Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
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<source>Time Magazine</source>
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SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
Miami: The Capital Of Latin America, Page 82
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<p>A city that was once a languid resort town is now a pulsating
center of international trade and pop culture
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<p>By Cathy Booth/Miami--With reporting by Timothy Long/Miami Beach
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<p> By the time the first tourist hits the sand at Sunny Isles,
Peruvian TV producer Jose Crousillat has been working the phones
for hours, checking on his offices in Milan and Madrid. By afternoon
he is in the Capitalvision studios videotaping Guadalupe, his
latest Spanish-language telenovela, seen around the globe.
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<p> Meanwhile, out on trendy South Beach, Dutch businessman Ger
Vrielink is busy sorting a barrage of faxes from German catalog
clients waiting for pictures from the latest fashion shoots.
With six photography teams out, at $20,000 per team per day,
he is a happy man. "There is no place in the world shooting
more fashion than Miami today," he says, beaming, between calls.
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<p> At day's end, as a fiery orange sun sets over the Everglades,
Italian developer Ugo Colombo looks out from his 31st-floor
office toward a distinctive circular white condominium tower,
near completion, on Biscayne Bay. Developing real estate has
made him a millionaire at 32. Half his buyers now, he says,
are Latin Americans and Europeans willing to pay from $200,000
to $1.6 million for a condo in the hottest place to be at the
moment: Miami.
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<p> Yes, the rumors about Miami are true. Just ask Jose, Ger and
Ugo. "Foreigners" have taken over. There are Brazilians buying
condos, Frenchmen opening clubs, Nicaraguans selling TVs and
washers, Italians building public rail systems. And the Cubans--everywhere. Today half the population of Miami's Dade County--a million people--were born in a foreign country. Dade
is the largest metropolitan area in the U.S. with a Hispanic
majority. Nearly 60% of its residents speak a language other
than English at home, mostly Spanish. In Miami even a deejay
for the new Latin MTV channel must be fluent in two languages.
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<p> While some Americans might look askance at the prospect of Hispanization,
it is already a fact of life in Miami. In the 1980s the city's
location made it the beachhead for nearly 300,000 refugees and
immigrants from Latin America and the Caribbean. What seemed
like a burden at the time, however, has become a business bonanza.
Miami, once a town of tourists and retirees, is today being
remade by its bilingual immigrants into a hemispheric crossroads
for trade, travel and communications in the 21st century--a sort of Hong Kong of the Americas.
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<p> Sociologists and businessmen alike see Miami as a model for
other American cities learning to cope with multiethnic populations
and new economic realities. "Miami today is a laboratory for
the U.S.--if not the Americas--of a new kind of city in
terms of international business and ethnicity," contends John
Anderson, who serves as president of Miami's Beacon Council,
an economic-development group. "Other large metropolitan areas
will be dealing increasingly with the social and ethnic challenges
we are dealing with today."
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<p> Signs of Miami's manifest destiny as a hemispheric power are
evident. International trade through the city is a $25.6 billion
business and growing by double digits annually, some 20% in
1992 alone. While the U.S. was reporting a trade deficit last
year, Miami's port district recorded a surplus of more than
$6 billion. Miami International Airport, now the nation's second
largest international passenger and cargo hub, is poised to
overtake New York City's Kennedy International Airport by 1995-96.
It is already the world's fifth busiest cargo airport. Ships
sail from Biscayne Bay to virtually every port in the world,
from Barranquilla to Bombay.
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<p> Tourism, long southern Florida's major industry, is also changing
to reflect its new international role. For the first time last
year, the number of foreign visitors to Miami (4.7 million)