That's the address of a trailer for the 2016 animated movie, "Sing." The trailer alone references both apartments in which I've been criminally victimized by voyeurism. I didn't see the movie.
When I moved to the apartment from which I'll be evicted in April 2017 if I don't move into homelessness before then, I played the Gypsy Kings at YouTube on my phone. I hoped that there wouldn't be cameras in this apartment, but I was afraid there were. At neither this apartment nor the apartment that I had at Braintree Village did I use the toilet, change my clothes, or shower without turning off the lights and blocking the bottom of the door with a towel so that light couldn't get in from the rest of the apartment.
When I realized, from the conglomerate's references to what it was seeing and hearing in my apartment, that I was again being criminally victimized by voyeurism, I spent months terrified to confront the property management or tell the police. I knew that the voyeurism would be denied, that the police wouldn't help me, and that I'd be evicted, and that's what's happening.
This is how much money this movie, which is one of the many movies that are full of jokes about me, has made, according to Google:
It has a PG rating, so probably a lot of people took their children to see it, not knowing that it's full of conglomerate injokes about the crimes of voyeurism and involuntary pornography committed against homeless people and psychiatric patients and many other people in the Boston area.
http://homelesspeoplearepeople.blogspot.com/2017/03/it-wasn-until-i-called-board-of-health.html
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, March 10, 2017 @ 10:33 p.m./addition March 11, 2017 @ 3:50 p.m.