What do plastic lawn flamingos mean?

In popular culture. In the media and fiction, plastic flamingos are often used as a symbol of kitsch, bad taste and cheapness. The movie Pink Flamingos is named after them and helped them become an icon of trash and kitsch.
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Why are people putting pink flamingos on their lawn?

Residents and businesses around town are being "flocked" with plastic flamingos on their lawns to raise funds for the 2016 Annual Giving Campaign. Want to get in on the action and flock a neighbor? A price tag of $35 will get you five flamingos, $60 will get you 10 and $100 will get you 20.
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What is the purpose of plastic flamingos?

THE PLASTIC FLAMINGO – RECYCLING PLASTIC INTO ECO-LUMBERS

by collecting post-consumer plastics, the plaf aims to compensate the material's footprint by giving them a second-life while educating communities about the plastic crisis.
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What is the hidden meaning behind flamingos?

Flamingos advertised outside a room or home can indicate that someone is into swinging, and an upside-down pineapple can mean the same, but the idea of an upside-down flamingo is just the two symbols being muddled together.
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What do pineapples mean in RV community?

If you know, you know… On a cruise (and sometimes also on land) 'pineapple' is code for swinging or wife-swapping. If you see pineapple on a cruise ship door it means that the people in the cabin are up for meeting other couples for 'adult fun'.
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what is the MEANING of a “pink flamingo” in your yard??…



When did lawn flamingos become popular?

Featherstone's duck and flamingo ornaments sold in pairs for US$2.76, and were advertised as “Plastics for the Lawn.” They became simultaneously popular and derided in the late 1950s and remain a recognizable species of American material culture.
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Who invented lawn flamingos?

The flamingo ornament was one of hundreds of items that Donald Featherstone made for the Union Products plastics company. If you've got a plastic pink flamingo on your lawn, give it a pat on the back. The man who designed the lawn art, Donald Featherstone, has died. He was 79.
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Where did yard flamingos come from?

Designed in 1957, the pink plastic lawn flamingo was one of Featherstone's earliest projects at Union Products in Leominster, Massachusetts.
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How many plastic flamingos are there in the world?

There are more fake flamingos in the world than real ones

There are just under two million flamingos in the wild, whereas their kitschy plastic cousins, produced on a mass scale since 1957, number well into the millions.
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Why are flamingos knees backwards?

They will alternate legs to regulate their body temperature. The backward bending "knee" of a flamingo's leg is the bird's ankle. The bird's knee is close to the body and not visible through the bird's plumage.
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Is flamingo poop pink?

“No, flamingo poop is not pink,” Mantilla says. “Flamingo poop is the same grayish-brown and white as other bird poop is. When flamingo chicks are really young, their poop may look slightly orange but this is due to them processing the yolk they lived off of in the egg.”
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Do people eat flamingos?

Its consumption has been recorded since around the first century, when Romans boiled them with spices and wine. You can eat a flamingo. But you shouldn't. In the U.S., as in many other countries, hunting and eating flamingos is illegal.
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Do black flamingos exist?

It's not every day you see Earth's (maybe) only black flamingo. This black flamingo is one in several million—and perhaps, the only one in the world. On April 8, it was spotted during a flamingo count along a salt lake at the Akrotiri environmental center on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus.
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What are baby flamingos called?

Like most other birds, a baby flamingo can be called a chick. More specifically, though, a baby flamingo is called a flaminglet.
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Do birds have penises?

Most male birds, including chicken and quail, have no penises, but ducks and geese have coiled penises that can measure up to 9 inches in length. These retract when not in use.
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What is a group of flamingos called?

The collective noun to describe a gathering of flamingos is “flamboyance,” an appropriate term for these colorfully-feathered creatures. They flock together by the thousands on salt flats, lagoons, lakes, and swamps around the world, where they can filter-feed for shrimp, algae, and insects.
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What are 3 interesting facts about flamingos?

Why are Flamingos Pink? And Other Flamingo Facts
  • Flamingo nests are made of mud. ...
  • Flamingos get their pink color from their food. ...
  • Flamingos are filter feeders and turn their heads “upside down” to eat. ...
  • A group of flamingos is called a flamboyance. ...
  • There are six flamingo species.
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Are flamingos associated with swinging?

According to the Sun, flamingos symbolize swinging, with partner swappers placing plastic replicas of the bird in their front yards to let others know they're up for a good time.
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What does upside down pineapple mean on cruise ship?

On a cruise ship, the secret symbol of an upside-down pineapple is regularly used as a code for swinging or “wife-swapping”. In most cases, an illustrated and upside-down pineapple is fixed to the cabin door of a guest interested in swinging and partner swapping.
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