Standing opposite a mansion in the elegant English city of Bath, Tegan Shirdon marvelled at the window from where Penelope, one of the heroines of Bridgerton, would eye her love interest Colin in the hit show.
A "huge fan" of the Netflix series which has racked up 300 million views, the 20-year-old Australian student was one of around 30 tourists to descend on the southwestern city recently.
They had come from countries including the Netherlands, Canada, Spain and Japan to admire the setting for the early 19th century romance drama.
Film student Ruby Maidment, their guide for the day, dished out historical anecdotes alongside snippets about Bridgerton shoots.
She pointed to a Marks & Spencer's supermarket sign that made it on-screen after production editors missed it, while noting the handsome fees paid to locals to stay indoors during filming.
"A lot of people when thinking about where to go for holidays, they'll put their favourite show on and go 'Oh, actually, why don't we check out there?"," she said.
This trend has a name: socalled set-jetting. It has emerged in recent years with the rise of streaming platforms, and has boomed further since the Coronavirus pandemic.
Movies and television series have become the leading source of travel inspiration, ahead of social networks, according to online travel group Expedia.
This story is from the August 31, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the August 31, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Xiaomi makes SA comeback
T14: BRINGS THE BRAND FULLY INTO MOBILE AI ARENA
Bafana poised for AFCON slot
Top-tier club soccer takes a break for the next week, but there's plenty of exciting football on the menu with the final group games in AFCON and UEFA Nations League, plus several cash-boosted TAB soccer pools including a R4.3-million Soccer 13 carryover tomorrow.
Ferraris favours Young Emperor
Purton looks to extend his lead with Triumphant More.
New GLC63 sets record straight
Affalterbach machine pips rival from Munich to bragging rights.
Peter can get bettors off to a winning start
Lerena could craft a change of fortune for Vibe SA.
Goldie to score on Polytrack
Dean Kannemeyer looks to have some useful runners in his yard, both in Cape Town and Durban, and he also seems to have a knack as to which of his runners will run well on the Polytrack.
Nissan Navara on slippery slope
Pro-4X still makes for pleasant transport with good fuel sonsumption.
Chery range gets sweeter
Chinese carmaker has even bigger plans for lined up for South Arican market.
Sassy all-new Suzuki Swift
ETHOS: 'FUN TO DRIVE' HATCH LIVES UP TO REPUTATION
Tests have helped Stubbs
When T20 cricket was first introduced, purists brushed it off as a bash-and-dash format which didn't require the same level of skills as longer forms of the game.