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Weird street act that has been horrifying major city since the 80s
Weird street act that has been horrifying major city since the 80s

News.com.au

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • News.com.au

Weird street act that has been horrifying major city since the 80s

There's something deeply unsettling about walking down a street and realising the path you just stepped on is breathing. But, in New York – a city where nothing shocks anyone anymore – a street performance artist named 'Kevin Carpet' has raised eyebrows for forcing people to do exactly that. His art? Undetermined. His medium? Carpet. It goes something like this: Wrapping himself in carpet and lying motionless in public spaces, inviting strangers to walk on him. Some think it's art, some think it's a prank – and others just think it's incredibly creepy. Kevin is no stranger to attention. He has been in the 'human carpet' business since the 80s. But his most recent 'exhibition' has reignited NYC's oldest debate. Is Kevin Carpet just plain old weird? In a clip posted to social media, which has gathered over 3.5 million views, many branded it 'perverted' and 'sick'. Kevin can be seen lying on the floor in broad daylight while unassuming pedestrians jump over or step on him. He can even be heard saying 'ow' as a couple walk over him. The woman filming the video, NYC local Taylor Pare, reveals that Kevin has been 'going around for years with his carpet, typically in the party scene'. 'What I don't love about this is that it's not consensual at all because nobody knows there's a person in there,' she states in the TikTok video. 'It's alarming. Someone could trip. If it's a sexual desire or fetish it should be disclosed to all parties,' she adds. Ms Pare can then be heard warning two men who look hesitant to approach the carpet. 'There's a person in there,' she says. 'Is it like an art thing?,' one man asks. 'No, they just like to be in carpets and not tell people about it,' she replies. Viewers were left divided over the scene with some even dubbing Kevin as 'NYC clubbing royalty'. 'That's Kevin Carpet!!! I used to go dance in Queens 10 years ago when he was in the scene. It's amazing he's still around,' said one viewer. 'That's just Kevin carpet,' said another unfazed person. One viewer came to the staunch defence of Kevin saying, 'I actually find it pretty messed up that you're subjecting him to online criticism – mind your business?' Others were not so willing to brush the situation under the rug. 'This isn't even funny, this is genuinely strange,' said one concerned viewer. 'I'm so sick of perverted people,' echoed another. In an interview with The Cut in 2022, Kevin insisted his pastime was not a sexual fetish. 'This is not a fetish for me. I don't get off on it,' he said. 'It's a Zen-type state. I'm feeling the people, hearing what they're talking about. I'm looking down at everyone hanging out, and I just phase out of being a person.' In a 2008 interview Lady Gaga raved about a 'sex party' where 'there's a lot of people hanging out, getting drunk, having a good time,' and 'a guy wrapped in a carpet underneath the bar'. Sounds like someone we know…

A day in the life of Jakarta's ‘manusia silver', the painted beggars who struggle for a dignified future
A day in the life of Jakarta's ‘manusia silver', the painted beggars who struggle for a dignified future

Malay Mail

time07-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Malay Mail

A day in the life of Jakarta's ‘manusia silver', the painted beggars who struggle for a dignified future

JAKARTA, May 8 — On a rainy day in Indonesia's capital Jakarta, three men coated in metallic paint known as the 'manusia silver', or silvermen, brave the elements at an intersection near a mall to ask drivers for change. It is an arresting act that comes with health risks, one some young Indonesians feel is necessary to make ends meet as the cost of living worsens and jobs dwindle after the Covid pandemic. 'I'm ashamed to earn money like this. I want to find a real, more dignified job,' said Ari Munandar, 25. 'But the embarrassment disappears when you remember that your daughter and your wife are at home.' Barefoot, dressed only in shorts and daubed head to toe by the irritating paint, Ari, his brother Keris and their friend Riyan Ahmad Fazriyansah each take a lane in the road. Street performers Keris Munandar (right) and his neighbour Riyan Ahmad Fazriyansah painting their bodies silver in Jakarta April 7, 2025. — AFP pic When the cars come to a stop they strike robotic poses in front of the drivers. 'Good afternoon, have a nice drive,' says Ari. The poses have little meaning other than to attract cash. 'I do them because one day I saw a friend earn more by doing them,' he said, moving between cars, holding out a bucket for donations. On a good day they can pocket up to 200,000 rupiah (RM50), but typically earn around 120,000. That's much less than Jakarta's monthly minimum wage of five million rupiah and barely enough to cover daily expenses. Street performer Ari Munandar, with his body painted silver, posing for tips in the rain at an intersection in Jakarta April 1, 2025. — AFP pic 'I'm not going to eat lunch, just drink and smoke,' said Ari. Every penny counts in a country where prices have risen steadily in recent years. A kilogram of rice, the archipelago's main staple, jumped by 27 per cent between 2015 and 2025, according to statistics agency data. And behind the paint, the friends are clearly undernourished. None are taller than 172cm nor weigh more than 55 kilograms. Street performer Ari Munandar, with his body painted silver, receives a tip in the rain at an intersection in Jakarta April 1, 2025. — AFP pic 'Stings my eyes' A lack of employment opportunity is the main cause of young men and women taking to the streets, they say. 'Since I was made redundant in 2019 I've been begging,' said Ari. 'Before that, I worked cleaning toilets.' According to government data, the number of people living below the poverty line in metropolitan Jakarta — a megalopolis of 11 million people — was up from 362,000 in 2019 to 449,000 as of September 2024. 'Many young people with few qualifications between the ages of 20 and 40 have found themselves unemployed,' said Bhima Yudistira, executive director of the Centre of Economic and Law Studies. 'Even though there is no national count, there has been a huge rise in begging in Jakarta after the pandemic of 2021.' Street performer Keris Munandar checks the silver paint on his face in a mirror inside an abandoned house where he and others hide their belongings before performing at an intersection in Jakarta April 7, 2025. — AFP pic After five hours at the intersection, the group returns home by hitchhiking a ride from a tuk-tuk. The three pile into the back, counting their meagre earnings and lighting a cigarette to share. Once dropped off, they walk by a polluted river and across a railway line to their Jakarta slum. Far from the capital's high-rises, children play near the tracks to the rhythm of the trains as Ari makes his way back to remove the silver. The paint, similar to that used for screen-printing on fabric, is not easy to remove. Street performer Keris Munandar bathes to clean silver paint off his body as his daughter Nimas Apriyani helps him in front of their home in Jakarta April 1, 2025. — AFP pic Squatting in front of a well and buckets filled with water, he splashes his body before scrubbing fiercely, his one-year-old daughter Arisya watching. 'At first the paint burned and I had a blister on my neck, but now it only stings my eyes,' he said. The shower reveals a new, younger man. Once dry, he heads home to play with Arisya. 'As soon as I'm here I forget all the fatigue and the hardship,' he says, smiling. 'But I hope she never does what I do.' — AFP

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