Dude, you are way too optimistic about what people know and do not know.
Most celebrities have private security. They are not hiring Blackwater or KBR. But, companies like Wackenhut or Securitas do not survive by posting guys at wharehouses alone.
As for the ignorance question.......
You would be amazed at what people do not know. Celebrities can afford to be ignorant. They can be kept from the world and its workings by a wall of handlers and such. I have met normal people, who in theory cannot afford to be that ignorant, who do not know how security and such works. Putting aside obscure knowledge, such as the Department of Energy or Agriculture jurisdictions, or deliberately opaque boondoggles like the Department of Homeland Security, there is still plenty of ignorance about who handles what in this country-where we have plenty of access to information.
Yes, the Secret Service has the high-profile job of guarding the President. But, they are also accountants, responsible for the financial security of the nation. (Many people assume the FBI would be responsible for tracking counter-fitters.) How many people understand the basic distinctions between CIA and FBI? The ATF has a high-profile flub about 15 years back. But even at the time, many people just lumped them in with some vague "black helicopter" militia. I have seen people in court-houses, (many of them are already in trouble), ignore clearly posted (and verbally stated) directives to dress and conduct themselves in a certain way-because they do not seem to know there is a penalty for deviating from those rules. It is amazing what people miss when they do not pay attention.
Blurr could easily not have had any direct run-ins with the cops. Even assuming one of his victory parties got a bit out of hand, there is no guarantee that Blurr himself would have any direct contact with the police. (Assuming of course that the Autotbots would enforce local ordinances.) One of Blurr's hangers-on would field the complaints and his lawyers and accountants would pay the fines (or even bribes) and handle court filings.
Hell, I have met well-read and well-informed people who did not know things that I took for granted. (Mind you, I am almost certainly ignorant of things they would assume to be common knowledge.) The best example of this I can think of is a friend of mine who grew up, (as he put it), near "one of the most expensive zip-codes in the Pacific, not even being aware that poor urban neighborhoods existed, let alone what they looked like. (I talked to him, about 20 minutes after his first walk through an American housing project. He was stunned for about 2 hours. He tells me that many of his friends back home would think he was kidding if he were to describe it to them.)
Bottom line, I can totally buy somebody, especially a cloistered celebrity, being as ignorant as Blurr was shown to be.
All Hail Megatron #4: When IDW announced this series, it was clearly intended to be a "bold new direction" for the franchise. The premise of this series is pretty much "Decepticons take over Earth". Normally, I am wary of this sort of story. But, IDW has, for the most part, been even in its handling of TF. Additionally, this is the first time since the original 1986 movie that a franchise changing "event" has happened to TF. (Most of the other stories that could have been either happened at the end of a run, were used to define a run early on, or were simply self-contained.) After the rather timid and meandering "-ion" arcs, ("Revelation" being the most recent), "All Hail Megatron" is a welcome change. And, Shane McCarthy seems to be the new blood the franchise needs. The pacing for this arc is a bit more even this issue, showing both factions, and having a demonstrable idea beyond "Decepticons stomping around". McCarthy does a good job of conveying why Optimus Prime is needed for the Autobots, and showing the Decepticons as something other than a pack of bandits. Several readers, over at the IDW forums, correctly anticipated that Megatron's reason for attacking Earth was to give the Decepticons an easy enemy, (humans), to unite against.
Grade: B It is getting easier to be optimistic about this book, and IDW's handling of the franchise.
Spotlight Blurr: IDW's strongest "Transformers" offerings have tended to be the "Spotlight" books. This outing is no exception. The basic premise is "Blurr grows up". Blurr is presented as an ignorant celebrity searching for meaning. It may or may not be intentional, but the story comes off as a commentary on American culture.
Grade: B
Dom
-changing the listing on this thread to include "Spotlight: Blurr" because *somebody*, (cought Sparky cough), brought it up here.