Setjetting

[1] Examples include touring London in a high-speed boat as in the James Bond films, or visiting the stately homes that are seen in the Jane Austen adaptations.

The term is a play on jet-setting, a form of luxury travel in upper-class society.

The term was first coined in the US press in the New York Post by journalist Gretchen Kelly in 2008.

[2] An analysis of the use of Geospatial technologies in set jetting was proposed by Thierry Joliveau in The Cartographic Journal.

[3] Corporations, convention and tourism boards followed the trend that year, creating their own set-jetting travel maps, like the Elizabeth: The Golden Age movie map published by VisitBritain.

Tourists on a "James Bond tour" of Khao Phing Kan island in Thailand, visiting a filming location of the 1974 film The Man with the Golden Gun