View Full Version : Boston Officials Livid Over Ad Stunt


Brian Damage
02-01-2007, 10:28 AM
Boston officials, livid about a publicity campaign that had disrupted the city by stirring fears of terrorism, vowed to prosecute those responsible and seek restitution.

Officials found a slew of blinking electronic signs adorning bridges and other high-profile spots across the city Wednesday, prompting the closing of a highway and the deployment of bomb squads.

The 38 signs were part of a promotion for Cartoon Network TV show "Aqua Teen Hunger Force," a surreal series about a talking milkshake, a box of fries and a meatball. The network is a parent of Turner Broadcasting Systems, Inc.

"It is outrageous, in a post 9/11 world, that a company would use this type of marketing scheme," Mayor Thomas Menino said. "I am prepared to take any and all legal action against Turner Broadcasting and its affiliates for any and all expenses incurred during the response to today's incidents."

The 1-foot tall signs resembled a circuit board, with protruding wires and batteries. Most depicted a boxy, cartoon character giving passersby the finger a more obvious sight when darkness fell.


Turner Broadcasting, a division of Time Warner Inc., apologized, but Boston authorities are still angry.

They arrested two men who put up the electronic promotions and vowed to hold Turner accountable for what Menino said was "corporate greed," that led to at least $500,000 in police costs.

Turner said the devices have been in place for two to three weeks in 10 cities: Boston; New York; Los Angeles; Chicago; Atlanta; Seattle; Portland, Ore.; Austin, Texas; San Francisco; and Philadelphia. As soon as the company realized the Boston problem, it said, law enforcement officials were told of their locations in all 10 cities.

"We apologize to the citizens of Boston that part of a marketing campaign was mistaken for a public danger," said Phil Kent, Turner chairman.

Kent said the marketing company that placed the signs, Interference Inc., was ordered to remove them immediately. Messages seeking additional comment from the Atlanta-based Cartoon Network were left with several publicists.

Highways, bridges and a section of the Charles River were shut down Wednesday and bomb squads were sent in. Turner notified them that the devices were part of a promotion at around 5 p.m., Boston officials said.

"Everyone can play a part by holding Turner Broadcasting to account for today's events," Suffolk District Attorney Daniel Conley said. "Viewers, advertisers, license holders, can and should make clear to them this sort of behavior is reckless, irresponsible and illegal."

"Commerce was disrupted, transportation routes were paralyzed, residents were stranded and relatives across the nation were in fear for their loved ones in the city of Boston," Conley said.

Peter Berdovsky, 27, of Arlington, and Sean Stevens, 28, of Charlestown, were each charged Wednesday night with one count of placing a hoax device and one count of disorderly conduct. State Attorney General Martha Coakley said they were hired to place the devices. Both men were to be arraigned Thursday morning.

Those conducting the campaign should have known the devices could cause panic because they were placed in sensitive areas, Coakley said. Authorities are investigating whether Turner and any other companies should be criminally charged, she said.

"We're not going to let this go without looking at the further roots of how this happened to cause the panic in this city," Coakley said.

In Seattle and several suburbs, the removal of the signs was low-key. "We haven't had any calls to 911 regarding this," Seattle police spokesman Sean Whitcomb said Wednesday. Police in Philadelphia said they believe their city had 56 devices.

In New York City, local news broadcasts showed images of the devices being collected, and the New York Post reported that police confiscated 41 in Manhattan and Brooklyn.

Interference had no immediate comment. A woman who answered the phone at the New York-based firm's offices Wednesday afternoon said the firm's CEO was out of town and would not be able to comment until Thursday.

Berdovsky, an artist, told The Boston Globe he was hired by Interference and said he was "a little kind of freaked out," by the furor.

"I find it kind of ridiculous that they're making these statements on TV that we must not be safe from terrorism, because they were up there for three weeks and no one noticed. It's pretty commonsensical to look at them and say this is a piece of art and installation," he told The Globe.

Berdovsky's attorney described the incident as a "misunderstanding."

"It's very disturbing that what was just an employment for a struggling artist turned into some major misunderstanding," Michael Rich told WHDH-TV.

A telephone voicemail box for Berdovsky was full Wednesday night. It could not immediately be determined if Stevens had legal counsel.

The first device to raise alarm in Boston was found by a transit worker at a subway and bus station underneath Interstate 93 on Wednesday morning, leading to the temporary shutdown of the station and the highway.

Later, police said four calls, all around 1 p.m., reported devices at the Boston University Bridge and the Longfellow Bridge, at a Boston street corner and at the Tufts-New England Medical Center.

Two devices, at the Longfellow Bridge and the medical center, however, turned out to be unrelated to the marketing campaign, Police Commissioner Edward Davis said.

The rash of calls around the same time is being investigated, Davis said. When asked if the calls were coordinated as part of the marketing campaign, he said: "There's no indication it came from panicked residents."

"Aqua Teen Hunger Force" is a cartoon with a cultish following that airs as part of a block of programs for adults on the Cartoon Network. A feature length film based on the show is slated for release March 23.

James
02-01-2007, 01:50 PM
If The Cartoon Network had stuck to exclusively airing cartoons that have stood the test of time like "Tom and Jerry" and "Woody Woodpecker", this would not have happened. (Think of The Cartoon Network being like Nick at Nite or TVLand--without the Originals, mind you!)

Lex Luthor
02-01-2007, 01:55 PM
What an incredibly stupid stunt! At minimum they should have told local officials so they would be prepared for any alarming calls. However I doubt it would have even been approved if proper channels were followed.

James
02-01-2007, 02:07 PM
I'm surprised that officials in the other cities mentioned did not discover this earlier, especially in this day and age.

JuicyCoutureGirl
02-01-2007, 04:13 PM
:rolleyes:

People are so damn stupid today.

80sTrivia
02-01-2007, 04:54 PM
I heard about this on the radio this morning... these guys must not be too bright to think that this stunt was going to go over well... :eek:

Courtnee
02-01-2007, 05:00 PM
There was this thing on Adult Swim about it last night. They apologized.

Chelsea
02-02-2007, 12:19 AM
There was this thing on Adult Swim about it last night. They apologized.

That's how big this brouhaha is - they apologized, on air, multiple times, seriously. The Williams Street crew are normally not very apologetic about things.

Janice
02-02-2007, 01:24 AM
I wonder if anyone will lose their jobs, lol. Stupid, moronic stunt.

Yooch
02-02-2007, 10:27 PM
As well they should be. Some heads should roll over this profound stupidity. Well, I'm not at all surprised; we're in the age of the 'jackass'-type mentality. And saying 'sorry' will just make it go away. I'm not even from Boston and I was livid.

Stopping commerce, utilizing emergency resources, impeding traffic, making people worry, etc. etc.; this is inexcusable.

When we have so much as a student pull a false fire alarm at our school as a prank, and the fire department and police have to come out, and kids miss class and people panic--it causes a lot of problems for everyone. In my town, just for something like this, the perpetrators pay heavily, and I mean heavily. And this is at a local level. Imagine at a city level--and, with people upset over possible terrorrism, the problem is compounded.

If I were the Boston officials or citizens, I'd be so d***** p*****, I wouldn't be able to see straight.

Central Perk
02-02-2007, 11:07 PM
I think the police are overreacting. I mean Cartoon Network could have alerted the police to be safe, but come on. These things look like light brites not bombs.

*Pleasant Tomorrow*
02-02-2007, 11:08 PM
I think the police are overreacting. I mean Cartoon Network could have alerted the police to be safe, but come on. These things look like light brites not bombs.
That's what I was thinking. How the hell do you mistake a light brite for a bomb so much that the situation got to the point that it did? :grr:

Brian Damage
02-02-2007, 11:23 PM
That's what I was thinking. How the hell do you mistake a light brite for a bomb so much that the situation got to the point that it did? :grr:


In this day and age, can you really tell what is a bomb and what is not?

Janice
02-02-2007, 11:27 PM
http://news.bostonherald.com/galleries/images/683715_bh_Feb022007_A001.001.jpg

Yooch
02-02-2007, 11:29 PM
In this day and age, can you really tell what is a bomb and what is not?

Exactly.

Brian Damage
02-06-2007, 11:15 AM
HOLLYWOOD - Turner Broadcasting Systems and Interference Inc. have agreed to pay the city of Boston $2 million for an advertising campaign that sparked a bomb scare last week.

More than three-dozen blinking electronic signs were found in Boston, Cambridge and Somerville, Massachusetts, on Wednesday, setting off widespread panic.

The signs featured a boxy cartoon character giving an obscene hand gesture and were part of an advertising campaign for the Cartoon Network's new show Aqua Teen Hunger Force.

According to Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, the financial agreement was reached with several state and local agencies to resolve any potential civil or criminal claims against the network.

The signs promoting the new show have also appeared in nine other major U.S. cities in recent weeks, but caused a panic in Boston with bomb squads responding to reports of the devices in subway stations and hanging from bridges

Janice
02-06-2007, 12:33 PM
http://news.bostonherald.com/galleries/images/15499_bh_Feb062007_A001.001.jpg

http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=181301&format=text


Suspects filmed chaotic response

Boston Herald Police Bureau Chief

The bomb hoax bozos whose light-up devices sparked a Boston terror panic were caught on camera standing with spectators and filming the massive police response, the Herald has learned.

Transit police surveillance photos taken at the Sullivan Square MBTA Orange Line station as police swarmed around one of the suspicious devices Wednesday morning clearly show the two men, sources said.

Peter Berdovsky, 28, was photographed holding a video camera filming the police response, including the transit bomb squad cop blowing up the device at 10:21 a.m. His prankster partner Sean Stevens, 27, stood alongside him.

The new evidence has surfaced amid speculation prosecutors may go easy on felony charges of planting a hoax device and disorderly conduct in return for some community service from the two men who were hired by a marketing firm to plant the cartoon promotional devices.

Berdovsky’s attorney, Jeffrey Pyle, said that his client was there filming the police response at the Sullivan Square scene, but only as a “video artist” responding to a friend’s call that there was a bomb scare near his Charlestown loft.

“He documents the world around him. He did not initially know that the event near his house was related to the (cartoon character) he placed there for Cartoon Network,” Pyle said. “He went home and called his employer, and they told him to sit tight.”

But their presence at the scene appears to contradict both men’s assertion that they did not know their actions had caused chaos.

“The minute they knew that police officers were racing across the city, firefighters were racing to the scene, and bomb techs were suiting up, and they did not call 911. That - that forms intent,” one high-ranking BPD official said last night. “Their being there could provide the proof of intent prosecutors need.”

Berdovsky’s employer, Interference Inc., along with Turner Broadcasting, agreed to make $2 million in restitution to the city yesterday and apologized for any inconvenience. No one in either company has been criminally charged. Stevens’ attorney, Michael Rich, did not return a call.

When asked why his client did not alert police that he was responsible for the device - which, by then, had sparked a massive law enforcement response and subway and highway shutdowns - Pyle said: “My client was assured by his employer that they would handle it.”

“The pictures show they were very interested in the whole scene. They had a decent camera with a telephoto lens. They were very carefully noting everything that was going on,” said one source who had seen the images. “They did not look like average spectators. They were actually so close to the scene, they had to be pushed back when we were clearing the area.”

Yesterday, Attorney General Martha Coakley said that she is engaged in ongoing negotiations with both suspects regarding the resolution of criminal charges.

But she said law enforcement officials were apparently kept in the dark intentionally, adding, “We believe at this stage that notification might have been sooner, could have been sooner, I’m not going to comment by whom.”