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MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok
#1

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

I've had the pleasure of traveling to what many consider some of the 'holy grails' in travel on this forum the past two and a half years. Perhaps no locations on the forum are discussed with more frequency than Eastern Europe, South East Asia, and Brazil. For the purposes of this comparative post, I'm going to be focusing a lens on Bucharest, Bangkok, and Rio de Janeiro. I have spent time in other parts of Eastern Europe, and we'll refer to Eastern Europe as Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Romania, and Montenegro, but I've spent by far the most time in Bucharest. Additionally, I've spent time throughout various parts of Thailand and Malaysia, but the majority in Bangkok. Lastly, the only destination I've spent time in Brazil is Rio de Janeiro.

The types of experiences I've had deserve some sort of disclaimer so you know how I've generated my data and where exactly I'm coming from, as I feel my experiences in each of these places was largely dictated by my setup, research and budget. Lastly, these experiences are exclusively my own. I have no interest in contributing to hype about locations that other members may have shared previously on this board. We all come from different backgrounds and have different expectations, so I feel a repetition of what a consensus may be about a location is ultimately a waste of time.

That said, I encourage you to challenge me on my opinions, but please I'd prefer if the the keyboard cowboys stay out of the conversation. I've noticed in recent months that guys who have not gotten off their asses and done things with their life are taking authoritative tones towards other member's travel experiences. There are well-respected members on this board whom I've either spoken to extensively, or met along my travels who can vouch for who I am, and the information that I'm about to share.

I look forward to a healthy discussion about these three places, and I encourage a fledgling traveler to give any one of these destinations a chance, as they've all been immensely rewarding for me in one way or another.

Accessibility (How easy is it to get to):

I'm referring to the Eastern US when I say this:

Rio: 8/10
Bucharest: 5/10
Bangkok: 2/10

There are plenty of direct flights heading into Rio. Even from the West Coast of the US, you're looking at a 4 hour time difference. From continental Europe, you're looking at a 4 hour time difference as well. A day or two isn't wasted dealing with jet lag.

Bucharest is almost guaranteed to have a connecting flight, even from the Western European mainland, thus adding unnecessary hours and frustration to your destination. OTP, the Bucharest airport is a custerfuck of taxi drivers who are more than happy to rip you off. On a side-note, the Bucharest taxi drivers are as scrupulous as they come. I once had a cabbie rip the meter out of the socket and proceed to tell me my ride would be 50 Euros. I subsequently pulled my pants down and told him I'd shit in his cab if he didn't cut the nonsense. Knowing I was staying deep in a mazy apartment complex, when we arrived I threw 5 leis at the fucker and took off running knowing he wouldn't catch me.

Bangkok, is about as much of a hassle as it gets to get over there, regardless of coming from anywhere in the US or Europe.

Weather:

Rio: 8/10
Bucharest: 6/10
Bangkok: 3/10

Rio gets hot in the summer, but the beach solves many of these problems. Wintertime in Rio is generally perfect weather with sunny days and perfect nighttime weather.

Bucharest is quite nice in the summertime, but can be unforgiving in the wintertime.

Unless you like excessive heat, taking outdoor monsoon showers, and swimming in humidity, then Bangkok isn't for you.

Quality of Food:

Bangkok: 9/10
Bucharest: 4/10
Rio: 4/10

Food to me is a key part of any travel experience. I learn as much about a culture through food, as I do from any other cultural observations I make. In my opinion, it's one of the leading reasons why NYC is, and will always be the greatest city in the world.

Bangkok might be my favorite culinary destination in the world after New York and Lyon. It's outrageously cheap with flavors that explode off your mouth. The food is varied in both taste and price. You can get killer curries made by the woman on the corner for $2, then walk up the block and have mango juice and a whole fish cooked in a bevy of herbs and spices for another $4-5. You can also splurge at Nahm, a Michelin starred restaurant, the only one in Thailand, and have a mind blowing Thai tasting menu for $60-70 including a drink. I was so full by the end of it, that I had to send dishes back that were coming out because I literally couldn't fit anything else in my stomach.

Bucharest's food is decent and contains a wide range of culinary influences at good prices, provided you know where to go. I'm typing this sans internet, but there is a rather famous restaurant in the old city that serves excellent traditional Romanian food. I generally ate well in Bucharest because I spent my time there who is very connected in the restaurant and social scene in Bucharest. If you're there for a short period without someone in the know, I would imagine the cuisine to be rather mediocre. Forgive me for not naming place in Bucharest because I'd just hop in my friend's car and we'd just show up. I didn't have a notepad or pen to take notes.

The food in Rio just didn't impress me. Their pizzas that are served at nearly any botequim,(informal bar/restaurant) were generally laughable for a native New Yorker. Most food seemed to be either fried, overly salted or sometimes both. My saving grace in Rio was the juice bars that served an amazing variety of fresh juice, and a place called Delirio Tropical which served heaping plates of healthy, mainly vegetarian food at very affordable prices. I tried out the Churrascuria,(all you can eat Brazilian meat restaurant) and was disgusted with overcooked beef cuts and pounds of salt poured on the meat. There were some very upscale restaurants located in Ipanema and Leblon that I did not try, but my motivation to try them was minimal when looking at the prices being similar to dozens of restaurants in NYC that I know for a fact serve world class food.

Beauty of Women:

Bucharest: 9/10
Rio: 8/10
Bangkok: 5/10

Disclaimer: I'm not big into the Asian look.

If you were to do a cross section of the 100 most beautiful girls I saw on my travels from these three places, it would look like this:

50 of them would be from Bucharest.
45 of them would be from Rio.
5 of them would be from Bangkok

Girls in Bucharest range from cute, to jaw-dropping, mouth on the floor with drool coming out beautiful. Their eyes and facial structure are as close to perfection as I've ever seen. Thin, yet curvy in the right places, and beautiful skin tone.

Brazilian girls, while not as universally gorgeous as their Romanian goddess counterparts, are curvy and exude an unmatched sexuality. They were put on earth to be man's desire and their mannerisms are sexual in every way. It's something I can't put into words unless you go there.

Thai girls are petite little spinners, but I found their naked bodies to be a letdown. Their nipples were often puffy and oddly colored, and their vaginas weren't the perfect shade of pink that men were put on earth to devour. There were some stunners, but all too often I would go about my day without my jaw falling to the floor.

Ease of Approaching During the Day:

Rio 7/10
Bangkok 6/10
Bucharest 4/10

I did a significantly more day approaches in Rio for reasons I'll spell out below. Beach culture in Rio is very conducive to chatting up the person next to you. The creepiness factor of dropping a chair on the beach and talking to the beautiful girl in a thong is harmless in her mind and is a great way to make friends or find out what to do at night. Once you get over the anxiety of approaching a pair of 8's laying around in their underwear, it's a wonderful day game city.

I didn't approach much in the day in Bangkok because I didn't feel much need to. I put up a few good pictures on ThaiFriendly, left my phone number on my profile and let girls message me all day. It worked better than I could have ever imagined. As a result, I did whatever it was I wanted to all day, knowing something would get set up for later in the day or evening. Note: I do have a look that many Thai girls would go for, so self assess before employing this strategy. I did some day game during my daily travels, but Thai girls are just so boring to converse with. More on that later.

Once again, in Bucharest day game wasn't all that necessary for me. My connection in Bucharest is bar none the the strongest player I've ever seen in action and is a titan of the Bucharest social scene. There simply was no need for day game when we were hitting up the best tables in the best clubs in Bucharest. I haven't been there in a year and a half now, but clubs I remember walking in like royalty were LeGaga, Gaia, Player, and Fratelli. We were surrounded by Russian, Moldovan and Romanian models who upon our arrival who flocked to our table. I have pictures if you're hamster is running wild with doubt about my experiences in Bucharest. I've shown some of these pictures to other members who can vouch for this as well.

Ease of Approaching During the Night:

Bangkok: 9/10
Rio: 7/10
Bucharest: 5/10

With the right look, and in my opinion tall, white, and muscular is the right look, approaching is comically easy in Bangkok. A few members had noted a scene like Route 66 at RCA as a scene of the past, but with the right game, the world's your oyster in Bangkok. Show up early to get a good 'table' in the middle of the dance floor at Route 66, order bottle service of Johnny Gold for a comical cost of $80 and go absolutely nuts. Grab girls and pour shots down their throat. Make friends with their beta orbiters by feeding them a couple of drinks and you can pretty much do whatever the hell you want. The guys will love you, the girls are fighting over you, and you go home happy.

The only pickup line you'll ever need in Rio is, “Do you speak English?” If she does and she says she does, it means she likes you. Spit decent game and you'll be kissing soon enough. If she says she doesn't, eject and move on. It means she doesn't actually speak English, or she does but she isn't interested in you. Samba clubs such as Rio Scenarium are absolutely worth the visit. The vibe, decor and cultural experience are unmatched with any bar I've been to in my life, though I found it a bit tougher to pick up there. Girls go in groups to celebrate their culture, and while there is a dance floor with top 40 music upstairs, I found pulling to be difficult because girls usually go in larger groups.

Bucharest, once again is harder for me to comment on in terms of night approaching. I didn't have to seek out women as they were the ones flocking to my VIP table. I would say that some command of Romanian or Russian would go a long way, as it did cost me a bang with what would have been the most beautiful girl I'd ever kissed in my life. I can't really comment on approaching at one of these clubs as a 'common' person, or approaching at one of the bars located in the old city however. Perhaps someone could provide a bit more insight into that. My routine more or less focused on the girl knowing I was a close friend of my friend who dominates the Bucharest social scene, and how I live in New York, to which her general response was 'New York is my dream.' After that, I'd pour her a drink, lightly banter on the couch, then dance with her a bit.

Quality of Nightlife:

Bangkok: 10/10
Rio: 6/10
Bucharest: 6/10

I loved Bangkok's nightlife. It was rocking everywhere every night of the week til any hour you wanted it to. It's pretty easy to go off the rocker and find a girl for a ONS provided you put the effort in. Nightlife is in pretty much any neighborhood, at any price point and anything can happen. I loved heading out on a Sunday night knowing there was some wild adventure in store. Even on a low-key night, make sure to hit the Skybar at the Banyan Tree Hotel for iconic views over Bangkok and top class drinks and décor. There were also ample beer gardens, or places with live music. Truly something for everyone ever night of the week.

Rio has good nightlife provided you are willing to burn a hole through your wallet AND you know where to go. Unless you have a plugged in social network, it's hard to find the coolest parties in Rio, and you'll likely end up at a place with an abundance of gringos. A gringo filled bar isn't necessarily a bad thing because Brazilian girls do go to them, and if they go to them, they are interested in gringos. No matter how suited up, or pretentious you find yourself, dress down one night and hit up the Lapa street party on Friday for a real taste of Rio. You belong in a corpse if you can't let your hair down, throw on a t-shirt and chat up strangers on the street while grooving to samba. Be warned, girls either love or hate Lapa street party Fridays. Talk to the wrong girl about how much you loved it, and she may think you're 'lower class'. That said, there were plenty of well off girls I met on the streets of Lapa who love the energy. Rio is excessively casual. I can't stress that enough. I'd rarely see people wear suits for business, let alone for going out drinking.

I found Bucharest's top end clubs to be really high quality. Throwing on a suit and ballin' out can have a really positive effect and will attract girls. During the week, many of these clubs will have 'theme night', so be on the lookout for that. I'd find penetrating this type of social scene a bit tough without the proper connections before hitting the ground. Facebook game, which I discussed a bit in the 'Kiev 2013' thread works very well in Bucharest. I would think most people here on a short stint will likely spend their time in the old city where you'll find more Western style pubs and bars. Don't fret however, the women there are still plenty attractive.

Femininity


Bucharest 9/10
Rio 8/10
Bangkok 8/10

Most girls in these countries take pride in being women. There is nothing more they enjoy more than being sexy, feminine women.

Bucharest, as has been repeated time and again takes the cake. They love to do womanly things. In fact, I'm fairly certain that if a girl from Bucharest was sick and just had to walk around the corner to get cough medicine, she'd still put makeup and heels on.

Carioca feminism exudes itself on the beach and after date one with a girl. Girls love looking good on the beach. Also, if you make it through a casual, low stakes date one with a Carioca, you better believe they're breaking out the heels and all the stops to be beautiful women. I found that quite a few can't cook, which is a big disappointment, but there are many, many qualities that make Carioca girls quite feminine.

Girls in Bangkok love their heels and cute outfits as well, but there a little bit off when it comes to being sexy and feminine. They don't move with the same vibrancy that Romanian or Brazilian girls do, and seem a bit awkward at times in showing affection and their feminine nature.

Ambition/Intellect/Curiosity of the Women

Rio: 7/10
Bucharest: 5/10
Bangkok: 2/10

I found most middle/upper class Cariocas to be socially, and intellectually sharp. I was in Rio at the height of many of the protests, even being caught in the middle of a particularly violent protest, and was impressed with the eloquence and understanding most women had about the issues their country faced. They understood the history of their nation, had clear ideas about where they felt their country was going, and were deeply proud of their Brazilian culture. Many had traveled and made keen observations of the world. In a completely non-game aspect, I enjoyed many of my conversations with Brazilian girls.

Romanian girls that spoke English understood their place in the world, accepted it for what it was and understood the world in ways that surprised me at times. I suspect this has a lot to do with either living in Ceausescu's reign or being born shortly after it. Life in those conditions certainly force one to take a look at the world a bit critically. I enjoyed some of their conversations about Western culture and the differences in their country.

In Bangkok, I think I would have enjoyed talking to a hello kitty doll more than girls from Bangkok. No ambition, no intellect, no curiosity. I could never marry a Thai girl because I'd end up brain-dead.

Quality of Living(Could I Actually Move Here For An Extended Period of Time?)

Rio 9/10
Bangkok 5/10
Bucharest 4/10

There is so much to do in Rio. Surfing, samba, socializing, sports, fitness, culture, beauty. You name it, and there is something for everyone, every day of the week here. I feel exceptionally safe. I found it easy to get around here, and sans real estate I found day to day living rather cheap provided you knew where to find a deal. It's a place I could seriously see myself retiring to. I'm a beach bum at heart, and with perfect beach weather, and the beach being a religious experience for Cariocas, I fit right in.

The food in Bangkok is excellent. I'm sure I'd have multiple girlfriends, and getting around is easy. Nonetheless, I love New York and it's truly a journey to get back home if needed. Living is cheap, but the shithole aspect of the city wasn't for me and I feel like I'd turn into an uninspiring ex-pat that so many older men who move to Thailand turn into.

Bucharest is yin and yang. Once again, I don't know if there is the depth of culture I'm looking for to keep me thirsty for life. Winter's are a slog. Everyone tries to rip you off, and as sexually satisfying as the club scene was for me, I can't imagine suiting up with bottle service every Friday 20 years from now. There's nothing that truly draws me to the city unlike world class cities such as NYC, London, Paris, Rio, etc.

Final Standings:

Rio 72/100
Bangkok 59/100
Bucharest 58/100


Enjoy!

Shoot away gentleman, I'd love to hear you opinion!
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#2

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Great Comparisons!

Are there cases where the brazilian girl being approached really doesnt speak english?
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#3

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-19-2013 11:25 PM)fernandes Wrote:  

Great Comparisons!

Are there cases where the brazilian girl being approached really doesnt speak english?

Plenty. English is widely spoken by many younger people, but it's not universal.

Or, it may be like I learned Spanish in school. I learned it. I can use it for necessities, but I can't speak it, per se.
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#4

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

But if you asked her if you speak english, and she really doesnt, how you take that as she is not interested?
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#5

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Great write up

Could you expand on the language issue, which place did you get by easiest on just english. Also how much of an effort did you make to speak thai, romanian and portuguese?

I am familar with the Thai visa rules, but for Brazil it is difficult for Americans to stay longer than 180 days in a year on a tourist visa. I am unclear on the visa situation in Romania, could you touch on your visa experiences?

I understand Bucarest is a much smaller city so I imagine things are less expensive since its not an international city but could you briefly discuss your opinion of a cost of living comparison between the three cities? Thanks

Game/red pill article links

"Chicks dig power, men dig beauty, eggs are expensive, sperm is cheap, men are expendable, women are perishable." - Heartiste
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#6

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Great Write-up MaleDefined!

Quote:Quote:

Girls in Bucharest range from cute, to jaw-dropping, mouth on the floor with drool coming out beautiful. Their eyes and facial structure are as close to perfection as I've ever seen. Thin, yet curvy in the right places, and beautiful skin tone.

That's quite the description, makes me consider Bucharest for the first time.

I was surprised to see a score of only 58 for Bucharest when I scrolled down to the end of your post. [Image: huh.gif]
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#7

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Excellent work. Strong insights on what you experienced first hand, which affected your criteria as mentioned.

I agree the prices of food in Ipanema/Leblon mirrored that of say Upper East/West side in NYC. Actually both neighborhoods kind of mirror each other IMO with regards to stiff off limits residents, architecture, and underwhelming yet overpriced restaurants. Whereas Upper East/West have Central Park & Harlem bordering, Leblon & Ipanema have the beach & Vidigal favela.

I remember there being really delicious cheap eats between the Ipanema and Copacabana neighborhoods though (not coastal areas of course). As good as Brazilian soul food can be, there is nothing quite like the scintillating flavors of the cuisine in Bangkok whether it be on the street or in the finer dining establishments. Thai food in the US is obviously made with better ingredients, but the execution of the culinary delights in Bangkok with "inferior" ingredients is just outright infallible.

I never had a chance to game in either Bangkok or Rio (unique past family/female circumstances), but I can imagine the things you experienced in each scenario. Well done again.
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#8

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-19-2013 10:58 PM)MaleDefined Wrote:  

Ambition/Intellect/Curiosity of the Women

Rio: 7/10
Bucharest: 5/10
Bangkok: 2/10

I found most middle/upper class Cariocas to be socially, and intellectually sharp. I was in Rio at the height of many of the protests, even being caught in the middle of a particularly violent protest, and was impressed with the eloquence and understanding most women had about the issues their country faced. They understood the history of their nation, had clear ideas about where they felt their country was going, and were deeply proud of their Brazilian culture. Many had traveled and made keen observations of the world. In a completely non-game aspect, I enjoyed many of my conversations with Brazilian girls.

What I really dislike about brasilians is that they are fanatical about their own culture. And they don't have any proclivity for self-deprecating humour about the ridiculous sides of the "brasilian culture" (like the ridiculous habit to cover themselves head to toe with clothes displaying brasilian flags when they travel abroad). I had an exemple recently ...I was talking with a brasileira friend of mine and wanted to tease her a bit about how silly are the lyrics of most pagode, funk and axe songs (which is only true). She became berserk. Brasilians never accept any criticism about their "culture", whatever it is. For them, anything brasilian is necessarily great. This is the huge difference with Russians for exemple, who are very patriotic but do have a lot of self-irony, especially about their own country, they love to laugh about themselves - in fact, Russian humour is, most often, self-deprecating. A brasilian will never laugh about himself. Also about humour, as I already said, try to make humour with a brasilian girl and most often you'll get the same stare than you get from your dog when you try to explain him quantum physics.

I'd wish BTW that someone could explain me what is "brasilian culture" - from what I know, Brasil has never produced a Dostoievski, a Tolstoi, a Shakespeare, a Zola, a Kant or a Victor Hugo.

That said, I pretty much agree with your comparisons, except for quality of food (food in Brasil is awesome and incredibly diverse - I've made a post about it, and there is in Rio many good regional restaurants), and your 8/10 for beauty of women - there is gorgeous women in Rio, but the streets are not paved with them, far from it (I also dislike the arrogant "sou carioca" frame of mind of Rio's women, like if Rio was the only good place on earth to live in).
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#9

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

I'm surprised when I see people rate brazil food poor.
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#10

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Great post!

I know the 3 cities and agree with a lot of what you wrote.

I'd add that the cost of living in Rio is much more expensive than in Bucharest nowadays, especially with regard to taxis and hotels. However taximen in Bucharest are the craziest unfriendliest m.... on earth.

I had middle-upper class beautiful girlfriends both from Rio and Bucharest and as a Western European man, I must say I connect much better with Romanian mentality and humor although I'm fluent in Portuguese (and don't speak Romanian).

As much as I love Brazilian culture and way of life, I find it more shallow and less interesting than Romanian culture.
For instance, Brazilians do not know the concept of "self deprecating" humor and they do not accept any criticism on them and their country.

(Edit: Haha I just read Prosal's post above and I realize I say pretty much the same things..)
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#11

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

I'm not surprised to see you thought Thai girls were anti-intellectuals.

I'm talking the High-So Thai girls that studied overseas in UK/US. These girls were very well educated BUT... would never even try to discuss anything beyond celebrity gossip and money.

Never ask for their thoughts on anything related to politics or society.
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#12

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Would you admit to some slight bias in favor of Rio because it's so fresh in your memory?
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#13

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 03:42 AM)Lika Wrote:  

Romanian culture.

Romanian culture is a unique culture, the product of Romania's geography and its distinct historical evolution from late Antiquity and Middle Ages. It has emerged and developed from many influences - Slavic, Byzantine, Greek, Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian, ect. I find that Transylvania, which is the core of romanian culture, is one of the most culturally interesting region of Europe.

As a side note, Romania is also the most francophile country in the world, which is great for us, but you know it already [Image: wink.gif]
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#14

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

How safe is it living in Romania?

I mean can you trust that you can keep your possessions in your room and no one is going to try and pick the lock and rob you?
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#15

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

How safe are your things in your room?I don't know!

But,I do know 95% of Cash Point fraud in the UK is carried out by Romanians taking advantage of their new European Union status!
How enterprising of them.
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#16

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

The reason I ask is because Romani gypsies are probably the greatest pickpockets in the world and it's Romania from where they originate.
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#17

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Can you break down the cost of living in the 3 different cities?
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#18

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 03:07 AM)Prosal Wrote:  

I'd wish BTW that someone could explain me what is "brasilian culture" - from what I know, Brasil has never produced a Dostoievski, a Tolstoi, a Shakespeare, a Zola, a Kant or a Victor Hugo.

If you put it like that, it's no wonder that she got angry. In France people tend to define culture by citing historical works. That's understandable because the culture that French take the greatest pride in, happened quite a long time ago. But as a world traveler I'm sure you know that judging a culture by your domestic standards can be a quick way to fall out of grace with them. In any event, if you define culture as achievements in the arts, you immediately can come up with a ton of noteworthy Brazilian cultural references that are of more recent date than the 100+ years old works that you cite. Even in France, I don't think that you would deny that the 1960s films of the Nouvelle Vague are an essential part of French culture. So in Brazil you have dance, music, carnaval, and the whole visual impact of those colors you see everywhere. That's Brazilian culture. On top of that they are also putting out some noteworthy films and who's to say that 100 years from now, some unknown author (or auteur) of today won't be regarded in the same esteem as Victor Hugo (or Jean Luc Godard).

More on the topic of this discussion, I like Romania, but i'm always surprised that some members of this forum give romanian girls such high marks for beauty. You can find some stellar examples, and the nightlife is great, but the average isn't all that great, IMHO.
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#19

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 07:42 AM)JohnQPublic Wrote:  

More on the topic of this discussion, I like Romania, but i'm always surprised that some members of this forum give romanian girls such high marks for beauty. You can find some stellar examples, and the nightlife is great, but the average isn't all that great, IMHO.

Which country would you think has the best average rating of attractiveness?
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#20

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 06:41 AM)Pilgrim37 Wrote:  

How safe are your things in your room?I don't know!

But,I do know 95% of Cash Point fraud in the UK is carried out by Romanians taking advantage of their new European Union status!
How enterprising of them.

Yes but I read bucharest is much safer than Paris for example. There are much less migrants and a girl can walk safely at night. I thing Bankgok may be safer but I dont know.
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#21

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 04:10 AM)Vicious Wrote:  

Would you admit to some slight bias in favor of Rio because it's so fresh in your memory?

I kept in mind reading this that MD is from NY and is used to the grit. Jaded if you will. Notice the awesome shitting in the taxi move. I think he remained objective. Knowing a nightlife titan in Romania surrounded by models and he still put it at the bottom of the list overall. Solid in my opinion.

It's hard to compare apples to oranges to spuds.
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#22

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

I really like the recent innovations in the travel section of the forum. The step by step data sheets and city vs city comparisons have been enjoyable to read. This one was well articulated and insightful. Good evenhanded analysis. +1
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#23

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

For those who want to see a cost comparison here is the numbers from numbeo.com

To maintain the same standard of living per month you would need...

Rio $3,400
Bucharest $2,258
Bangkok $2,700



Rio vs Bucharest

[Image: C7W1lZR.png]




Rio vs Bangkok

[Image: PgvhIep.png]



Bangkok vs Bucharest

[Image: Vnj8HDD.png]
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#24

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Quote: (08-20-2013 03:07 AM)Prosal Wrote:  

I'd wish BTW that someone could explain me what is "brasilian culture" - from what I know, Brasil has never produced a Dostoievski, a Tolstoi, a Shakespeare, a Zola, a Kant or a Victor Hugo.

Hey now, they got Paulo Cohelo!

And Ronaldo, Ronaldihno, Pele....the list goes on.

In a more serious note, it all depends on what one is looking for. Some want an intellectual FB while others want a pump and dump.

I can't have sex with a female's knowledge of Tolstoi.

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Game is the difference between a broke average looking dude in a 2nd tier city turning bad bitch feminists into maids and fucktoys and a well to do lawyer with 50x the dough taking 3 dates to bang broads in philly.
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#25

MaleDefined Compares The Big 3: Rio, Bucharest and Bangkok

Brazilian culture is almost the exact opposite to English culture, its humor as well.

Brazilians don't use sarcasm, nor irony, while these are very common in English humor. In fact, if you use sarcasm, people will think you are really weird.
Brazilians like simple jokes, and I find then interesting. For example, people will smile at you and talk about some small things which interests them.

Brazil is a large and quite insulated country, there is everything: sun, beach, food, there has been no major wars, Why do people need to be self depreciating? For foreigners the best way is to accept the brazilian culture.
The girls maybe abit simple minded, but I don't want to talk about Shakespeare all day.
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