A massive crop circle that will troll Trump as he flies over the United Kingdom isn't the work of aliens,eroticized transference, but it's definitely sending a message.
The crop circle on Moat Farm in Stoke Mandeville says "блядь" in Russian, with "Trump" directly beneath it. The Russian word directly translates to "whore." It's also used as an exclamation, much like shit and damn. In this context, it probably translates to "Fuck Trump," possibly a jab at the president's chumminess toward Russian president Vladimir Putin. The circle is directly under Trump's flight path from London to Chequers, where Trump will visit Prime Minister Theresa May on Friday.
SEE ALSO: Someone has made a giant Trump blimp to protest his UK visitAccording to the farmer who owns the field and agreed to the stunt, the art ruined his crops and the harvest wouldn't be salvageable. He told the local newspaper the Bucks Herald that "there was a financial transaction" that was "renumeration" for the damages.
Here's a super dramatic video of the crop circle at all angles:
The Tenth Man, a British marketing agency, stepped forward and claimed responsibility for the crop circle. With the help of "crop circle specialists" Circlemakers, they wanted to create a PR stunt that would catch the president's eye.
A spokesperson for the agency told the Drum that "Trump occupies at least 60 percent of the news vacuum on a normal day" and that stunts need to be "big, brave, and bold" to get noticed. In a statement to the Bucks Herald, a Tenth Man spokesperson said, "It's almost as big as Donald Trump's ego so we're pretty confident he'll see it."
Donald Trump and Melania are mostly sidestepping London for their visit to the UK, as thousands of protestors flooded the streets to rally against him. British protestors have trolled the American president's visit by bumping Greenday's "American Idiot" to the top of music charts and flying an enormous blimp of Trump as a baby.
It's a good day for statement art.
Women feel more uncomfortable biking to work than men, Strava report finds8 gifts to get for the person you just started datingThe joy of listening to authors like Jonathan Van Ness read their own audiobooksBaby Yoda is the Being of the DecadeCops tell Uber driver to stop filming, but he's also a lawyerApple's iOS 13.3 update finally lets you disable those annoying Memoji stickersAirport builds Christmas tree from confiscated knives, scissors, box cutters, and lightersLos Angeles' LGBTQ pride will be replaced by a protest marchTop 9 emojis if you're, like, really into graphsHow the entertainment industry can catch up with Apple TV+'s 'See'The Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge Datapad is a secret weapon for immersion.Strong winds blow away 4Ivanka Trump's brand claims sales spiked after White House controversyCan you guess which state googled Baby Yoda the most in 2019?Facebook waited two weeks to tell employees payroll data was stolenFeeling powerless after the UK election result? Here are things you can do right now.Strong winds blow away 4The 10 best video games of 2019Samuel L. Jackson gets called out on Facebook and reacts with humility'Buffy' is the only show that prepared us for the Hellmouth of Tinder A Night and a Day and a Night and a Day and a Night and a Day in the Dark by Lisa Carver Glimmer: In Siena by Cynthia Zarin The Best Books of 2024, According to Friends of the Review: Part One by The Paris Review Passion, Jealousy, Love, and an Unquestionable Disdain for Art by Olivia Kan Fourth Sleeper: Rachel Sindler by Sophie Calle Time Travel by Cynthia Zarin Sixth and Seventh Sleepers: Graziella Rampacci and Françoise Jourdan Fifth Sleeper: Gérard Maillet by Sophie Calle On An African Abroad by Toye Oladinni The Paris Review – The End of Roadside Attractions by Jane Stern A Sex Memoir by Edmund White My Ex Recommends by The Paris Review Six Handbags by Simon Wu Accurate Models of Reality by Sophie Haigney and Olivia Kan The Equinox on Orchard Street by Cara Schacter Third Sleeper: Bob Garison by Sophie Calle Making a Claim on Language: A Conversation with Adania Shibli by Max Weiss The Prom of the Colorado River by Meg Bernhard Windows and Doors by Laurie Stone Suzanne and Louise by Hervé Guibert
1.6907s , 8263.15625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticized transference,】,Defense Information Network