Samantha "Sam" Taylor, a successful event planner from New York City, has inherited a charming but neglected beach house in Beachside from her great-aunt, Lucille. The news of the inheritance comes as a shock, as Sam had never met her great-aunt but had fond memories of summer vacations spent at the beach house as a child.
Perhaps the most elusive yet pervasive aspect of the Costa Southern Charms is a cultural attitude, often captured by the Spanish concept of sobremesa (the leisurely conversation after a meal) or the Italian dolce far niente (the sweetness of doing nothing). Life here prioritizes human connection, sensory pleasure, and rest. Daily routines are punctuated by a long midday pause, a late-evening paseo (stroll), and dinners that stretch long past midnight. The town square, not the shopping mall, is the social hub. Festivals, whether religious processions or harvest celebrations, are vibrant, communal events that close streets and invite participation. This unhurried pace is not laziness but a deliberate cultural choice—a resistance to the relentless productivity demanded by modern life. For visitors, this is the most transformative charm: an invitation to set aside the clock, savor a glass of local wine as the sun sets over the sea, and embrace a more human rhythm. Costa Southern Charms