856 Comments for Rockland Psychiatric Center

wrote:
Beautiful!
wrote:
Great picture...so dramatic!
wrote:
He's smiling 'cause, he's ~evil~.

He's about to feed it to that young girl and watch her choke on it.
wrote:
I think that the clown is smiling because he's about to munch on that giant paint chip.
wrote:
LoL! Oh geeze! :0)
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Oh yes!!! The padding would be over the speaker as well, creating a 'muffle' effect on the music. LOL
wrote:
ROFL! That's my favourite song! LoL! Just kidding... :0)

I guess emily would be thankful that it's padded if that's what was playing when she got put in there! LoL!
wrote:
No windows, no lights, no seats, just one wall mounted speaker, blasting "Dominque" by The Singing Nun over and over and over again.

Do you still want to be locked in a padded room? (LOL)
wrote:
i think it would be alsome to be put in a padded room and a straight jacket..that has been my dream since i was 11 years old 6th grade
wrote:
thats like....the worst thing i've ever seen.......the painting not the photo :\ clowns freak me out
wrote:
I t looks like an image out of the Twilight Zone.
wrote:
Oh, goodness! Clowns are creepy end of story and cisco is scary too!
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I think Mamils is right, those aren't switches on the top, they're drawbars which are typical of a Hammond.
wrote:
Wow, those lights are worth some serious money. It looks to be in working order, too.
wrote:
Looks like either Bogen or Argos speakers on the walls between the stage opening and the grate above the doors, they look to be boxes with 12 six or 8 inch speakers each in them. These are pretty typical for a sound system from that time period. Probably powered by a 15 to 35 watt 70-volt commercial amplifier. Not anything remotely like what would be used in a theater today.