Dumbasses at Turner Broadcasting

ma_guy

Internet Perv
Joined
May 26, 2002
Posts
12,880
Media Company Taking Responsibility For 'Hoax Devices'
Crews Respond To Bridges, Hospital


BOSTON -- Turner Broadcasting plans to take responsibility for the "hoax devices" that were found at several locations in and around Boston Wednesday that forced police bomb units to scramble throughout the area.

The incidents were part of a marketing campaign that involved a character from the cartoon show "Aqua Teen Hunger Force."

"The 'packages' in question are magnetic lights that pose no danger. They are part of an outdoor marketing campaign in 10 cities in support of Adult Swim's animated television show 'Aqua Teen Hunger Force,'" Turner Broadcasting said in a statement.


The company said that they have been in place for two to three weeks in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, Portland, Austin, San Francisco and Philadelphia.

Turner Broadcasting is in contact with local and federal law enforcement on the exact location of the billboards, according to the statement, and regrets that they were mistakenly thought to pose any danger.

"Emergency deployment teams were sent into the center of the city immediately upon these reports. There were significant shutdowns of not only highways, but rail traffic with the MBTA," Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said. "Several of the devices do have common characteristics, but it is too early to say how many are connected."

The first device was found under Interstate 93, and the state police bomb squad was called and detonated the package in Sullivan Square just before 10 a.m. Officials said it contained an electronic circuit board with some components that were "consistent with an improvised explosive device," but they said it had no explosives.

Several hours later, Boston Police said the department received four calls, all at about 1 p.m., reporting the devices. Officials responded to at least nine locations, including the Boston University Bridge, the Longfellow Bridge, the McGrath O'Brien Highway in Somerville, Harvard Avenue in Brighton, a location near the intersection of Stuart and Columbus streets, a location near Washington and Water streets and under the McCarthy Overpass in Somerville, according to Davis.

A device described by officials as a pipe bomb was found in the basement of the Tufts New England Medical Center at 185 Harrison Ave.

Davis said that residents should not be afraid to enter or leave the city and that additional police resources have been deployed to help ensure people that they are safe.

"It's a hoax, and it's not funny," Gov. Deval Patrick said.

Mayor Tom Menino said that all of the packages found posed no danger and that several police departments are working together to investigate suspicious calls about the devices.

"Public safety officials are all working together. There is no time for anyone to panic. We believe we have the situation in hand. Go about your business," Menino said. "The individuals who placed these packages should be warned that there is a heavy penalty -- two to five years imprisonment for each one of them. We are not playing around."

Storrow Drive eastbound was shut down for a brief time, and the MBTA suspended service on the Red Line and planned to bus afternoon commuters between Kendall and Park Street stations.

"Anytime you get a report of a suspicious device, it is always a concern," U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Scott Carr said. "We went ahead and shut down the waterways so we could clear the area and keep everybody safe."

"Our device was not an active device. We are still treating the area as a crime scene. There were no injuries. Everyone was evacuated properly, and everyone now back to their locations," Tufts New England Medical Center's Brooke Hynes said.

MBTA Lt. Sal Venturelli said police were told about the first package by a transit passenger who spotted it on a column that supports I-93. The parcel was located on an elevated structure above the bus way and below I-93 in the Charlestown section of Boston at about 8 a.m.

"This is a perfect example of our passengers taking part in Homeland Security," Venturelli said.



http://www.thebostonchannel.com/news/10890113/detail.html


WTF??? :confused:
 
paganangel said:
they didn't mistake an advertising campaign for explosives.

But they did take a dozen or so plastic boxes (with no markings on the exterior of them indicating what they were for) with eletronics in them and a few blinking lights and attach them to brigde piers and didn't bother to tell anyone responsible for public safety or the bridges that they were putting them there.
 
ma_guy said:
But they did take a dozen or so plastic boxes (with no markings on the exterior of them indicating what they were for) with eletronics in them and a few blinking lights and attach them to brigde piers and didn't bother to tell anyone responsible for public safety or the bridges that they were putting them there.
calling bullshit
 
paganangel said:
calling bullshit

Call it bullshit all you'd like. Here is a pic of the one that was attached to the pier on I-93:

http://www.thebostonchannel.com/2007/0131/10891376_240X180.jpg

Where are the markings on it indicating what it is and who put it there? It's a plastic box with the lights on top of it (I have no idea what the hell the figure is supposed to be) and it hardly looks professional.
 
paganangel said:
calling bullshit
The BBC reported "unidentified devices" earlier on today. Doesn't sound like billboards to me.
 
does it look like a bomb?

i've seen the character before, i have no idea what it is, but i know this, it's a marking.
 
paganangel said:
does it look like a bomb?


What exactly does a bomb look like? lol Plastic explosives can be pressed into pretty much anything you'd like.
 
Made my day extra difficult with closed bridges etc. And I got all the way home only to find out that our special ops team was being activated so I had to turn around and go back in, despite the fact that it's a hoax. So now I'm sitting here in east boston along with some state police and bomb squad personnel and we're all twiddling our thumbs. What a great use of resources.
 
Am I the only one who finds it hysterical that the picture of the Moonite is giving the finger, kind of like a big "F.U." to everybody in Boston that got their knickers in a twist over this?

Anybody who watches ATHF could have told them what it was.

But yeah, Turner is negligent for not telling anybody at City Hall they were doing this. Thankfully it didn't ruin my commute. :)
 
Dumbasses at:
Boston Police Force
Dept of Homeland Security

It wasn't a "hoax" it was a gross overreaction. And from the look of things, it would be more accurate to call the "devices" "Lite Brites". The aggressive rhetoric is spin-control, trying to cover up what was clearly a foolish shut-down.

News Flash: There could be a bomb anywhere at any time. But you know what else? You probably drive in your car every day and think nothing of it, but it's statistically an incredibly dangerous thing to do. If you smoke cigarettes you're pretty much guaranteeing to kill yourself. Obesity, alcoholism, lack of health insurance, AIDS: these are America's most deadly killers. Yet as a country we fear Terrorism more than these much more preventable causes of death. Frankly I'm more afraid of earthquakes than terrorists.


The overreaction shows that the Terrorists have already won. This is sad. :confused:
 
ma_guy said:
Media Company Taking Responsibility For 'Hoax Devices'
Crews Respond To Bridges, Hospital


BOSTON -- Turner Broadcasting plans to take responsibility for the "hoax devices" that were found at several locations in and around Boston Wednesday that forced police bomb units to scramble throughout the area.

The incidents were part of a marketing campaign that involved a character from the cartoon show "Aqua Teen Hunger Force."

"The 'packages' in question are magnetic lights that pose no danger. They are part of an outdoor marketing campaign in 10 cities in support of Adult Swim's animated television show 'Aqua Teen Hunger Force,'" Turner Broadcasting said in a statement.


The company said that they have been in place for two to three weeks in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Atlanta, Seattle, Portland, Austin, San Francisco and Philadelphia.

Turner Broadcasting is in contact with local and federal law enforcement on the exact location of the billboards, according to the statement, and regrets that they were mistakenly thought to pose any danger.

"Emergency deployment teams were sent into the center of the city immediately upon these reports. There were significant shutdowns of not only highways, but rail traffic with the MBTA," Boston Police Commissioner Ed Davis said. "Several of the devices do have common characteristics, but it is too early to say how many are connected."

The first device was found under Interstate 93, and the state police bomb squad was called and detonated the package in Sullivan Square just before 10 a.m. Officials said it contained an electronic circuit board with some components that were "consistent with an improvised explosive device," but they said it had no explosives.

Several hours later, Boston Police said the department received four calls, all at about 1 p.m., reporting the devices. Officials responded to at least nine locations, including the Boston University Bridge, the Longfellow Bridge, the McGrath O'Brien Highway in Somerville, Harvard Avenue in Brighton, a location near the intersection of Stuart and Columbus streets, a location near Washington and Water streets and under the McCarthy Overpass in Somerville, according to Davis.

A device described by officials as a pipe bomb was found in the basement of the Tufts New England Medical Center at 185 Harrison Ave.

Davis said that residents should not be afraid to enter or leave the city and that additional police resources have been deployed to help ensure people that they are safe.

"It's a hoax, and it's not funny," Gov. Deval Patrick said.

Mayor Tom Menino said that all of the packages found posed no danger and that several police departments are working together to investigate suspicious calls about the devices.

"Public safety officials are all working together. There is no time for anyone to panic. We believe we have the situation in hand. Go about your business," Menino said. "The individuals who placed these packages should be warned that there is a heavy penalty -- two to five years imprisonment for each one of them. We are not playing around."

Storrow Drive eastbound was shut down for a brief time, and the MBTA suspended service on the Red Line and planned to bus afternoon commuters between Kendall and Park Street stations.

"Anytime you get a report of a suspicious device, it is always a concern," U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Scott Carr said. "We went ahead and shut down the waterways so we could clear the area and keep everybody safe."

"Our device was not an active device. We are still treating the area as a crime scene. There were no injuries. Everyone was evacuated properly, and everyone now back to their locations," Tufts New England Medical Center's Brooke Hynes said.

MBTA Lt. Sal Venturelli said police were told about the first package by a transit passenger who spotted it on a column that supports I-93. The parcel was located on an elevated structure above the bus way and below I-93 in the Charlestown section of Boston at about 8 a.m.

"This is a perfect example of our passengers taking part in Homeland Security," Venturelli said.



http://www.thebostonchannel.com/news/10890113/detail.html


WTF??? :confused:
You know, the whole thing sounds not quite right to me. There are lots of signs that light up and blink and what not. I'd like to know more about who Turner was in partnership with on this. Also,why did ( it was either) the mayor or governor go on air addressing this as an issue of bomb hoaxes late today after he knew it wasn't the case, according to NPR.
 
Pseudomoniker said:
But yeah, Turner is negligent for not telling anybody at City Hall they were doing this. Thankfully it didn't ruin my commute. :)
Good point, it raises 2 questions, one, do you need some sort of license or permit to advertise? If so, Turner would have known about that. Second, what sort of advertising ploy is it if no one knows it is an advertisement? Wouldn't they be talking about the blinkies on tv ads or something?
 
ma_guy said:
Call it bullshit all you'd like. Here is a pic of the one that was attached to the pier on I-93:

http://www.thebostonchannel.com/2007/0131/10891376_240X180.jpg

Where are the markings on it indicating what it is and who put it there? It's a plastic box with the lights on top of it (I have no idea what the hell the figure is supposed to be) and it hardly looks professional.

I completely agreed with you until you posted that picture.

I can't say I'd mistake that for a bomb.
 
~hellbaby~ said:
You know, the whole thing sounds not quite right to me. There are lots of signs that light up and blink and what not. I'd like to know more about who Turner was in partnership with on this. Also,why did ( it was either) the mayor or governor go on air addressing this as an issue of bomb hoaxes late today after he knew it wasn't the case, according to NPR.

I don't know what NPR has been saying but I sat here was watched TV this afternoon and the local stations were covering it all afternoon. Both the Mayor and Chief of Police made their statements and then an hour later there was "Breaking News" that Turner Broadcasting had contacted the Boston Police and told them that the "signs" were their's. Someone at NPR may have seen the replays of the Mayor's comments after the Turner annoucement - I dunno. I can't explain their timeline.

They also had the owner of a Comic Book Store that they interviewed. One of these things was attached to the sign over her storefront (she claims it was put there Monday night/Tuesday morning) and she didn't know where it came from or who had put it up. She called police after the stories started breaking and they pulled the sign down from her store.
 
EternalWinter said:
I completely agreed with you until you posted that picture.

I can't say I'd mistake that for a bomb.

If they hadn't been stuck on piers on 4 different bridges around town people probably would have had more time to figure out what the image was supposed to be and that it was harmless.
 
Gee, what a stupid marketing campaign.

All they were able to do was get on the front page of every news org in America. :rolleyes:
 
Correct me if I am wrong, but aren't the Turner staff defacing both public and private property by affixing their boxes with no prior permission?

By the way, I just saw a short on Hardball about this a few minutes ago, and the film made the boxes look pretty real. I suspect that you cannot see the lights as anything other than potentially ominous blinking lights until you get pretty close.
 
NewEnglandGirl said:
Correct me if I am wrong, but aren't the Turner staff defacing both public and private property by affixing their boxes with no prior permission?

By the way, I just saw a short on Hardball about this a few minutes ago, and the film made the boxes look pretty real. I suspect that you cannot see the lights as anything other than potentially ominous blinking lights until you get pretty close.
good point. It was a stupid marketing idea and they should've known there would be a heightened sense of awareness in a post-9/11 America.
 
NewEnglandGirl said:
Correct me if I am wrong, but aren't the Turner staff defacing both public and private property by affixing their boxes with no prior permission?

I dunno. There is all kinds of crazy stuff tacked up on light poles and utility poles all over Boston. They probably have some sort of permitting process but I doubt it gets enforced (like most other ordinances in Boston. Arrgh!).

P.S. I left you a note in another thread the other day. You have PMs turned off so I haven't been able to contact you! :(
 
DV81 said:
good point. It was a stupid marketing idea

Really?

DV81 said:
they should've known there would be a heightened sense of awareness in a post-9/11 America.

You just made the case for their "stupid marketing idea".
 
Back
Top