Singapore takes a jab at Time Out ranking
as boring city
Send a link to a friend
[February 02, 2018]
By Dewey Sim
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Singapore's tourism agency has hit back at
lifestyle magazine Time Out for ranking the wealthy city state among the
world's least exciting cities, by releasing a video that mockingly
declares, "There is nothing exciting to do."
The magazine's City Life Index 2018, published this week, ranked
Singapore 31st out of 32 cities, one spot above Istanbul, based on a
survey of more than 15,000 people.
Chicago topped the index, followed by Porto in Portugal and New York
City, scored on factors such as food, drink, culture, friendliness,
affordability, happiness and liveability.
Singapore won praise for safety and public transport, but was rated the
lowest for its arts and culture scene, with just 17 percent of
respondents saying, "There is always something to see and do."
In response, the Singapore Tourism Board posted a 56-second video on its
Facebook page, opening with the tongue-in-cheek claim, "Singapore is
boring ... there is nothing exciting to do."
The message backdrop features Universal Studios Singapore, the Formula
One race, and the city's Artscience Museum, as well as a newly-opened A
J Hackett bungy jump at Sentosa island.
"Yeah, Time Out London, we're pretty 'unexciting'," it continues,
turning the spotlight to Singapore's delicacies, including a S$2 ($1.52)
Michelin-star soy sauce chicken meal at a Chinatown food stall with the
caption, "Everything is so expensive."
[to top of second column]
|
A view of the skyline of Singapore March 26, 2017. REUTERS/Woo
Yiming/File Photo
Terrence Voon, the Singapore Tourism Board's digital and content
director, said, "We created this light-hearted response to let the
audience have a glimpse of what Singapore can offer."
It is not the first time the tourism board has rebuffed what it
regards as misconceptions of the island.
Last April, it posted photographs debunking geographical and factual
inaccuracies in an episode of CBS's "Criminal Minds", which referred
to Singapore's "red light" district of Geylang as the "dark side of
paradise".
(Reporting by Dewey Sim; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|