76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid asks the immortal question, 'Pirates vs Vikings? Who'd win in a fight?' To find out, he contacts -- by a telephone -- tourist sites linked with both and asks.
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid uses Billy Joel lyrics to create an itinerary of suburban Long Island, outside New York City. Taking a roadtrip with Twitter contest winners, he visits Billy's former neighbor, a bar he drank at, the Village Green, and a certain Italian restaurant that begs to ask the immortal question, 'a bottle of red, a bottle of white?'
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid goes to East Berlin to track down the last days of the Red Elvis, or Dean Reed -- a communist American who sung Elvis songs and appeared in Italian spaghetti westerns.
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid tracks down the best sandwich of all time: a Lebanese mujaara, served from President Chester Arthur's former bedroom in New York City.
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid goes to the Hamptons to visit 'America's best beach,' by a certain Dr Beach anyway, and talks with locals (and the mayor) about the surprising award.
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor goes to Orlando, and skips the amusement parks. Instead talking with locals about what makes Orlando Orlando? Includes a look at Jack Kerouac's house, the rising 'Milk District,' and the ViMi (Little Vietnam) area.
76-Second Travel Show: Lonely Planet's US Travel Editor Robert Reid, based in NYC, throws a party -- in the snow -- for the 100th birthday of the 'other bridge,' the Manhattan.
76-Second Travel Show: US Travel Editor Robert Reid -- who's lived in both San Francisco and NYC -- asks which is better. It includes Mission burritos, the BART map and the incomparable organ player at the Castro Theater.
The capital of Tennessee is the beating heart of country music, but it also boasts a brainy side with great museums, grand architecture and a thriving university scene
Lined with monuments and icons, Washington's National Mall is the greatest public space in the country and contains many of the most potent symbols of the nation's identity
Breakfasts, barbecues and burgers are local art forms in Memphis, making the city is a perfect place for a binge if you can cope with an Elvis Presley-style fried peanut butter and banana sandwich
For most visitors this icon of midtown Manhattan is New York in a nutshell - taxis, crowds, billboards and enough blinking lights to illuminate a stadium
Georgetown is the home of Washington DC's glitterati - this leafy neighbourhood is home to the city's bright and beautiful people, from students to diplomats
The area surrounding Cancún is full of opportunity for fans of eco-tourism, from taking ritual steam baths to visiting turtle farms and exploring cenotes