The display -- already a historic relic, since it shows Phil Anschutz's Winter Park Ski Train that shut down at the end of last season (a replacement is supposed to start chugging on December 27) -- is now in the window of the former Virgin Records at the Denver Pavilions. But Hickenlooper's sweater is not part of the show.
"No, he is not giving up his sweater for the holiday display," mayoral spokesman Eric Brown says of Hickenlooper. "With cold weather coming, he says he's going to use it to warm his slender torso."
Besides, his sister knit that sweater for him.
Last year, the background music was "Rocky Mountain High." Denver's also spent decades trying to convince people that the city isn't in the middle of the mountains -- but skiing was front and center in that display, which cost Visit Denver $50,000 to create and is currently residing in the window of the former Virgin Records space in the Denver Pavilions. But it also includes what's now some good, old-fashioned nostalgia, since the Winter Park Ski Train in the Phil Anschutz era is also prominently featured. (A new Rio Grande Scenic Ski Train is slated to start trips to Winter Park on December 27, Amtrak willing.) One thing that didn't make the trip from Times Square to the Pavilions: the ho.