An Informative Essay On Pink Flamingo

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When the pink flamingo splashed into the fifties market it staked two major claims to boldness. First, it was a flamingo. Since the 1930s, vacationing Americans had been flocking to Florida and returning home with flamingo souvenirs. In the 1910s and 1920s, Miami Beach first grand hotel, The Flamingo, had made the bird synonymous with wealth and pizzazz. Later developers built hundreds of more modest hotels to cater to an eager middle class served by new train lines and in South Beach especially architects employ the playful Art Deco style, replete with bright pinks and flamingo motifs. This was a little ironic, since Americans had hunted flamingos to extinction in Florida in the late 1800s for plumes and meat. But no matter. In the 1950s the new interstates would draw working-class tourists down too. Back in New Jersey, the Union Products flamingo inscribed ones lawn emphatically with Floridas cachet of leisure and extravagance the bird acquired an extra boldness too from the direction of Las Vegas—the flamboyant oasis of instant riches that the gangster Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel had conjured from the desert in 1946 with his Flamingo Hotel. Anyone who has seen …show more content…

The plastic flamingo is a hotter pink than a real flamingo even a real flamingo is brighter than anything else around it. There are five species, all of which feed in flocks on algae and invertebrates in saline and alkaline lakes in mostly warm habitats around the world. The people who have lived near these places have always singled out the flamingo as special. Early Christians associated it with the red phoenix in ancient Egypt it symbolized the sun god Ra. In Mexico and the Caribbean, it remains a major motif in art, dance, and literature. No wonder that the subtropical species stood out so loudly when Americans in temperate New England reproduce it, brighten it, and send it wading across an inland sea of

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