Silent Treatment: Mimes Enforce Traffic Laws in Venezuela

Nov 06, 2011 13:23



And why not? Nearly everyone looks at a mime, especially when dressed in a brightly colored getup while eagerly making fun of people on the side of a busy street. The latest effort has about 120 mimes on the downtown streets of Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, making a (silent) scene any time a driver or pedestrian disobeys a traffic rule.

In Sao Paulo, Brazil, the black-and-white dressed mimes crowd street corners to urge pedestrians to follow the rules. Any infraction leads to frantic miming. And in Bogota, Colombia, the mimes signify a mainstay on the streets, joining with the police officers.

Officials hope that using the visible, yet less-threatening, tactic of mimes can help break bad habits in a more congenial way. The mimes in Caracas have reported mostly compliance with their gesturing, although, as expected, the enjoyment of the mimes hasn’t proven universal. It seems some folks don’t take rebuke well, even the silly, silent variety.

Some mimes simply wave their fingers at knowingly lawless drivers, while others encourage drivers to stop, slow down or otherwise completely change their reckless driving.

And with the wild-and wildly loud-streets in the big cities of South America, maybe the silent miming is the only kind of enforcement drivers can really hear.

Time

not the onion, free speech, lol wut, art, totally awesome, venezuela, law

Previous post Next post
Up