Sunday, August 24, 2025

Roberto the Clown: entertaining drivers for 22 years

For the past 22 years, Roberto Barnan has dressed as a clown and juggled for Mexico City’s frustrated drivers as he bounces between the red lights at the crossroads of Avenida Baja California and Calle Medillín. 

The city is known for its terrible traffic and pollution, but Roberto has capitalized on this and brings a few seconds of entertainment to the local commuters.  Depending on the day, he makes between 200 and 300 pesos, but he appears to thrive more on the warm reception he receives from his audience. 

The early commuters are always the most pleased to see him, he explains, but it’s also fantastic to see a child’s face light up as they pass him in the street. As we chat between red lights, Roberto returns numerous greetings from various people going about their daily lives.

Roberto is a married father of five and grandfather of many but he is the only juggler in his family. What does his wife think of his job, I asked.  “She likes my job,” he says and then chuckles as he adds, ‘probably because it brings in money.” 

We talk briefly about the city and how beautiful it is before the conversation turns to politics.

“It’s always best not to talk politics in this town’, he says, but given a magic wand, Roberto would make everyone more honest. “It would help with so many problems.” 

Roberto’s message to anyone considering visiting Mexico is not to believe everything on the television. 

For the most part the country is calm, with beautiful places and cultural traditions that cannot be found anywhere else in the world — not to mention the juggling clown in Roma Sur. 

Mexico News Daily

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

The truth about wealth disparity in Los Cabos

4
Take a dive into the numbers that show what life is really like for both worlds at the foot of Baja California Sur.

‘Mary Joseph,’ ‘Little Town’ and ‘Holy Conception’: The unusual names I hear in Mexico

2
Why do some Mexican parents give their children names that sound, well... odd in translation? Let Sarah DeVries give you the answers.
A Haitian man stands outdoors in a park-like setting, holding two small flags — one of Mexico and one of Haiti — attached to his shirt. He is looking slightly to the right with a neutral expression.

Mexico’s migration policy isn’t perfect, but it’s more effective than the United States’: Here’s why

6
The U.S. has a centuries-long tradition of providing refuge to migrants and the persecuted. So why, Louisa Rogers wonders, is Mexico now beating the U.S. at its own game?
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity