Posted on 06/25/2008 5:54:41 PM PDT by unspun
An open letter to the people of France:
Bonjour! We in America are still very thankful for the Statue of Liberty.
She is a fine lady. She still stands for freedom and huddled masses and all of that.
But let's face it, she needed to dress for a baseball game like everyone else here.
So we thought you should know that we have taken a few, um, liberties.
Major League Baseball announced more details Thursday about the "Statues on Parade" that will have everyone talking. It is going to be the most amazing celebration of the Statue of Liberty since the 1986 centennial celebration in the New York Harbor.
There will be 42 Statues of Liberty, each standing 8 1/2-feet tall, stationed around New York leading up to the July 15 All-Star Game there. These will start showing up on Friday at popular locations around the Big Apple, including Times Square, Carnegie Hall, Radio City Music Hall, the New York Stock Exchange and, yes, the Statue of Liberty.
Each one will be uniquely designed with bold graphics and colors featuring each of the 30 Major League Baseball clubs, the Brooklyn Dodgers, the New York Giants, the American League, the National League, four All-Star statues and statues commemorating the final season of Yankee Stadium and Shea Stadium, an additional version for the host Yankees, and one to be determined to be painted by the artist as a surprise.
To celebrate the spirit of the occasion since you started all this, you can buy likenesses of these in France just like anyone can here in North America. Forever Collectibles, which has made those statues, also designed 9-inch figurine replicas that are now available at the MLB.com Shop.
So, what do you think your own sculptor, Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, would think? As a powerful creative force, he no doubt would have loved this.
You commissioned Bartholdi to design a sculpture in 1876 to commemorate the centennial of America's signing of the Declaration of Independence. He had no instructions at the time about working baseball into the design, because how could he know? There was no Internet. But just think about how important baseball was to American life in that same year that he began creating Lady Liberty.
On Feb. 2, 1876, the National League of Professional Baseball Clubs was established at a meeting in Chicago. Ten days later, Albert Spalding moved to Chicago and opened a sporting goods store that became known simply as Spalding -- and then that April he threw the first shutout in NL history, for the Chicago White Stockings. Teammate Ross Barnes hit the first home run in MLB history that same season.
Ah, yes, 1876 was a big year in American baseball. So had Bartholdi known that, he might have designed a baseball cap instead of the crown with its seven spikes that represent the seven seas and continents of the world. Had he known about Mickey Mantle, he probably would have said the seven spikes represent his number.
The Statues on Parade probably would make Bartholdi feel pretty good about his creation -- the fact that 42 versions of it will be prominently displayed in high-traffic areas around the Big Apple when the Midsummer Classic comes to town. They will go on display in the middle of this month and stay put until the week after the All-Star Game.
The statues themselves are not numbered, but if anyone happens to see these on a map in New York, they would notice that the Brooklyn statue is designated as No. 42. That would be a tribute to Jackie Robinson, who made a pretty good case for freedom in his own way. He broke baseball's color barrier in 1947 while with the Dodgers.
For the 2003 All-Star Game in Chicago, many people were mesmerized by the sight of giant bobbleheads scattered around the city, each of those also uniquely displaying MLB and team designs. The following year in Houston, there were big cowboy boots all across town, following a similar theme. It is nothing compared to what is about to happen in New York to pay homage to that statue you gave us over here.
Lady Liberty herself is made of copper 3/32 inches thick, and we have noticed that since you gave her to us, she gets hit by lightning a lot. That happens when you are 305 feet tall and made of a material commonly used to conduct electricity! It's no wonder she is carrying a torch that is lit up all the time.
That will not be the case with Statues on Parade and the figurines for sale at the MLB.com Shop. The 8 1/2-foot statues will be made of resin. While the real Statue of Liberty is 305 feet from base to crown, these are 78 inches for that dimension. These are 106 inches from base of statue to top of torch.
Each of the statues set up around town will weigh 250 pounds. Each will have a cement base weighing approximately 530 pounds. Bartholdi would have no problem making these, but he would have had to make a lot of them and he would have had to know his baseball. Wait till you see the Pirates version, with the big swashbuckler prominently over her midsection. Or that Cardinals version with the red face and the bird on the yellow bat, and the way it says "RALLY TIME" on the back of Angel Liberty.
We even found one of her in pinstripes. Of course.
Our personal favorite, however, might be simply the one where the statue is swathed in the Stars and Stripes.
The imagination on these designs is incredible and we think you will be interested in what is about to happen to the whole Statue of Liberty thing here. Have you ever wondered what she might look like with a few trips to the hair salon? Lady is a redhead on the Astros statue, she has dark hair representing the A's, Indians and Mariners, and for the Nationals, she went Solid Gold. Just wait till you see a Red Sox red-and-blue version with a green Wally head on her backside. You just have to see these to believe it, and that is what people are going to be saying around New York shortly.
They are at the MLB.com Shop right now in figurine likeness if you want to see for yourself. Those make good collector's items, and since you really were responsible for this whole thing in the first place, we thought you might want to know.
Au revoir,
Mark
This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.
...an incredible and tawdry commercial use of our American symbol and American ideals.
I suggest telling MLB, news outlets and forums, etc., how you feel about it.
Link to article (commercial promotion):
http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20080604&content_id=2838046&vkey=allstar2008&fext=.jsp
Could be a LOT worse.
Oh Please. Save your energy for more important issues.
There are 1000 cartoons published every day with some variation of Statue of Liberty.
There are people impersonating Statue of Liberty nearly in downtown in every city. You pose with them and you give them money.
Finally, the INTENTION of this campaign is not to denigrate Lady Liberty, but celebrate it.
You can’t control free speech.
It would be mother of all ironies if its Statue of Liberty that you are trying to control.
Could have been a celebration of soccer or figure skating. LOL
Now that would be offensive. ;o)
its not my national symbol, The flag is.
I think it’s disgusting.
but this is definitely officially licensed and some of the profits i am sure go to the lady's preservation. it might be ugly and in bad taste, but the all-star game is in NYC this year.
all these sports are massive whores to the almighty dollar and this is just another drop in the bucket. and until we stop going to the games or buying this crap, it will not change. it will get worse.
Whinging ninnies.
I’m looking forward to seeing the Tiger-striped Lady. And I hope the rain delay ends soon, I want to see ‘em win tonight.
figure skating could have The Statue of ‘Tonya Harding’ Liberty holding a club up in the air.
Nice to see that they’ve finally picked up their season.
Are you trying to control my complaining? ;-`
This defacing of the symbol of the Statue of Liberty with commercial graffiti is tawdry. There is no escaping that. Speaking out against it is the consequence of advertising that treats our national symbols in this way (whatever they think).
I don't find it as much disgusting as I find the desecration of our President by the media.
I agree with at least this part of your post. (And the All-Star Game being in New York city, the capital of graffiti is hardly an excuse. ;-)
I’m glad I checked out this Breaking News story.
Many, many Americans have lost an understanding of reverence.
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