Quali oggetti materiali sono simboli di status stereotipati nel tuo Paese? Nel Regno Unito, abbiamo Range Rover (con targhe personalizzate) che riescono a malapena a circolare sulle nostre strade. Sono chiamati colloquialmente “Chelsea Tractors” perché sono veicoli apparentemente essenziali per i ricchi di Londra.

    https://i.redd.it/vcgugv96zrld1.jpeg

    di Odd_Fix_1250

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    27 commenti

    1. feshpinceofbla1r on

      People usually don’t spend lot of money on their cars here. Rich people will likely own a decent middle class car that is relatively new or a Mercedes etc., but the actual outlier item, for the middle and upper classes, are designer lamps worth tens of thousands of euros, and other designer furniture. This is probably why the burglary rate is so high in Denmark

    2. SlowMotionSnail on

      In Serbia(and the whole Balkan region) is the same – BMW, Audi, Range Rover or some other “prestigious” car brand with personalized car plates. You can find them parked on spots reserved for handicapped people. And of course, some of them have “handicapped” stickers, because that way car insurance and road taxes are much cheaper.

      Then you have people who pretend that they are rich, and are showing their “wealth” with branded clothes and the latest flagship phones.

    3. dat_9600gt_user on

      Having a BMW or a Mercedes and a villa is basically peak wealth. Eating octopuses meanwhile is usually a sign that wealth is going in over your head.

    4. albanian_dragon on

      I thought only my Albanians did this thing with range rovers and personalized plates.

    5. furniturecats on

      Am an expat who visited the UK a while back,
      Those range rovers are fucking everywhere,and it seems like even not so well off people have them too because they want to appear rich.

    6. alexvith on

      In Romania we have BMW, Mercedes and Audi. Those are the status symbol of “rich” people. The bigger the car, the less taxes you could expect that person to be paying. Before you get angry at them, I regret to inform you many of them are unfortunately physically disabled, at least that’s what you would deduce by how often they park on parking spots reserved for people with disabilities or pregnant women. We can’t see it, but their cars have a personal aura, many times larger than the cars itself. That’s why they to occupy multiple parking spots at once.

      On the lower end of the wealth spectrum there’s the VW and Skoda wielders. We joke about owners of the VW Passat, saying they have a Passerati due to how they act in public and on the roads.

    7. _FreakyChakra on

      Hello everyone from Ukraine.
      we have, if I’m not mistaken because I’m not rich, a Tesla and the same Range Rover. but 2-3 years old.

    8. uuuuniverse on

      In Holland we name them PC Hoofttractors, named after the expensive shopping street in Amsterdam, where these cars block the road all day (used to block, haven’t been there for a while)

    9. oneharmlesskitty on

      Burberry in Varna, Bulgaria. You can see men and women dressed for the beach in the Burberry plaid from top to bottom – hat, swimsuit, towel, T-shirt/dress to the flip-flops. The rumour is as there is no official Burberry store and the city is not so rich, but a port, that most are Chinese or Turkish counterfeits.

    10. Damascinos on

      Looks like this Range Rover is fitting perfectly well on the road

      Bad bot

    11. Material-Spell-1201 on

      I think cars are still a thing here, but more of the older generations. Young people care much less. For people of Milan specifically, owning a flat in the city center and multiple houses or villa around the Lakes, Alps or sea town is still a thing though. Specifically Courmayeur or Bormio for a house on the Alps and Alassio or Sestri Levante on the Ligurian Riviera. Tipical Milanese towns.

    12. ImPurePersistance on

      In Poland it seems to go one of two ways, either used BMW imported from Western Europe or like a new Toyota Camry/Skoda Superb

    13. DemonisTrawi on

      In Georgia, we have Toyota Land Cruiser Prado. Most of the corrupt people drive it. But corrupt church officials are in special love with that car. So we call it “Mgvdel-cruiser”, which translates as “Priest-Cruiser”.

    14. Dropper-Post on

      What an interesting idea to call them tractors of people who made it. Yes yes very same in Lithuania, expen$$$ive car and custom number plate and terrible parking apparently on purpose because what you peasants with normal cars and plates going to do muhahahha 😂

    15. emilybluntforeal on

      In Hungary G Mercedes became the symbol of Orban’s system beneficiaries recently. When you were poor / simple minded but you get tons of money in a few years, it is one way to spend it I guess. Kinda funny parallel that in Russia this has been the symbol for quite a long time, I guess we are catching up lol (in terms of corruption and wealth distribution to the friends of government)

      It is kinda hard to justify a G when you are working hard for your money. It’s really the type of ‘in your face – I am rich’ car

    16. Yen-Jasker on

      iPhone. In Ukraine it is often stupid, how a poor girl buying a modern Iphone.
      Or when each manager on a business meeting puts his or her iphone on the table to show his or her Status.

    17. Firstpoet on

      We like number plates. TH1CK0 or D1MB0 really looks amaaaazing!

    18. fanboy_killer on

      Same thing in Portugal. We associate Range Rovers with building developers.

    19. canocano18 on

      Mercedes-AMG, BMW M series or an AUDI RS — Germany.

      In your home ? -> Thermomixx, fcking Dyson, ugly Birckenstock sandals

    20. firewire_9000 on

      Speaking of those narrow roads, I recently watched a video from the Late Brake Show with that massive car and I was extremely astonished how narrow the roads are and how high the speed limit is given the narrowness of those roads. I then remembered going through the field of Ireland, on an impressively narrow two lane road that the speed limit was like 50 km/h or so with turn without any kind of visibility. I was petrified and I wasn’t even driving. We almost crashed with a caravan because of course the caravan was like 70 % of the total pavement width.

    21. ConfectionThis6294 on

      Tesla used to be such a symbol of a green and wealthy person.. but now they are just everywhere. I drive to work and every third car is a Tesla.

    22. That’s odd, a Range Rover doesn’t strike me as a status symbol tbh.

    23. Having a house as young as possible in Germany. 25-30 year olds that already finance their own house will get lots of “ohh”s and “ahh”s. Not really a fake status symbol I guess though, because even shitty tiny houses can be super expensive in many areas.

      In terms of cars, it’s not really that big of a factor anymore. That tide of “big SUVs” and expensive luxury cars has already passed us and has become the new normal. Doesn’t really impress anyone anymore.

      Leasing a car and rent for your apartment taking up 80% of your monthly income? That’s reality for many, many people, and they see absolutely no problem with it… Even ones that are seemingly “educated”.

    24. OverdueMaterial on

      In the Netherlands you could say some fancy type of city bike is a minor status symbol. Prior to the bankruptcy, Van Moof bikes were a must have for any self respecting manager. (It sort of faded after that.)

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