Passport Q
Trisha Thomas  Nov 19
3 MIN READ

Millions of tourists visit the Colosseum and Sistine Chapel each year, yet only a tiny fraction ever step inside the gilded halls of Rome’s most exclusive site: the Colonna Palace.

Millions of tourists visit the Colosseum and Sistine Chapel each year, yet only a tiny fraction ever step inside the gilded halls of Rome’s most exclusive site: the Colonna Palace.

The private home-museum hides in plain sight, spread out in four wings over an entire block in the city center. Its owners cling to their cloistered ways, keeping the baroque palace’s paintings, sculptures, busts, tapestries and 76-meter (249-foot) Great Hall far from most prying eyes. Doors open to small groups, 10 people at a time, guided by art historians for a few hours on Friday and Saturday mornings.

“We cannot have mass tourism. It is not the wish,” said Elisabetta Cecchini, a restorer at the palace, adding that the reason any visitors are allowed is because art dies in the absence of public appreciation. “It is not intended as a museum to be commodified.”

The family’s sitting prince, Don Prospero Colonna, still resides there, granting infrequent approval to hold events like the release of Pope John Paul II’s book in 2005 and the 2018 Metropolitan Museum of Art exhibition of Catholic fashion, attended by designer Donna Versace and Vogue magazine’s Anna Wintour. Both marked rare instances of journalists gaining admission.

Claudio Strinati, a former superintendent of Rome's museums, supports the palace’s relative seclusion, calling it “indubitably one of humanity's greatest artistic heritages” and one the family has a duty to protect.

“These were not conceived as tourist attractions,” he said. “Rather, they are made for those who have a certain understanding of history.”

Since the 12th century, the palace has belonged to the Colonnas, part of the “black nobility” — the name for Roman families who remained loyal to the Pope and the Papal State when the Italian army took the city in 1870 to create a unified nation. They hung black banners outside their palaces to show they were in mourning while, within their walls, they held fast to their masterpieces.

For two centuries, the Colonnas have maintained a trust guaranteeing the palace's precious artworks will forever remain there. Princess Isabella Colonna is credited with saving the family treasures. She fled Rome when the Nazis invaded, but not before ordering all artworks be “crammed into a wing of the building whose entrances were then walled up,” Cecchini said. The soldiers failed to find them.

Today, the interior betrays a history of power and privilege. In the Throne Room, a portrait immortalizes Oddone Colonna, who became Pope Martin V in 1417 and made the palace the papal residence for a decade. The Great Hall’s frescoed ceiling depicts the exploits of another Colonna forebear, Commander Marcantonio, who won a 16th-century naval battle that proved a watershed for the future of Europe.

"We can say that the Colonna cannot exist without Rome, but even Rome cannot exist without the Colonnas," Patrizia Piergiovanni, director of the palace’s gallery, said in an internal courtyard dotted with orange trees. “Being one of the great families, they have contributed a lot."

With Princess Isabella’s blessing, the Great Hall, with its masterpieces set amid marble columns and glittering chandeliers, became the set for the final scene in the 1952 classic “Roman Holiday.” Playing a beloved princess herself, Audrey Hepburn addressed the foreign press corps and fielded a question: which city on her extended European tour had she most enjoyed? After some diplomatic equivocation, she stopped short.

“Rome,” she said firmly. “By all means, Rome. I will cherish my visit here in memory as long as I live.”

by Trisha Thomas

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Booking.com has garnered positive attention for its sustained commitment to LGBTQ+ inclusion in travel, bucking a wider trend of industry pullbacks and backlash.

In 2025, the travel sector has confronted increasing scrutiny over LGBTQ+ inclusion, as many companies have retreated from diversity initiatives in the face of political and consumer backlash. According to the “2025 LGBTQ+ Advertising: Marketing in the Quiet Age of DEI” report, 62% of consumers now support brands speaking up on social issues, but there is a marked decline in visible LGBTQ+ representation across advertising and services, falling from 73% in 2023 to 65% in 2025 for all consumers. The report highlights that LGBTQ+ audiences—who wield $3.9 trillion in annual global buying power—hold companies to higher standards, expecting not only marketing campaigns but also substantive, year-round inclusion.

McMinnville, Oregon, a historic wine town with a population under 40,000, is fast becoming one of North America’s most inclusive destinations for LGBTQ+ travelers.

In the heart of Oregon’s Willamette Valley, McMinnville is rewriting what it means to be a small town in America. Once known primarily for pinot noir and picturesque vineyards, this community is now gaining national attention for its robust embrace of LGBTQ+ inclusion. The shift isn’t accidental—it’s the result of coordinated efforts by residents, business owners, and local government to transform McMinnville into a place where all identities are celebrated .

Boise, Idaho, once known for potatoes and quiet conservatism, is rapidly emerging as an unexpected LGBTQ-friendly hotspot.

If someone told you a decade ago that Boise, Idaho would become one of the fastest-growing queer communities in the Western U.S., you’d probably have laughed, checked your map, and gone back to making Pride plans in Seattle or Portland. But in 2025, the punchline has changed: Boise is now a bona fide LGBTQ+ destination, with a rising number of queer residents, a visible social scene, and a reputation as an affordable, welcoming alternative to coastal queer meccas .

Traverse City, Michigan—a small lakeside town best known for cherries and craft beer—has quietly become an emerging haven for LGBTQ+ travelers seeking outdoor adventure, quirky art, and a warm welcome beyond the big city.

The first thing you notice as you step onto Front Street in Traverse City isn’t just the sweet scent of ripe cherries or the crisp breeze rolling off Lake Michigan—it’s the subtle but unmistakable sense of welcome. Rainbow stickers gleam on bakery doors, a pride flag sways in the window of an indie bookstore, and the sound of laughter drifts from a sidewalk café run by a local couple who swapped city life for the lakeshore. For LGBTQ+ travelers, Traverse City offers an unexpected blend of rural charm and queer visibility, where you can kayak at sunrise and dance under disco balls by night .

Jerry Harmer  Nov 16
2 MIN READ

A restaurant in central Thailand has become an internet sensation after a nearby river flooded it with water and fish

A restaurant in central Thailand was bursting with a stream of customers coming for a unique dining experience: Enjoying a meal while sitting in flood waters, surrounded by live fish they bring into the establishment.

by Jerry Harmer

Copyright Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


After years of pandemic-induced hibernation, LGBTQ+ winter travel is roaring back with a flurry of color, camaraderie, and culture.

It’s official: the snow queens are out, the slopes are sparkling, and LGBTQ+ ski weeks are back with the kind of fabulous energy not seen since pre-pandemic days. After years of longing for the thrill of a powdery run followed by a dancefloor avalanche, queer travelers are once again flocking to winter havens like Stowe, Vermont for Winter Rendezvous, and the legendary Aspen and Telluride Gay Ski Weeks, proving—once and for all—that queer joy refuses to stay in the lodge.

Battambang, Cambodia, often overshadowed by its more famous neighbors, is emerging as a vibrant and inclusive destination for LGBTQ+ travelers.

Travelers often flock to Phnom Penh or Siem Reap when visiting Cambodia, drawn by the capital’s energy or the ancient allure of Angkor Wat. But a growing number of LGBTQ+ visitors are beginning to chart a different path—one that leads west to the tranquil, art-filled streets of Battambang. Known for its colonial architecture, riverside cafes, and thriving arts scene, Battambang is quietly positioning itself as one of Asia’s most welcoming destinations for queer travelers, thanks to its open-minded attitude, visible LGBTQ+ community, and unique blend of cultural experiences .

Nestled in the Chattahoochee National Forest, Blue Ridge, Georgia, is emerging as a vibrant LGBTQ+ destination with a growing number of queer-owned businesses, inclusive events, and a welcoming community spirit.

Tucked away in the northern reaches of Georgia, Blue Ridge is a picturesque mountain town that has quietly become a beacon of LGBTQ+ inclusivity in the South. With a population under 250,000, Blue Ridge offers a blend of natural beauty, small-town charm, and a growing queer community that is reshaping the town’s identity. The city’s transformation is evident in its expanding roster of LGBTQ+-owned businesses, inclusive events, and a local culture that celebrates diversity.

Halifax, the port city perched on Canada’s rugged Atlantic coast, is quietly emerging as one of North America’s most inclusive and vibrant LGBTQ+ destinations.

If you arrive in Halifax on a foggy summer morning, as I did, the city feels like a secret waiting to be shared. The air tastes of brine and possibility, with the tang of saltwater mixing with the aroma of fresh espresso from the harborfront cafes. Along the boardwalk, rainbow flags flutter from windows above indie bookstores and microbreweries, sending quiet signals of solidarity to those who know how to look for them. Halifax isn’t a place that shouts its queerness; it wears it with the easy confidence of a favorite hoodie—well-loved, well-worn, and ready to withstand the weather.