Other Videos
Our Other road trip highlights, interviews with roadside attraction creators, clips from vintage travel shorts, and videos by Roadside America fans.
Anywhere |
How to Go Places: Before You Hit the Road Pack your trunk for maximum efficiency and don't forget the travel cookies! Some 1954 car vacation travel tips still seem pretty smart to us.Go to video |
How to Go Places: Always Know Where You Are If the GPS satellites all crash and the mobile network goes dead, you'll be thankful you watched this film.Go to video |
Seeing Green 1937 educational film shows just how messed up traffic lights were in the early days of car travel.Go to video |
Video: Tomorrow's Drivers Jimmy Stewart insists that some people really do drive like six-year-olds as tiny tots learn to drive by pedaling around a custom-built miniature town.Go to video |
Video Freedom Highway A busload of average American movie stars travels cross-country and learns about the USA's wonderful history and road system. Tex Ritter sings!Go to video |
Cemetery |
Ask An Expert: Kurt Deion, Presidential Grave Hunter Q and A with POTUS historian Kurt Deion, who's visited over 500 Roadside Presidents landmarks, graves, and attractions.Go to video |
Findlay |
USS Maine Sinking: Quasquicentennial Salute Quasquicentennial tribute to the 1898 sinking of warship USS Maine, floating "Fortress of the Seas."Go to video |
This Exit |
This Exit For News (No. 1, Jan. 2023) First episode of our news highlights show, an archival and current event creation by the Roadside America research team.Go to video |
This Exit For News #2 Oddball attraction news! Monkey Island - Vulcan Hand - Frozen Bats - Giant Flamingo - Elvis Slept Here - Weeki Wachee MermaidsGo to video |
This Exit For News #4: Sign Museum, Twine Ball, Hot Dog Muffler Man, Hardhide, Hydrant! Oddball attraction news! Largest Hydrant - Old Hardhide Retires - Hot Dog Muffler Man - American Sign Museum - JFK's Twine Ball.Go to video |
Trailer City |
Here Today and Gone Tomorrow: Homes on Wheels The urge to see America from the comfort of your own living room isn't new; people were doing it back in the 1930s, driving around in their mobile homes.Go to video |