Popular Culture Review Vol. 14, No. 2, Summer 2003 | Page 73

Romanian Popular Culture 69 capitalist market, with its large variety of goods, advertising principles, discounts and sales. Compared to the unbelievable scarcity of goods of the pre-1990 decade, the Romanian shopping mall, though of a much more reduced size, is seen both as a blessing and as an icon of capitalist economy. Similarly, fast-food restaurants (McDonalds, Wendy’s, KFC, Pizza Hut) are regarded as an oasis of capitalist soci ety. People, disregarding all the unhealthy food propaganda, go to these places primarily because they are clean and air-conditioned. As the prices are generally high compared to the Romanian salary, fast-food restaurants are places where people usually go for a treat. Some McDonalds, for instance, have become children-friendly, a place where families may spend whole afternoons treating their children and supervising their play. They are less the quiet place where people hurriedly grab a bite or take the burger away and more a busy place of leisure and entertainment. While malls and fast-food restaurants have been easily integrated into people’s every-day life, the Dracula theme park, with its commercial and entertainment purpose, met with strong opposition. It could probably have been accepted more easily if it were not for the idea of dedicating it to Dracula, whom most Romanians refuse to see as a national myth. The controversy became very strong when the Romanians were faced with its construction in one of the most renowned medieval cities, in the heart of Transylvania, where people still liv R