My Mission

Will The World Ever Be Ready For a Female Bourdain?

Spread the love

After a long day, I headed to my local watering hole for a glass of wine. As I sipped subpar Pinot Grigio, I felt a blaring light behind me. The man sitting next to me at the bar screamed, “Yes! Bourdain!”

I turned around to watch a younger, less-gray-haired Anthony Bourdain tossing fresh pasta in a tomato-ladled saucepan.

“Why don’t we have a female Bourdain?” I said.

“Because women aren’t funny!” he said, the female bartender and I refusing to laugh.

“It’s a fucking JOKE, you guys are proving my point,” he continued.

The bartender and I locked eyes, rolled them synchronously, and shrugged it off.

Hiking Kilimanjaro

This man whom I had never seen before knew nothing about me, but his comments fueled a fire that already lives within me as a woman in the travel industry.

Despite all of my accomplishments as a radical righteous solo traveler, I am sometimes taken aback by the amount of sexism in the industry. I have traveled to over 60 countries on 6 continents, written for several publications, and have even been on a podcast or two. When I first started branding myself, I wasn’t too keen on taking bikini shots on beaches, but I was keen on using my GoPro while I did things like ride the world’s largest swing in New Zealand or swim alongside a turtle in The Great Barrier Reef. I often wondered, if I wasn’t willing to exploit my body, was there a chance of me ever getting my foot in the door?

Getting scuba certified in the Great Barrier Reef


I was once invited to speak for a site featuring solo female travelers. Despite having sent them all of the places I’ve gone to alongside my craziest adventures, they asked me a plethora of disappointing questions, such as what I do to avoid being sexually assaulted abroad. The way this was framed was confusing; just because I am a woman who travels means I have the golden rule on how to not get raped? I don’t carry a magical shield. I have in fact been raped in my own apartment in New York, but never abroad (knock on wood). Traveling alone is one of the few ways I feel I’ve gotten my bodily autonomy back from some of the shit that’s been done to it. I wonder how many times male travelers are asked what they do to avoid raping women. Men, seriously, what do you do to avoid those urges? Do you not walk alone at night, as to not find vulnerable women, waiting like prey to be pounced? How do you control yourselves?

Solo Hike in New Zealand



The same company asked me what countries are most unsafe, which, though I understand the notion, ends up furthering negative stereotypes. I have watched interviews with men, and yet, the questions are never framed around their safety, but instead, “What’s the biggest risk you’ve taken?” The response is always something like crossing a West African border, or sleeping alongside snakes in the Amazon, which is often met with a, “That’s awesome, man!”

Petra, Jordan


I once pitched a story to a male-dominated company about hiking Kilimanjaro, which I have personally done. I included the tidbit that I keep in touch with my guide, and could verify accuracy through him. The response was, “Well, are you an expert? I mean, you only climbed it once, right?” and the story was promptly denied. That same man continued to call me an amateur travel blogger instead of a professional writer, despite having been professionally published several times.

And I did it alone.

I believe women in every industry are at a disadvantage, but in the travel industry, I have watched male travelers jump off of cliffs and be called amazing and adventurous, while women simply show up to a place and are questioned on their sanity and safety. I have watched men travel to places like Syria and Socotra to be called “brave,” while women travel to India or Egypt and are called “crazy.”

Existing in a bikini in the Philippines


Bourdain set a high bar: we should get out there and see the world, eat anything that’s placed in front of us, drink questionable liquor with the locals, and face our dreams and fears head-on. For this, I love him. However, Bourdain was simply given a show after the success of his book Kitchen Confidential. He had seldom traveled prior to that, but he was curated and crafted into this character we all grew to love. I ask myself, would those same opportunities ever be given to a woman? Women are out there now, traveling and seeing the world, and I don’t see any of them making the impact Bourdain has. This is not because they are incapable, but because, perhaps, those doors will never be opened for them. The travel world doesn’t need a “female” Bourdain, it simply needs a female.


Spread the love
Kaitlyn Rosati

Kaitlyn Rosati is an expert solo traveler, having been to over 60 countries on 6 continents. An adrenaline junkie at heart, she has climbed Kilimanjaro, seen all 7 World Wonders, became scuba certified in the Great Barrier Reef, and even once moved to Tokyo on a whim. Her work has been featured in several online publications, and she has a running column in New York Daily News featuring hole-in-the-wall eats around NYC. Her long term goals include visiting every country in the world and owning a villa in Italy. Come join her adventures here at No Man Nomad!

Share
Published by
Kaitlyn Rosati

Recent Posts

How to Get from Sarajevo to Mostar by Train

If Bosnia is on your radar, you've likely read a lot about Sarajevo and a…

2 weeks ago

One day in Doha, Qatar

I've lost count of the number of layovers I've had in the Doha Airport. I'm…

2 months ago

A quiet oasis in Montenegro: How to Spend a Weekend in Budva

One week before visiting Budva, I had never even heard of her. I had been…

2 months ago

Planning a Group Trip to the Seychelles Without Losing a Day to Layovers

Getting to the Seychelles is already a commitment for solo travelers. Add a group of…

2 months ago

One Day Itinerary for Muscat, Oman

As you make plans to visit Oman, you'll likely be steered in the direction to…

2 months ago

Know Before You Go: Solo Female Travel in Oman

If there's one region I feel continually drawn to, it's the Middle East. Maybe that's…

2 months ago