Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Best TV shows for vicarious travel thrills

- By Jason Bailey The New York Times

There’s no getting around it: Most of us won’t be traveling for a good, long while. There are certainly more pressing concerns — personal health, supply lines, stocking the pantry, caring for the children — but the anticipati­on and inner peace of an upcoming vacation, a family gathering or a trip abroad have now disappeare­d, and who knows for how long. It’s neither safe nor (increasing­ly) possible to visit Norway or Brazil or France or anywhere else when you’re stuck in your home.

But maybe it is. One of the genuine delights of the streaming era is the degree to which it has made internatio­nal television available, and readily, too — with scores of shows streaming on Amazon, Hulu, HBO and Netflix. Sprinkle in an assortment of travelogue­s and you can go all over the world, from the comfort (and confines) of your couch. Here are some of the best shows for treating cabin fever:

‘Anthony Bourdain: No Reservatio­ns’ (Hulu)

Any respectabl­e world television tour should begin with Anthony Bourdain’s globe-trotting food and travel docuseries, in which the late, great celebrity chef visits places large and small, from Singapore to Saudi Arabia to Sweden, taking in the local cuisine, culture and citizens. (And he doesn’t slouch on the scenery, either — the series twice won the Emmy Award for Outstandin­g Cinematogr­aphy for Nonfiction Programmin­g). Over the course of its nine-season run, it became clear that Bourdain wasn’t just out to see sights or swipe recipes; the show seemed like his personal mission to correct the Ugly American stereotype, and to remind us that when we’re abroad, we should aim to be travelers rather than tourists.

Anthony Bourdain, seen here in

‘Travel Man: 48 Hours In …’ (Hulu)

There’s a long, rich tradition of British comedians “presenting” travel programs, from Michael Palin’s marvelous BBC docuseries (“Around the World in 80 Days,” “Pole to Pole,” etc.) to the ongoing “Trip” series (to northern England, Italy, Spain and Greece) with Steve Coogan and Rob Brydon to this Channel 4 treat, in which comic actor and director Richard Ayoade (“The IT Crowd”) visits the great cities of the world for 48 hours with a celebrity guest. The results are enjoyable as both a travel series and a parody of them; Ayoade and his friends hit the must-see sights and capture the beauty of these hot spots, but also detour to goofier locations.

‘The Night Manager’ (Amazon Prime)

When screenwrit­er David Farr and director Susanne Bier adapted John le Carré’s 1993 spy novel for television, they not only updated the time period,

Istanbul, takes in the local sights and cuisine for the award-winning “No Reservatio­ns.” but tweaked the locations — shooting the sleek, glossy tale in Switzerlan­d, Marrakech and Spain (of particular note: a gorgeous Spanish villa for villain Hugh Laurie). The le Carré purists may object, but the rest of us will be too busy luxuriatin­g in the Continenta­l flavor and sunsoaked photograph­y.

‘Killing Eve’ (Hulu)

Spy shows and films generally hopscotch around the globe, which makes them especially ripe for wanderlust viewing, and though the smash BBC America adaptation of Luke Jennings’ “Villanelle” novels is, in many ways, a subversion of the spy series convention­s, one must often embrace those tropes to send them up. So the MI6 agent Eve Polastri must trek from London to such locales as Tuscany, Berlin, Bucharest, Paris, Amsterdam, Rome and other places in her pursuit of the high-level assassin Villanelle (Jodie Comer).

‘Occupied’ (Netflix) And from here our world

tour takes us to Norway, for this ongoing series from the minds behind such archetypal Scandinavi­an crime films as “Insomnia” and “Headhunter­s.” This fastpaced political thriller, in which high-minded Norwegian government officials cease production of oil and gas in the face of climate change, only to find their country occupied by Russian forces, offers up not only the snowy landscapes we’ve come to expect, but plenty of urban portraitur­e as well.

‘Babylon Berlin’ (Netflix)

Next stop: Germany, for this extravagan­tly mounted, neo-noir series, set during the city’s preHitler, Weimar Republic era. The production — reportedly the most expensive in German TV history — leans heavily on a giant, permanent standing set at the Babelsberg Studio, but also uses copious locations throughout the city (and country), including the Theater am Schiffbaue­rdamm, the Berlin City Hall, the Protestant Church of the Redeemer,and the Bavarian Railway Museum.

‘My Brilliant Friend’ (HBO)

Some series float through their locations, only making fleeting connection­s. But HBO’s ongoing adaptation of Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels isn’t just set in Italy in the 1950s; it’s dug in there, intimately aware of every stairwell, courtyard and apartment in its working class neighborho­od. It’s a setting, James Poniewozik writes, “where everyone is packed close and prying eyes and whispers are inescapabl­e.” But the series also offers gorgeous glimpses of the world outside that neighborho­od, of an uppercrust area of Naples, or a resort island. It’s a welcome reminder that even when things are bleak, escape is still possible.

‘Kingdom’ (Netflix)

And on we travel, both around the globe (to South Korea) and back in time (to the 16th century) for this Netflix original, gleefully mixing historical drama, zombie horror, swordplay, political satire and (gulp) contagion thriller — and mounted on a grand scale, with big, colorful action sequences carefully choreograp­hed in gorgeous forests and rolling vistas. Mike Hale picked it as one of the best internatio­nal shows of the decade, and praised the “rousing” series for its “rich production values.”

‘Fortitude’ (Amazon Prime)

And finally we land at the top of the world — well, close to it, on the Arctic island of Fortitude, setting of this Sky Atlantic mystery/ thriller series. Fortitude, however, is a fictional location (that’d be just a bit too nice and neat), so the threeseaso­n series was shot in Iceland and Norway; its icy glaciers and snow-capped mountains could come in handy if we’re still indoors this summer.

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