Kangaroo emblems and popular culture
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Kangaroo emblems and popular culture deals with the uses which have been made of the image of the kangaroo such as coins, emblems, logos, mascots and in the naming of sports teams.
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[edit] Kangaroo emblem and logo
- The Kangaroo and Emu are standard bearers on the Australian Coat-of-Arms
- Australia's national airliner, Qantas, uses a bounding kangaroo for its logo.
[edit] Kangaroos and coins
The kangaroo has been featured on pre-decimal coins, and on decimal coins.
- The Kangaroo was featured on the Australian pre-decimal penny coin.
- The Kangaroo was also featured on the Australian pre-decimal half-penny coin.
- Five Kangaroos are featured on the Australian one dollar coin
[edit] Kangaroo mascots and sculptures
[edit] Kangaroo mascots and sculptures in Australia
- The Boxing Kangaroo – mascot for the Australia II team in the 1983 America's Cup. This rendition of the kangaroo has become a sporting icon, known informally as the green and gold "Sporting Kangaroo", and is highly popular with cricket crowds and international sporting events which feature Australian participation
- Matilda, the mascot at the 1982 Commonwealth Games held in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, was represented by both a cartoon kangaroo and a 13-metre high (42 feet 8 inches) mechanical kangaroo (which winked at the spectators during the opening and closing ceremonies). The 'medal', which was worn by both the cartoon and mechanical versions of Matilda, features the 1982 Commonwealth Games logo — a stylised representation of a kangaroo bounding (in "flight") – similar to the pose of the kangaroo featured on the pre-decimal half-penny coin.
- The City Roos sculptures, which were made by sculptor Christopher Trotter during 1999 from scrapmetal, are in George Street, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
[edit] Kangaroo mascots in the United States
- Kasey Kangaroo is the mascot for the University of Missouri–Kansas City
- Zippy the kangaroo is the mascot for The University of Akron
- Lizzie (a purple and white kangaroo) is the mascot of Lake Washington High School in Kirkland, Washington
[edit] Kangaroos in books and on screen
Kangaroos are extremely well-represented in films, television, toys and souvenirs around the world.
- Skippy the Bush Kangaroo – star of the 1960s Australian children's television series
- Kanga and Roo are fictional mother and son kangaroos in the popular series of children's books and cartoons about Winnie-the-Pooh
- Kidding Kangaroo in the Sweet Pickles book series by Ruth Lerner Perle, Jacquelyn Reinach and
Richard Hefter - Austin of The Backyardigans is a young Kangaroo
- Roger the boxing kangaroo from the Tekken series of videogames.
- Kangaroo Jack – the title character of an American film
- A giant kangaroo is featured in the movie Welcome to Woop Woop.
[edit] Kangaroos and sports teams
The kangaroo features prominently in sport. Australian sports teams with nicknames derived from the kangaroo (and wallaby) include the following:
- National teams
- The Australian national rugby league team is nicknamed the Kangaroos.
- The Australia national rugby union team is nicknamed the Wallabies.
- The Australia national football (soccer) team (men's) is nicknamed the Socceroos.
- The Australia national under-23 football team plays Football at the Summer Olympics and is nicknamed Olyroos.
- The Australia national under-20 football team is nicknamed the Young Socceroos
- The Australia national under-17 football team is the Joeys
- The Australian Women's field hockey team is nicknamed the Hockeyroos.
- The Australian national ice hockey team is nicknamed the Mighty Roos.
- The Australian men's national basketball team is nicknamed the Boomers.
- Major domestic teams
- The North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League is nicknamed the Kangaroos.