TV TRAVEL show host Samantha Brown walks through a field of flowers in Fredericksburg, Texas, in this April 4, 2017, with John Thomas, the owner of Wildseed Farms. Brown has a new series premiering Jan. 6 on PBS called “Places to Love.”

TV TRAVEL show host Samantha Brown walks through a field of flowers in Fredericksburg, Texas, in this April 4, 2017, with John Thomas, the owner of Wildseed Farms. Brown has a new series premiering Jan. 6 on PBS called “Places to Love.”

NEW YORK

You may know Samantha Brown from her years as a Travel Channel host for shows like “Great Hotels,” “Green Getaways” and the “Passport” series about Latin America, China and Europe, among others.

She’s back with a new series on PBS called “Places to Love,” launching Saturday with 13 weekly episodes through March.

“‘Places to Love’ is about finding the experiences, the destinations, but, most importantly, the people who really make us feel like we’re part of a place,” Brown said in an interview for the AP Travel podcast “Get Outta Here!”

Destinations featured on the show range from Shanghai to places Brown says you might not think of going “but should,” like Huntsville, Alabama, nicknamed Rocket City for its work with NASA and the space industry.

Brown talked about the show’s philosophy, some individual episodes and the challenges of succeeding as a woman on television. Here are some excerpts.

THE FLOWERS OF TEXAS HILL COUNTRY

Advertisement

“When you are producing a show totally based on flowers being in bloom, it is a nail-biter. We were getting reports, updates, we had our flower-watchers. I was following bloggers and Instagram … I mean we had a plan B but luckily they were in bloom and we saw the Texas bluebonnets in all their glory.”

CHALLENGES FOR WOMEN ON TV

“Even if the men’s ratings are low for a time, they will let that male host have that show for much longer so they can slowly gain those ratings to the point where they do have a successful show. Women are not given that chance. That to me was a huge frustration. … It’s just sort of the male-driven kind of world that men have adventures and women really don’t. And so of course I don’t believe in that but there’s a perception there. … I wish it would change and the way I changed it was I decided to produce and fund my own show.”

GROWING UP

“There was nothing like getting up at three o’clock in the morning and our parents piling us in the Pontiac station wagon with the dog, with our baloney sandwiches and making the 10-hour trip (to visit relatives in Pennsylvania). I loved it. Or to Canada. That was our big trip because we were from New Hampshire so we could go there. But that’s what I brought to my experience when I first started at the Travel Channel: There is this idea that travel is a privilege and you have to be privileged not only with money to travel, but time and most importantly confidence. I think it takes a lot of confidence to get on a plane and go somewhere else especially to a foreign land. And so I always wanted to be that person who could connect that experience with the person sitting on the couch. If I can do it, you can do it.”

FAVORITE EPISODE

“I would say my most powerful memory I have is our first show which we taped in Houston, Texas. There was something about starting the day: I’ve got a cameraman, I’ve got a camerawoman, I’ve got a producer, a director and of course the fixer, and I realize this is all because of our hard work and we did it. Two years before, people said there’s no way you’re going to raise the money to make a travel show and yet here I was. We were in this wonderful city, Houston, which I totally fell in love with. It’s the most culturally diverse city in the U.S. … We shot that before the flood, about five months before (Hurricane) Harvey came. It will be the first show to air on your PBS stations because we feel so strongly about it, that this city came back from a historically bad flood. It’s because of the people.”

———

Listen to an interview with Samantha Brown about her new show on AP Travel’s weekly podcast “Get Outta Here!” available on iTunes apple.co/2s2ruHY.


Comments are not available on this story.

filed under: