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September 25, 2005

Faulty Tours?

Double-decker tour buses have in the past decade become a standard part of the average tourist's trip to the Big Apple. You see them everywhere in Manhattan and in the past few years they've even made it out to the wilds of Brooklyn. Sometimes when you're standing on a corner you can catch a snippet of the what a tour guide is telling their innocent charges, but other than that the average New Yorker has little to no idea what is actually getting said about our fair city to our thousands of visitors. So it was interesting for us to see in the today's Daily News an exposé on the validity of the average double-decker bus tour.

2005_09_25_citysights_bus.jpg

Some of the fun inaccuracies that the News found include the guides who thought Harrison Ford lived in the Dakota (he lives in the Trump World Tower), the guide who claimed that adults aren't allowed into the Central Park Zoo unless accompanies by a child (uhm, no, but that does remind us of the little girl who really thought that the McDonalds Arch Deluxe was only for adults), and the guide who thought that Gotham got its name from its Gothic architecture (actually the name, first used by Washington Irving in 1807, has nothing to do with architecture).

The list goes on and is funny, but to be fair the News doesn't quite take into account just how difficult it can be to jabber on for three hours and not make a mistake or two nor do they think on how much the average tourist on those busses just doesn't care about the facts (they spent their $49 and what they want is to see the city without, uh, walking). But we might be a bit biased as we have friends who work for the two bigger bus companies (Grey Line and City Sights NY). The News does, however, point out that all you have to do to be a tour guide is get over 65% on a 150-question, multiple choice exam about Manhattan (run by the Department of Consumer Affairs) and then apply to one of the companies. They're generally hiring, and the pay is not bad at all.

Have you heard any great tour guide inaccuracies? Share 'em.

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Comments (9)

According to the wonderful book "Gotham", written by two local professors, the name gotham comes from got-ham which means something like "sheep pasture" in Dutch. I don't have it in front of me (Its a big book, my apt is very small, hence its in storage *grin*), so it may really be goats and not sheep, but I do think the name predates Irving...

 

The name definitely predates Irving, he was just the first guy to pin it onto NYC.

 

According to the Daily News Harrison Ford doesn't live in the Time Warner center either- they say Trump World Tower. That's ok, though. You've got 149 questions to go.

 

Washington Irving depicted New Yorkers as wise-asses and know-it-alls, calling them Gothamites back in 1807. In 13th century England there was a village called "Gotham." The King at the time wanted to turn the village into a vacation spot. The villagers decided to act like mental cases, running around and screaming, which effectively turned the Kings men away; he decided to vacation elsewhere rather than live among the crazies. Gotham itself became legendary for the cunning of its "wise fools," likely leading Irving to dub New Yorkers "Gothamites."

 

Those tours have always had always had inaccuracies. Since there are no New Yorkers taking the tour and the tourist don't know the difference. If you want to go on a very accurate and excellent tour check The Slice of Brooklyn Pizza tour at
asliceofbrooklyn.com.

 

"They're generally hiring, and the pay is not bad at all."

How bad is "not bad"? curious...

 

how bad is not bad? it depends on which company you end up at and what kind of money you are looking for. i'd say between 12-20 an hour. grey line is a union shop, so it pays for all the hours you're assigned, even when you aren't giving a tour, but pays less than non-union city sights, who only pays you when you're giving a tour but pays something like twenty an hour. if you have character though, the tips can easily be fifty or more. there are better jobs, but at how many of them do you just talk about new york all day?

 

OK, in the type of bus pictured here, what's on the main deck? No windows, no nothin'. Are there seats? Why would there be? So what's down there? I picture a room to get your party on, with a wet bar, disco ball, and kickin' tunes. City Sights NY up top, Mobile Groove down below.

 

Another inaccuracy:

"To our right, this is called the East Village. Artists live here."

 
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