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Sowing 'Terror on the Streets'
For a Zephyrhills entrepreneur, fear becomes a marketing tool.
By THOMAS LAKE, Times Staff Writer
Published December 10, 2007
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Matt Heller, whose kits give cars a variation on a train horn, markets them with videos of people and animals being scared witless by the earsplitting assault.
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[David Degner | Times]
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[David Degner | Times]
Here's the business end of one of the train horn setups. This one is attached where the spare tire would usually be.
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When the weapon is fired at close range it sends the target into a minor convulsion: The hands go up, as if to shield the face, the knees bend toward a defensive crouch, and the whole body recoils from the force. This is meant to be hilarious.
The weapon is a customized car horn, tuned and amplified to sound like the horn of a freight train, mounted on a long black sedan. Two men are inside; one has a video camera.
They blast thugs on the street and women at the drive-through. They blast an old man in high pants. They blast a cat and some dogs and a herd of horses. They ask people for directions and the people come close and then they get blasted.
A child covers one ear and a young woman clutches her heart. A homeless man begs for mercy. A man on crutches crosses the street in front of them and they blast him and he does not fall but he trembles.
The men in the car laugh very hard.
"Hornblasters.com!" one of them yells.
He is referring to the company that sells the train horns, from a garage on a one-lane dirt road in Zephyrhills. He does not work for Hornblasters, but he has played a vital role in its success.
This is, after all, the Internet age, where notoriety has cash value and terror can be a marketing tool.
Matt Heller, the founder of Hornblasters, admits he has mixed feelings about the videos that drive demand for his horns.
"I signed a deal with the devil," he said, only half-joking.
Heller, 26, said Hornblasters began around 2002, when he drove a low-rider pickup truck to work at the Home Depot on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard in New Tampa. Other drivers frequently cut him off, perhaps because they didn't notice his small truck. Heller had always loved trains, and he got an idea: He went on eBay, bought a used Airchime train horn and found a way to power it through his truck's pneumatic suspension. Suddenly, he could punish inconsiderate drivers.
"I was just waiting for someone to cut me off," he said.
Fellow motorists were both startled and impressed. Some rolled down their windows at traffic lights to ask him where they could get such a horn.
Business is a blast
Heller does not necessarily fit the profile of high-tech entrepreneur: He has no formal business education, and he has been arrested on charges of grand theft and domestic battery, though in both cases the charges were dropped. Nevertheless, he realized his idea could make him some money. He started Hornblasters with a Capital One credit card.
His first breakthrough came when he cut a deal with a toy manufacturer to produce a high-grade plastic replica of a train horn. It's not as loud as the original, but it sounds similar and it's much cheaper. A complete setup, with air compressor and installation, can be had for about $600 - if you're willing to risk getting a ticket under a state law against the unreasonable blowing of horns.
Heller's second breakthrough came when a car salesman in Jacksonville bought one of his horns, and then another and another, until he had equipped his Mercury Marauder with nearly $8,000 worth of horns.
The car salesman's name was Randy Lindsey. He enjoyed scaring friends with his furious new trumpets, but then he discovered it was even more fun to scare strangers. He and a friend started videotaping their shenanigans. He mailed tapes to Heller, who ignored them until Lindsey got a client with video-editing skills to put the footage on DVD. Heller took another look and saw an opportunity. The video clips got a name: Terror on the Streets.
A Web phenomenon
The clips spread through the Internet like viruses. They were viewed nearly 600,000 times on YouTube alone. Traffic to the Hornblasters Web site increased dramatically, and so did sales. Heller won't say exactly how many horns he has sold.
Then something changed. Lindsey blames the shifting winds of karma. His wife kicked him out. He was arrested on an allegation that he got drunk and fired a gun at someone and missed. According to the State Attorney's Office in Duval County, he pleaded no contest. He was sentenced to 90 days in jail.
Lindsey stopped terrorizing people. He sold the Marauder to Heller. He is trying to clean up his life.
"I'm ashamed," he said. "I ... sure ain't going to be blowing any horns anymore."
Now Heller has a shortage of fresh train-horn footage. He says his lawyer has advised him not to produce any terror clips himself. Web traffic has plummeted, and so have sales.
Heller points out that his horns have nonthreatening applications - such as scaring birds at a fish hatchery or warning miners deep in the earth - but the Terror on the Streets videos are the most vivid way to show them off. He has employees to pay and creditors to appease. He still displays the clips on his Web site.
There are at least 10 installments of Terror on the Streets. There are hundreds of victims. It will cost you nothing to watch them recoil.
Times staff members Jamal Thalji, John Martin and Caryn Baird contributed to this report. Thomas Lake can be reached at tlake@sptimes.com or toll-free at 1-800-333-7505, ext. 6245.
[Last modified December 9, 2007, 22:05:13]
Share your thoughts on this story
Comments on this article
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by Michelle
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12/17/07 12:24 AM
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So, where can I buy these again? Hornblasters.com? I'll be sure to buy a set and scare all the cry babies in here. Train horns are Red Neck Crack.
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by Brad
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12/15/07 08:25 AM
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Scaring people with the horns is not the smartest of ideas but everyone needs to realize how many people do stupid things on the roads Ie: cutting people off, no signals, sudden stops cause they missed their turn, talkn on the phone,why not blast'em
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by John
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12/12/07 03:17 PM
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Hey Matt,
Keep that lawyer handy. Now that everyone knows who and where you are, he should be a busy dude.
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by Laurie
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12/11/07 11:17 PM
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I've seen this video and think it's a shame. I have a set of train horns on my truck and do not use them during normal driving. They are for for truck show I attend and fun only. I don't want someone to have a heart attack. This guy is a moron.
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by Carry
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12/11/07 05:09 PM
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It will cost you nothing to watch hundreds of victims recoil? Thomas Lake, Heller, sadists. Did you feel like you missed out on atrocities in war? Terrorism, Nazi Germany. What gives????
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by Steve
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12/11/07 02:39 PM
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As a professional driver, I am dismayed that drivers frequently use a car horn as a poor substitute for needed driving skills and courtesy on the road. These loud horns only further contribute to the melee that now passes for "normal" traffic.
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by Jamie
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12/11/07 01:42 PM
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I loved this article because now I have a name and a face to put to my FURY after being assaulted by one of these horns while riding my bicycle, which startled me so much I wrecked my Trek; bent frame, busted my lip and a grudge..here I come Matt.
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by Rick
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12/11/07 11:28 AM
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Wow,all the tailgating,non-signalling,slow in the passing lane cut-off artists don't like the threat of retaliation.A blast from a horn is better than the bat upside the head that you deserve.But,scaring pedestrians is abusing a good tool.
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by John
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12/11/07 10:53 AM
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And newspapers wonder why their circulation is droping.
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by Ron
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12/11/07 09:14 AM
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Yo, Yo. Blow a set of these near me and I'll blow your brains out.
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by John
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12/11/07 05:53 AM
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Hey great idea! I mounted air horns on a motorcycle years ago - in self defense. These horns would really go well on my diesel pickup, but I'd rather have a Vulcan 20mm cannon - loaded with blanks of course. Boys will be boys.
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by Disgusted
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12/11/07 02:14 AM
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What happened to Nelson Poynter's newspaper? Promoting nastiness and harming innocent people as funny?Why not publish something USEFUL?There is so much REAL NEWS out there that I never see in my home town paper-and that is wrong.
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by XV
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12/11/07 01:47 AM
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This is hilarious.I think this guy is smarter than most of your readers. He saw a business opportunity and took action. I bet most of these complaining degenerates posting still work for someone else.America was started by people of action like him.
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by d.
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12/10/07 11:03 PM
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All of you who think Thomas Lake is 'endorsing' this idiotic behavior by simply bringing this story to our attention were probably held back in the 2nd grade. You are just as dimwitted as the punk with the train horn.
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by C
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12/10/07 05:36 PM
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I've heard those horns. Whose neighborhood are they blowing them in certainly not the suburbs. If they were this article would not be praising this behavior like it's something to look up to. It's noise pollution!! and It's not cute to scare people!
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by Dave
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12/10/07 04:11 PM
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There was a time when the Times was an award winning newspaper. It was a source widely quoted by other papers. From what I see now it's best use is to line litter boxes.
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by Mitch
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12/10/07 01:33 PM
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A one-sided story? Even if this loser has another side to his story he doesn't deserve to have it published. Typical trash.
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by Frank
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12/10/07 12:55 PM
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Well, Thomas Lake, I hope he blows this thing near your house. I'm sure you will just laugh and laugh all day.
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by Daniel
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12/10/07 12:28 PM
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This product is absolutely sickening. Even worse for SPT to do a story glorifying a form of assult and battery on the innocent public. I can't wait for victims to take class action against this company and owners of this product. Shame on you SPT!
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by doug
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12/10/07 12:03 PM
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Wow! I guess the spt never expected this kind of response. Just shows how out of touch you are.
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by ds
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12/10/07 11:57 AM
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Geez. I wonder why he's been in trouble before. Blow one of your damn horns near me like that and I'll sue your pathetic little @$$. Grow up and do something productive with your life.
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by Conrad
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12/10/07 11:53 AM
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So people go out of their way to help someone with directions and what they get is a blast for a "super horn"? Nice. I hope somebody keys this moron's car.
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by Sue
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12/10/07 11:48 AM
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Twice I've been in traffic when someone let loose with one of those idiotic horns. Both times we were stopped at red lights. Only idiots and jerks would want one of these - and yes, I can see the distinct possibility of one causing an accident.
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by JoeF
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12/10/07 11:46 AM
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Somebody, find this dawn car and burn it.
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by AJ
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12/10/07 11:11 AM
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THIS IS NOT NEWS! SHAME! How can the Times promote such an irresponsible product. "It will cost you nothing to watch." Yeah, that sounds good until some kid dies in a fatal accident emulating what you are promoting. THIS IS NOT NEWS! SHAME!
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by RJ
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12/10/07 10:59 AM
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Another one sided story. I think he failed to mention everything he's overcome & how he trys to help every person he comes in contact with and donates to causes like breast cancer & childrens cancer. The real jackass is the one passing judgement
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by YO
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12/10/07 10:57 AM
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FEEL WHEN THEY WANT TO THROW THE BALL AND HEES IN A WHEEL CHAIR.SO I WISH I COULD FIND A SET OF HORNS THAT WOULD SHATTER GLASS AND EARDRUMS AND I WOULD USE THEM ON EVERY CRAPPY DRIVER ON THE ROAD. AND ILL GIVE MY DAUGHTERS A KISS TONIGHT FOR YOU.
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by YO
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12/10/07 10:52 AM
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THAT FEEL THEY CAN TAKE YOUR LIFE AT ANY TIME BY CHANGING LANES. I HAVE A SET OF THESE HORNS THEY WERE 750.00 INSTALLED ON MY VEHICLE AND MY LIFE IS WORTH WELL MORE THAN 750.00 I HAVE A WIFE AND CHILDREN AND I WANT TO MAKE IT HOME TO THEM EVERYNIGHT
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by YO
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12/10/07 10:49 AM
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SO I AGREE THE TORTURE TO UNSUSPECTING CITIZENS AND ANIMALS ARE NOTHING TO BE PROUD OF. BUT LETS LOOK AT THE REASON SOMEONE WOULD HAVE TO COME UP WITH SOMETHING LIKE THIS ,REDLIGHT RUNNERS,TAILGATERS,AND SENIOR CITIZENS WHO FEEL THEY CAN TAKE -TBC
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by Bill
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12/10/07 10:46 AM
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Get a life, loser.
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by Jake
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12/10/07 10:45 AM
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It sounds like the Times is trying to build support for this moron. Why?
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by Mitch
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12/10/07 10:37 AM
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Sue Carlton would probably champion this fool as a civil liberties leader.
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by chris
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12/10/07 10:36 AM
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Hey, Saint Pete times, thanks for the commercial for this crap! Outstanding journalism as always.
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by chad
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12/10/07 10:32 AM
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This isn't an article, it's a commercial for stupidity being sold by a criminal. Nice work, Times.
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by justme
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12/10/07 10:28 AM
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Isn't there a law against this kind of crap? So when he causes an accident or someone to have a heart attack will he be charged with murder?
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