Ads, ads everywhere

11 comments
  1. Hm, ciekawe czy te inne kraje były do 1989 również komunistyczne, czy może mają jednak dłuższą historię wolnego, kapitalistycznego rynku, a więc fazę agresywnych reklam już miały (?). 😉 Poza tym, taki kontent to myślę bardziej na erpolska Ci się sprawdzi. 🙂

  2. I was just in Zgorzelec/ Görlitz and this is exactly my experience. Not a single billboard, sign, visible logo or garish color anywhere on the German side. Jump to Poland and it’s wall-to-wall mess and carnival kitsch.

    “Zigaretten,” Night Club, lody, Tyskie, Coca Cola flags, Toi Toi all blaring in the line of sight right up to the river front. Such a shame because it’s a pleasant town, it just needs some historic district ordinance, and people to care, of course. I mean, whatever, junk up the osiedle away from the center, but keep the front tidy at least.

  3. The same in Ukraine. It feels like the city is screaming at me

  4. the “gdzie są te dzieci?” is the most true thing, i was walking trough the streets of Jelenia Góra, and what i saw was the same billboard everywhere. i went to a biedronka and when i turned around i saw the billboard. i was going to the train station and then i saw the billboard.

  5. Same in Slovakia, everything that wasnt blown up by communists gets covered in ads.

  6. In Kraków all the billboards have been removed since last year. It is pretty neat now. Not sure about other parts of Poland

  7. Polecam gdańską uchwałę krajobrazową. Zero billboardów poza jakąś sporadyczną antyaborcyjną partyzantką. Inne miasta nie starają się o podobne prawo?

  8. In many places it’s still better than it used to be.

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