@ЧеканЕвгений-п2е · high
Про таймер в метро, это не задержка поезда, он показывает интервал с предыдущим поездом
Why: Factual correction on a specific detail Peter got wrong on camera — acknowledging it publicly builds trust and shows he listens to locals
Draft replyThank you for the correction! That makes a lot more sense actually — shows how well they keep the intervals tight. Appreciate you taking the time to explain it.
any photos or videos are forbidden in our underground ... how much was the fee , haha? And there are no nuclear doors, where have you found this information?
Why: Sharp, fair challenge to two claims in the video — one about filming rules, one about the nuclear doors. A public response protects credibility and invites genuine dialogue
Draft replyHa — nobody stopped me, so I got lucky! On the doors, that's a detail I've seen repeated about Soviet-era metros across the region — but if you have better info on what they actually are, genuinely curious to hear it.
LOVE your videos. Do one on the 'ghosts' of Belarus: the ditches containing Jewish families bodies; the houses once lived by Jewish families; former synagogues; deserted cemeteries. What locals know? What locals think?
Why: Specific, substantive video request with an angle that fits Peter's documentary style perfectly — worth a public reply to show he takes topic suggestions seriously
Draft replyThis is exactly the kind of story I want to tell. The forgotten history under the surface of a city like this — that's what I'm most drawn to. Noted and on the list.
@michaelrogov1187 · high↗ view Thank you Peter. A very nice video. But the timer in the metro show interval when previous train has left station. We know that this interval is 1:00 - 1:20 in rush hour. Interval can be 5-7 minutes late in the evening.
Why: Second factual correction on the timer, in English — worth a reply so international viewers also see the corrected information
Draft replyReally appreciate this — and that context about rush hour vs. evening intervals is exactly the kind of detail I couldn't have known as an outsider. Thank you.
@annaromanova5083 · medium↗ view Hello from Minsk! You've made quite nice videos about my city! Glad that you liked it. You can also visit some other Belarusian cities, such as Brest, Grodno.
Why: Warm local invite with specific city suggestions — a reply threads community goodwill and signals future travel plans to viewers
Draft replyBrest and Grodno are absolutely on the radar — heard great things. Belarus surprised me in the best way, definitely plan to go deeper.
Since you're living in Ukraine you should definitely explore Belarus more, check out countryside of Belarus, small towns, villages..
Why: Substantive travel suggestion from someone who knows the region — fits Peter's format and shows he engages with recommendations
Draft replyThe countryside is always where the real stuff is — 100% agree. Cities are easy; the small towns take more work but they're usually worth it.
@AlexanderRomanovsky · medium↗ view Cool video. I should be there in couple of days, if I ever get out of Toronto. Any word of wisdom about renting a car there?
Why: Unanswered practical question — replying is useful to the viewer and shows Peter engages with people actually planning trips
Draft replyI didn't rent a car so can't speak from experience — but public transport worked surprisingly well. Would ask a local once you land, they'll know the current situation better than I would.
Hi))) I am a blogger from Minsk))) I usually shoot about Minsk myself))) it was interesting to see this through the eyes of a foreigner. It would be interesting to go around Minsk with you, ask some questions and answer yours)))) If you are still in Minsk, you can write to me in the intsargam ruslanasolo_28
Why: Local creator offering to collaborate — even if the timing has passed, a reply keeps the door open and shows community engagement
Draft replyLove this — a local showing me around is always the best way to do it. I'm not in Minsk right now but keeping this in mind for the next trip.
@LightSightTCR · medium
Всю жизнь живу в Минске, а на видео будто смотрю репортаж из другого города)
Why: Top comment by likes — classic local nostalgia reaction that anchors the video's theme; a reply rewards the most visible commenter and validates the outsider-eye concept
Draft replyThat reaction is exactly what I'm going for — sometimes it takes a stranger to show you what's been in front of you all along. Thank you for watching.
@dzmitrysizykh4964 · medium↗ view Thank you, Peter. Belarusian authority should hire you to promote my country in the USA 😂
Why: Viral-potential funny comment — a quick witty reply could get traction and extend the thread
Draft replyHa — I'll work for cheap, just give me metro access and a good meal and we have a deal.
I lived in Minsk for many years and took my first metro ride next day it was opened in the summer of 1984. Now it looks even better.
Why: Rare first-hand historical perspective — someone who rode it on opening day is a compelling story worth surfacing
Draft replyThat's an incredible piece of history — to have been there on day one and seen it grow over 35 years. Would love to hear more about what it was like then.
Wow very modern and clean. Sometimes I wonder what does the NYC MTA subway system do with all those billions of dollars!
Why: Relatable Western-audience hook — the NYC comparison thread has viral potential and matches the point Peter makes at the end of the video
Draft replyGenuinely asked myself the same question every time I ride the New York subway after being somewhere like this.