Why Athens needs a local guide
Athens runs on freddo espresso and arguments about politics. The city has been continuously inhabited for 3,400 years and every neighborhood has its own personality. Plaka feels like a village, Psyrri wakes up at midnight, and Koukaki is where the young Athenians actually hang out.
To become a tour guide in Athens is to accept that most visitors only scratch the surface. Over 30 million tourists pass through Greece each year, and the majority spend their Athens time shuffling between the Acropolis and Syntagma Square before flying to the islands. They miss the graffiti-covered alleys of Exarchia where the political history of modern Greece is painted on every wall. They never find the tiny ouzeri behind the Varvakios central market where fishmongers eat lunch at 11am. If you become a tour guide in Athens, you get to change that. You walk people through Philopappou Hill at golden hour when the Parthenon turns amber and the tourist buses are gone. You take them to Koukaki for a freddo espresso on a sidewalk table where actual Athenians argue about football. The city needs guides who know Psyrri after midnight, who have eaten at every souvlaki stand on Mitropoleos Street and picked a favorite, and who can explain why the Plaka cats are better fed than most European house pets. Becoming a tour guide in Athens means turning 3,400 years of chaos into a story people carry home.