Opinion
Black AtlasAmerican Airlines launches travel site for black Americans
8:28 AM on 10/30/2009
Image of BlackAtlas page. Author, screenwriter, and essayist Nelson George is the site's "Travel Expert-at-Large" (Photo courtesy BlackAtlas.com)
American Airlines has quietly jumped into the increasingly crowded niche travel market with BlackAtlas.com, a portal tailored to African-American travelers. Combining the impact of social networking and the deep reach of a major air carrier, BlackAtlas may be U.S. aviation business' most mainstream online recognition of the appeal of heritage tourism, and its understanding of a not-so-secret secret: black people travel, too.
Black travel Web sites are themselves nothing new. There are dozens of Web sites that slice and dice an African-American travel market estimated at more than $5 billion a year, according to Target Market News, a leading monitor of African-American economic trends.
American Airlines has put a spin on the idea in two ways: BlackAtlas, which launched Oct. 15, is powered both by commentaries from contributors -- a nod to the emerging trend of user-generated content -- and a strong use of videos to embellish the narrative. And while many other such sites are ad hoc creations of ambitious amateurs, or launched by various grassroots black travel associations, BlackAtlas makes travel by African-Americans a top-of-mind experience for the nation's top domestic carrier in miles flown (about 243 million last year), and size of the fleet (more than 600 planes).
American seeks to capitalize on a growing market. A 2008 study by Packaged Facts, borrowing from U.S. Census data, found that there are 2.4 million African-American households with incomes of $75,000 or more. About 1.3 million of those households have incomes of $100,000 or more.
"We at American Airlines see BlackAtlas.com as an important connector, enabling an online community of travelers to share information about their favorite places for experiencing African-American and black culture, food, music, literature, history and events across the globe," said Roger Frizzell, American's vice president for corporate communications and advertising, told Target Market News.
American brings a celebrity vibe to the site; author, screenwriter and essayist Nelson George is the site's "Travel Expert-at-Large" and guide for travels through (so far) Milan and Los Angeles.
BlackAtlas makes a big deep-pocketed splash by virtue of its connections with American, and that's part of the problem. The ties to American necessarily limit travelers to what AA offers in the way of flights. Only 15 international destinations are listed on BlackAtlas, and not one is on the African continent.
For a portal devoted to the African American traveler, that's a meaningful omission. In recent years, black travelers have frequently taken trips to Africa on family pilgrimages meant to connect them to their ancestral origins, in remembrance of the Middle Passage. Visits to Goree Island, off the coast of Senegal, have shown great appeal to black Americans seeking to witness firsthand the island's slave fort, and the wrenching experience of seeing the "Door of No Return" where untold Africans were sent to the ships that carried them to uncertain fates across the Atlantic.
So it's curious why BlackAtlas doesn't include in its roster any of the destinations in Africa that American either services directly, or through other carriers by "codeshare" agreements (when you buy a ticket from one airline and travel on another).
Despite its obviously self-promotional flavor, BlackAtlas recognizes both the growing sophistication of black travelers with online tools, and the economic power of African-Americans with travel on their minds. The University of Georgia's Selig Center for Economic Growth estimates that total black American buying power is expected to top $1 trillion by 2012. With that kind of clout found in a bloc of increasingly affluent black households, this portal's likely to have company before long.
Follow theGrio on Facebook & Twitter!
Top Stories
-
16-year-old arrested for 'all black people' leave Wal-Mart prank
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, NJ (AP) - "This was an extremely disturbing event on many levels," Gloucester County Prosecutor Sean Dalton said at a news conference."...
more
- Obama to Dems: Health reform 'is in your hands'
- Health care reform protesters shout N-word at black lawmakers
- African-Americans support Obama's race-neutral stance
- Tavis Smiley can't win with anti-Obama talk
- Dems down to the wire lobbying for reform votes
- First lady and feds to food industry: Cut the fat!
- Why Smiley and Sharpton are both right about racial politics
- Colorectal cancer doesn't discriminate
- 11-year-old caught in the middle of health reform mudslinging
- An 'Immortal Life': How one woman's cells helped cure a generation
- Presidential disrespect goes prime-time in Obama's Fox interview
- Baller-in-chief: Obama's 'March Madness' bracket scores well
- Oprah, schoolgirls to testify at defamation trial
- Robert Townsend turns serious with 'Diary of a Single Mom'
- DMX sentenced to six months in Phoenix jail
- Oprah to appear in sex-abuse, defamation trial
- Will Michael Jackson's new music be a thriller for fans?
- Slideshow: TV's black child stars - where are they now?
- The 15 most memorable 'March Madness' moments
- Rangers manager: I used marijuana, amphetamines
- Ex-porn star reveals purported Tiger texts
- Tiger's aura gone, probably for good
- Ed Secretary: Ban NCAA teams with low grad rates
- Coach on coke: Rangers' Ron Washington tests positive for drugs
- Certain carnival dances said to come from the days of slavery
- Smithsonian receives rare Harriet Tubman items
- Selma, a town rich with history, seeks new legacy
- 'Black Ski' gets a lift from the First Family
- Slideshow: A glimpse of Hawaii's gorgeous landscape
- How to celebrate Black History Month in the Big Apple
- Lawmakers fight to finish health reform
- Kucinich switches vote, will back health reform
- Late-innings hardball in health care push
- Michelle Obama talks to anti-obesity food giants
- It's 'do or die' week for health care reform - how did we get here?
- Obama delays Asia trip to deal with health care
- Made in America: Black-owned businesses blaze trails on our soil
- GOP questions Boys & Girls Clubs' executive salaries
- Is the average single black woman really worth just $5?
- 'March Madness' isn't amateur, it's big league exploitation
- Why African-Americans are more optimistic despite fewer jobs
- Wealth gap greatest for black and Latino women
- Prosecutor pursuing 'all black people should leave Wal-Mart' remark
- Man posing as cop sexually assaults woman
- Barbershop Buzz: Should 'No Child Left Behind' be left behind?
- Teen dies after being pushed into traffic
- Children help mother deliver fourth child
- Missing woman's body found stuffed into bedframe
- 'Brooklyn's Finest' is flawed but fiercely entertaining
- Why audiences should opt-out of 'Cop Out'
- Black music without borders: Five artists you need to hear
- 'Ameriville': Stories of Hurricane Katrina still alive onstage
- Sade's return is worth the wait
- Aid groups struggle to get food, water to Haitians
- TheGrio Reflects: Malcolm X rails against complacent civil rights activists
- TheGrio Reflects: Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul
- TheGrio Reflects: Muhammad Ali on Vietnam
- theGrio Reflects: The Story Of Emmett Till
- theGrio Reflects: the Underground Railroad
- theGrio Reflects: The 14th Amendment is adopted
Facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Myspace
Flickr
Podcast
Wordpress
Linkedin
Last.fm
Tumblr
Identi.ca
Plurk