BALLOON BOY EXPOSES FAKE NEWS WHILE CBS NEW YORK SUPPRESSES WARNING OF ATTACKS ON FIRST AMENDMENT THAT LEAD TO LOVE GRAFFITI. How The Maverick Artist Victor Hugo And President Barack Hussein Obama Mutual Admiration Of Rat Dog Manifested A Modern Art Music Movement.
On the day Balloon Boy exposed fake U.S. news , for what it is worth, Victor-Hugo Vaca II was interviewed by a CBS New York reporter, for a segment on the CBS Evening News, questioning why police issued the artist a citation for displaying a bumper sticker on his BMW that proclaimed, “Crackhead Jesus is coming”.
As Victor-Hugo Vaca II headed to the Rat Dog concert afterwards, police and Secret Servicemen swarmed the artist and corralled him along with everyone on the block into a corner, behind barricades, for over an hour.
News crews surrounded Victor-Hugo Vaca II as he stood next to a man holding a cardboard sign that introduced him as RocOpera. The WPIX Newscaster at the scene, informed Victor-Hugo that his “1st Amendment story on CBS evening news never aired”. According to Wanda, a CBS New York producer, the fake news of Balloon Boy had pre-empted the canary-in-the-coal-mine of free speech in America documented in a Suffolk Times article by Erin Schultz titled, “Pulled Over In The Name Of Crackhead Jesus?“. The newspaper article records the following:
Traveling artist says Southold police officer profiled him.
A bumper sticker bearing the phrase “Crackhead Jesus is coming” got an author pulled over in Southold last month, the man told The Suffolk Times.
Victor-Hugo Vaca Jr., a multimedia artist formerly of Brooklyn who now calls the road home, said that Southold Town Police Officer Frank Lyburt violated his First Amendment rights by pulling him over Oct. 11, simply because the officer was offended by the bumper sticker on Mr. Vaca’s rear windshield.
“I wasn’t speeding and I knew there was nothing wrong with my car,” said Mr. Vaca, 39, noting that the sticker is a promotional tool for his graphic novel, “Crackhead Jesus.”
“[The officer] said he was doing me a favor by handing me that ticket, the same way someone knocks on your door on a Sunday morning, saying you’re wicked for not going to church.”
The wandering author, who claims to have traveled across the country raising awareness of issues not typically covered in mainstream media, said he was ticketed while driving to the Hampton International Film Festival to promote “Crackhead Jesus,” the story of a man who went to work one day high on crack and told his co-workers that they were his disciples.
“[The sticker] has nothing to do with Jesus Christ,” Mr. Vaca said. “It has to do with the modern devils out there.”
Southold Town Capt. Martin Flatley said the ticket issued to Mr. Vaca is a valid summons, adding that there is a section in vehicle and traffic law that prohibits “the placing of posters or stickers on windshields or rear windows of motor vehicles.”
“I believe Officer Lyburt might have stopped the driver for another violation but ended up writing him this summons,” Capt. Flatley said. “This section of law may not be written often, but it is a valid section. This is part of the officer’s discretion when performing a traffic stop.”
Mr. Vaca said Officer Lyburt appeared very upset with the bumper sticker after he scanned his Florida license.
“He came back to my car and asked me, ‘What’s the deal with the Crackhead Jesus sticker?'” Mr. Vaca said. “Here I am, a white guy in a BMW with all this fancy artwork in the back, and for the first time, I felt what it was like to be profiled.”
Mr. Vaca made an appearance in September at Rock the Harvest, a concert held in Southold to benefit The Retreat of East Hampton.
“So I’m in town to help raise money for battered women, and I get mistaken for a guy spitting in the face of God,” he said. “I went to Southold to do good work, and I leave getting punished.”
Mr. Vaca said he plans to drive back to Southold from Florida — where he is attending a music festival in Miami — to fight the ticket.
“So many people are apathetic — they’ll just pay the ticket and get it over with, but that’s the problem,” he said. “I’m not just going to pay this ticket. I’m going to take a chance to look deeper into this.”
Reporters informed Victor-Hugo Vaca II that because President Barrack Hussein Obama is a fan of Rat Dog, everyone on the New York City Street next to the concert venue, were detained against their will, in zones, by Police and Secret Service agents, to protect President Obama, while he attended the first half of the Rat Dog concert.
Victor-Hugo Vaca II missed the first-half of the Rat Dog show because of President Obama. However, as a result of their mutual appreciation of Rat Dog and The Grateful Dead, this Modern Art Music Movement™ work of art was born.
As seen being manifested in the Modern Art Music Movement™ MAMM Music Video, “Crackhead Jesus: Shake The City”, Produced, Directed and featuring the Maverick Artist Victor-Hugo with music By RocOpera.
Behind The Scenes: On set with the Maverick Artist Victor-Hugo, RocOpera, Joanne Togati and Paparazzi.
Portions of the music video were filmed inside the Gulfstream Park Racing and Casino in Hallandale Beach, Florida.
Behind The Scenes: RocOpera on MI-VI set with the Maverick Artist Victor-Hugo.
Portions of the music video were filmed inside the legendary MI-VI Nightclub, as seen on tv news and in print newspapers.
Maverick Artist Victor-Hugo, RocOpera and filmmaker, Chris Alonso, inside, “The Labyrinth Of Creativity Miami”.
Portions of the music video were filmed inside Victor-Hugo Vaca Jr.’s production studio in Miami known as, The Labyrinth of Creativity Miami.