The
mandarin duck was first spotted at
Central Park's
Pond by
birder Gus Keri in early October 2018. His appearance was disseminated by another birder, David Barrett, who operates the
Twitter account Manhattan Bird Alert and was described as the duck's "kingmaker" and "de-facto PR spokesman". He quickly became a local celebrity, with the duck and the public's enthusiasm for him receiving national and international coverage, covered by the
BBC,
The New York Times,
The Guardian,
CNN, the ''
People's Daily in China, and making front-page news as far away as the Los Angeles Times. Several vendors began producing and selling merchandise referencing or depicting the duck, turning him into a tourist attraction. The New York Times'' noted that it "[had] become an international celebrity. A living, breathing, quacking
meme." The
Associated Press dubbed the crowd following the duck "the quackarazzi". It has also been credited with sparking broader interest in birding in New York.
New York Magazine The Cut initially covered it as "New York's Most Eligible Bachelor" in its Dating section and subsequently called him "Hot Duck", while the website
Gothamist named it Mandarin Patinkin, after
Broadway actor
Mandy Patinkin. Not long after his initial sighting, it disappeared for almost two weeks before returning to the Pond. Whenever the duck was not seen for a period of days or when he was seen somewhere other than Central Park, it received media coverage, such as when it showed up in
Brooklyn or
Edgewater, New Jersey. Multiple accounts describe "panic" among birdwatchers during these times. The website
Quartz set up a website dedicated to tracking whether or not he had been spotted in Central Park that day. Paul Sweet, Collection Manager in the Department of Ornithology at the
American Museum of Natural History, criticized the enthusiasm for the duck. Though he credited the phenomenon with raising interest in birding, he pointed out the dangers that
exotic species pose to
native species in general and compared the experience of seeing an escaped duck in Central Park to seeing a bird in a
zoo: "In British birder parlance, this is a 'plastic' duck, an escaped pet, one that can be bought online. He is not a rare bird or a first record or anything of that nature, so to me, of zero
ornithological interest." Even within city limits, there are several other Mandarin ducks at zoos—at the majority of zoos nationwide, as well—according to
AMNY; however, those captive birds never seemed to attract this level of public or media attention. Both Sweet and
WNYC News urged redirecting public interest to the many attractive native species found in New York, like the North American
wood duck, a native species that also frequents Central Park, and is the Mandarin duck's closest relative.
Audubon editor Andrew Del-Colle echoed similar sentiments in an "open letter" to the duck, telling him that he was not " special". Others criticized the behavior of people watching the bird for violating birding ethics by feeding him bread or trying to get him to move to where he could be seen more easily.
Gothamist Jen Carlson likened its public attention to a
cult, with its crowd of onlookers by the Central Park Pond "[taking] on an apocalyptic circus vibe on weekends. Part Audubon field trip, part
Burning Man." ==Origin==