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LIDL - Where Lifestyles go to die....
 

offline jand from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2004-02-16 06:35 [#01075046]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



href="http://www.urbanomic.com/MT/undercurrent/archives/000
006.html">http://www.urbanomic.com/MT/undercurrent/archives
...

LIDL’s uk outlets are part car-boot sale, part
eastern-bloc theme park, part 70s simstim. It’s an
extraordinary place that goes against every rule of the
cutting-edge supermarket. You know how in Goodbye Lenin
Alexander has to go out and get the old east-german pickles
for his mum and finds the supermarket transformed into a
cornucopia of glossy overpackaged goods from all over the
planet? Going to LIDL is like that, in reverse. Other chains
can be pleasingly parochial (at the Somerfield I went to in
London there was a small section of an aisle signposted as
‘foreign foods’ – including that rare exotic creature,
pasta). But LIDL tops them all for making no effort.
Semiologically, it’s neither hot nor cool, it’s colder
than Iceland, it’s where lifestyles go to die.
...



 

offline jand from Braintree (United Kingdom) on 2004-02-16 06:36 [#01075048]
Points: 5975 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



http://www.urbanomic.com/MT/undercurrent/archives/000006.... ....



 

offline horsefactory from 💠 (United Kingdom) on 2004-02-16 06:39 [#01075049]
Points: 14867 Status: Regular



The worst place on earth. I recommend their gummi sweet,
"Vitamin Friends".


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2004-02-16 06:45 [#01075052]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Show recordbag



And their apathetic, barely concious staff sometimes scan
single barcodes on mulitpacks and don't notice that it only
cost £1.20 for 6*2 litre bottles of pepsi :D

You get some really weird hardware in lidl too. Halogen
lamps on tripods, variable height trestle table legs (sold
on their own- not paired or with a table top!)

Some mental foreign foods there too. Unknown brand alcohol
and chocolate that you might be able to pass off as "exotic"
were it not for the shoddy packaging desings.


 

offline Skink from A cesspool in eden on 2004-02-16 06:57 [#01075060]
Points: 7483 Status: Lurker



I think alot of the food is actually very good, the
chocolate ice cream is great!


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 07:03 [#01075062]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker



a lot of good cheap food. fruit+veg section leaves a lot to
be desired. but for tinned/cereals/frozen/breads etc theyre
usually pretty good.
mad deals on german made laptops, dvd-burners + external
hard drives sometimes too.

the question is, who would win in a lidl vs aldi contest?


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2004-02-16 07:07 [#01075065]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular



hey dont bash the lidl... i got a digital camera, price 260
¤ for 150¤, and the stupid staff put in a 128 mb memcard
instead of a 64 mb one.

and i dont care about how it looks really :)

the food does not taste bad at all, some things are better
than the grade a brands


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 07:10 [#01075068]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker | Followup to JAroen: #01075065



true, and the difference between how much decent food you
can get for £30 in lidl and, say, £30 in sainsburys is
phenomenal.


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2004-02-16 07:11 [#01075069]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular | Followup to acrid milk hall: #01075062



heh thats what i mean

the veggies look like spraypainted dog poo .. but the other
food is damn good :D

when you wanna buy hardware you'd better get there early
becuz sometimes the computers sell out in 2 hours


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2004-02-16 07:13 [#01075071]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular



I work for the Albert Heijn, which is the most expensive
supermarket out there... everything has to be clean and look
shiny and new and fresh

sometimes it pisses me off.. the scandalous price difference
between the aldi/lidl and the high end supermarkets


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 07:15 [#01075073]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker | Followup to JAroen: #01075069



this i know - had to get a couple of external hds for my old
man last month.

ceri is right though - the staff are often somewhat vacant.
but ive worked in a small grocery/newsagent before, and that
was mindnumbing enough. so i can understand where theyre
coming from.


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 07:16 [#01075074]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker | Followup to JAroen: #01075071



where are you from?
ive not heard of the Albert Heijn chain before.


 

offline JAroen from the pineal gland on 2004-02-16 07:21 [#01075076]
Points: 16065 Status: Regular



Holland...


Attached picture

 

offline mortsto-x from Trondheim/Bodø (Norway) on 2004-02-16 07:59 [#01075092]
Points: 8062 Status: Lurker



Tell me more. Lidl are establishing in Norway these days.
There is a lot of fuzz about how bad the employees are
treated. Still people apply for jobs as if they were mad


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 12:36 [#01075384]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker



I like Lidl, its funny to say and then sell steak in a can
which is very nice. Also fake twix bars called Mr Choc
Caramel Biscuits are mouthwatering. They have their niche.


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 12:49 [#01075410]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker



i tend to find that people who slate lidl's food are doing
so purely on price. theyve never actually eaten any + seem
to have been brainwashed into the delusion that, in order to
get good food, you have to pay waitrose/sainsbury/tesco
prices.
most of the price difference goes into interior design + tv
advertising campaigns, not into getting better, fresher
food.


 

offline warpphex from lurkston, ziltyland. (United Kingdom) on 2004-02-16 12:57 [#01075424]
Points: 1372 Status: Lurker



I agree that lidi plays its part its just the shampoo makes
my hair fall out .


 

offline acrid milk hall from United Kingdom on 2004-02-16 13:01 [#01075427]
Points: 2916 Status: Lurker | Followup to warpphex: #01075424



hahaha
thats true. happened to a friend of mine.
my advice is not to buy their shampoo.


 

offline redrum from the allman brothers band (Ireland) on 2004-02-16 13:20 [#01075465]
Points: 12878 Status: Addict



lidl is the shit.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2004-02-17 04:19 [#01076174]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to acrid milk hall: #01075410 | Show recordbag



I saw quite a good thing (on Kilroy of all places) where
they explained the reason behind people's snobbishness
regarding supermarket stores (I mean, does it matter
where you buy Kellogs cornflakes or Cadbury's hot
chocolate?!)

Years ago, cheaper green grocers etc. used to "cut" food in
much the same way drug dealers do with drugs now. For
example, fine grain flour was cut with plaster etc.

As health and safety, trading standards and ethics generally
have improved (as well as decreasing costs in food
production) have resulted in all stores (even the cheap
ones) having "acceptable quality" food.

On the subject of store's own brand foods, it's a myth that
it is *all* generic. True, the same bakeries provide the
same crumpets for Tescos, Somerfield and some namd brands,
but even within one supermarkets ranges there are
differences. Tesco's "Finest" range for example is different
food (not just packaging) to their "value" range.


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2004-02-17 04:30 [#01076187]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



I hate people who so their "weekly shop" in Marks &
Spencers. Overpriced nonsense. I buy all my food from
local shops, expecially my fine grain flour which, if I
don't use it all before it's sell by date, I can use for
filling holes in the wall.

I refuse to go into a Spar, I won't shop at Netto, I
occasionally set foot in Asda and Sainsburys, but that is
very rare. I like to cook my own meals, with proper
ingrediants, not buy packets.


 

offline Ceri JC from Jefferson City (United States) on 2004-02-17 05:57 [#01076219]
Points: 23533 Status: Moderator | Followup to ecnadniarb: #01076187 | Show recordbag



Refuse to go to Spar? You're missing out on something very
special; Spar's own brand vodka. A fantastic way to
demonstrate to someone that you're not just "paying for the
label" and that all vodkas do not taste alike. NB: It really
is rough as boots, don't ever drink it.

I prefer proper cooking to "ready meals" too. I keep a few
pasta bake sauces and curry sauces in the cupboard for quick
meals when I'm busy/feeling lazy, but they're hardly a
staple of my diet. It's cheaper to make your own meals etc.
too. I tend to make several portions and freeze most of
them.


 

offline Jedy from dublin (Ireland) on 2004-02-17 06:31 [#01076242]
Points: 1280 Status: Regular



lidl is not bad at all.

actually loads of products are better than the leadeing
brands

baby wipes (i have a son) are half price and the quality is
better than pampers johnson's
also for the ice cream nad the chocolate soem are excellent
(milk chocolate and whole almonds )


 

offline azatoth233 from tku (Finland) on 2004-02-17 08:15 [#01076473]
Points: 387 Status: Regular



the beer they sell tastes weird...atleast here in
finland..but its cheaper...


 


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