Is that someting like a sandwich artist?
He may be a performance artist. But he's also a dingy, self-absorbed hippie.
These guys may be nimrods, but it's been one hell of an effective marketing effort. Millions of people now know about the show, instead of a few dozen who might have gotten the reference from the LED lights.
I think CNN/Cartoon Network got every penny of its 2 million dollar fine in advertising exposure.
...from your friends at CNN.
Just because the hippies don't understand it's wrong is not a reason to let them off the hook. Send him to jail where his cellmate can do his hair...and him.
He placed the "device" three weeks before they were seen as a threat.
So no wonder he didn't figure out that it was HIS device the bomb squad was dealing with.
Isn't this a television network designed to appeal to kids? Why are they using a character giving an obscene gesture? The FCC should fine the hell out of these people for corrupting the morals of minors. It's no wonder this country is going to hell in a hand-basket fast. There's no moral authority. A large portion of this countries citizens morals are in the gutter.
Right up until I read the above headline, I thought this was "much ado about nothing".
If one of the persons DIRECTLY INVOLVED thinks that it's going to create a police reaction, whether he tapes it or not is irrelvant, he is officially a suspect in a case of
"disturbing the peace and public order",
meaning that he, with ALL OTHER PARTIES involved, are due some serious fines AND time in the crowbar hotel.
Boston ought to hold a raffle, a buck a chance, to see who gets to shave this guy's head once he's arrested. They would make Millions!
Why am I not outraged? This whole matter is just so stupid. The devices were there for weeks. We cannot even laugh as a nation anymore thanks to those diaperhead bastards.
Sean Stevens, 28 (L), and Peter Berdovsky, 27, are photographed during an arraignment inside Charlestown District Court in Boston, Massachusetts, February 1, 2007. Turner Broadcasting System on Thursday tried to quell a firestorm of controversy in Boston a day after a guerrilla marketing campaign for a cable television show was mistaken for a terrorist plot to bomb the Hub. Two local men -- Sean Stevens, 28, and Peter Berdovsky, 27 -- were released Thursday on $2,500 bonds after pleading not guilty in state court to charges of placing a hoax device and disorderly conduct. REUTERS/George Rizer/The Boston Globe
Sean Stevens, 28, left, and Peter Berdovsky, 27, speak to the media outside Charlestown District Court in Boston Thursday, Feb. 1, 2007 after pleading not guilty to placing a hoax device and disorderly conduct. One of the men criminally charged after placing blinking cartoon advertisements around the city videotaped a police bomb squad removing one of the electronic devices, but did not tell the officers the object was harmless. Surveillance cameras caught 27-year-old Peter Berdovsky videotaping officers removing what they thought was a possible bomb. (AP Photo/Bizuayehu Tesfaye, FILE)
BTW, here's the real story of what happened...as reported by yours truly, heh heh...
Hang him by his wobbles. Ooops, no wobbles. Use his toes, then.