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| Miami Beach, Monday 10th - I didn't want to go clubbing. After the 500
mile drive from the Panhandle I planned a quiet night: a pepperoni
pizza, a swim in a motel pool, a movie on HBO. But it didn't work out
that way.
'Niles, right?'
'I'm sorry?' I say.
I am trying to buy gas on Collins
Avenue when the freckled redhead in a strapless number bounces up
wearing a brand new pair of scarlet fuck-me pumps.
'You're Niles from Frasier,' she
says.
'I'm Rory from Yetminster.'
'I love South Beach,' she cries,
swinging across the forecourt. She isn't a day older than twenty.
Confident, candid, bedazzled. 'You meet all the stars here.'
I couldn't look less like a star:
clip-on dark glasses, rumpled clothes, pina colada yoghurt spilt down my
t-shirt.
'We saw Gloria Estefan yesterday,'
she tells me. 'And we've heard that Stallone's in town. Hey, Mitch, it's
Niles.'
'No shit,' says Mitch. Her
boyfriend has mastered the black art of Miami petrol pumps. I am yet to
learn that they are switched on only after surrendering a credit card.
He reaches out to shake my hand. 'Man, we love your show. But you look
thinner on TV.'
'You just hanging out?' the girl
asks.
'I've just arrived.'
'You caught up with Sylvester yet?'
I pulled off the Dolphin Expressway
and suddenly everyone was chilling out, catching rays or speaking
Spanish. Latino matrons walk under parasols. Blade Runner cops ride
in-line skates. Buff boys burnish themselves to a perfect sheen. Young
blacks sport baggies low on their hips, exposing Calvin Kline boxers and
a line of pubic hair. Here are bronzed skin, firm bums and melanoma.
Hunchbacked old ladies drive gull-winged Thunderbirds. Yellow-haired
bohunks squeeze into elastic cycle shorts. Miami Beach is an Art Deco
feast of pink and ochre, of turquoise balconies and folly towers, of
beach-front hotels called Winterhaven and The Tides. It is the coolest
place to be seen on the planet, according to Tanya and Mitch.
'It's a head-fry,' says Tanya.
'Zippy and fun; it has heart and energy and a restless haphazard charm. MacLean has wrestled the Sunshine State like an alligator and stuffed and mounted it for our readerly pleasure' Louis Theroux
'A marvellously entertaining and intelligent glimpse of the
"real" Florida'James Jauncey, The Scotsman
'Punchy, irreverent and funny' Independent on Sunday
'Probably quite unlike any Florida you or I have seen' Anthony Sattin,
Sunday Times
'Next Exit Magic Kingdom' is republished by Tauris Parke in 2008. It was first published by HarperCollins in 2001.
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the USA

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