Theo Rutherford, a sommelier and wine educator at Josh Cellars, asked Insider, "Why would someone take the time to log into this specific tasting? Though we are stuck at home, that doesn't mean that people are going to join with a plethora of options out there." Knowing that the gap between physical and virtual is a difficult one to bridge, and that they're competing for your attention with a vast spectrum of online activities, businesses are being especially careful to make these new food and travel experiences worth it. But, the transition to Zoom (or Google Meet or Instagram or YouTube) isn't exactly easy. That's where my indoor gardening lesson took place, and it proved to be an effective showcase for The Sill's interactive presentation on how plants use light. If you want to attend a cooking class, a flower arranging workshop, or even a wine tasting, it'll most likely take place on Zoom, the video conferencing platform that has grown explosively from 10 million daily participants (December 2019) to 300 million (April 2020).
They're just a few of the many different virtual sessions trying to make up for the real thing in the age of the coronavirus.įood, drink, and travel experience providers have a special challenge these days - how do you show your product in action when touching, sharing, moving, and gathering are at the core of fully understanding it? The answer, as it's been for school lessons, work meetings, and workouts, is in an online room. Associate travel editor Hannah Freedman recently joined a digital tango lesson and a Moroccan cooking class via Airbnb Experiences, while our director of commerce Adam Burakowski went a slightly less conventional route by using that same platform to take a video tour of Prague that followed the journey of an 18th-century plague doctor. Class was about to begin.Ī couple of months ago, I tuned into a live plant care workshop hosted by The Sill. In a few swift moves that have become all too familiar during this pandemic, I opened my laptop, adjusted the screen so the camera was pointing at my face, and clicked a Zoom link.