Anyway, Coney didn't start out as congested as the top photo suggests. The beach (above) used to be narrow and less crowded. It was a place for "refined" people to bathe. Click to enlarge.
The problem was, too many refined people bathed there. You couldn't find a place to sit in all that refinement. Click to enlarge.
Under pressure from the public, the city fathers enlarged the beach (above), and oooh what a change that made! The public descended on the place like a tsunami. Amusement piers and cheap public transportation added to the chaos.
But the problem wasn't limited to Coney Island. Before long all of New York City became as crowded as Coney.
New York shops are famous the world over, but even shopping became a chore. There were just too many people.
You could try to relieve the stress with a quiet stroll (above), but at any time of the day or night millions of other New Yorkers were relieving stress with a stroll of their own. Yikes! Something had to give.
It was bound to happen. Nature, sensing that the city had exceeded all rational limits, moved to restore the natural balance.
Hideous monsters emerged from The Hudson River.
Excess New Yorkers (above) were eaten. A harsh corrective, to be sure, but Nature has its own ways and its own rules.
Today New York is a model of ecological harmony. The few thousand people who live there look forward to each new day with renewed enthusiasm.
Call New York...a success story.
6 comments:
Thank you, Eddie...made my day!
To this day, I have never been to Coney Island even when I lived up in New England. I'm adding that to the list of places I need to visit when I'm in a position to do some traveling. Could you do a post like this about San Fransisco? My sister recently went there on a college trip and loved it.
Talk about taking a bite out of the Big Apple! I recall as a kid when the radio active particles created a whole zoo of giant creatures that laid waste to many cities. I also recall God telling us to be fruitful and take dominion of the earth and all that lived upon it. How are we doing in that regard?
I had no idea that New York City was such a fragile ecosystem. We can only hope that there are currently more monsters breeding in the sewers, waiting to crawl back out when needed to take care of any future human population explosion.
Eddie, check out this cool painting someone posted on the Cartoon Brew Facebook page:
http://sphotos-b.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-ash3/533501_10152254407250526_1413224762_n.jpg
Found on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152254407250526&set=a.10151686826240526.846109.798730525&type=1&permPage=1
More weird Worm fan-art and digital paintings from the same artist! You could do a whole post on these, Eddie!
You're not on Facebook or Twitter by any chance, are you, Eddie?
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