The Meaning of Miami’s Castrated Bitcoin Bull
Standing 11 feet tall and glistening in the southern sun, “The Miami Bull” statue has been called both “a crime against god” and “pretty cool.” The robotic reimagining of the Wall Street landmark is 3,000 pounds, made of chrome and fiberglass and sports blue laser eyes. Miami Mayor Francis X. Suarez said it speaks to the city’s vitality.
“I can tell you, [in] Miami we have big balls. That’s all I can tell you,” he said on CoinDesk TV’s “First Mover” on Thursday.
The statue, however, does not.
Almost immediately after it was unveiled outside the Miami Beach Convention Center on Monday, kicking off the first day of the global Bitcoin 2022 conference, observers noted the robotic totem with hooves and horns lacked that one crucial anatomical detail. Its creator, Furio Tedeschi, hadn’t intended for the bull to be a steer.
“I’d designed some huge, mechanical balls,” Tedeschi, who has done art design for the “Transformers” film series, from which his latest work draws inspiration, told Forbes. Apparently, TradeStation, the Florida-based trading platform that commissioned the mechanical statue removed those assets to avoid feeding the gendered stereotypes about finance.
Suarez, who spoke at the bull’s unveiling, is working to turn Miami into a hub of modern finance – the “capital of capital,” he often says. He has drawn paychecks in bitcoin, offers tax incentives for crypto, fintech and investment firms to relocate and even christened the city’s own cryptocurrency, Miami Coin.
“I think what it symbolizes is the metamorphosis from the old economy to the new economy,” Suarez said, about the bull.
The bull is a potent sign of energy coursing through Miami and the cryptocurrency industry. But it is odd that this “new economy” is using the language and imagery of the old. Has much really changed?
Asked just that, Suarez disclaimed credit. “And of course, you know, this is something that TradeStation did, I didn’t do it, you know, their idea, to be honest with you,” he said.
(He also walked back his previous steadfast support of Miami’s Stacks-based “city coin,” saying it’s “too inflationary” to be useful as a currency, though praising the demand for and “tremendous buzz” around it. “It’s a great idea, but … you have to get all the dynamics right. And and I think that dynamic is a little out of whack,” he said.)