Functional Traveler Gifts/Tougher Italian Passport/Cheaper Streaming Options
Nomadico issue #184
Useful Traveler Gifts
At this time of year, publications are flooded with gift ideas, including ones supposedly for travelers that nobody boarding a plane will actually make room for. So each year I update this post on traveler gifts that will actually get used. These are items I pack personally, ones I see other frequent fliers carrying, and new ones that deserve their space and weight. I tend to favor inexpensive, lightweight, and small items that solve a problem. These have a better chance of taking a trip with the recipient, not tossed into a storage area at home.
Stricter Requirements for an Italian Passport
An Italian passport used to be one of the easiest ones to obtain for those who wanted a second one that came with EU movement freedom, but living la dolce vita is getting much tougher now. You must prove direct lineage no further back than a grandparent, speak Italian well enough to pass a proficiency exam, and live there already for three years to qualify. See the details here.
Cheaper Streaming Abroad
I’m going to add Apple TV at home after watching only part of Severance on a United flight, but I’ll likely subscribe in Mexico where it’s 28% cheaper than the USA. You can play this arbitrage game with most of the streaming services—I once got HBO on sale for $5 a month. In Mexico you can get the highest tier of Netflix for the price of the middle tier stateside, a 39% monthly savings (with a better studio movie selection too). Shop around if moving around. In Turkey, for example, the highest tier of Netflix with 4K hi-def is less than US$10 per month. Try regional gift cards, signing up while in another country, or using a good VPN for the first transaction.
A Long Walk Is Better Than Many Short Ones
Good news for travelers: those mountain hikes and long walks across the city are better for your health than quick spins around the block. According to research in the Annals of Internal Medicine that measured step counts over eight years, “People who walked in longer stretches had a lower risk of heart problems than those who walked in short bursts. Their risk of heart disease and death dropped significantly.” I’m linking to the explanatory article from the BBC since the source study’s title will give you an idea of how dry their version is: “Step Accumulation Patterns and Risk for Cardiovascular Events and Mortality Among Suboptimally Active Adults.”
UNCLASSIFIEDS:
Obsessed with Japan? So are we. The Japan or Die Newsletter has the best travel tips about Japan since the invention of travel tips. Insider info on restaurants, bars, shopping, culture, neighborhoods, places to stay, things to do, and more. Sign up for free!
Would you rather spend hours fighting with an airline that owes you compensation, or have Airhelp take care of everything and let them score your payout? Get 15% off the annual Airhelp+ Global plan (non-US) through December 21 with code COZY15.
Get flexible medical and travel insurance built for nomads from a company with a fully remote workforce that understands your needs. Check rates from SafetyWing online here.
Reach 21,500+ working travelers with an unclassified ad in Nomadico for $85 — in a newsletter with an industry-high open and click rate. Or get 4 weeks for $250 at this link and increase your awareness and clicks.

Now you have sparked my interest in streaming prices, low and behold in a quick search i found an interesting site that breaks them down by service -> service tier -> and finally a global price chart from lowest price to highest price based on the currency you tell it to use. Amazing work interwebs!! Here is the link i checked: https://subscriptionland.com/services/netflix/premium/USD
> I’m going to add Apple TV at home after watching only part of Severance on a United flight, but I’ll likely subscribe in Mexico where it’s 28% cheaper than the USA. You can play this arbitrage game with most of the streaming services[.]
This is, if one cares, against the t&c of every service that I’ve checked, and arguably criminal fraud depending on jurisdiction.