The levies have worsened relations between China and the US, the two largest global economies - and launched the countries into a tit-for-tat trade battle.
The pair admitted there was "no limit" on how far they would travel to sample a delicacy.Jess said she recently drove more than an hour to one bakery just to buy a sandwich.
"We're going to Marrakesh [in Morocco] in a couple of weeks and the first thing that I've looked at is the eateries," she added.At Pettigrew Bakery in Cardiff, David Le Masurier's team bakes and sells "thousands of pastries a day" to consumers like Jessica and Louise.David said he had "absolutely" seen bakery tourism positively impact his business, with international travellers building food spots into their trips, influenced by online trends and viral dishes.
"They have done their research. They've gone onto social media, they've seen images. They've read reviews. They're getting tips off TikTok," he said."People are literally walking in with their phones, particularly if English isn't their first language, and they're holding up pictures or showing us reels and saying: 'I want this'."
Customers pay anything from £3.20 for a plain croissant to £4.50 for "limited edition" bakes - prices which David accepts are outside of the bracket of "everyday products".
But he said between the ingredients, paying for his "quality" staff and making a profit, margins were "very small".Scott came out as gay at the age of 15, and said the show played a huge role in his formative years.
"Doctor Who literally changed my life," he told Dr Emily Garside on BBC Radio Wales' programme"People talk about the Doctor Who family and it's absolutely true. People I met back in the early 2000s are still massive parts of my life."
Scott recalled growing up in a working-class family in Birmingham, "in a world of soap operas and things" where TV characters were mostly in heterosexual relationships or "settled down" in a nuclear family."You could actually take most characters from an episode of classic Doctor Who and their sexual orientation, their gender, how they define, is completely irrelevant... [it] was almost a breath of fresh air."