Frequent NJ town hall menace breakdances in silence, complains about taxes before moonwalking away

He wanted to break down the issues.A man in New Jersey running for a committee in his township crashed a town hall meeting by bizarrely slipping into a sloppy breakdance routine before delivering a tirade against increased taxes — a stunt he regularly performs at the public hearings.Will Thilly, a resident of the township of Cranford, sashayed up to the podium during a town hall meeting on Tuesday, but stopped a few feet away and tried to breakdance.
Confounded witnesses clamped their hands over their mouths as they tried not to laugh, while others had to look away.He carried on for almost a whole minute, bopping along to nothing but the tune of his own shoes skidding against the floor.Then, he finally finished his painstaking trek to the podium — before letting out an exasperated sigh and jogging back to grab his paper and water.Once he’d doubled back to the podium, Thilly finally started speaking and walked the unwilling audience through his recent vacation in Monterrey, Mexico.“There’s no pizza there … [but] it’s a beautiful town with lots of history.
Anyone here afraid of flying?” Thilly asked.His flubbed crowd work attempts were consistently met with silence.
He asked the mum crowd if anyone wanted to watch him do a backspin — and performed one despite no one responding, the footage shows.After spinning repeatedly on his bottom with his legs in the air like an overturned turtle, he tried to signal for applause.No one in the audience so much as budged.
Finally, he returned to the podium on his feet and stared down the town officials in front of him.“Why did our taxes go up so much?” he asked plainly.Thilly has dedicated much of his public advocacy — and campaign for a seat on the Cranford Township Committee — to discussing local tax hikes and making developers pay their fair share.The town approved a referendum in January that allotted $55 million in funds to local schools, which Thilly believes was necessary “because developers a...