California pulled out all the stops to welcome the arrival of two new giant pandas from China, the first to be sent by Beijing to the United States in 21 years.
The young bears were greeted by children in panda hats and dignitaries, and the show included traditional Chinese dances.
However, Yun Chuan and Xin Bao appeared to be little moved by the performances and the symbolism of their arrival at a time of gradually thawing U.S.-China relations.
After traveling nearly 7,000 miles (11,000 kilometers) from the mountainous region of Sichuan, the two creatures are now the undisputed stars of the San Diego Zoo.
"My children only wanted to see two things in America: Orcas and pandas," Guillaume Courcoux, a Swiss tourist whose family was among the spectators, told Agence France-Presse - (AFP). "They were very impressed."
California Governor Gavin Newsom celebrated the "panda mania" and declared August 8 "Panda Day" in the state.
"This is about something much deeper, much richer than just the two beautiful pandas we celebrate," the Democrat said. "It's about celebrating our common humanity. It's about celebrating the things that bind us together."
Until recently, the loan of the two pandas seemed an unlikely dream.
With fierce trade competition, and disagreements over Taiwan and human rights, tensions between China and the United States have been rising for several years – to the point that Beijing's traditional "panda diplomacy" seemed to have frozen.
In recent years, pandas at zoos in Washington, D.C., Atlanta and Memphis have all been returned to Beijing after loan agreements were not renewed.
However, at a key summit between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping in November, the latter announced that Beijing would continue the program in the U.S.
China's loaning of pandas worldwide is both a diplomatic symbol and a way to help the survival of a vulnerable species.
In addition to San Diego, pandas are expected to return to zoos in Washington and San Francisco by 2025.
China first offered its pandas to the U.S. in 1972 under U.S. President Richard Nixon.
Since then, the country has used its loan of the black-and-white bears to send diplomatic messages.
For instance, after President Barack Obama met with the Dalai Lama in 2010, who Beijing sees as a rebel, China recalled two of its pandas.
The San Diego Zoo has enjoyed a decades-long partnership with Chinese authorities, having received two pandas in 1996 that gave birth to six cubs in captivity.
All of the pandas were returned to China in 2019, in line with earlier agreements.
The return of the pandas is not only a boon for the zoo, where their presence attracts thousands of visitors a year, but also supports the propagation of the species, which is notoriously difficult in the wild.
Zoo officials described four-year-old Yun Chuan as a "mild-mannered, gentle and lovable" male, who was named after his grandmother, Bai Yun, one of the initial two pandas loaned to San Diego.
The other panda, three-year-old female Xin Bao, is a "gentle and witty introvert," zoo officials said. Her name means a "new treasure of prosperity and abundance."
"We hope she will bring you good luck to California and San Diego," China's ambassador to the U.S., Xie Feng, said.