Apple TV+'s 'Reluctant Traveler' Eugene Levy gets a second season
Apple has renewed the Apple TV+ travel series "The Reluctant Traveler With Eugene Levy" for a second season.

Eugene Levy in "The Reluctant Traveler" [Apple TV+]
The first season of the Emmy Award-winning Eugene Levy-fronted travelogue landed on Apple TV+ on February 24, but more will be on the way. Apple has confirmed it has picked up a second season of the show, which takes the comic actor to interesting places around the world.
"After experiencing season one, I've come to realize it's true what they say about travel broadening the mind -- and, I guess my mind could still take some broadening. So I'm packing my suitcase once again and looking forward -- with a healthy dose of trepidation -- to whatever adventures lie in store. Here's to trying new things -- well, within reason," said host and executive producer Levy.
While season one had Levy take on fears including poisonous snakes, harrowing helicopter rides, and swimming in cold lakes, season two promises to be a bigger journey. This time, Levy will pass through Europe, visiting intriguing destinations and uncovering hidden local gems.
"The Reluctant Traveler With Eugene Levy" is produced for Apple TV+ by Twofour and is executive produced by Levy and David Brindley.
No air date has been offered for the second season as yet, but given the first season only just aired, it's likely to be available later in 2023, if not early 2024.
Read on AppleInsider

Eugene Levy in "The Reluctant Traveler" [Apple TV+]
The first season of the Emmy Award-winning Eugene Levy-fronted travelogue landed on Apple TV+ on February 24, but more will be on the way. Apple has confirmed it has picked up a second season of the show, which takes the comic actor to interesting places around the world.
"After experiencing season one, I've come to realize it's true what they say about travel broadening the mind -- and, I guess my mind could still take some broadening. So I'm packing my suitcase once again and looking forward -- with a healthy dose of trepidation -- to whatever adventures lie in store. Here's to trying new things -- well, within reason," said host and executive producer Levy.
While season one had Levy take on fears including poisonous snakes, harrowing helicopter rides, and swimming in cold lakes, season two promises to be a bigger journey. This time, Levy will pass through Europe, visiting intriguing destinations and uncovering hidden local gems.
"The Reluctant Traveler With Eugene Levy" is produced for Apple TV+ by Twofour and is executive produced by Levy and David Brindley.
No air date has been offered for the second season as yet, but given the first season only just aired, it's likely to be available later in 2023, if not early 2024.
Read on AppleInsider
Comments
Mildly entertaining if you want to watch something that doesn't require a lot of thought.
- Arctic TreeHouse Hotel in Finland - $300-$650 per night
- Nayara Tented Camp in Costa Rica - $800-$1200 per night
- Gritti Palace in Venice - $800-$1200 per night
- Amangiri in Utah - $3k-$4k per night
- Kudadoo in the Maldives - $5k-$7k per night
- Kruger Shalati Train Lodge in South Africa - $600-$900 per night
- Verride Palácio Santa Catarina in Lisbon - $500-$5k per night (they have a weird variety of rooms)
- HOSHINOYA in Tokyo - $500-$1k per night
Kudadoo and Amangiri were the only wildly expensive ones. Several of the others are actually pretty reasonable for a vacation involving an international flight. During the winter (when the aurora is visible), Arctic TreeHouse in Finland is around $650 per night, but during the summer it's $300 or so. More than a Motel 6, but I've had to pay more than that for worse hotels in much less interesting parts of the US.Just for example's sake, I priced flights from DFW (major international airport in Texas) to RVN (Rovaniemi, Finland, where Arctic TreeHouse is). Leaving July 7th, returning July 15th. There are round-trip flights for $1800 US with two 24-hour layovers per leg. The cheapest flight with a total duration under 48 hours per leg is $2300 US round trip per person. A double suite at the hotel checking in July 8th leaving July 15th is 1764€ ($1936 US) for the stay. So the hotel for the whole week is less expensive than either person's flight individually.
For the same dates, flights to Tokyo are $2400 US round trip per person, and the stay at Hoshinoya is $2850 US.
Yes, there are absolutely cheaper places to stay, but those two hotels are roughly as expensive as a single flight to get to them and back. I focused on them specifically because I'm actually considering visiting the areas some time in the future.
In contrast, I've had to travel within the US for business and wound up one time at a Marriott with a mediocre breakfast and a "scenic view" of some warehouses for $380 per night. I distinctly remember this because I had to pay it and expense my employer at the time.
You can get pastries and coffee in Venice. In Tokyo, you can get egg salad sandwiches (7-11 egg salad is famous, really! I recommend the yuzu lemonade with it), cross the Shibuya crossing, visit the temples, go to an izakaya without spending much at all. Hotels in Japan can cost the same or less than an average hotel in the US or Europe, easily less than $100 for something very clean, very quiet, and very nice.