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Photographer’s Note

Route 66 is an icon of the USA pop culture. It starred in books, music, movies, people's dreams. For some persons it is the very materialization of the American Dream - the freedom to go anywhere on a westbound never ending road.
Nowadays it is another example of the American expertise to make money out of anything (see workshop #3).
Along this old route everybody profits from the iconic name, from gift shops to restaurant menus, including tourist traps. [In fact, I think many tourists deserve to be trapped. Nobody demanded them to be silly!]
The Route 66 was established in 1926; its start point was in Chicago, Illinois. The western end was in Los Angeles, California.
This picture, in Williams, Arizona, shows the last section of Route 66 that was bypassed, when Interstate 40 was built around town in 1984. Route 66 was finally decommissioned in 1985.
As expected, this main street of Williams, once part of the Main Street of America, it is full of tourist businesses, including, of course, the ubiquitous (and also iconic) American motels (motor or motorists' hotels). In the workshop #1 you see a modern motel, in the other side of the city.
This photo was taken, from inside a car, when arriving in a rainy afternoon. The original, uncropped picture is in the workshop #2; I like the original version because it shows better the reality of the shot inside the car. The primary post shows better the street and details.
Location in WikiMapia: 35.249816, -112.1903872.

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Additional Photos by Francisco Santos (xuaxo) Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Star Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 4092 W: 278 N: 4100] (5649)
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