Photos from a nice church in Mexico City. My parents had low expectations of Mexico City -- they expected rampant poverty and no tourist attractions. Actually there are many palaces and museums! Also churches.
Mexico City: good on culture, bad at marketing.
2 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Mexico City: good on culture, bad at marketing.
This bothers me a bit, because it seems that the only way someone could expect no tourist attractions in a city with as much amazing ancient history and culture as Mexico City is by not actually doing any research on what's there at all -- if that's the case, wouldn't the problem be closer to one of stereotyping/prejudice than bad marketing? What's the city supposed to do instead?
This bothers me a bit, because it seems that the only way someone could expect no tourist attractions in a city with as much amazing ancient history and culture as Mexico City is by not actually doing any research on what's there at all -- if that's the case, wouldn't the problem be closer to one of stereotyping/prejudice than bad marketing? What's the city supposed to do instead?
2 comments:
Mexico City: good on culture, bad at marketing.
This bothers me a bit, because it seems that the only way someone could expect no tourist attractions in a city with as much amazing ancient history and culture as Mexico City is by not actually doing any research on what's there at all -- if that's the case, wouldn't the problem be closer to one of stereotyping/prejudice than bad marketing? What's the city supposed to do instead?
Mexico City: good on culture, bad at marketing.
This bothers me a bit, because it seems that the only way someone could expect no tourist attractions in a city with as much amazing ancient history and culture as Mexico City is by not actually doing any research on what's there at all -- if that's the case, wouldn't the problem be closer to one of stereotyping/prejudice than bad marketing? What's the city supposed to do instead?
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