“…Establishing authenticity involves 'an intense classificatory and legitimation struggle' (Munt, 1994: 116) as particular destinations, forms and styles of travel and, importantly, specific discursive performances through which other people are made aware of one's experiences reveal a clear yet contested hierarchy of tourism and travel experience (van Nuenen, 2016). Thus, the Bucket List joins the range of ways in which tourism enters the social imagination, with media representations (Crouch, Jackson and Thompson, 2005), travel writing (McClinchey, 2015), cinema (Tzanelli, 2007), advertising (Park et al, 2013), souvenir photos and videos (Merchant, 2016) and tour guides (Ong et al, 2014), storytelling (Kane and Zink, 2004), social media (Wang and Alasuutari, 2017), and internet blogs (Walter, 2016;Bosangit et al, 2015) all contributing to an increasingly contested field of accounts of what kind of traveller or tourist one should be and what sort of experiences are viewed as worthwhile. As shall be discussed further below, the appeal of Bucket Lists appears to lie in their ability to offer an authoritative collation of desirable experiences involving the delineation of what destinations and activities ought to be seen as worthy of an individual's attention.…”