Toronto Star

Channellin­g a virtual vacation

Airbnb’s online experience­s offer plenty to explore from the comfort of your living room

- DAVID POGUE

Online guides bring interactiv­e tourist-style experience­s to you over video chat.

In the Great Lockdown, twoway video has become our primary social channel. Meetings, parties, concerts, music lessons, exercise classes: any interactio­ns that can be adapted to a Zoom video call, have been. Surely there’s nothing left to be Zoomified.

Actually, there is. Airbnb has introduced what it calls Online Experience­s: live interactiv­e sessions, conducted over Zoom by guides around the world, for small groups of “tourists” stuck at home. Over the course of an hour or two, the hosts dive into a wide range of artistic, cultural, musical, culinary and athletic topics: “Dance Like a K-pop Star,” presented live by a guide in South Korea; “Cooking with a Moroccan Family,” from Marrakech; “Tokyo Anime and Subculture­s,” from Japan; “Day in the Life of a Shark Scientist,” from South Africa.

The average price per person is about $10 (U.S.), but you might pay as little as $2 (“Cultural Journey through London Chinatown”) or as much as $73 (“Private Astrology Reading & Natal Chart,” from Barcelona). At the moment, some 200 classes are available, but the company adds another dozen or so every week, after vetting and viewing a dress rehearsal of each. Catherine Powell, who leads the Airbnb Experience­s program, says that her team has received thousands of proposals. (“We had one called, ‘My Experience­s Watching My Cat,’” she says. “That one was rejected.”)

Many of the guides once led these sessions in person, as part of Airbnb’s Experience­s program. (Visiting Alaska? Go salmon fishing! Visiting Italy? Do a wine tasting!) When the company suspended those risky in-person interactio­ns in March, the guides, suddenly unemployed, proposed adapting their classes to video.

And so, a few months ago, while the rest of the country was binge-watching, I went binge-experienci­ng. I crammed in Airbnb courses, all in hopes of answering the question: how well can a Zoom video chat replicate experienci­ng another place or culture? And how is it any better than, say, watching a YouTube video on the topic?

Aweekend of experience­s I discovered the answer to that second question immediatel­y. These classes are not canned videos. They are live and twoway, and you are with people. The classes are generally small enough that you can chat, discuss and joke with both your instructor and your fellow classmates.

The main event, though, is the hosts’ presentati­ons, and they can be mind-blowing. “Meet the Dogs of Chernobyl” ($52), for example, is one of the few classes in which the host actually ventures away from home. Lucas Hixson, a radiation specialist, arrived in Ukraine in 2015 to discover more than 1,000 dogs, starving and unattended, in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. They’re the descendant­s of pets who were abandoned by their fleeing owners after the 1986 powerplant disaster.

Hixson took us on his daily rounds to visit and feed these dogs near the creepily still, silent power plant. Apart from Hixson’s driver/cameraman, we didn’t see another person.

We did see the famous Unit 4 reactor, now covered by a massive containmen­t shell; the smoke from the local wildfires that have been burning since April 4; and, of course, the dogs. Some approached Hixson, wagging their tails, clearly delighted by his visit. Others hovered warily at a distance, waiting until he left to approach the food. “The dogs of Chernobyl have what I would call a streetdog mentality,” Hixson told us. “They’re not feral, but they’re also not still domesticat­ed.”

After that intense and moving journey, I was ready for “Guided Meditation with Sleepy Sheep” ($8), hosted by Beccy Routledge from her farmhouse in Loch Lomond, Scotland.

On paper, there’s not much to it: Routledge introduced us to her chickens (we witnessed an egg-laying on camera) and to her four “naughty sheep,” who lived up to the descriptio­n by noisily butting heads over a food bucket.

Her daughter, Rivkah, then guided us through a gentle, eyes-closed meditation. “Start to notice all the sounds around you,” she instructed us. “Listen for the sound the furthest away and the sound the closest to you.” It helped that her voice was backed by twittering birds and rustling sheep. By the end, it was impossible not to feel destressed; even one of the sheep had fallen asleep. “Follow a Plague Doctor Through Prague” ($11) was, as promised, a walking tour of the Czech Republic’s capital city. It incorporat­ed stops at the important locations in the history of the pneumonic and bubonic plagues that killed 200 million Europeans over the years.

The twist, though, is that the entire tour was actually a beautifull­y shot video. It depicted a “plague doctor” — a man wearing the classic 1656 plaguemedi­c outfit, including that weird, full-face beak mask — leading us silently through the deserted streets of Prague’s Old Town at night.

The beaked man, we learned, was our host, David Merten. During our session, he narrated the video, pausing the playback to tell a story or take a question. (I asked him about the beak. Doctors of the time, he said, believed that the Black Death spread as a toxic gas. Dried flowers, herbs and spices inside the beak were supposed to offer protection.)

My teenage son joined me for “Secrets of Magic” ($20), taught by Martin Rees from his home in central England. Rees holds a handful of unlikely Guinness

Book records, including “Most Magic Tricks in a Wind Tunnel,” but his greatest achievemen­t may be nearly perfecting the long-distance magic class.

He presented a live close-up magic show on camera — the highlights were the flaming wallet, the lollipop-through-bill trick, and memorizing-a-deckin-10-seconds — and then began teaching us magic. Few tricks are easy enough for absolute beginners, but still baffling to an audience. But Rees had found three great ones, which he taught with enthusiasm, British humour and the appropriat­e emphasis on presentati­on.

Expert one-on-ones Interactio­n with leaders in various fields — Olympic gold medallists, Grammy nominees, wine experts — is another hallmark of these experience­s. Under what other circumstan­ce could you get a private lesson (my wife and I were the only attendees that day) from a fourtime, Emmy-nominated Foley artist?

A Foley artist adds or re-creates everyday sound effects to movies and TV shows, like footsteps, clothing rustles and door squeaks — and the host of “Secrets of Hollywood Sound FX” ($39) has done a lot of it. It was Adam DeCoster, whose work you’ve heard in “Cheers,” “Lost,” “Orange Is the New Black” and more than 500 other shows.

We were completely unprepared for how much we’d laugh in this class. Some of the humour comes from DeCoster himself, who’s dry and self-deprecatin­g. “I love that we get to have the word ‘artist’ in our title,” he said.

Future of online experience­s There were no duds among my online experience­s, but that’s not to say that they were flawless. We could have seen more of the sleepy Scottish sheep if Routledge had held her phone sideways instead of upright. DeCoster, the Foley artist, struggled with his own lighting as the setting sun blasted his lens and turned him into DeCoster the Friendly Ghost. And we’d have become better magicians if Rees had allowed us to show him the tricks we’d just learned and then suggested improvemen­ts.

On the other hand, these guides had been guiding for only a few days; the polish will come. Meanwhile, the heart of their experience­s — personalit­y, humour, expertise — is already strong.

So how close can a video chat come to taking you into a new place or culture? As it turns out, very close. As page after page of five-star reviews make clear, you really do meet new people in new places; you genuinely do lose yourself in another world. This new format is an ingenious, inexpensiv­e way to carry you and your family away during lockdown, and even — why not? — long after the present plague passes.

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 ?? AIRBNB PHOTOS ?? The “Meet the Dogs of Chernobyl” presentati­on, hosted by radiation specialist Lucas Hixson, will let you interact with some of the abandoned dogs who live near the site of the 1986 power-plant disaster in northern Ukraine.
AIRBNB PHOTOS The “Meet the Dogs of Chernobyl” presentati­on, hosted by radiation specialist Lucas Hixson, will let you interact with some of the abandoned dogs who live near the site of the 1986 power-plant disaster in northern Ukraine.
 ??  ?? Beccy Routledge offers “Guided Meditation with Sleepy Sheep” from her farmhouse in Loch Lomond, Scotland.
Beccy Routledge offers “Guided Meditation with Sleepy Sheep” from her farmhouse in Loch Lomond, Scotland.

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