BUSTED: Ou Garden Photoshoot Hilariously Roasted on Social Media (Suzhou) 🤦♀️😂
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Sigh, that's true. I also visited Suzhou five years ago and was hoping to relive that feeling, which is why I wanted to take some photos to remember it by.
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Commercial shoots could go to some less popular, smaller gardens with fewer tourists. If they insist on crowding into popular spots, of course people will complain.
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Smaller gardens with no tourists? Where? Tell me. I'm going on a trip in two weeks, I'll check if that's true.
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On Xiaohongshu (Little Red Book), every commercial photoshoot claims they only took 2 minutes.
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They sure know how to talk themselves up.
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Why not go to Yi Pu Garden? It's less crowded and more niche. In those popular gardens, you either have to avoid people, or it gets awkward if you shoot for too long. It feels pretty uncomfortable.
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I didn't do enough research for my trip, so I just found a spot nearby.
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You can time it. Pressing the shutter and checking the photo might take two minutes, but the time spent finding the spot, posing, fixing clothes and hair, directing expressions, adjusting settings, and even waiting for the area to clear definitely adds up to more than 2 minutes.
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They should learn from the Forbidden City and just ban them altogether.
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It's useless, even worse than before. In the past, it was mainly those professional wedding photographers who dominated the spots. You could argue with them, call your friends for backup, or get security. Now, it's often groups of friends ('sisters') taking photos together or individual photographers, making it hard to tell if it's a commercial shoot. They'll hog one spot for ages, with several people taking turns. And because they often look like regular tourists, you can't really say much. You can only try asking, 'Hey, how are your photos coming along? Mind if I snap a couple?' Some are nice about it, but others are totally unwilling to move.
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I just booked a commercial shoot on Pingjiang Road today. What exactly counts as a commercial shoot that doesn't disturb other tourists?
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Attractions should impose some restrictions on commercial photoshoots to reduce conflicts with regular tourists, such as specific ticket types, limited time slots, and a cap on the number of commercial shoots allowed in at any one time.
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I support this. There's no need to outright ban everyone who enjoys taking photos.
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It would be best if commercial shoots and regular tourist visiting hours were separate, so they don't affect each other.
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That's impossible. These state-owned attractions can't just do whatever they want like smaller, local places might.