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tiktok.com/@gabrielist22 Our websites www.luxuri.com https://hotelocean.com/ here their website https://thegreatelephantmigration.org/ thumbnail by James https://www.metawavestudio.com/ Title: "Chasing The Great Elephant Migration: Miami Beach Art Vlog" Creator: Gabriel Reck (aliases: gabrielist22, Gabriel) Duration: 7 minutes 50 seconds Location: Miami Beach, Florida (South Beach, 36th Street Park, Lummus Park, Fisher Island, Port of Miami) Content Type: Vlog, art exploration, travel Summary: Gabriel Reck, known as gabrielist22, vlogs a spontaneous Miami Beach adventure to find "The Great Elephant Migration," a traveling exhibit of 100 life-sized Indian elephant sculptures. Filmed over two days, the 7-minute-50-second video starts at the Port of Miami, showcasing Fisher Island’s exclusivity (boat/helicopter access only) and a $33M property linked to “Phyllis Frost” (possibly a misheard name). Reck captures new lamps, hanging plants, and pre-Art Basel installations, then drives from Lummus Park to 36th Street Park at sunrise to see the elephants. The sculptures, crafted by 200 indigenous artisans from Tamil Nadu’s Nilgiri Hills, replicate real elephants they live alongside, promoting human-wildlife coexistence. Bonus drone attempts and weather notes (mid-60s°F, cold sunrise) round out the journey. Key Moments: Reck films a boat shot with zoom techniques near the Port, spots supercars (Infinity cars) and construction, and discovers the elephant herd at 36th Street Park. He highlights their name tags, QR codes linking to thegreatelephantmigration.org, and notes their size (smaller than expected for Indian elephants). Sunrise footage enhances the display’s beauty. The Great Elephant Migration Context: Launched in 2024, this global fundraising exhibit features 100 sculptures made from invasive lantana weed by The Coexistence Collective (Bettakurumba, Paniya, Kattunayakan, Soliga communities) from Tamil Nadu’s Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve. Each represents a named elephant from the region’s dense human-elephant overlap, raising funds for NGOs like Elephant Family USA via sales ($10,000-$100,000 each). After Newport, NYC, and Miami (December 2024), it heads to Montana and LA in 2025. Themes: Art installations, Miami Beach exploration, human-wildlife coexistence, spontaneous travel, drone filming. Keywords: The Great Elephant Migration, Miami Beach, 36th Street Park, Indian elephant sculptures, Nilgiri Hills, Tamil Nadu, art vlog, Fisher Island, Port of Miami, Art Basel, sunrise, drone footage, indigenous artisans, conservation NGOs. Additional Context: Reck ties the trip to Art Basel prep (likely December 2024), mishears “Phyllis Frost” (possibly a real estate figure or error), and notes Miami’s constant construction. Weather shifts from pleasant (60-70°F) to a freezing 6 AM sunrise. The exhibit’s QR codes and website push NGO support, which he endorses. Technical Notes: Handheld and attempted drone footage (batteries failed), with music, ambient sounds (construction, crowds), and raw narration. Multi-location cuts span South Beach’s evolving landscape.