• Lady Liberty Unleashed: From French Gift to NYC's Baddest Icon 🗽💪

  • 2025/03/31
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Lady Liberty Unleashed: From French Gift to NYC's Baddest Icon 🗽💪

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  • This is your Statue of Liberty monument podcast.Yo, what's up history buffs? It's your boy Higgs here, comin' at ya live with another epic monument deep dive. Today we're diving into the Statue of Liberty - that big green lady standing tall in New York Harbor. Strap in, 'cause this is gonna be one wild ride through time.Let's kick things off with how this iconic statue came to be. Picture this: it's 1865, the American Civil War just ended, and over in France, this dude named Édouard de Laboulaye is like, "Yo, we should totally give America a massive statue to celebrate their independence and the abolition of slavery." Talk about a birthday gift, am I right?So Laboulaye hits up his homie, sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, and they start cookin' up plans. Bartholdi was all about that colossal statue life, having already pitched a giant lighthouse for the Suez Canal. But this time, he's thinking bigger - like, way bigger.Fast forward to 1871, and Bartholdi's cruising across the Atlantic to scope out the perfect spot for his masterpiece. He takes one look at Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor and is like, "This is it, chief." Why? 'Cause every ship rolling into New York would see this bad boy. Talk about prime real estate!Now, here's where it gets wild. The French were like, "We got you on the statue, fam," but they told America, "You gotta handle the pedestal." Classic move, right? So while Bartholdi's back in France getting his sculpt on, America's trying to scrape together cash for the base.Construction kicks off in 1875, and let me tell you, this was not your average DIY project. Bartholdi's out here building Lady Liberty piece by piece in his Parisian workshop. We're talking 300 copper sheets, each hammered into shape by hand. That's some serious elbow grease!But here's the kicker - they didn't just slap this thing together. Nah, they got the big brain energy of Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel (yeah, the tower guy) to design the internal structure. This dude comes up with this crazy iron framework that's both sturdy and flexible. It's like the world's biggest Transformer, I swear.While all this is going down in France, America's struggling to get that pedestal money. It got so bad that New York Governor Grover Cleveland shut down a fundraising drive 'cause it was too embarrassing. Ouch.But then, in swoops Joseph Pulitzer like a caped crusader. This newspaper tycoon starts a massive crowdfunding campaign, promising to print the name of every donor in his paper, no matter how small the donation. And boom! The cash starts rolling in. We're talking everything from a kid's $0.60 allowance to a group of young women offering up $10.50 they'd saved for a statue of the dude who assassinated President Garfield. Talk about a plot twist!Finally, in 1885, the statue's ready to make its grand voyage across the Atlantic. They pack this 151-foot tall lady into 214 crates and ship her off on a steamer called Isère. Imagine trying to assemble that IKEA furniture!Fast forward to October 28, 1886 - dedication day. The whole city's going nuts. We're talking parades, fireworks, the works. President Grover Cleveland's there (yeah, the same dude who shut down the fundraiser earlier - awkward), and he drops this bomb: "We will not forget that Liberty has here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected."But get this - the person who wrote the famous poem on the statue's pedestal, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free," wasn't even invited to the ceremony! Emma Lazarus, the poet, had died a year earlier, and her poem wasn't added until 1903. Talk about a delayed drop!Now, let's fast forward through some of the wild stuff that's gone down with Lady Liberty over the years. In 1916, some German saboteurs blew up a nearby munitions depot, damaging her arm. During World War I, the torch was closed to the public - apparently, German spies were using it as a lookout. Sneaky!Then in 1984, she gets her first major facelift. They replace the torch and fix up her insides. It's like an episode of Extreme Makeover: Monument Edition.Fast forward to 9/11, and Lady Liberty becomes a symbol of resilience. She's closed for a bit, but when she reopens in 2004, it's like a big middle finger to terrorism. Take that!Now, let's talk about how this big green lady has left her mark on the world. She's been in more movies than you can count - from disaster flicks like "The Day After Tomorrow" to comedies like "Ghostbusters II" where she actually starts walking around New York. Can you imagine that traffic jam?In the art world, she's inspired everyone from Andy Warhol to Ai Weiwei. Warhol did this whole series of pop art Liberties, while Ai created this wild installation with Legos. Yeah, you heard me right - Legos!And don't even get me started on her impact on tourism. As of 2025, she's still pulling in over 4 million visitors a year. That's more people than the population of some countries!But here's ...
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あらすじ・解説

This is your Statue of Liberty monument podcast.Yo, what's up history buffs? It's your boy Higgs here, comin' at ya live with another epic monument deep dive. Today we're diving into the Statue of Liberty - that big green lady standing tall in New York Harbor. Strap in, 'cause this is gonna be one wild ride through time.Let's kick things off with how this iconic statue came to be. Picture this: it's 1865, the American Civil War just ended, and over in France, this dude named Édouard de Laboulaye is like, "Yo, we should totally give America a massive statue to celebrate their independence and the abolition of slavery." Talk about a birthday gift, am I right?So Laboulaye hits up his homie, sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, and they start cookin' up plans. Bartholdi was all about that colossal statue life, having already pitched a giant lighthouse for the Suez Canal. But this time, he's thinking bigger - like, way bigger.Fast forward to 1871, and Bartholdi's cruising across the Atlantic to scope out the perfect spot for his masterpiece. He takes one look at Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor and is like, "This is it, chief." Why? 'Cause every ship rolling into New York would see this bad boy. Talk about prime real estate!Now, here's where it gets wild. The French were like, "We got you on the statue, fam," but they told America, "You gotta handle the pedestal." Classic move, right? So while Bartholdi's back in France getting his sculpt on, America's trying to scrape together cash for the base.Construction kicks off in 1875, and let me tell you, this was not your average DIY project. Bartholdi's out here building Lady Liberty piece by piece in his Parisian workshop. We're talking 300 copper sheets, each hammered into shape by hand. That's some serious elbow grease!But here's the kicker - they didn't just slap this thing together. Nah, they got the big brain energy of Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel (yeah, the tower guy) to design the internal structure. This dude comes up with this crazy iron framework that's both sturdy and flexible. It's like the world's biggest Transformer, I swear.While all this is going down in France, America's struggling to get that pedestal money. It got so bad that New York Governor Grover Cleveland shut down a fundraising drive 'cause it was too embarrassing. Ouch.But then, in swoops Joseph Pulitzer like a caped crusader. This newspaper tycoon starts a massive crowdfunding campaign, promising to print the name of every donor in his paper, no matter how small the donation. And boom! The cash starts rolling in. We're talking everything from a kid's $0.60 allowance to a group of young women offering up $10.50 they'd saved for a statue of the dude who assassinated President Garfield. Talk about a plot twist!Finally, in 1885, the statue's ready to make its grand voyage across the Atlantic. They pack this 151-foot tall lady into 214 crates and ship her off on a steamer called Isère. Imagine trying to assemble that IKEA furniture!Fast forward to October 28, 1886 - dedication day. The whole city's going nuts. We're talking parades, fireworks, the works. President Grover Cleveland's there (yeah, the same dude who shut down the fundraiser earlier - awkward), and he drops this bomb: "We will not forget that Liberty has here made her home; nor shall her chosen altar be neglected."But get this - the person who wrote the famous poem on the statue's pedestal, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free," wasn't even invited to the ceremony! Emma Lazarus, the poet, had died a year earlier, and her poem wasn't added until 1903. Talk about a delayed drop!Now, let's fast forward through some of the wild stuff that's gone down with Lady Liberty over the years. In 1916, some German saboteurs blew up a nearby munitions depot, damaging her arm. During World War I, the torch was closed to the public - apparently, German spies were using it as a lookout. Sneaky!Then in 1984, she gets her first major facelift. They replace the torch and fix up her insides. It's like an episode of Extreme Makeover: Monument Edition.Fast forward to 9/11, and Lady Liberty becomes a symbol of resilience. She's closed for a bit, but when she reopens in 2004, it's like a big middle finger to terrorism. Take that!Now, let's talk about how this big green lady has left her mark on the world. She's been in more movies than you can count - from disaster flicks like "The Day After Tomorrow" to comedies like "Ghostbusters II" where she actually starts walking around New York. Can you imagine that traffic jam?In the art world, she's inspired everyone from Andy Warhol to Ai Weiwei. Warhol did this whole series of pop art Liberties, while Ai created this wild installation with Legos. Yeah, you heard me right - Legos!And don't even get me started on her impact on tourism. As of 2025, she's still pulling in over 4 million visitors a year. That's more people than the population of some countries!But here's ...

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