Tag: entertainment

  • Entertainment and leisure in the old town of Ploiesti

    Entertainment and leisure in the old town of Ploiesti

    An oil-extraction town, the seat of a mountainous county, therefore a town with a remarkable tourist potential, Ploiesti, in the inter-war years, was a thriving town, with lots of entertaining opportunities. Some of these entertaining opportunities were even imported from Bucharest by the Ploiesti town dwellers, who were eager to compete with the Bucharest city dwellers on an equal footing. One such important entertaining habits was the big flower fight, which in Bucharest was staged at the Promenade, that is on the then northern outskirts of Romania’s capital city. In the Prahova town, the flower fight started before World War One and was resumed when the war ended. It was a spring entertainment that came to a close in late June, once the holidays began. When and how the flower fight was staged in Ploiesti, we will find out all about that from the author of a book entitled Once Upon a Time in Ploiesti. Flower Fights, football and beauty contests, Lucian Vasile.



    The flower fight was an imported habit, to Ploiesti from the Capital city, before World War One. The Promenade in Bucharest was replaced by the Ploiesti boulevard, on a smaller scale, by all means, yet with the same passion, the same verve and the same popular revolt. Perhaps in Ploiesti it was more intense since it was a smaller town, the green areas were a lot fewer, so cutting the boulevard off from the community circuit at the weekend caused the revolt of those who were unable to afford taking part in that kind of entertainment. That is why, in the 1920s or thereabouts, several newspaper articles were issued, writing that, anyway, the green spaces around town were scarce, which simply deprived the town’s downtrodden and ostracized people of one of their very few recreation areas. Everything came to a standstill on the Saint Peter and Paul’s Feast, when the school year also came to a close in the town’s most important high-school. It had Peter and Paul as patron saints. And it was the time when the town fell asleep. The scorcher back then was, if you will, quite similar with the scorcher we have these days, so the posh people left town, leaving for various resorts abroad, or retiring to their residences in the region, usually lying around Ploiesti.



    The flower fight was mostly affordable for the rank and fashion, yet the more modest town dwellers amused themselves in funfairs, which gained their momentum in early autumn, when the crops were harvested, especially when the grapes were harvested.



    Historian Lucian Vasile:



    If the flower fight was the sign that the life of the town in early summer came to an end, three months later, in early autumn, a funfair was mounted, At the Cannons, that’s how it was called, it opened the new school year as well as a new season of the highlife. Then the town’s posh people returned to their residences in Ploiesti. But, rather, that was how the rank and file amused themselves. The grape juice ignored the social status, so having fun like that was extremely affordable, since at that funfair all sorts of vendors arrived, offering very cheap and simple entertainment: from the Merry-go-round to target shooting, to the boxer punch machines where you could test your force. It was the entertainment for commoners, it lasted for about between 4 and 6 weeks and could have lasted longer had the cold weather not set in, forcing people to retire in beerhouses, restaurants and taverns.



    However, Ploiesti town dwellers were also into football. With details on that, here is historian Lucian Vasile again.



    This sports discipline saw a spectacular rise. Around 1907, 1908 it barely had any fans in Ploiesti and people thought it was a waste of time, they even thought it was a weird kind of sports discipline. Well, 20-30 years later, not only was Ploiesti a hub of national football, but also it had two teams that used to duel each other, yet also competing on the country’s central football stage. It was, on one hand, Prahova, which was the traditional team subsidized the Dutch industry tycoon Jacob Kopes and there was Tricolorul, the Tricolor, the team of the Ploiesti-Valeni Railway Society. It was a very profitable society which of course had tremendous sums of money at its fingertips, sums it splashed here and there, yet with a hardly encouraging outcome. They were unable to win the championship, nay, they even were relegated. Yet they were famous in the late 1930s, for the bonuses and the salaries they paid. But at that time as well, football ended up in brawls, in fights. There was a time, in the late 1920s or thereabouts, when the police prefect himself entered the pitch and started punching people and kicking them with his legs, because he was mad the local team had been defeated.



    A multi-ethnic town, Ploiesti also witnessed ways of spending leisure time through habits and customs imported by the foreigners who settled in the city. A telling example of that is the German community, which was quite numerous. Here is the historian Lucian Vasile, with more on that.



    They built a hall for their community, a hall on the foundation of which today’s Philharmonics Building in town was erected. As early as the late 19th century, the members of the German community convened there, they had a choir and organized all sorts of games: bowling and snooker. What was really new in the town’s life was the fact that here women rubbed shoulders with men, being allowed to play, they were not discriminated against. For the then patriarchal world, that came as a curiosity, how was it possible that, with the Germans, women played snooker alongside men, with no discrimination. Otherwise, the other communities were rather well integrated, and not that anxious to preserve their separate identity. They were trying to integrate.



    Unfortunately, once with the paucity and the restrictions the communist regime brought with it from 1947 onwards, many of these entertainment and leisure opportunities disappeared, just as people’s good humor disappeared.




  • Generația Z. Tinerii și media

    Generația Z. Tinerii și media

    Informația circulă, în zilele noastre, cu o viteză amețitoare și tot ceea ce vrem să aflăm, din cele mai diverse domenii, este acum doar la un click distanță. Iar tinerii din Generația Z sunt cei care par să dețină controlul absolut în aflarea informațiilor din cele mai noi canale de comunicare.



    Rețelele sociale, dar și canalele de entertainment, cum sunt Tik Tok sau Youtube, au devenit principalele surse la care apelează tinerii, în detrimentul mediilor clasice (ziarul, radioul, televiziunea), în care, spun ei, nu se mai regăsesc. Poate pentru că nu sunt atât de accesibile, poate pentru că nu sunt la fel de atractive sau poate pentru că vocea Generației Z nu se face suficient auzită în aceste mijloace de comunicare în masă tradiționale.



    Totuși, pericole sunt la tot pasul în mediul online, de la fake news până la manipulare și propagandă. Iar pentru a reuși să cerni informația, este nevoie de educație și cultură, pentru că modele sunt peste tot, trebuie doar să știi și să înțelegi cum să alegi.



    Despre relația Generației Z cu media am stat de vorbă cu Radu Simion, student în anul I la Facultatea de Drept a Universității București, cu europarlamentarul Dacian Cioloș, dar și cu Adrian Sandu, profesor de Științe Sociale la Colegiul Național ”Andrei Șaguna” din Brașov.



  • Start of the summer season in Mamaia resort

    Start of the summer season in Mamaia resort

    The most popular and largest festivals are held here, with the best DJs. Accommodation comes in all shapes and forms, and entertainment is to match. You can take the gondola, you can visit the water park, and you have a variety of trips available in Dobrogea region and the Danube Delta.




    However, in order to get to know Mamaia better, we should take you on a trip back in time. 112 years ago, Mamaia opened for business as a summer vacation destination, more precisely in 1906. Organizing the facilities started in 1905.



    Razvan Victor Pantelimon, a lecturer with the School of History and Political Sciences at the Ovidius University of Constanta, told us some details: “This was the vision of a few very important people. First there was engineer Anghel Saligny, who built a number of administration and infrastructure buildings, starting with the famous bridge over the Danube. Once Constanta harbor was improved, he also had the idea to build a number of spas close to the city of Constanta. Another visionary with a very important role was the mayor of the city at the time, Ion Banescu. He held the position for a very short time, only two years, between 1905 and 1907. The citys local council leased an area north of the city, which was initially a fishing village. This is the origin of what is now known as Mamaia.”



    This was an international resort right from the start, because the landscaping was made by a French architect, Edouard Redont, who made the blueprints, turning the beach into parks, according to Razvan Victor Pantelimon: “The first map of Mamaia resort was made in France, in December 1905, by the Architecture and Landscaping Service with Paris City Hall. Also in Paris, France, in early 1906, one thousand copies of photos of the beach were made. The official inauguration of Mamaia resort was in August 1906, when two trains left from Constanta. The inauguration was attended by a large crowd. What is interesting is that they built a railroad between the old railway station in Constanta and the resort, over 8 km long. Success came quickly. Statistics show that within a few months, in 1906, over 45,000 tourists visited Mamaia. It was a success, considering that the city of Constanta had only 12,000 inhabitants.”



    Along the years, Mamaia saw some hard times as well. The first was during WWI and its immediate aftermath. Here is Razvan Victor Pantelimon, a lecturer with the School of History and Political Sciences at Ovidius University of Constanta with details: “We can say there was a slump until the 1920s, when construction resumed. The Royal Palace was built starting in the 1920s, with blueprints made by Italian architect Mario Stoppa. The resort flourished in the 1930s. The casino was built, and the first large hotel, The Rex. What is interesting is that in 1934 there were 12,000 foreign tourists from surrounding countries, like Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia. Then, during WWII and in the 1950s, the resort took a step backward too — it was left in dereliction, but in the 1960s a new policy for development was implemented, aimed at bringing foreign tourists to Mamaia. We can say that it gained international recognition in 1968, when Miguel Angel Asturias, South American Nobel Prize winner, came to Mamaia and said that it could rival any resort on the French Riviera – Cote dAzur, the Italian Riviera, or the beaches of Florida. After the 1990s it once again went into a slump, and growth resumed only after 2000.”



    It would be worth mentioning that the resort of Mamaia hosted the Radio Holiday headquarters, the foreign language station of Radio Romania. This famous station enjoyed great success during the communist period with entertainment programming.



    After the year 2000, the resort developed a lot, as confirmed by Stefan Necula, the director of a travel agency focused on the seaside: “We tried to cater for all types of tourists, with offers in all inclusive hotels and also in boutique hotels. We consider that this will be more and more a favorite destination for foreign tourists. We are trying to open up more and more towards festivals, because it would attract foreign tourists, who are used to having such events at the beach. One very important event is Neversea, one of the biggest music festivals in Eastern Europe. I think the trips we organize and introduce in our tourist packages are good for the development of the resort. We want tourists to get to know the local culture instead of just spending time on the beach.”



    Mamaia is not an exclusive destination, Stefan Necula told us: “We have a variety of prices around the resort. We have two star units for tourists on a budget, but also four and five star hotels, with matching prices. They offer services comparable to Western European ones. The feedback from tourists has been positive. The latest round came around the May Day holiday, when tourists flocked to the clubs in the north of the resort. As you know, the entertainment was exceptional. Loads of tourists came for May Day from the UK, Germany and Italy, many of them accompanied by Romanians who promoted the resort. We are eagerly awaiting tourists who want to get to know the place and feel its vibe. The hotels, restaurants, and clubs here, as well as the beach facilities, are eager to accommodate any tourist.”



    In Mamaia you have a rich history, with lots of events and all sorts of entertainment. Contact soon your travel agent to check out what is on offer this summer season.