Las Vegsa - Fremont Street in Vegas
Every city in America has a main street. Many European cities
do, too, but as many of them are round it's sometimes hard to tell
which it is. However, that's not a problem in Las Vegas. Fremont
Street is it. Of course, those who walk The Strip will argue. But
visit Fremont Street, and you'll be convinced.

Fremont Street is in downtown Las vegas and here you
will find the largest LCD big screen in the world. To go along
with the big screen - Fremont Street has several stages on which
different performers play music nightly.
New York has Times Square at Broadway where the neon lights
astound visitors. Paris is appropriately nicknamed the City of
Lights. Nevertheless, Las Vegas is unique. Nowhere outside Asia can
you find such a dazzling array of sights and sounds, with crowds to
match.
Housed under a permanent canopy, the casino-lined street has
over two million lights and a state-of-the-art sound system. The
combined effect is, well, electric. Under the $70 million canopy
walk a million visitors a year, if 'walk' is the proper term.
On many nights, it's more like being the ball in a pinball game.
Not that it's overcrowded, it's just that you spend so much time
trying to take in all the sights, you have to bump shoulders fairly
frequently.
Ninety feet above your head there are 12.5 million synchronized
LED lights producing millions of color combinations, accompanied by
animation and video. One second it may be a TV broadcast, the next
an indefinable kaleidoscope that pops your pupils. Among the better
known signs is Glitter Gulch's Vegas Vickie, exemplifying
everything which is Las Vegas. Kitsch, fun, carefree and silly.
Videos are projected onto the canopy, too. Some last several
minutes and run the gamut from 'The Drop', a psychedelic
'happening' ala the '60s, to 'Area 51', showing earthlings in
battle with aliens. 'Above and Beyond' gives visitors a clear view
of the Earth from outerspace, while 'Fahrenheit at Night' displays
some of what Vegas is best known for: beautiful women.
There are dozens of shops, everything from small indoor venues
to free standing kiosks. Many of the offerings are just what you'd
expect - little trinkets that will break the first time your child
goes to play with it. But there is the odd interesting item here
and there. If nothing else you can grab a doughnut at Krispy Kreme
and enjoy the sights from the outdoor patio.
The canopy is 1,400 feet (about 1/4 of a mile), so you'll have
plenty of opportunity to miss something interesting. Better plan to
go twice, at least once when you're sober.
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