
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I thought I would never leave my city until I started traveling due to my study abroad college semester and now I am literally starting my life in a new continent in a few weeks. Traveling opens up eyes. So when I see people screaming USA #1 without haven't seen the world or at least part of the world. I dismiss them with the quickness but if you still come to that conclusion after having traveled or lived in a different part then I can't argue with you.
 

bouncy

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I thought I would never leave my city until I started traveling due to my study abroad college semester and now I am literally starting my life in a new continent in a few weeks. Traveling opens up eyes. So when I see people screaming USA #1 without haven't seen the world or at least part of the world. I dismiss them with the quickness but if you still come to that conclusion after having traveled or lived in a different part then I can't argue with you.
Traveling really does change who you are in a way. It helps you learn how to mingle with everyone also, and help give the top game.

Even reading about these different places, open up your mind without even going there because it forces you to be aware of others doing things differently from you. That is the secret, the awareness of differences, and how you react to them! The reaction skill is what makes the physical traveling important. Without it, you can't "feel the game".

Thats my pimp shyt philosophy. Don't mind me, I'm sparked, and that old street shyt is coming out :win:
 
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