shopping

Two news: LGBT Pride demonstration; bankruptcy of luxury mall

The municipality of Vilnius finally announced where the first ever demonstration for the rights of homosexuals (and others) will take place. This is not the exact route, but it connects the starting and the finishing point of the march, and shows you which part of the city is reserved for demonstrations from now on... The Swedish Minister for EU affairs announced she will attend. Will you?

Second news: after three years, a luxury shopping mall on Gedimino ave. 9, right next to the Government building and a block away from the Cathedral, is facing uncertain destiny. The company which owns it is bankrupt, and the business is now transferred to the chief creditor - a Scandinavian-owned bank. The mall is not closed [yet], but the fact shows how deep the crisis is. Even comparatively rich inhabitants of Vilnius are saving.

Senses of Vilnius - where?

As I'm sitting at the first Coffee Inn and blogging, I see a big add in front of me, vaguely inviting people to "sense - see, hear, smell, taste, touch Vilnius" - a hint about a new event from the Capital of Culture repertoire. This particular space is marked with an ear - people will soon be able to hear something, I don't know what. What can one hear in that space at the moment? Chatting of teenagers, mumbling of a homeless man harassing people in search for a compassionate soul to give him some money, before he gets kicked away by a guard from a nearby cafeteria. This "sense" project, however, gives me some inspiration.

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Desperate consumerism and public order

My friend L. sent me this link offering me to see a [yet another] "Lithuanian nightmare". The story is the following. The notorious"Maxima" decided to boost its revenues by inviting people to shop at night with discounts.

The crisis and the subsequent tax reform have made household budgets shrink, so, of course, people were tempted to get what they need for living with a discount. This was enough to keep them up at night. However, "Maxima" miscalculated the number of people who would be ready to sacrifice their sleep in exchange for cheap stuff. Thousands gathered in front of the supermarket, leaving little space for those who wanted to leave. The journalist in the video asks people how long they are standing there. Some say that about an hour. It's freezing cold in Lithuania at this time. Towards the end of the video you will see a girl who almost passed out.

The police interfered in order to make way for people willing to leave the supermarket. In the video, the police is saying "Everybody back off, otherwise you'll hurt each other!"

This is really terrible - I'm totally filled with grieve for people who sacrificed their night sleep to get cheap stuff, without even being guaranteed a chance to get in. Looks like a flashback from the USSR times, when there was a shortage of everything and people had to stand in long lines to get oranges or sausages. People are feeling uncertain and scared - they want to have a stock of goods in case the situation goes even worse.

A tiny shop in Uzupis and its contested space

Decision which was taken to blame the director of the shop for safety problems. Not because it's an usual practice, but because she was a labour union activist.

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