The Last Venetians | ARTE.tv Documentary

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  • Опубліковано 21 чер 2024
  • In recent years, the population of Venice has dipped below 50,000 inhabitants, with almost 30 million tourists visiting each year. Every day, the city loses 3 inhabitants, with locals fed up with rising rents as the unique, historic city on the lagoon is turned into a theme-park for tourists. Can anything be done to save the last Venetians?
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    The Last Venetians | ARTE.tv Documentary
    🗓 Available until the 13/05/2024
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 55

  • @artetvdocumentary
    @artetvdocumentary  5 днів тому

    WATCH NEXT:
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  • @strikedn
    @strikedn 5 днів тому +9

    Veneziano di nascita. Nel 1966 i miei genitori (avevo 6 anni) si trasferiscono a Mestre. 3/4 dei miei parenti abitavano ancora a Venezia. Oggi non ci abita più nessuno. Tutti in terraferma o morti. La vecchia casa di famiglia l'ho venduta nel 2013 quando è venuta a mancare mia madre . Era vuota e cadeva a pezzi ma per mia madre era qualcosa di sentimentalmente importante e voleva tenerla. La vendetti ad un mestrino (anche lui ex veneziano). Pensavo ci andasse ad abitare..l'ha fatta diventare un B&B. L'ultima volta che sono stato a Venezia nel 2022 mi è venuta una malinconia assurda. Non voglio tornarci mai più. Se vuole, mia moglie milanese ci torni con le sue amiche. Io non voglio metterci più piede.

  • @mariannapapoutsopoulou182
    @mariannapapoutsopoulou182 5 днів тому +3

    The same thing is happening in Athen's center and the Saronikos riviera... Thanks ARTE for the honest approach.

  • @sarahp1383
    @sarahp1383 5 днів тому +3

    Loved this video for its honest depiction of how tourism is forcing Venetians to leave their homes as it is becoming expensive by the day.
    It was painful to know that Matteo, such a distinguished looking gentleman who was once the manager of a hotel is now the night watchman of a hotel.
    This video is tinged with sadness as one witnesses its heritage being trampled over ...as an example a theatre of great grandeur is now functioning as a supermarket.
    How painful it is to see this cultural transition .
    What is this demon which makes people addicted to greed?
    Chiara is doing something wonderful , protecting the heritage of her beautiful city by restoring abandoned homes and giving them the dignity they deserve.
    No doubt , its eternal beauty attracts millions of travel crazy tourists to Venice
    But they should remember , to respect this ancient city's traditions, history, heritage and culture and not crush its spirit or change its ethos..

  • @belindacole71
    @belindacole71 6 днів тому +2

    The same thing is happening along the French Riviera also. People with money are buying up the apartments ( sometimes 2 or 3 at a time ) and renting them out to tourists. They stay empty in the winter and people that reside here year round cannot find yearly accomodations . Food has increased by 30% in one year and it is becoming increasingly difficult to live here permanantly.

  • @andersonsantucci9325
    @andersonsantucci9325 6 днів тому +4

    Wonderful city,but I don't like cities that is full of tourist, it's terrible 😔

    • @solangelauthier2381
      @solangelauthier2381 2 дні тому

      Mass tourism deters you from visiting places/towns you would have lived otherwise.

  • @blueyomogi
    @blueyomogi 7 днів тому +4

    Sono nata en Hawai'i ma al momento vivo a San Francisco. Me sento triste per i veneziani en questo video. Ammiro la loro resistenza y solidarietà.

  • @pragueexpat5106
    @pragueexpat5106 6 днів тому +6

    So, who are the people profiting by renting out the entire city?..

    • @user-po3ko9yb5w
      @user-po3ko9yb5w 6 днів тому +1

      The ones that have always owned and ruled the world

  • @floreanchannel
    @floreanchannel 6 днів тому +2

    Many Italians from the old Venice do not want to live there. The city is literally a museum; any changes are painfully monitored, so any renovations are expensive and long. Transporting the materials, products and anything there is a problem because you have really narrow pathways, and everything must be transported by boats or by hand (many bridges and staircases). Although Venice has a port and ship industry there is not much that the old city of Venice can offer, except tourism, artisan (and expensive) handmade products and food.

    • @user-og2wt3le4j
      @user-og2wt3le4j 5 днів тому

      I call Venice the "city of nice things". My ex gf lived there doing a glass blowing apprenticeship. She later moved to the UK. My friend did her jewelry design course at a college in Florence and continued learning in Venice. There are the museums, art, architecture, and food experiences. Lots of shops to buy things. But I don't think it is a place to raise children and plan a future. There are better cities in Italy to live. I like Florence, Bologna, Verona, and Torino. Milan is expensive and for the rich. Same with Como. Rome is also a tourist trap. Some are moving to the small towns where housing is cheap and they can raise a family. Finding good paying work is always an issue, but you can compromise and work at home now in many jobs.

  • @AI-xs4fp
    @AI-xs4fp 4 дні тому +1

    Mi porta alle lacrime.

  • @c_cma1971
    @c_cma1971 4 дні тому +1

    Hello from Bucharest, Romania- a huge underrated city in Europe:)

  • @pedroarthurbarbosa
    @pedroarthurbarbosa 5 годин тому

    Could someone explain that Venice is not only the main island of the commune of Venice, but that this touristic Venice is the old city of Venice! Venice has more than 250k inhabitants!

  • @hijodehombre
    @hijodehombre 17 годин тому

    Vecio Matteo, sei un grande

  • @robaire.b
    @robaire.b 3 дні тому

    The same thing has happened in countless towns in the UK especially around the coasts where tourism has destroyed the local economy and housing opportunities for young local people. Much of the profit from tourism go into the pockets a minority that own the valuable resources (e.g properties/businesses). Local people have had to move away as they can no longer raise their families where they were raised. Employment is often low skilled, tourist related and disappears in Winter. Schools, hospitals and medical practices are closing down and the vitality of communities has been diminished. Farm workers, teachers, healthcare professionals etc often cannot afford the massively inflated property prices and rental charges. Normal shops are being closed and replaced by restaurants, cafes, souvenir etc

  • @MrLUCARAMELLO
    @MrLUCARAMELLO 3 дні тому

    The main problem that this video unveils is Overtourism. Overtourism is a rather big issues in many European towns but also in other towns on the globe. The European commission for travel and tourism recently brought up this issue more seriously, defining all related problems that do not impact only demographic but also climate change and criminality. Venice might rank just after Rome, Florence and Amsterdam or Barcelona that do face similar problems of overtourism. There is hardly a solution to this matter, due to an enormous amount of co-factors...let alone social networking and the new online booking platforms' empire that further overtourism for their profits and those of low cost airtransport that drive to Venice millions and millions of tourists per year.

  • @user-og2wt3le4j
    @user-og2wt3le4j 5 днів тому

    There are many reasons to live in Venice. I have two friends who live there. It is very clean compared to other European cities. The locals are nice. Many workers commute to the city and live elsewhere. It is not a city to live if you are old. There are virtually no cars and people walk everywhere. The water taxis help, but be prepared to walk on steps, over bridges, on hard surfaces. There are tourists which leads to crowds every weekend, more in the summers. And the cost of living varies depending on where you live. My friends pay 500 and 750 Euros for their nice size rentals. That's cheap compared to other cities in Europe. Some of the older houses are nice but cost an arm and leg to own. Food costs also vary. Eating at home is cheaper. Tourist trap restaurants will cost more. Locals tend to go to small family run places off the tourist trap areas. I hear the Italian government is trying to lower the number of tourists. But then again that is the bread and butter for many Venetian business owners.

  • @Escape_The_Mundane
    @Escape_The_Mundane 7 днів тому

    Hallo, mein familie kommen aus Baden-Württemberg. I can speak perfect english. Plus some spanish from mexico, Hola mi amigos, mejame estaban. Never been to italy but I heard there is many different italian accents. I understand german. Buorno giorno fortunato l'opportuno

  • @steffra4756
    @steffra4756 6 днів тому

    Non ho ancora finito di vedere il video ma da italiana mi chiedo come possa Venezia non essere una città turistica! Non ci si può lamentare di questo, casomai servono politiche intelligenti per gestire abitanti e turismo, come succede in milioni di città nel mondo!

    • @user-og2wt3le4j
      @user-og2wt3le4j 5 днів тому

      Much of Europe and the UK have become tourist cities. Their major source of income come from tourism. Other less touristy cities are still expensive due to high taxes and high rents. I was recently in London and Paris. The locals told me how high the cost of living is. They are quickly becoming cities where only millionaires can afford to live well.

  • @drwebstercivet5540
    @drwebstercivet5540 7 днів тому +1

    Cette course au fric est encouragée par l'Union européenne, le commanditaire d'Arte.

  • @solangelauthier2381
    @solangelauthier2381 2 дні тому

    A Venise, comme dans d autres villes (Lecce, Syracusa/Ortygia etc en Italie - et la même chose dans d autres pays) il n y a plus de « vraie vie » : plus de boulanger, de boucher etc. Rien que des restaurants (ave des menus en 4 langues !), des marchands de souvenirs etc. Sans parler de la foule. Tout est gâchė, on n a plus envie d y aller. Dommage.

  • @donaldsmith7685
    @donaldsmith7685 4 дні тому +1

    I remember when Castro said we'll throw all of the entrepreneurs and wealthy residents out of the country. Forget tourism I'll create a workers paradise he bragged. Today the country is in shambles. The beautiful city of Havana is a rotting corpse with the occasional1955 automobiles sputtering around the streets. Anyone who can has left. Criticize tourist but where would the city be without them?
    It's the same all over with high cost of living, especially in American cities. The western nations, even with all of their problems, must look pretty good to South Americans and Africans, they're flooding the borders everywhere and bringing their three or four children per family with them.

  • @marianasalles242
    @marianasalles242 7 днів тому +11

    So sad! Mass tourism creates a loss of identity of beautiful places as Venice. And also other major prejudices…Tourists are like grasshoppers 🦗:) We need less humans in this 🌍👍🏻

  • @bobbybannerjee5156
    @bobbybannerjee5156 4 дні тому

    This is what capitalism does to places, only Venice looks more extreme. No rules. You're welcome if you can pay. No concern for the environment. It's yours if you can pay for it.

  • @cineffect
    @cineffect 6 днів тому +1

    Tourism is surely not to blame, corruption is. How come there's no other economy besides tourism?

    • @francisdrake7060
      @francisdrake7060 6 днів тому +3

      Lol please Google venetians artesans and industries 😂😂
      Another tourist that is not needed.
      Go spend your money elsewhere.

    • @cineffect
      @cineffect 6 днів тому +2

      @@francisdrake7060 I know, but it's not enough to keep the economy afloat. I spend my money where I have fun, not stress. Provence and Tuscany are much nicer.

    • @alessandratrevisan7951
      @alessandratrevisan7951 6 днів тому

      @@francisdrake7060 Thank you for the attitude, exactly what we need to understand a complex problem and solve it 👌

  • @adyton
    @adyton 7 днів тому +5

    I don't agree with the main idea of this video. Venice is an universal city of mankind now; I hope all habitants leave the town and it is conserved only for visitors. Moreover, native Venetians earn a lot of money with tourism by sales and rentals etc. No need for empty romantism. No one is unhappy with this situation.

    • @user-po3ko9yb5w
      @user-po3ko9yb5w 6 днів тому +16

      Are you kidding? I cannot believe what you just wrote

    • @adyton
      @adyton 6 днів тому +1

      @@user-po3ko9yb5w Why not? Do we all have to think alike?

    • @kendv4299
      @kendv4299 6 днів тому +17

      Ridiculous statement. If they allow Venice to become a Disneyland for pure profit, then the 49,000 remaining citizens can at least be put on the payroll and be properly paid as employees. Venice is only the latest sad story of Mass Tourism. Loads of people swarming in to take a selfie and head on to the next location.

    • @nicolettastrada5976
      @nicolettastrada5976 6 днів тому +9

      @@adytonyou talk like that because you aren’t Venetian

    • @adyton
      @adyton 6 днів тому +1

      @@kendv4299 Sorry, quite a right statement. Those remaining 49.000 citizens are earning their lives by those tourists; you don't have to be mean to them; such a hypocrisy, take tourist money and then blame them for everything; I'm happy that local politicians don't agree with you.