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Word: touristed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...riding on the city's ability to lure visitors back. For better or worse, New Orleans has long staked a disproportionate share of its economic health on the tourism and convention business. Before Katrina, tourist spending pumped up to $6 billion into the local economy, employed 80,000 and fueled more than one-third of the city's operating budget. Getting those visitors back is key to the city's recovery, and to its long-term viability - perhaps even more so in a smaller, post-Katrina economy, when luring new business and industry will likely be an even greater challenge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Bourbon Street Bring the Tourists Back to New Orleans? | 8/25/2006 | See Source »

...Tourism officials have rolled out a new advertising campaign, featuring a new slogan ("COME FALL IN LOVE WITH NEW ORLEANS ALL OVER AGAIN") and homegrown celebrities such as Emeril Lagasse, Wynton Marsalis and actress Patricia Clarkson. But prospective tourists could be forgiven if they're still confused. Almost since the slow recovery began, New Orleans has been sending mixed messages, begging the federal government for more financial help and asking the state to send in the National Guard to help battle a violent crime wave, while assuring skittish tourists and convention planners that the city's historic attractions are intact...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Bourbon Street Bring the Tourists Back to New Orleans? | 8/25/2006 | See Source »

...real successes to point to: Mardi Gras, the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival and a series of smaller festivals went on as planned. Meanwhile, the city's major museums have reopened, and its big-name restaurants have either reopened or announced plans to do so this fall. Popular tourist attractions like the Aquarium of the Americas and Audubon Zoo are up and running, and the cruise ships that use New Orleans as a home port - and carry more than 700,000 passengers a year - will be back in service by the end of 2006. "We're back in business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Bourbon Street Bring the Tourists Back to New Orleans? | 8/25/2006 | See Source »

...wasn't long after his stint in Honduras that he made his way to Thailand, entering and re-entering that country mainly on tourist visas. These visas prohibit paid work, but many foreigners flout the rule, and school administrators, eager for the cachet that comes with expatriate instructors, tend to turn a blind eye. Thailand is, however, a favored playground of globetrotting drifters. "You never really know who you're talking to in Bangkok," says an Australian teacher in St. Joseph's English immersion program who met Karr during his brief tenure there. "We've all got a past...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: John Mark Karr's Strange Life as a Teacher | 8/18/2006 | See Source »

...worth writing down. He then published those quotes for the whole world to see. Friedman and his "trusted spies" of five friends combed the streets of New York listening for interesting and entertaining bits of conversation to post on OhinNY. One recent favorite, overheard in downtown Manhattan: A tourist asks a cop for directions, and he replies, "See that naked Chinese guy? Walk down to him and make a left." Since 2003, OHinNY has expanded into two other blogs, Overheard in the Office and Overheard at the Beach, and the spy network of five friends has turned into hundreds sending...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Q&A: The Coolest Bloggers | 8/15/2006 | See Source »

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