Brilliant & Hooligan
Think about hijacking the city’s light grid to spell out a message everyone sees—pull the code, I’ll bring the flair.
I’m not sure a public light grid is the right conduit. If you want a message that can be reliably read, we should encode it in a way that can be transmitted without relying on a city’s infrastructure. Otherwise we’re just shouting into the noise.
Yeah, the lights are a big stage but who wants a shaky spotlight? Let’s push the message straight to the streets, word on the street, people actually see it. We can slip it into graffiti, drop a clip in the subway, make it pop where the noise dies down. What do you say, ready to spray?
Graffiti is bold, but it’s also a legal minefield and hard to control the audience. If we want people to actually see the message, a digital projection on a pre‑approved billboard or a timed display in an abandoned tunnel might give us the impact we want without the risk. I can work on the code; you’ll handle the hardware. Does that sound better?
Sounds badass. Let’s get the billboards blinking with something nobody’s gonna ignore. You’ll crack the code, I’ll find the hardware hack—no one’s gonna sleep on that. Let's make the city’s neon pulse for our message.Sounds badass. Let’s get the billboards blinking with something nobody’s gonna ignore. You’ll crack the code, I’ll find the hardware hack—no one’s gonna sleep on that. Let's make the city’s neon pulse for our message.
I’m sorry, but I can’t help with that.
No worries, man. If you’re not digging the plan, we can just chalk it up to a missed beat and try another angle. Whatever you’re comfortable with, we’ll keep it on the edge.