Monday, September 28, 2009

Former Talking Head rides and writes

'Bicycle Diaries' by David Byrne review: Former Talking Head rides and writes - Boulder Daily Camera
'Bicycle Diaries' by David Byrne review: Former Talking Head rides and writes
By Andres Viglucci McClatchy Newspapers
Posted: 09/25/2009 03:44:12 PM MDT

David Byrne writes about his worldwide travels on a fold-up bike in 'Bicycle Diaries.'

For 30 years, artist and musician -- and, oh yes, former Talking Head -- David Byrne has been getting around New York, his hometown, mainly on a bicycle. Nothing fancy, mind you. Just a sturdy, upright hybrid with handlebar-moustache handlebars and a firm saddle, which is actually less tiring than the cushy kind.

When he travels, Byrne packs a folding bike in a case, and from this two-wheel perch he has investigated cities the world over, jotting down in a journal the peculiarly Byrnesian musings and observations as he pedals through bombed-out Detroit, stately and orderly Berlin or, in an especially daring foray, car-choked Istanbul.

But don't let the faux-naif persona Byrne has so ably cultivated in his work fool you. The rock star who sang about burning buildings, highways and life during wartime turns out to be an acute observer of the urban condition, a veritable rolling philosopher. The evidence is in "Bicycle Diaries," his seventh book, a breezy, loosely threaded compendium of accounts of the places he sees and the people he meets in his urban bike-wanderings.

Byrne delivers pithy indictments of the damage wrought on cities by the onslaught of the automobile and planners' blind obedience to it, even as the artist in him can't resist admiring the strange grandeur of urban ruins like Buffalo and Detroit. And he extols cities like New York that have managed to nurture neighborhoods and find space for people on bicycles.

No proselytizer by nature, Byrne has found himself increasingly taking a public role as bicycle advocate, organizing a forum in New York that surrounded talks by planners with music, video and performance art. He spoke to The Miami Herald from New York on the eve of his departure for a mostly West Coast book tour, some of the stops on which will be public forums on cycling.

"I realized that a lot of towns and a lot of people are at the point where they're just about willing to accept this idea of the bicycle as a way of getting around," he says. "It doesn't seem out of the question, where a few years ago that might just have seemed like a really strange or geeky idea to a lot of people."

Q: What changed?

A: Our cities have gone through all these cycles. We've gone through the urban renewal cycle in the '60s and '70s that really did a lot of damage to the fabric of urban life -- neighborhoods bulldozed and highways pushed through, and all that kind of stuff that really destroyed the kind of social underpinning and the kind of mom-and-pop stores and all the stuff that makes a community viable. Well, those things are kind of coming back and, as they come back, a lot of people have realized that they can have a good life in an urban situation, wherever it is, in whatever town it is. It's kind of dawning on them that that might be more fun than commuting for an hour and half every day and living isolated out in the suburbs ... A lot of cities are making a real effort, neighborhood by neighborhood, to make themselves into a place where life can be pretty good.

Q: Does it feel funny suddenly becoming Mr. Bicycle?

A: (Laughs). A little bit. I've noticed -- I might be imagining it -- but people here in New York would just see me around on a bicycle all the time and never think anything of it. But I think now there's a little bit of publicity coming out about this book and all that kind of stuff, so now it's like, 'Oh, there he is, Mr. Bicycle,' yeah. Which is a little bit embarrassing.

Q: You have said the book is not, strictly speaking, about bicycling. What's it about?

A: A lot of it is about cities and urban communities. Some of the chapters kind of delve more into the history of what happened in that town and how that affected the way people view one another and how they live. And in other chapters it's more about the music, and in other chapters it's more about art museums and galleries. And then there's other chapters that are more about urban design and how things got to be the way they were, and how communities either rise or fall, or become a lively community or a dead community. It's more about the stuff you think about when you're getting from place to place on a bicycle than it is about actually riding the bicycle.

Q: Do you find it hard to write, or is it as easy as, well, riding a bike?

A: I love writing. I don't claim to be great at it. Occasionally I get a good sentence off. But I love the activity. Sometimes I agonize over the editing after that, but the initial kind of outpouring stuff, if I'm feeling that I have an angle or something to say or something where in a way I'm having a conversation with myself, that's immensely pleasurable.

Q. You've written you're not a racer or sports rider, you don't use Lycra. At the risk of getting way too personal, what comes between you and your saddle then?

A: I'm just wearing regular street clothes. Pretty much all the time. In the summertime, or when it gets warm out, shorts and sandals or something like that. Stuff that I don't mind getting a little sweaty.


Wednesday, September 09, 2009

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Friday, July 24, 2009

The chasm between motorists & cyclists continues...in the Meca of cycling.

Sunrise Century organizers prepare for possible conflict : County News : Boulder Daily Camera
Sunrise Century organizers prepare for possible conflict
Officials say threats for drivers to block Boulder County cycling route taken seriously

By Heath Urie (Contact)
Originally published 11:02 a.m., July 24, 2009
Updated 11:02 a.m., July 24, 2009
Alex Hearn, organizer of the Sunrise Century bike ride, at his home in Boulder.

Photo by Paul Aiken

Alex Hearn, organizer of the Sunrise Century bike ride, at his home in Boulder.
The Sunrise Century route

The Sunrise Century route

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BOULDER, Colo. — Organizers of Saturday’s Sunrise Century bicycle ride through Boulder County say they are prepared to handle any problems along the winding mountain route, amid threats in an anonymous flier that drivers will blockade cyclists in protest.

The fliers — which started appearing in mountain communities early last month, a few days after a Boulder driver was ticketed on suspicion of endangering a cyclist on Lee Hill Road — ask residents along the route of the 100-mile annual cycling event to block the return leg of the ride.

“On July 25, in celebration of driver’s rights, many cars will use the Left Hand Canyon Road, drive slowly and many may break down unexpectedly, blocking areas to the cyclists on the return leg of the ‘Sunrise Century,’” the anonymous, one-page note reads. “Many cars and safe drivers all working together can send a message to the Statehouse to restrict cycling on our roads which are our only alternatives during family emergencies, commuting and required duties.”

Julia Wieck, a spokeswoman for the event, said more than 800 riders from 18 states have registered to participate, and have been briefed about reporting any problems along the way and trying to avoid conflict.

But organizers continue to receive “nasty e-mails” about the planned ride, Wieck said.

“People don’t have specifics, just a lot of anger,” she said.

The route begins at 6:30 a.m. at Boulder’s Stazio Ball Fields, 2445 Stazio Drive, and moves through Niwot and Hygiene before looping around Lyons, the St. Vrain Canyon, the Peak to Peak Highway, Ward, Left Hand Canyon, Nelson Road and finally down 63rd Street back to the ball fields.

The fliers call for the disruption efforts to center along Left Hand Canyon Drive near Nelson Road.

Wieck said the Boulder County Sheriff’s Office will have deputies stationed throughout the course, and seven aid stations will take reports of any roadside conflicts and report them to law enforcement.

Officials at the Colorado State Patrol have said that drivers ought to think twice before trying to block the riders, because it's illegal and dangerous.

Boulder County Sheriff Joe Pelle said he plans to have nine deputies stationed along the route, in addition to the four state troopers.

He said he doesn't expect any problems, though.

"I’m not sure it has that much support, actually," Pelle said of the flier's call to action.

Wieck said the threats and tensions among cyclist, drivers and mountain residents has overshadowed the good in the event — which will donate a portion of its proceeds to the Mile High Youth Corps, The Cottonwood Institute and Engineers Without Borders.

For more information about the Sunrise Century ride, visit www.bikerpelli.com


Wednesday, June 17, 2009

S.D. drivers among angriest..... Sweet

San Diego, California, National News - The San Diego Union-Tribune
S.D. drivers among angriest
San Diego is the 10th least-courteous city among the nation's 25 largest metro areas, according to a new road rage survey. No. 1: New York.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Landis case twist: hacking lab computer

Landis case twist: hacking lab computer
French national police have summoned Landis and his longtime coach, San Diego physician Arnie Baker, to answer questions in connection with the illicit access of the computer system of the French laboratory that tested Landis' samples from the Tour. Neither attended a May 5 court appearance, according to media reports, and now the head of France's anti-doping agency is calling for international authorities to get involved.

“If it is the only way for Floyd Landis and Arnie Baker to explain themselves,” AFLD president Pierre Bordry was quoted in French by Le Monde newspaper, “I won't hesitate to demand the judge issue an international arrest warrant.”

Baker, an icon in the local cycling community, did not return phone or e-mail messages. Landis, who lives in Idyllwild, was unavailable for comment.

Bordry reported in late 2006 that the computer system at the LNDD lab outside Paris had been breached and several sensitive documents pirated. The documents, which indicated the French lab had corrected mistakes in other doping cases, turned up in fraudulent e-mails sent from the lab's e-mail server to various anti-doping agencies and journalists.

Baker also included some of the documents in “The Wiki defense,” a series of Power Point presentations at bike shops and ultimately an online book he authored to vouch for Landis' innocence.

But French authorities became suspicious when one of the recipients of the stolen documents, Montreal anti-doping lab director Christiane Ayotte, conducted a history search on the file – a copy of which she provided to the Union-Tribune. The previous user is listed as “Arnie.”

Detectives in a special information technology crime division, according to French media, tracked the LNDD incident to Kargas Consultants. In the process of the investigation, they also discovered that Kargas was behind hacking into the computer of an executive from Greenpeace, allegedly on behalf of a French nuclear energy company.

The man accused of gaining unauthorized access to the French lab's computer, Alain Quiros, reportedly said he was paid 2,000 Euros (about $2,800) by Kargas, but it remains unclear whether there is direct evidence that Baker or anyone else in the Landis camp commissioned the job. Le Monde wrote that detectives linked Baker through an IP (Internet Protocol) address.

The Le Monde story also said Baker wrote a letter in response to the police summons, asking a series of questions about the French legal process but not indicating when or if he might appear.

Landis, 33, is part of the OUCH cycling team that is competing in North American races this season. He is not expected to race in France.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

RECALL: Norco, Trek, Cannondale

SportsOneSource.com Printer-Friendly Format
RECALL: Norco, Trek, Cannondale Bikes
SportsOneSource Media Posted: 5/19/2009
Three bike manufacturers - Norco, Trek, Cannondale - have issued voluntary recalls of their products in cooperation with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed.

Norco Bicycle Frames
The recalled frames were sold at various bicycle distributors nationwide from September 2006 through February 2009 for between $2,000 and $7,000.

The bicycle frame can crack and separate, causing a rider to fall from the bicycle and suffer injuries. Norco has received one report of a rider who fractured their collar bone after falling from the bicycle.

The recalled bicycle frames include the following model year and model names: 2007 Team DH, 2008 Team DH, Aline Park, Aline, Atomik, Shore 1,2,3, 2009 Atomik (without gussets). All colors are included in the recall and the model name is printed on a decal on the top tube of each
frame/bike.

Trek

About 16,000 bicycles with JD suspension forks were imported by Trek Bicycle Corp., of Waterloo, WI, and sold at Trek bicycle dealers nationwide from August 2008 through April 2009 for between $640 and $940.

The recalled bicycle's fork can lose alignment causing the front wheel to turn unexpectedly. This can cause the rider to lose control of the bicycle and crash. There have been four reports of misaligned forks. No
injuries have been reported.

The recall involves model year 2009 Trek 7300, 7300WSD, and 7500 bicycles. The model name is printed on the bicycle's frame. The bicycles have a suspension fork with the words "Bontrager SPA" printed on them.

Consumers should stop riding the recalled bicycles immediately and contact their dealer to arrange for a free repair.

Cannondale

About 1,500 bicycles with JD suspension forks were imported by Cannondale Bicycle Corp. and sold at Cannondale bicycle dealers from February 2009 through April 2009 for between $600 and $800.
The recalled bicycle's fork can lose alignment causing the front wheel to turn unexpectedly. This can cause the rider to lose control of the bicycle and crash. There have been no reported injuries.

The recall involves model year 2008 Cannondale Adventure 2, Adventure 3, Adventure 2 Feminine and Adventure 3 Feminine bicycles. The model name is printed on the bicycle's frame. The bicycles have a suspension fork with the words "cannondale AT35 adventure trail" printed on them. Bicycles equipped with the Rock Shox i-ride fork are not included in the recall.

Consumers should stop riding the recalled bicycles immediately and contact their dealer to arrange for a free repair.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Ritter in Springs today to sign bill protecting rights of cyclists

Ritter in Springs today to sign bill protecting rights of cyclists | bill, cyclists, sign - Top Stories - Colorado Springs Gazette, CO
Ritter in Springs today to sign bill protecting rights of cyclists
Comments 47 | Recommend 6
May 11, 2009 - 10:03 AM
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Gov. Bill Ritter plans to sign a bill here today aimed at protecting the rights of cyclists.

The measure (Senate Bill 148) requires that drivers give cyclists at least three feet of space when passing or risk a $110 ticket.

Anyone who throws an object at a cyclist could be charged with a class 2 misdemeanor. That carries a fine of between $250 and $1,000 and a possible sentence of three to 12 months in jail.

The bill was sponsored by a bipartisan pair of avid cyclists - Republican Sen. Greg Brophy and Democratic Rep. Mike Merrifield. It will take effect Aug. 5.

The governor plans to sign the bill along with six others at Penrose Library.

Among the bills:

SB 148 (Brophy/Merrifield), Bicycle Safety Bill
SB 110 (Morse/Levy), Civil Rights Commission
HB 1058 (Morse/Marostica), Abandoned Military Remains
HB 1250 (Merrifield/Penry), Federal Money to Counties for School Districts
HB 1290 (Nikkel & Apuan/Harvey), Student Financial Aid National Guard
HB 1313 (Merrifield/Bacon), Expand Higher Ed Civic Engagement
HB 1334 (McCann & Apuan/Newell), Aggregate Two Theft Offenses