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Post by Cãtãlin Bugean on May 16, 2004 15:31:50 GMT 2
Aci' dragii mei olteni, io vreau imi spun off-ul despre acest mare oras. Tuturor celor care ma cunosc le spun asa: "MI-AS SCOATE TOTI PRIETENII, FAMILIA SI PE TOTI CRAIOVENII LA IARBA VERDE, LA UN GRATAR, (FAC IO CINSTE!!) UNDEVA DEPARTE DE BUCURESTI, IAR IN TIMPUL ASTA AS IMPREJMUI ORASUL CU NESTE DINAMITA....." Acum o sa ma intrebati DE CE MAH? DE CE? CE AI CU EI? Hai sa vedem de ce, spuneti voi prima data "cum va place Bucurestiul"....
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Post by pufica on May 17, 2004 10:31:07 GMT 2
de ce credetzi asta? pai aducetzi domnishoarele argumente pupici
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Post by Habibi on May 18, 2004 10:15:32 GMT 2
Depinde cum privesti Bucurestiul.Pt. mine de exemplu reprezinta locul unde muncesc si nimic altceva. Nu ma prinde weekendu' mai des de o data pe luna pe-aci.
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Post by Cãtãlin Bugean on May 18, 2004 10:20:14 GMT 2
si pt mine la fel. Dar pana ajungi la birou este o intreaga tevatura, te lupti cu strazile astea imputite, cu oamenii de kkt. Cu transportul in comun care ma exazpereaza. Si ar mai fi multe diferente fata de Craiova... Aci' in Buc, ai mai multe oprtunitati decat in Cr. atat si nimic mai mult.
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Post by pufica on May 18, 2004 10:59:45 GMT 2
oportunitatzi da insa eu merg pe jos 15 minute si ajung in centru, mai merg 20 minute si ajung la gara
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JoeTheDJ
Junior
"Viata trebuie traita privind inainte si inteleasa privind inapoi"
Posts: 31
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Post by JoeTheDJ on May 18, 2004 15:59:55 GMT 2
nu pot decat sa fiu si je de acord cu faptul ca in Bucuresti exista mai multe oprtunitati...si atat. cel putin pentru unul care a trait suficient de mult in Craiova si are toti prietenii, cunoscutii de o viata etc acolo.... o fi niscai subiectivism in toata povestea, da' asta e adevarul
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Post by pufica on May 19, 2004 8:15:41 GMT 2
in capitala probabil pot sa vad mai multe filme, piese de teatru, concerte asta e o chestie buna
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Ileana Balanescu exTudor
Guest
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Post by Ileana Balanescu exTudor on May 19, 2004 13:43:55 GMT 2
Nu se zice "Bucuresti - mandria tarii"? ;D In afara, poate, de mai multe oportunitati de job-uri, nu prea vad nimic atragator la/in orasul asta!!!
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JoeTheDJ
Junior
"Viata trebuie traita privind inainte si inteleasa privind inapoi"
Posts: 31
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Post by JoeTheDJ on May 19, 2004 13:58:59 GMT 2
da, nimic de zis, mai sunt concerte, chestii, alea-alea.... problema e ca trebuie sa ai si timp sa te duci la ele....si cel putin pentru mine marea problema in orasul asta e timpul pe care nu prea il am
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Post by pufica on May 19, 2004 14:22:39 GMT 2
timpul ti-l faci...
ileana, tu ai o problema de atitudine? crezi ca suntem superiori pentru ca ne mutam, crezi ca bucureshtiul e urat... mai spune ce mai crezi??...haide fii tu! spune tot ce te deranjeaza...forumul asta te deranjeaza? noi poate te deranjam?!?
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JoeTheDJ
Junior
"Viata trebuie traita privind inainte si inteleasa privind inapoi"
Posts: 31
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Post by JoeTheDJ on May 19, 2004 15:12:51 GMT 2
da, ete ca unii din noi e mai optimisti (nu ca je n-as fi) da' serios vorbind sa stii ca ziua are tot 24 de ore si la craiova, si la bucuresti....iar daca acolo fac si eu 15 min de acasa pana in centru, ei bine aici fac 40.... deci iaste o mica-mare diferenta care se "vede"
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Post by pufica on May 27, 2004 10:53:46 GMT 2
spirit, avetzi nevoie de ceva mai mult spirit
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Post by droasca on May 28, 2004 10:23:22 GMT 2
Bucuresti,oras urat,murdar,poluat,aglomerat,pop..at de o multime de creaturi intr-o infinitate de variante...o intreaga fauna.Si apoi :oras de cultura si spirit,cu cele mai tari spectacole de teatru,concerte,evenimente mondene si sportive,baruri,discoteci,cluburi.... Si acum principala cauza a migratiei catre Bucuresti: OPORTUNITATI !!! de toate felurile (job-uri).Aici se invart BANII.Umila mea parere este ca cine nu recunoaste asta este ipocrit.Iar dincolo de asta,puterea de adaptare a fiecaruia.Cred ca de Craiova ne leaga inima si prietenii,dar nu cred ca cele doua orase se pot compara.Parerea mea....Hâc...
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Post by Florian Ciobanu on Jul 16, 2004 12:38:44 GMT 2
Sunteti voi rautaciosi. Avem una din cele mai frumoase capitale din lume. Intr-o zi o sa scriu mai multe sub punctele de mai jos. . ......................................................................................
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Post by RAMBO on Aug 30, 2004 20:55:05 GMT 2
nu neaparat cea mai frumoasa capitala dar sigur una dintre cele mai aglomerate:
Bucharest Becomes Crowded Capital
By ALISON MUTLER, Associated Press Writer
BUCHAREST, Romania - No parking spaces. Crippling traffic jams. Sky-high rents. Is this London, Rome, or Athens? No, it's Bucharest, where communism and capitalism have conspired to make it Europe's most crowded capital.
The crowding began when dictator Nicolae Ceausescu set out to industrialize Romania overnight by forcing peasants into factories and making them live in tiny apartments in the capital. The inflow continues today, as rootless young people come seeking their fortune.
Romanians "come here like it's Mecca, thinking that is enough to find yourself on the streets of Bucharest, and you'll have a family, a business and everything," said Mariana Nica, a sociologist at the Urban and Metropolitan Planning Center.
Bucharest has more than 20,000 people per square mile — not quite New York's 26,000 but way above Sofia, capital of neighboring Bulgaria, with 2,400, and nearly twice as crowded as Amsterdam.
The grand plan launched by Ceausescu in the 1970s meant that "People had to live as near as possible to the place where they worked," said Victoria Marinela Berza, the director of the Urban and Metropolitan Planning Center. "The Romanian had to be a sort of little robot, ... to move as little as possible to save time and fuel and to produce."
More people moved in after Ceausescu and his regime were overthrown in 1989 and the country shifted toward a market economy.
Adrian Claudiu Popa, a 25-year-old doctor, lives in a college dorm and says chances for him to get his own place are slim on his monthly income of $154. But he's determined to stay.
"Here I have more possibilities to become someone," he said. "Salaries are higher."
Since communism ended, Bucharest has wholeheartedly embraced Western ways — two dozen McDonalds, Estee Lauder and Clinique in the perfumeries on the elegant Calea Victoriei boulevard, a cinema called the Hollywood Multiplex showing "Troy," "Spider-Man 2" and "Harry Potter (news - web sites) and the Prisoner of Azkaban."
The traffic lights function more smoothly than a decade ago. Drivers flaunting their BMWs and Alfa Romeos often speed in built-up areas, and if their exploits turn fatal they are likely to turn up on accident-hungry evening TV news.
Crime remains low but glue-sniffing children and drunks loiter around the Gara de Nord railroad station, young women with toddlers cadge change from tourists outside the Athenee Palace Hotel and impoverished retirees wait outside food markets for handouts from generous customers.
While a far cry from the dark, dirty Bucharest of communist days, the city still bears the scars of Ceausescu's "systematization." Blocks and blocks of historic buildings were razed to make way for the ugly tenements that have cut a permanent scar on the face of what used to be known as the Paris of Eastern Europe.
At the same time, Ceausescu razed 15,000 buildings in the historic heart of Bucharest to make room for his ultimate folly — a giant $1 billion palace with almost as much floor space as the Pentagon (news - web sites), and a fountain-lined avenue slightly wider than the Champs Elysees in Paris. That may be no coincidence; Romania's culture and language draw heavily from France.
The palace now houses Romania's parliament.
Legend has it that the city was named after a shepherd named Bucur who settled here. It was declared the capital in 1457 under Vlad the Impaler, the warrior ruler who inspired the Dracula legend.
Fast forward 5 1/2 centuries to 21st century Bucharest and its 2 million people.
Raluca Mihailovici, 22, works at a business in Union Square, one of the most crowded districts with 28,000 inhabitants per square mile. She lives with her parents and cannot see herself buying property.
"To live by myself, I must wait for my parents to retire and move to the countryside. There is no other option," she said.
A one-bedroom apartment rents for $100-$200, and monthly salaries are about $180.
Still, Bucharest has its advantages. Just seven miles north of the center are woods and orchards.
"If you drive out of Bucharest to the countryside you are out of the city very quickly because many people live in high rise apartments," said Paul Wood, a 42-year-old British recruitment consultant who moved to Bucharest six years ago. "In London, it takes you ages before you see green spaces."
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