Robocall Michael A. Brown
Brilliant, Mike Licht, brilliant.
The blogger over at Notions Capital has a plan to pay at-large council candidate Michael A. Brown back for his incessant phone calls over the past few months:
Call him back . . .
Campaign Office: 202-629-4240
Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge LLP: 202-478-7383Fax him . . .
1-866-885-1873
or email him . . . mbrown@eapdlaw.com
with a message like this:
Hello, Michael Brown. This is John Q. Public. I’ll be voting on November 4th, but not for anybody who uses “Robo-Calls.” So next election, don’t use automated phone calls to annoy me and invade my privacy.
How many times should you send the message?
How many times has Michael Brown robo-called you ?
If LL were truly mean, he would post Brown's cell phone number. You might be able to convince me in the comments.






5:58 pm
If LL were truly mean, he would post Brown’s cell phone number
You can always say it was a Halloween prank gone horribly wrong . . . (snort).
3:55 am
Do robo-calls even work? They've always struck me as a strange campaign tactic.
1:08 pm
Thanks for the e-mail. I had called the campaign office numerous times to have them take our number off their robo-list. For some reason we would get two (and once three) of each calls, sometimes in the same day. The most hilarious was the last one "look mcihael brown is campaigning in our neighborhood" I deleted it, then thought, hmmm maybe it was a spoof as he has never been in our neighborhood but it was on his website.
1:44 pm
I'm nominating Look, Michael Brown is Campaigning In Our Neighborhood For a Helen Hayes Award, specifically the Charles MacArthur Award for Outstanding New Play or Musical.
I laughed, I cried . . . .
8:15 pm
I wonder if the robocalls are the same as the radio ads. Those are annoying as well.
7:19 am
Has it been correct that robocalls are unlawful, with the exception of political and charitable purposes??