Feb. 1st, 2007
The dust has begun to settle in Boston. If you have been ignoring the news for the last twenty-four hours or so, we had a bomb scare yesterday: the sudden discovery of dozens of mysterious electronic devices installed at outdoor locations throughout downtown Boston caused the city to shut down several roadways and bridges for several hours and destroy the mysterious things, until someone figured out that they were part of a guerilla marketing campaign for Aqua Teen Hunger Force, arranged by Turner Broadcasting.
(I'm not providing links -- if you need more background, go to your favorite news site and search for "Boston bomb")
It is hard for me to see that anyone involved in this debacle was really making with the smrts. The BPD certainly did not exactly have their finest hour. The first device that they were alerted to? That I can understand approaching with care, even if it doesn't appear to fit any known bomb profile. But once it had been neutralized and disassembled? It should not have taken a genius leap to figure out that they were following a pattern of defusing NON-BOMBS. The fact that they have gone on to arrest the guys who were hired to build and install these things is just a shameful attempt at saving face.
On the other hand, it's not as though Turner Broadcasting and the marketing company they retained for this stunt are blameless. I would love to have been in the planning meeting for this one:
"I have a pitch for our new ATHF campaign. Let's build a bunch of circuit boards with flashy lights and install them anonymously around major metropolitan areas!"
"But won't everyone be able to tell that it's a cheesy marketing campaign?"
"Good point. Let's just not include anything on the device that identifies us. And make sure that we don't coordinate with the local authorities either!"
"Perfect! What could go wrong?"
There's an old Bloom County comic strip, making fun of The People's Court, that has Judge Wapner saying, "Bailiff, would you please kick both these litigants in the butt?" That's about how I'm feeling today.
(I'm not providing links -- if you need more background, go to your favorite news site and search for "Boston bomb")
It is hard for me to see that anyone involved in this debacle was really making with the smrts. The BPD certainly did not exactly have their finest hour. The first device that they were alerted to? That I can understand approaching with care, even if it doesn't appear to fit any known bomb profile. But once it had been neutralized and disassembled? It should not have taken a genius leap to figure out that they were following a pattern of defusing NON-BOMBS. The fact that they have gone on to arrest the guys who were hired to build and install these things is just a shameful attempt at saving face.
On the other hand, it's not as though Turner Broadcasting and the marketing company they retained for this stunt are blameless. I would love to have been in the planning meeting for this one:
"I have a pitch for our new ATHF campaign. Let's build a bunch of circuit boards with flashy lights and install them anonymously around major metropolitan areas!"
"But won't everyone be able to tell that it's a cheesy marketing campaign?"
"Good point. Let's just not include anything on the device that identifies us. And make sure that we don't coordinate with the local authorities either!"
"Perfect! What could go wrong?"
There's an old Bloom County comic strip, making fun of The People's Court, that has Judge Wapner saying, "Bailiff, would you please kick both these litigants in the butt?" That's about how I'm feeling today.