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Revision as of 21:23, 17 August 2005 edit62.52.34.208 (talk) restored reverted propaganda words← Previous edit Revision as of 21:28, 17 August 2005 edit undoTim! (talk | contribs)962,359 edits revert to last but one version by 62.52.34.208, continued pov pushing and refusal to explain why it is propaganda within the article, listed at WP:VIPNext edit →
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'''Polish Plumber''' is a character featured in propaganda by the ] tourism board. During the ] in ] in ], "Polish plumber" was a phrase first used by ] and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from ] as a result of the ]. The advertisement by the Polish tourism board was in response to what was perceived as negative ] against Poland. '''Polish Plumber''' is a character featured in an advertisement by the ] tourism board. During the ] in ] in ], "Polish plumber" was a phrase first used by ] and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from ] as a result of the ]. The advertisement by the Polish tourism board was in response to what was perceived as negative ] against Poland.


The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old model ], who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the phrase "Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux" (I am staying in Poland, do come over in large numbers). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber. The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old model ], who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the phrase "Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux" (I am staying in Poland, do come over in numbers). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber.


A follow up propaganda featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old ]. A follow up advert featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old ].


==External links== ==External links==
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Revision as of 21:28, 17 August 2005

The advertisement featuring the Polish Plumber

Polish Plumber is a character featured in an advertisement by the Polish tourism board. During the EU Constitution referendum in France in 2005, "Polish plumber" was a phrase first used by Philippe de Villiers and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from Eastern Europe as a result of the Directive on services in the internal market. The advertisement by the Polish tourism board was in response to what was perceived as negative rhetoric against Poland.

The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old model Piotr Adamski, who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the phrase "Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux" (I am staying in Poland, do come over in numbers). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber.

A follow up advert featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old Bozena Szwartz.

External links

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