okay this happened a long time ago but im just now getting around to putting it on here
boston is a bunch of dumbasses
and our government as problems
for all of u aqua teen hunger force fans out there youve probably alrdy heard of this stuff but for those of u that havent
there are ppl on the show called mooninites
they flip ppl off alot
they are coming out with a movie in april i think it is
the ppl that were hired to advertise for the show had big neon signs of ignignot and err (the mooninites) flipping ppl off
they were like big lite brights
and ppl in boston just assumed that they were bombs
the signs were in other cities for weeks and nobody said a thing
but in boston ppl just assumed that they were bombs even though
1. they were informed before htey were put up
and 2. while they were put up they were repeatedly told what they were
those 2 reasons are things that i heard ppl comment on usatoday.com
and i dont think they woulda made that up
but anyways
the government completely ignored the warnings
they completely ignored the advertising company and everybody who told them what the signs were
and apparently nobody - APPARENTLY NOBODY BOTHERED TO PICK ONE OF THEM UP OR TO WALK UP TO ONE THEM TO SEE WHAT THEY FUCKING WERE
WHAT A BUNCH OF IDIOTS
and then they shut the whole city down and put them on fucking high alert or w/e because they said they were bombs
and now they are sueing the fucking advertising company for a couple million dollars
the only thing bad i can see about these signs is the fact that they were flipping ppl off
but
BIG FUCKING DEAL
read the article below to see what happened
if u really want i can email u the actually page itself from
www.usatoday.com and u can see what the signs looked like
or u could probably google it too
anyways read the article below
Boston beaned over response to 'Aqua' stunt
These devices placed around Boston and other cities to promote an upcoming movie based on the cartoon Aqua Teen Hungerforce sparked some panic.
Enlarge By Steven Senne, AP
These devices placed around Boston and other cities to promote an upcoming movie based on the cartoon Aqua Teen Hungerforce sparked some panic.
Sean Stevens, 28, left, and Peter Berdovsky, 27, during their arraignment in Charlestown District Court in Boston on Thursday. Berdovsky videotaped police responding to the suspicious devices at one location, an attorney says.
Enlarge By Bizuayehu Tesfaye, AP
Sean Stevens, 28, left, and Peter Berdovsky, 27, during their arraignment in Charlestown District Court in Boston on Thursday. Berdovsky videotaped police responding to the suspicious devices at one location, an attorney says.
By Wendy Koch, USA TODAY
BOSTON — Boston won an apology and a $2 million settlement Monday from Turner Broadcasting and a marketing company for a campaign that caused a terrorism scare last week.
The city, however, has lost ground on the comedy front. Cartoonists, comedians and entrepreneurs are poking fun at Boston officials for dispatching bomb squads and shutting down bridges and highways Wednesday in reaction to blinking electronic devices left on bridges and subway stations.
ON DEADLINE: Is it fair?
The devices, light boards that displayed a boxy cartoon character making an obscene hand gesture, were actually a marketing promotion for a late-night cartoon, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, a surreal series on Turner's Cartoon Network about a talking milkshake, a box of fries and a wad of meat.
The Dayton Daily News ran a cartoon of Paul Revere riding through Boston shouting, "The Cartoon Network is coming!"
On the Internet, there are new videos and images of the cartoon character, known as a "mooninite." One has Jack Bauer, lead character of Fox TV's 24, interrogating "the Boston mooninite." T-shirts with the character are selling online, some saying "Remember 1-31-07" or "I survived Boston Mooninite Invasion." Lauren Woodburn, customer service director of the Threat Pit, a Florida company, said, "They're doing really well." She declined to give sales figures.
The devices caused no stir in nine other cities where they were posted in recent weeks.
In Boston, where two of the hijacked 9/11 flights originated, officials shut down much of the city after receiving reports of more than three dozen devices, some with dangling wires.
"Last week's events caused a major disruption in the greater Boston area on many levels," Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said when she announced the settlement by Turner and Interference, the marketing company that hired people to distribute the devices. "We are fortunate that no one was injured."
Coakley said $1 million will be used to reimburse agencies that incurred extra security costs and $1 million will fund homeland security programs.
Two men paid to hang the devices in Boston, Peter Berdovsky and Sean Stevens, pleaded not guilty to placing a hoax device and disorderly conduct. Coakley said talks are underway to resolve charges.