Disneyland Essay

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As time progressed, many different people, cultures, and ideologies have migrated to California in search of better social and economic opportunities since the state was still young and full of hope. In the process, the combination of people from different backgrounds has led to California becoming a diverse state in which people from not just the rest of the country, but from all over the world, perceive the Golden State as everything the Hollywood and other forms of media has made it out to be. However, there were many factors that played into the creation of the Californian identity, including the “built-environments” that were created through Disneyland, Orange County, and especially Hollywood.
Disneyland today remains one of the biggest …show more content…

So, when guests walk into the park, the first thing they would witness is the Sleeping Beauty’s castle that brought them through Main Street to the rest of the park (George Lipsitz, 2002). Furthermore, the gates to each “land” in Disneyland represents a portal to another world within the same park. The details that Disney put into his park was what made Disneyland stand out from other attractions in the US in general. The park become a success and an inspiration to many families from all over the world, having catered up to a quarter of the US population by 1965 (George Lipsitz, 2002). Today, Disneyland has helped shape the image of California so that people from all over could imagine a place that is full of sunshine and wholesome family fun. Whenever people visit the state from wherever, Disneyland is one of the few places that they could envision during their entire …show more content…

The area, much like most of California, was fertile enough to produce abundant crops, nutritious grass to feed thousands of cattle, and had access to high quality water via the Santa Ana River (Gustavo Arellano, 2008). Orange Country was known for walnut groves, sugar beet crops, lima bean fields, and of course citrus, the export that allowed most of the county’s farmers to become rich (Gustavo Arellano, 2008). With the rise of refrigerated railroad cars, citrus exports, particularly oranges, allowed Orange County farmers to amass a great amount of wealth, making up almost 35% of the county’s agricultural profits. In turn, the financial success stories, as well as the adoption of the name “Orange County,” attracted immigrants from both inside the country and out (Gustavo Arellano,

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