You've seen Mount Rushmore on the telly and in the cinema - and you may even have visited the site of the monument itself.
But could the iconic memorial - depicting four US presidents and carved into a South Dakota cliff face - be about to be replicated on Teesside?
That's the plan that has been suggested should Middlesbrough FC win promotion to the Premier League after a six-season absence.
Tourism chiefs believe Saltburn's Huntcliff could be the place to replicate the huge visitor numbers seen at Mount Rushmore - made famous in Alfred Hichcock's classic film North by Northwest.
The US version was created in the 1920s and features 60ft carvings of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln.
It has already been decided that the planned Teesside version - depicted in the artist's impression below - would start with Boro head coach Aitor Karanka.
An artist's impression of how the carving at Huntcliff could look
A team of stonemasons have already been reserved to start work at the close of the season - should they be required.
And it is hoped that planning permission will be received in the interim so that work can get started as soon as Boro return to the top flight.
Should the scheme prove a draw for visitors plans for a second phase has already been sketched out.
It would see Boro legends George Hardwick, Tony Mowbray, Lee Dong-Gook and Juninho positioned alongside Karanka.
The Boro head coach was unavailable to comment on the plans last night.
But it is understood that he is thrilled at the prospect of being immortalised in the area.
Aitor Karanka
Saltburn residents, however, yesterday reacted in different ways to news of the plan.
"If Karanka can get us back in the Premier League they could carve his face on the Moon for all I care," said one man from nearby Redcar.
But others were less certain of the proposal.
"I'm very unsure of this," said one woman who said she lived in the town.
"Huntcliff is a natural beauty spot and a tremendous asset to our area.
"Besides, I prefer Gordon Strachan."
Gordon Strachan
Other proposals to mark promotion - dismissed at an early stage for being patently ridiculous - included using the big screen in Middlesbrough's Centre Square to run a season-long, 24/7 loop of Grant Leadbitter saying "That's football".
Alternatively, organisers suggested a flash mob for Teesside residents in which a Lee Tomlin-style 'flapping bird' action would be mandatory for everyone listed on the electoral rolls of Middlesbrough, Stockton and Redcar and Cleveland.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, there's still time left to renew your season card at the special early-bird rates. Click here to find out more.
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