Magazine
Czechs can now download music legally - but what are the chances of people paying for music when they can get it for free? The price of losing a bet - Czech politicians know all about it. And, the Czech invention that preceded the plastic bag. Find out more in Magazine with Daniela Lazarova.
Zdenek Skromach
The Senate and local elections have had some belated repercussions -
several politicians made very unwise bets about the outcome and have now
had to pay up. The deputy chairman of the Social Democratic Party Zdenek
Skromach bet his moustache that the Social Democrats would not win the
mayor's seat in Brno and - lost the bet. The Social Democrat mayor, Roman
Onderka, himself set about shaving it off - while photographers and TV
crews had a field day. After 33 years with a moustache Mr. Skromach
clearly had a problem relating to his face in the mirror. Such outrageous
bets are not unusual among Czech politicians- Communist Party deputy
Milena Vostra also lost a bet on the elections and had to delivery the
post all day to people in her constituency.
Zdenek Skromach
The former transport minister
Milan Simonovsky has laid a bet that if the Prague-to-Ostrava highway is
not finished by 2008 he would cover the distance on foot. It's 80
kilometres and Mr. Simonovsky says he trains daily - walking and swimming
to keep fit. Possibly the worst bet of all was that made a few years ago
by the head of the Pensioner's Party Eduard Kremlicka who said that if his
party failed to cross the 5 percent margin needed to win seats in the lower
house he would eat a bug. His party failed and Mr. Kremlicka was forced to
chew on a big black bug as TV cameras rolled. One would have thought that
after that politicians would have been more careful.
As of this week Czechs can download music legally- for a certain fee - at
two new internet servers. But what are the chances of people paying for
music when they can get it for free? An opinion poll conducted at several
Prague schools shows that teenagers find the idea laughable. Downloading
music and burning CDs is something 95 percent of teenagers do on a daily
basis- and they see no reason at all why they should pay for it -or feel
guilty about not paying. "Everyone does it - so why shouldn't
we?" is the most frequent argument used. Another is that they find
CDs to be generally overpriced. Parliament has now tightened the country's
anti-piracy laws but that should be more effective with regard to firms
than individuals. As one teenager put it - how will they find out? Petr
Bartak of the company which set up one of the internet servers says he is
aware of the fact that they are not likely to attract the masses. "We
expect to be successful in marginal genres, but much will depend on
accessibility and easy payment" he said. The portal will cooperate
with all the big music agencies as well as small companies. It presently
offers over 200,000 songs and expects to have double that number in the
near future.
Photo: Regional museum of Zdar nad Sazavou
Czechs are well known fans of plastic bags- they are practical, light and
fit into your pocket when they are not needed. But you may not know that
what preceded the plastic bag was a Czech invention - the so-called
"net-bag" or "string-bag". The net bag performed the
very same function for decades before the plastic bag appeared on the
market. It first made its appearance in the town of Zdar nad Sazavou in
the late 1920s where a local businessman Vavrin Krcil had a good business
going making nets for elaborate hairdo's. One day he decided to add two
handles - and the net-bag was created. For close to half a century people
used the net-bag on a daily basis - every family had several of them and
they were used mainly for shopping - but also for transporting whatever
was needed - vegetables from the garden or a live carp from the market at
Xmas time. It was the symbol of the communist days, but it also spread to
other countries in Europe, including Western Europe. When plastic bags
appeared the production of net-bags stopped and Czechs have never looked
back.
Jan Fencl and Milos Zeman, photo: CTK
They jokingly call themselves "the club of government veterans"
and if anyone is enjoying the twists and turns of the country's political
crisis -they are. The ministers of the Social Democrat government led by
Milos Zeman which was in office from 1998 to 2002 have annual
get-togethers in the country home of the former agriculture minister Jan
Fencl. To quote ex-prime minister Milos Zeman they meet to remember the
good old days and discuss how their successors are faring over Becherovka,
beer, roast pork and tripe soup. "We are talking about the good old
days when it took three weeks to form a government" the former prime
minister Milos Zeman told reporters at their meeting last week. "This
is a meeting of ministers of the first and so far only successful
government to rule since 1989- the only government which government for a
full term and left untainted by scandal" Mr. Fencl added. The mood
was upbeat and the only faces missing around the table were those of
Vladimir Spidla and Stanislav Gross both of whom later went on to become
prime ministers and who fell out of favor with the former party boss Milos
Zeman.
The number of British tourists to Prague has doubled to more than 650,000
since 2002 and not all of them are giving their home country a good name
in the Czech Republic. Stag parties which head for Prague on low cost
airlines looking for a good time are often drunk and rowdy and an easy
target for pick-pockets. Tired of dealing with complaints and being woken
up in the middle of the night by disoriented tourists who have forgotten
what hotel they are staying in, the British embassy has now launched a
campaign appealing for more common sense and less excess. "Come and
have fun but be responsible" is the gist of the message which will
appear on billboards and beer mats around Prague.
The initiative is part of a wider campaign targeting 26 countries where
her majesty's citizens have a history of being accident prone or a
reputation as boorish tourists.








