"Bomb" hoaxes in Boston might be Aqua Team Ads

I do have to say one thing. While I think the whole Boston fiasco is Bostons problem (that the goverment is stupid and their bomb squad is moronic) there is a legal question here that may make the perps liable. Did they get permission to put the signes up from the city. Remember, you just can plaster ads everywheer you want. You need permission.

Remember the PSP grafitti fiasco when they just started spray painiting characters in diefferent cities without permission. They had to pay a fine and cleanup costs. Now, those didn't cause a bomb scare. But if, when putting up the ATHF signs, the marketing firm didn't get permission from the citiy to put up the ads, then that would be vandalism. And an act of vandiaism that cause an anti-terrorism response would probably make them liable for any accrued costs related to that response. No matter how absurd the whole fiasco is.

So I do think that the guys involved and CN could be in serious legal trouble here when it comes to having to pay nearly a million in damages.
 
[quote name='GuilewasNK']The sad thing is this is bringing attention to ATHF well after it jumped the shark. ATHF use to be great, now it's crap.[/QUOTE]

i disagree

it's still great

just not as great as it used to be

kind of like communism... or hostess cupcakes
 
[quote name='PKRipp3r']i disagree

it's still great

just not as great as it used to be

kind of like communism... or hostess cupcakes[/quote]

Watching ATHF now is the equivalent of eating a Happy Meal out of the trash.
 
[quote name='GuilewasNK']Watching ATHF now is the equivalent of eating a Happy Meal out of the trash.[/QUOTE]

exactly so

there's nothing sweeter than than forbidden delight of a free Happy Meal straight out of the trash
dirty-trash-can.jpg


then again, i ate an oreo cookie that i found under my couch last night
 
And Fox News Channel shows there true side. They did at least 10 minutes on the Boston bomb hoax scare. They are trying to make America afraid and that the government is doing a good job when they aren't. It's Bush's way, ly and make people afriad so you will belive them.

At the same time MSNBC is talknig about real news that the VP is an evil man and how they lied and covered up the fact there was no reason to go into Iraq. Fox News of course won't have that as a feature.
 
[quote name='Admiral Ackbar']
So I do think that the guys involved and CN could be in serious legal trouble here when it comes to having to pay nearly a million in damages.[/quote]

What exactly did these two guys damage other than Boston's pride? I see no damage to any structure these were attached to...
 
[quote name='David85']And Fox News Channel shows there true side. They did at least 10 minutes on the Boston bomb hoax scare. They are trying to make America afraid and that the government is doing a good job when they aren't. It's Bush's way, ly and make people afriad so you will belive them.

At the same time MSNBC is talknig about real news that the VP is an evil man and how they lied and covered up the fact there was no reason to go into Iraq. Fox News of course won't have that as a feature.[/QUOTE]

wait.. there was no reason to go into Iraq?

what about all the money that halliburton is stealing from taxpayers?

that's SOMEthing.
 
[quote name='mtxbass1']What exactly did these two guys damage other than Boston's pride? I see no damage to any structure these were attached to...[/quote]

Lost production from shutting down traffic, bridges, and parts of the city.
 
[quote name='GuilewasNK']Lost production from shutting down traffic, bridges, and parts of the city.[/QUOTE]

CN didn't do that, Boston Police did. If Boston tries to sue CN for that I would sue Boston back saying they caused all the issues.
 
[quote name='GuilewasNK']Lost production from shutting down traffic, bridges, and parts of the city.[/QUOTE]
none of the other cities shut that stuff down..

b/c they realized that before taking a step that big, they should be 100% sure what they were dealing with

i've heard the analogy of yelling fire in a crowded theater applied to this situation and i agree... it was Boston PD that yelled fire - when it was just a picture of fire taped to a wall

game, set, match
 
The ads were to be used as a form of fear for the hoax bombs.

That's what the cops offically said, or something like that. They are ads!

:lol:


Kieth Olberman went "Did these things start smoking or ticking yesterday? Why yesterday and why just in Boston?"
 
[quote name='PKRipp3r']
i've heard the analogy of yelling fire in a crowded theater applied to this situation and i agree... it was Boston PD that yelled fire - when it was just a picture of fire taped to a wall

game, set, match[/QUOTE]

It's not even like a *picture* of a fire in a crowded theater. I mean, if the lite brites were made in the classic cartoon bomb shape (spherical with a big fuse) then, yeah, that would be like a picture of a fire in a theater. But it was a dumb cartoon character that even I (who is maybe only slightly younger than the people in charge in Boston) know about (well, OK, just about the only thing I watch on TV anymore is AS, so maybe that's just a fluke).

But damn, I want one of those now. Maybe they will start selling them in their online store?

By the way, that auction someone linked to has a bid now for $2000. Screw the PS3, start hoarding these puppies. I'm probably too late to hit downtown Portland and find any at this point ;).

A reminder in case you don't want to look back a few pages:

http://cgi.ebay.com/Mooninites-Igni...goryZ363QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem

I was just watching AS and I saw the wierd messages before the commercial breaks. As usual they made little sense, so I just thought it was typical AS snarkiness - I had no idea about this story till I came here afterwards.

But I'm more puzzled as to how ATHF is going to work as a full-length movie :whistle2:k.
 
Let's all empty our lungs and say it: Three cheers for Peter Berdovsky and Sean Stevens.

• The two artists took a $600 paycheck, split down the middle, to brave quasi-arctic weather and paste up brightly-lit guerilla advertising for Aqua Teen Hunger Force across the city of Boston. (Their doing so, pointed out Stephen Bainbridge, represented a true triumph of capitalism.)

• They exposed the sleeping bear tactics of Boston's terrorism response network, which consist of taking three weeks to notice something "suspicious," then locking the metropolis down in a panic without testing to deduce whether several dozen "bombs" are actually "harmless mini-billboards covered with light bulbs."

• They masterfully punctured the scare-driven self-importance of TV news. First they gave the networks (including all three cable news channels) a black eye for breathlessly hyping a threat that didn't exist. Then, showing off balls so big and so brassy that they could knock the Moon off orbit, they called a press conference to speculate about the origins of 1970s hairstyles.

We can argue over whether all of these makes Berdovsky and Stevens authentic folk heroes or simply right-place-right-time accidental heroes. But we need to agree that they're not villains. That sentiment has been completely lost as Boston's media (led by the tabloid Boston Herald) and the Howard Beale impersonators of Fox News who poked, lampooned, and threatened two harmless "starving artists." The Herald's Howie Carr, his face several shades redder than its usual cerise, dubbed Berdovksky (who is from Belarus) a "nerd," "slacker," "moonbat," and "Borat," while fantasizing about his deportation.
Hey Borat, you're not a citizen? That's too bad. How does five years at Cedar Junction sound, followed by a steerage-class flight back to the Third World hellhole from which you came, to annoy the taxpaying citizens?
Fox News' John Gibson, doing his best to make the world forget his stint as a left coast entertainment reporter, struck the same tone. He led Fox's coverage of the affair, accompanied by chyrons that dubbed Berdovksy and Stevens "hippie dudes," "hippie pranksters," "hoax jokesters," and "loony toons." "Here's hoping these arrogant bleeps go to jail," he snarled, while Fox legal expert Andrew Napolitano patiently explained that the artists hadn't done anything we could execute them for.

The Gibsons and Carrs covering this story do so because, they'll tell you, the artists wasted the time and money of Boston's police forces and trapped thousands of hapless civilians in traffic and freezing weather. But this isn't what they're angry about. For reporters and pundits, Berdovsky and Stevens are instruments for frustration about terrorists and the security state.

There is anger about the way American soldiers can't defeat the inexhaustible supply of enemies in Iraq; there's anxiousness, ever-present, about every report of mysterious packages or white powder or, as in New York in 2005, "specific but not credible" reports. Occasionally we drown our sorrows with the killings or trials of some actual terrorists. More often, we cope by targeting people who don't support the war on terror (in the U.S. or in the Iraq bureau) and pinning some of the blame of them. This week, it's Berdovsky's and Stevens' backs collecting the pins.

Not all public manias are acceptable. This one is. After a terror scare, the scared -- in this case Boston Mayor Thomas "Mumbles" Menino, some Bostonians, and the national media -- don't ask whether they overreacted. This is impossible; you can never overreact to terrorism. Those terrified mayoral statements to cameras are defensible, not uninformed. Those bright, red, clanging news alerts are informing the public, not exploiting viewers' basest fears. Does the hyping of bomb threats make urbanites more skittish and more likely to report a souped-up lite brite as a "suspicious device"? It doesn't matter. As Brian Doherty noted yesterday, panicked civilians calling to report those lite brites are considered a "perfect example" of "taking part in Homeland Security."

It's strange logic. The Bostonian who called in the phony threat is considered diligent, even though citizens in every other location where advertisers place the lite brites got the jokes. As the cartoonist August Pollak noted:
The "devices" were placed in ten cities, and have been there for over two weeks. No other city managed to freak out and commit an entire platoon of police officers to scaring their own city claiming they might be bombs. No other mayor agreed to talk to Fox News with any statement beyond "no comment" when spending the day asking if this was a "terrorist dry run."
The guerrilla campaign was working, actually. If Boston's law enforcement network had better intelligence -- we're talking human intelligence, not a web of hidden cameras -- they would have figured out that hipsters had been smiling at the signs for two weeks. They might have realized that garish cartoon pictures, unlike inconspicuous suitcases or shoes or backpacks, are not the delivery methods that terrorists use for bombs.

The same goes for Bostonian and national reporters, and it was in dealing with them that Berdovsky and Stevens made the evolution from loveable patsies to 15-minute icons. When reporters fielded questions about the ads, about what they were feeling, and all the usual boilerplate that comes with a TV camera scrum, the artists responded by talking about their haircuts.
"What was it like to spend last night in jail?"
"That's not a hair question. I'm sorry."
"Do you feel like you owe people an apology?"
"That's also not a hair question."
The video of this press conference has trafficked around the internet as fast as these things can happen; it's been linked on the Drudge Report and my pals on Facebook have made sure that everyone they know can see it. Massachusetts authorities persist in calling the LED scare a "hoax" and invoking 9/11 ("Just a little over a mile away from the placement of the first device, a group of terrorists boarded airplanes and launched an attack on New York City") in the hopes that spectators will stop laughing and come to their side.

It's not really working, and it's not going to work. Not only do people under 35 understand that Stevens and Berdovsky were blameless, but the growing number of people who consume their media online, from Daily Kos to Free Republic, are howling with laughter at Boston and the TV reporters. If it's not enough to stop the state and the media from putting us on terror alerts every week, it should be enough to stop the artists from being railroaded.

David Weigel is an associate editor of Reason.
http://reason.com/news/show/118476.html
 
[quote name='David85']And Fox News Channel shows there true side. They did at least 10 minutes on the Boston bomb hoax scare.[/QUOTE]
OH MY GOD, 10 MINUTES?!! Man, and here the other stations only dedicated 8 minutes and 48 seconds to it!

It's Bush's way
LMAO

You must not watch the news very often, Fox or otherwise.
 
I watch a lot of news and I just like how Fox "News" takes the news that makes Bush look great and MSNBC takes the news that makes Bush look like shit.

And I knew at noon the day they found the things that they weren't bombs. The police even told NECN (New England Cable News) that there was no explosives on it, that it was a motherboard looking thing. Then for some reason a few hours later I checked the news and Boston desided to completely freak out. I hope this "trial" is going to show Boston in it's true light, dumbasses, all of them are dumbasses. The cops are dumbasses, I like how the news seems to say the cops did a perfect job, umm... no... the cops should have know these aren't bombs.
 
My college's newspaper printed an editorial from Boston University today about this. BU apparently is as idiotic as the rest of Boston. Unfortunately, you have to register on BU's newspaper's website to get access to news that is more than one day old. :roll: So I can't give a direct link to the idiotic article. Who do they think they are, the New York Times?
 
[quote name='Dead of Knight']My college's newspaper printed an editorial from Boston University today about this. BU apparently is as idiotic as the rest of Boston. Unfortunately, you have to register on BU's newspaper's website to get access to news that is more than one day old. :roll: So I can't give a direct link to the idiotic article. Who do they think they are, the New York Times?[/QUOTE]


Copy and paste, or print screen there are numberous ways around it.

And if they were the NYT they would just make up the news then.
 
[quote name='David85']Copy and paste, or print screen there are numberous ways around it.

And if they were the NYT they would just make up the news then.[/QUOTE]

Why would I sign up for BU's newspaper's website?
 
[quote name='Dead of Knight']My college's newspaper printed an editorial from Boston University today about this. BU apparently is as idiotic as the rest of Boston. Unfortunately, you have to register on BU's newspaper's website to get access to news that is more than one day old. :roll: So I can't give a direct link to the idiotic article. Who do they think they are, the New York Times?[/quote]

What does the article say?

Why is BU idiotic? Why would all of Boston be idiotic?

Don't go calling a whole city idiotic, its juvenile.
 
[quote name='richieyoo']What does the article say?

Why is BU idiotic? Why would all of Boston be idiotic?

Don't go calling a whole city idiotic, its juvenile.[/QUOTE]

Of course not all of Boston is idiotic. It's an exaggeration. But it is run mostly by idiots and you cannot argue that.

Basically they said it was justified that the city was shut down and that the police approached them like they were bombs, and that the people who make ATHF should be ashamed of themselves. :roll: They said that after 9/11 everyone is in great fear of terrorist attacks. :roll: Nevermind that these didn't look anything like bombs and there were zero problems in nine other cities.
 
[quote name='Dead of Knight']Of course not all of Boston is idiotic. It's an exaggeration. But it is run mostly by idiots and you cannot argue that.

Basically they said it was justified that the city was shut down and that the police approached them like they were bombs, and that the people who make ATHF should be ashamed of themselves. :roll: They said that after 9/11 everyone is in great fear of terrorist attacks. :roll: Nevermind that these didn't look anything like bombs and there were zero problems in nine other cities.[/QUOTE]

Care to read my rebuttal?

Not to you of course. The entire city of Boston may not be idiotic...but they sure did a good job of acting like it.
 
[quote name='CocheseUGA']Care to read my rebuttal?

Not to you of course. The entire city of Boston may not be idiotic...but they sure did a good job of acting like it.[/QUOTE]

Sure, where is it gonna be published?
 
[quote name='Dead of Knight']Sure, where is it gonna be published?[/QUOTE]

Associated Content. I'll PM you a copy (can't post it because I'm getting paid).
 
I just read the first sentence of that and what bullshit.

In a scenario that could be the plot of a science fiction novel, Boston law enforcement authorities on Wednesday closed bridges, subways, and interstate highways after finding suspicious devices that were later revealed to be part of marketing campaign for a cartoon television show.

How is that science fiction?
 
[quote name='David85']I just read the first sentence of that and what bullshit.



How is that science fiction?[/QUOTE]

Why, invasion of the Mooninites, of course.
 
[quote name='richieyoo']What does the article say?

Why is BU idiotic? Why would all of Boston be idiotic?

Don't go calling a whole city idiotic, its juvenile.[/QUOTE]

Srsly, DoK, stop hating on my school!
 
Finally got to see some of this on television, thanks to FOX News.

It's hysterical how FOX News is treating this as some sort of heinous crime and / or "they deserve whatever they get!!!!!"

The intent wasn't to create a false terrorist alert, by any means. That should be taken into consideration, in court... but it probably won't.
 
[quote name='jPoD']Srsly, DoK, stop hating on my school![/QUOTE]

Dude, it's not my fault that my college's newspaper printed one of their retarded editorials. If the editorial had been from Northeastern or Harvard I would have shat on it just the same.
 
[quote name='Dead of Knight']Dude, it's not my fault that my college's newspaper printed one of their retarded editorials. If the editorial had been from Northeastern or Harvard I would have shat on it just the same.[/QUOTE]

mhm. You've got extra special venom for BU, dont you ;)
 
[quote name='Brak']Finally got to see some of this on television, thanks to FOX News.

It's hysterical how FOX News is treating this as some sort of heinous crime and / or "they deserve whatever they get!!!!!".[/QUOTE]

That's my point. MSNBC doe slittle 1 minute things gonig "These guys are crazy", and they are, they talked about hair.

Fox News is acting like this was the 9-11 sequel, but that's because they need any news that might make Bush not look like a dumbass.
 
MSNBC just had it on Countdown saying the charges were dropped. He then said that Boston should also say they are sorry for trying to scare everyone and that no one in the other 9 cities freaked out.
 
[quote name='David85']MSNBC just had it on Countdown saying the charges were dropped. He then said that Boston should also say they are sorry for trying to scare everyone and that no one in the other 9 cities freaked out.[/QUOTE]

Good.
 
[quote name='David85']MSNBC just had it on Countdown saying the charges were dropped. He then said that Boston should also say they are sorry for trying to scare everyone and that no one in the other 9 cities freaked out.[/QUOTE]

Good. Boston would have just wasted more money in trying to prosecute them.

I'm sorry I missed that day. I was keeping track of the January transfer window closing.
 
[quote name='David85']MSNBC just had it on Countdown saying the charges were dropped. [/quote]

Why hasn't this news shown up on any news source online?
 
That's a good question. It's on again in like an hour and a half I think so watch it then. Maybe some other pointless charges were dropped and I misunderstood.
 
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