5150, the Amazon profile formerly known as Enrique

Yet another profile created by the parent used to attack truthseekers and give false praise to their own products sold on Amazon is the profile, “5150”.  The name on this profile has changed multiple times.  Before being 5150, it was “Enrique”. But it is obviously Ms. Waters, as anyone can see from the content of the comments.

Screenshot below.  This is a comment that appeared in a review for the book the Waters were selling on Amazon.  The book has many negative comments.  The majority of the comments are negative, but it should be pointed out that NONE of the comments are attacking or bullying the child.  Rather, they are overwhelmingly concerned about the authenticity of the art and worried that this non-verbal, autistic child is being exploited by the parents.

Also, the quality and content of the book itself appears to be rather low quality and poorly assembled.  Most of the $45.00 book’s content seems to be more blatant self-promotion (i.e., “Look at all of the celebrities that we got autographs from, and please go to our websites and buy stuff”).  The images in the book are predominantly cellphone photos of art which is already available to see on the internet for free on their Facebook page.

5150comment

Here is a link to the comments on Amazon.

Anyone can read the comments for themselves:  The product reviews of the Amazon book

*Please note that if you hover over the link to the Amazon page, the URL begins with ‘HTTPS‘, indicating that it is a secure internet link and cannot be a virus.

There is a new video channel on YouTube related to the Candy Waters Autism Artist scam’

Some of the concerned citizens and skeptics of the ‘Candy Waters Autism Artist’ business have created a YouTube channel for documenting their concerns. Here is the link:

Autism Artists

“This page raises awareness of the Water’s Autism Art Scam.
Sharing facts of how Faith, Love and Hope translated to Fraud, Larceny and Harassment.
These videos are from multiple victims and all based on facts.”

Please note that the blog authors of this Beware of Art Scams blog are in no way connected to the YouTube page and have no control or authority over its content.

Facebook page: Boycott Products by ‘Candy Waters Autism Artist’

 

A new page was created on Facebook, made by victims of the ‘Candy Waters Autism Artist’ scam and other people who question the authenticity and ethics of the products.  Here is the link:

Boycott “Unspoken Gift” Candy Waters Autism Artist Book

It contains many photos, videos, and screenshots that document evidence of the Waters’ lies and deceptive business practices.

Please note that the blog authors of this Beware of Art Scams blog are not connected to the Facebook page and do not have any authority over its content.

 

Facebook Group: Waters Autism Artist Scam, plus video

On the Facebook page “Waters Autism Artist Scam”, there is more information about the Waters faked-art controversy.  One person, who is also a parent of a child with autism, posted this video:

https://www.facebook.com/Waters-Autism-Artist-Scam-1786330378286003/?hc_ref=NEWSFEED&fref=nf

It outlines information that shows how Candy is used as a marketing tool, but has no actual power or financial benefit to the money being made by the scam.

***Keep in mind that the URL to this video link begins with “HTTPS”, indicating that it is a safe and secure link.  If you don’t want to click the link, you can also search on Facebook with the words “Waters Autism Artist Scam” and it can be found that way.

The only one?

 

screenshotvideo

 

The parents are currently claiming that Candy “is the only artist who has autism and is nonverbal to have full videos of herself creating art“.

There are several things about this that are completely untrue:

 

The videos put out by the parents on the Facebook page are not “full videos”.  They are highly edited, full of jump cuts and mystery hands in some portions.  The mystery hands (that are conveniently not in the camera shots at strategic times) are making brush strokes that the child does have appear to have the motor skills or natural desire to create.

The art being created in the videos is dramatically different from the designs being marketed on Zazzle, PAOM, and other print-on-demand sites for profit.  These videos are being put out apparently as an effort by the parents to somehow prove that Candy is actually making the art that is being branded as hers.  Therefore, when people comment and ask to see videos as some sort of validation, these videos are offered as “proof”, despite the quality of the art being completely different than what’s being sold.  Bait and switch.

Candy is definitely not the only artist with autism or other neurological differences to have videos of themselves creating art.  A simple search on Google or YouTube will reveal many people of various ages, some non-verbal and profoundly affected by autism who are painting or drawing.  Many are children or young adults.  The parents’ claim that Candy is the only one out there with videos is utter nonsense.

The caption in this video screenshot says that Candy is “doing what she loves”.  The video shows a child who appears conditionally trained or pressured, likely with food as a motivation reward, to paint on command and not as a natural desire.  It may be true, hopefully, that the child at least partially enjoys some of the process as a sensory activity.  But all of the videos put out this year show a child who is looking up periodically for approval or being directed in what to do, and not engaged in the process.  Some videos have shown Candy stopping the painting halfway through and making the ASL sign for “eat”.  A video published December 1, 2016 shows Candy pushing the paper away at the end and immediately grabbing a plastic box filled with food once her task is completed.

Almost all of the videos are edited to have music dubbed over spontaneous and naturally occurring voices in the moment, which also strategically hides the verbal directions being given by the parents.

This is not a contest.  There is no valuable exclusivity in being “the only one” who paints dots and smears on video and can’t speak.  That is the kind of thing that is said when marketing or at a carnival sideshow attraction to sucker customers to get attention.  There is no need or merit in comparing your child to others unless you have an ulterior motive.  Just be proud of who they are and what they can do as their own person.  Stop interfering with their process if they want to paint.  This is not raising awareness for autism in a productive or meaningful way.  It’s strictly self-promotion.

In all of the videos, a finished painting is typically shown at the end through editing that has clearly been embellished later with extra strokes and dots to shape Candy’s original stripes, dots, and smears into something more recognizable like an animal or a person.  This is not Candy painting on her own.  Through all of the videos published, Candy  has never appeared motivated to paint in a representational manner at all; It has always been single-color dots, smears, and lines.  Videos of Candy have never once shown the circles, fine details, multi-color brush loading, feather strokes, or representational plants, suns, and animals, which are shown in the Zazzle art.  The extra strokes and dots are the parents, adding to the paintings in an unnatural and dishonest way.  If the parents were actually proud of their child’s art, they would leave it alone and not manipulate it into something it is not simply for the sake of getting attention and compliments on a Facebook page.  If Candy really wants to paint, she should be given the tools to do it without interference, food motivation, or ableist expectations of a final product.  If your child paints a blob, let it be a blob and be proud of them.  Don’t add feather strokes and extra lines and dots. It clearly proves that the Waters don’t accept Candy’s art as it is and desire for it to be something different than what she made. That is not real parenting. It is manufacturing and dishonesty.

Your comments will be deleted and you will be blocked

If a person asks a question on the Candy Waters Autism Artist page on Facebook, it will likely only remain if it pertains to there being art for sale and where it can be purchased online.  If it is a compliment, stating that the art is amazing, beautiful, and inspirational, it will also  remain.

However, if a question is asked, no matter how politely and respectfully, about Candy’s painting process, charities, or other topics that the Waters don’t want to address, they will quickly delete the comment and block the person who asked, usually within minutes.

Many times, other families with children on the Autism spectrum are looking for guidance, help, comradery, inspiration, new techniques to try with their children, and other information.  To find a successful page like the Waters’, which has over 100,000 alleged supporters, seems like it would be a good place to find kindred spirits when you don’t know where else to turn.

No.  Unfortunately, that is not how it works on the Candy Waters Autism Artist page. If your comment isn’t about wanting to buy their merchandise or giving glowing compliments, you and your words will immediately vanish.

Below are 2 screenshots from the public Facebook page.

The first one shows a comment from a mother with a child who has an Autism-related condition.  She is asking about making a purchase and wanting to know about the merchandise site Zazzle being non-profit, because she would like to support raising awareness for the condition.  Under that is a compliment made by a person who speaks Spanish.

The second screenshot shows that the question was not answered, but instead deleted. The compliment in Spanish underneath is also gone.

 

SCREENSHOT BEFORE

cwaapageQUESTIONbeforedeleted1

 

 

SCREENSHOT AFTER

cwaapageQUESTIONafterdeleted

 

A public video created by a person who also has Autism

The public video below was made by an adult who also says that they themselves have Autism, and this person has recently become focused on explaining from their own unique perspective how it is unlikely or impossible for Candy Waters to have been the real artist behind the art being marketed on Facebook, PAOM, and Zazzle.

To be clear, no one is saying the child isn’t painting or playing with paint, but her skills depicted in videos and photos do not convey the motor skills or intellectual skills necessary to create the intricate and more complicated designs being branded as “done completely by Candy”.  Watch the video below, and then look at the art being sold – you are invited to draw your own conclusion.

Also, pay close attention at the 1:40 mark, where the video suddenly cuts from the child doing dots and blobs to some “mystery hands” in close-up, that are doing more precise and controlled painting strokes.  It is not likely that the mystery hands in the close-up section are Candy’s.  Then, the video cuts back out to a full shot of Candy, continuing with dots.

 

Below is a public comment from the Waters’ Zazzle website, made by “Sonata”, who claimed in the title that “authentication was completed long ago“, but doesn’t give any details about how, who, when, or where to validate that conclusion, except to say that it was done by “high-ranking people all over”.

ssSONATAzazzle

At the Waters’ public Zazzle shop there are over 1000+ products with art branded as being 100% done by Candy.  Below are a few of the designs being promoted.

ssZazzlemerch1ssZazzlemerch2