This picture of twin toilets in a men's restroom in Sochi has gone viral, mostly out of curiosity and amusement as to why two toilets would be located side-by-side in a single stall. One joke says it's a nod to tight security measures imposed for the Olympics -- the second toilet is for a security officer.
SOCHI, Russia (AP) — It's a tale of two toilets.
When BBC reporter Steve Rosenberg went to use the bathroom at the cross-country skiing and biathlon center for next month's Winter Olympics in Sochi, he found two toilets but only one stall.
His tweeted picture instantly became a national joke.
Although toilets like that are not common in Russia, social media users posted photos of other toilets side by side, including some said to be in a courthouse and a cafe.
The editor of the state R-Sport news agency said such communal toilets are standard at Russian soccer stadiums.
"Why are the BBC folks scaring us?" Vasily Konov wrote in this personal Twitter account. "This is what the gents look like at football stadiums in Russia." He posted a photo showing two urinals and three toilets in a large room.
Russians jested that the toilets in Sochi were designed for a "tandem," the name used to describe the duo of President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev. One popular blogger altered Rosenberg's photo to put in a framed portrait of the two leaders above the toilets.
In a nod to the tight security measures imposed in Sochi for the Olympics, another joke has it that the second toilet was for a security officer.
The Sochi organizing committee refused to comment.
No comments:
Post a Comment