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![]() Reminds me of the movie "The Game" with Michael Douglas.
http://www.activedayton.com/ddn/news/0816kidnapfun.html Designer kidnapping lastest extreme sport Clients pay $1,500 to be abducted By Shelley Emling Cox News Service NEW YORK | Bungee jumping lost its white-knuckle appeal? Skydiving grown as lackluster as a kiddie roller coaster? Don't fret. Today's stimulus-seeking New Yorkers have found a new adrenaline rush: designer kidnapping. You allow yourself to be bound, gagged, roughed up a bit and ripped from your daily life. And you get to pay thousands of dollars for the privilege. The business scheme is the brainchild of Brock Enright, 25, an artist who grew up in Virginia Beach, Va. ‘‘Many people treat it like the latest in extreme sports — it's like a fun house that's been brought right to you,'' Enright said. Clients pay $1,500 on up to be snatched and carted away for a period that can last hours — or several days. Every client's kidnapping is customized, depending on their preferences. ‘‘People will give me a window of opportunity to do the kidnapping. Some people give me a window of a week. Some people give me a window of a month. I do surveillance and figure out their most vulnerable time during that window, and that's when we do it,'' he said. Sculptor Jason Peters, 25, has purchased three kidnappings so far. He compares the experience to running a marathon: You may not like it while it's actually going on, but afterwards you're proud you made it through. He said each kidnapping is different, although ‘‘I've always told them I never want any broken legs or cuts, even if I am able to take a certain amount of pain. ‘‘I'm usually kidnapped for anywhere from about 10 to 20 hours,'' he said. ‘‘Once I was blindfolded so I had to depend on my other senses. ‘‘I like it because it's a way to test yourself and to find out more about yourself,'' he concluded. The New York Police Department's hands are tied so long as no laws are broken and participating parties are consenting adults. But a police spokesperson said that the practice is not something the department condones. Critics charge such a violent activity shouldn't be portrayed as fun and games when children are being kidnapped and killed. Just this week, young children in California and Texas were taken from their families by strangers before being found and returned. Enright said his service is for consenting adults, not non-consenting children, so ‘‘it's a very different thing.'' And although some clients have been worked over a little, everyone is given a code word they can scream out to stop the kidnapping any time it becomes too scary. But Jane Grady at the Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence in Boulder, Colo., said she hopes designer kidnappings don't become a trend. ‘‘This sounds too bizarre,'' she said. ‘‘Why would someone want to do this? Because they can't find anything else in life to enjoy?'' Enright's business started as an underground service for his thrill-hungry friends that was opened up to the public after an acquaintance agreed to pay $300 to be kidnapped. Business has taken off this summer strictly through word of mouth, since Enright hasn't advertised. He said demand is growing so fast he'd consider launching the service in other big cities such as Atlanta, Chicago or Miami. Enright, who relies on a cast of about 15 operatives — or ‘‘birds,'' as he dubs them — said his designer kidnappings are big productions ‘‘in that I have to hire actors, gather the props and then set everything up.'' So far about 26 people have paid for his service, and he's currently designing eight more abductions. His clientele is split evenly between men and women, with most customers in their 20s. The oldest has been 45. Some people want to be kidnapped on the streets of Manhattan. Others want to be kidnapped from outside their homes. Some people understand where they are going, and some don't. The thrill comes in not knowing when the ‘‘birds'' will swoop in and strike. ‘‘So far most people seem to think we're participating in the filming of a movie or something, and no one has interfered when we've kidnapped on the streets,'' said Enright. [From the Dayton Daily News: 08.16.2002] |
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