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To find out how this conversation about classic American experiences started in the first place, we reached out to Reddit user JeffRyan1, who invited others to share their stories about visiting the United States. He was kind enough to have a chat with Bored Panda and reveal what inspired this thread.
"I'm a writer myself – most of my books are on pop culture characters, like Super Mario and Mickey Mouse," he shared. "They represent more than just a dad-bodded plumber and a rat boy: they represent adventure and innocence and childhood and, yes, America. That made me wonder, for better or worse, what happened to visitors in American that they felt was quintessentially 'American'?"
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We also asked the OP if he had ever experienced anything in his homeland that he felt was particularly American. "I've seen a bald eagle in the wild once – it stole a fish from an osprey," he shared. "I was at a Fourth of July where they accidentally cued the big fireworks finale to the love theme from Raiders of the Lost Ark, not the Raiders March."
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As far as what Jeff thought of the replies to his post, he told Bored Panda, "I was surprised at how uniform so many of the responses were. I guess we really do love guns and huge portions of food here in 'Murica."
We were also curious to know if the author had ever had an experience in another country that probably wouldn't happen in many other places. "Last year, I was in England, and on a morning jog through London, I saw a fox," he shared. "That was special to me, until I looked it up and found that foxes are considered garbage-eating pests."
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