"How hard can it be?"
: A typical journey began in Paris and often included the Alps, Florence , and Venice , ultimately culminating in Rome and Naples .
For over 150 years, the Grand Tour was the definitive rite of passage for young, wealthy European men, primarily from Britain. It served as a bridge between university and adult life, intended to provide a finishing touch to a classical education. The Grand Tour
As the trio rides off into the sunset (presumably after running out of fuel), they leave behind a legacy of laughter, genuine engineering curiosity, and the immortal truth that a car is just a box of metal—until you point it at a horizon.
Initially, the show followed a "travelling tent" format before shifting exclusively to high-budget feature-length specials. "How hard can it be
Enter the Romantics. Men like James Boswell (biographer of Samuel Johnson) and Lord Byron used the tour not just to learn, but to misbehave. Byron traveled through Portugal, Spain, Malta, and Greece, turning the tour into a hero's quest for personal liberty. His poem Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage romanticized the journey so much that it created "overtourism" in places like Lake Geneva and the Greek ruins.
The tent has closed. But the road goes on forever. As the trio rides off into the sunset
By the late 18th century, hit its fever pitch. The roads were better (thanks to better carriages), and the route was established. But the travelers began to change.
: Features like "Celebrity Brain Crash" and "Celebrity Face Off".
Which format fits your project best? I can tweak the tone (more emotional, more funny, or more analytical) if needed.