Why Cars Suck: Daredevil Bike Riders' Death-Defying Commutes in To Live & Ride in L.A.

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Swank One
Down by the (L.A.) River. That's fixed-gear legend Keo Curry (left) and George Gregor (right).

Sean Martin can tell you about the moment he thought he would die.

Sure, the fixed-gear cyclist who moved to L.A. in 2008 and cycles to work daily had had close calls before but one sunny day, a couple of years ago, at the corner of Melrose Avenue and Rossmore Avenue, he thought he was toast.

The light was green, his side of the busy intersection was unusually empty, he was barreling through it and suddenly a car did 'a left hook,' crossing into his lane from his left side as it turned right into a driveway.

Martin was riding at between twenty to twenty five miles an hour. He was riding a fixed-gear bike, a kind mainly used in racing, in which the pedals always have to be moving along with the wheels, meaning it can't coast, and any braking has to be done by having your legs resist the motion of the perpetually-moving pedals. He knew there was going to be impact. For sure.

"I am going to die, right now," he thought and then he hit the car and jettisoned thirty feet through the air.

What saved Martin was his muscle memory, his tuck-and-roll -- his shoulders and back taking the impact, not his head. That didn't mean he wasn't hurt -- he was -- but Martin walked away, if slowly and painfully, declining a ride in an ambulance in part because he doesn't have health insurance.

"It definitely shook me up a little bit. It's intimidating to have a multi-ton vehicle baring down on you -- especially after you've been hit a few times," he says.

And yet, a while after the accident, he got back on the bike to pedal, routinely, through the streets of Los Angeles, where he commutes daily to work and frequently participates in fixed-gear races and events.

"I love it! It's absolutely the greatest thing in the world to ride a track bike through a city. It's an amazing experience that everyone should do," he tells us.

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Swank One
Sean Martin from "To Live & Ride in L.A." takes the most dangerous ride he says there is: the streets of L.A.

That drive to ride is the subject of To Live & Ride in L.A., a film that was released via the net on Tuesday and will enjoy a full-bore worldwide premiere and requisite party this Saturday, June 25 at the Royal/T in Culver City from 6:30 p.m. to midnight.

The documentary's director, David Rowe, assembled and shot a cast of fixed-gear stars in order to explore Los Angeles' underground culture of urban riding, demarcated by a multitude of riding crews, races staged at rush-hour, loft parties and "alley-cats."

Alley-cats are events derived from the bike messenger world, which is the origin of fixed-gear bike culture. They began as informal races, in San Francisco and New York, in which riders gathered at a pre-set point, received a map and manifest and had to clock in at checkpoints all over a city.

"It was a thing that messengers did at the end of the week to blow-off steam, a way to have fun," says Martin who adds that they also would determine who was the "fastest guy in the city."

Though Los Angeles is the city of the car -- the self-worth of film industry execs and talent agents set by the model of their BMW, Mercedes or Porsche -- alley-cats and other unique staples belonging to the culture of the wheel are drawing large crowds of cyclists, prompting nightly rides and a slew of ride-out crews here. The crews often flaunt names as outrageous as the premise of swarms of brakeless, gearless cyclers commuting in the streets of L.A. Consider these: Chubby Boob cycling team and crew, VCR (as in Venice Chill Ride), and Thirsty Thursdays (drinking involved, perhaps?) According to Martin, these ride outs can draw between fifty and four hundred riders.

"We're really the only city that has these large group rides every night," notes Martin who helps generate and coordinate races and events through his website, "A Blog About Bikes and Other Random Sh*t We Like," along with fellow rider Joseph Lobato. The two also administer a popular Facebook Page under the Takeover LA!™ Moniker.

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Swank One
Master class. Keo Curry who pioneered tricks on fixed-gear bikes shows how it's done.

The power of L.A.'s thriving scene even turned Seattle resident and fixed-gear superstar Keo Curry, who is featured in To Live & Ride in L.A., into an L.A. believer.

"Keo was the first person to focus on doing tricks on the fixed-gear bike," notes Martin. "Until then, if you were gong to come out to an event, you were going to race. He brought [tricks] to the forefront."

Developing these tricks is about "mastering the physics of the bicycle and my body," says Curry.

Speaking to us on the phone, the man who can pirouette easily on his back tire for 360s and perform no-handed wheelies with only one leg on the bike, is low-key and generous.

"Everybody was really cool and really down in earth," he tells the Weekly. "I had thought I would not want to live in L.A., but I would live there," as he was inspired by the riders he met and rides he took for the movie.

In particular, he cites the cemented Los Angeles River. "It's one of the legendary parts of the city" he says, before giving a shout out to Saber, the famed graffiti artist whose enormous lettering once festooned a nearby section of the river but whose work, more recently, was featured in MOCA's "Art in the Streets" show.

Whether To Live and Ride in L.A. generates the mainstream discussion for L.A.'s fixed-gear scene that the MOCA show did for Saber and other graffiti artists will remain to be seen.

To Live & Ride in L.A., which features fixed-gear riders Keo Curry, George Gregor, Mr. Quick, Lil' Hern, Tracko, Ace Boogie, Efrem, Anthony, Roadblock, and Joey Inferno, Fish'N'Chips, Charlie Murphy, NY Joe, Tim Hammer and Sean Martin, gets its L.A. premiere at Royal/T, 8910 Washington Blvd., Culver City, on Saturday, June 25. At 7 p.m. is a meet-and-greet with riders, director and producer, and at 8:30 p.m. the film screens. Q&A and party to follow. For more information or to buy the movie visit the To Live & Ride in L.A. website.

Follow us on Twitter at @LAWeeklyArts.


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15 comments
Ts102
Ts102

Riding in L.A. rules, it's all about the speed.

Tibby Rothman
Tibby Rothman

Hey, this is Tibby who wrote the above story...Just want to interject a follow-up prompted by some of these comments. I couldn't find the word whining or a description of that anywhere in the piece, and it didn't enter into Sean's conversation with me. But maybe there's an expose on the whole NoCal versus SoCal thing, here. (I'm kidding... although, I'm also not whining.)

Fram-a-lama
Fram-a-lama

To SFsmuglefty: keep doing what your doing hater! Everyone needs haters in this world, just let's us know that we are on people's minds and they can't stop thinking about us! Keep up the good work HATER! Nice comment Ace!!!

Sfsmuglefty
Sfsmuglefty

Hater, that’s it, that all? Who's using all the caps and exclamations? Quite the contrary I love you, you all validate everything I’ve said. Just one question does you're mom still make you wear the helmet when she drives you around in her Volvo with the sticker?

anthony
anthony

Sfsmiglefty might be upset, possibly fully upset. Going with the latter. 

Mikey Wally
Mikey Wally

@41d4fc58c9e279f80c0bac40921b9774:disqus  k

Sfsmuglefty
Sfsmuglefty

5 things: 1-Bike in the photo not in bike lane or even on the right side as car behind approaches-cars did build the road he's on, 2- the guy in the story is riding on a busy shared street on a vehicle without brakes if it were any other vehicle it would be illegal, 3-the guy is riding without insurance which would also be illegal, 4-people do stupid acts whether a bicyclist running down a pedestrian or a car driver not looking before turning I ride here in SF I've bailed on bicycles and motorcycles and I've been hit by a car while in a car and as a pedestrian nearly run over by cars and bicycles I'm not whining about either. I surf there are several surfers who have been attacked by sharks they don't bitch about the shark's mistake if a surfer wants to ride a tsunami hey they'll go for it but the surfer isn't going to whine about the wave when they get beat up, 5- there is a difference between someone making a mistake and someone who chooses to do something stupid don't throw yourself into LA traffic without brakes and expect that tsunami to watch out for you-when you’re in traffic you to have a responsibility to those around you even on a bike.PS why are bicycle fanatics such a bunch of irresponsible cry babies-did your mothers stick helmets on your heads at birth cover your houses in padding and have one of those “baby on board” stickers in the rear window of her passive aggressively driven Volvo? Is that how you got such a warped perspective your mothers filling you with absurd expectations of what the World owes her little baby?

West
West

"I'm not whining"yes, you are

Mikey Wally
Mikey Wally

http://mikeywally.com/2011/06/...

1 – The rider on the left, Sean Martin, is legally overtaking a slower cyclist occupying the right lane.2 – But it’s not illegal. And what is your point anyway? Fixed gear bikes have one brake (your legs resisting the direct drive), it’s not a redundant system and can be safer (by adding brakes). If you think riding a fixie without brakes isn’t right for you (which it shouldn’t be for most people, the fad will fade), don’t do it.3 – Which would also be illegal in your fantasy world? It’s not illegal to ride a bicycle without health insurance or insurance on the bike. And if it were illegal to ride a bicycle without health insurance, wouldn’t it, in your fantasy world, be illegal for people to drive cars without health insurance too?4 – People need to be held accountable to the predictable consequences of their actions. If a car hits a pedestrian or cyclist the consequence is usually much worse than if a cyclists hits a car or pedestrian. That’s why bikes aren’t supposed to be on sidewalks and deserve their own separated lane; so they don’t hit pedestrians. It’s your right to surf, it’s not your right to drive. Driving is a privilege. As for being attacked by sharks. Isn’t that a predictable risk of surfing? Driving is a privilege to make sure there aren’t any sharks on our roads to kill innocent surfers, pedestrians, and cyclists.5 – You’re right. Everyone needs to be held to the predictable consequences of their actions. Drivers and cyclists need to respect each other (reciprocity) so we can all get where we need to go as safely and quickly as possible.P.S. What’s up with your Freudian analysis of cyclists? We expect too much because our mom’s were over protective? I ride a bicycle because I can’t afford a car.

Ace Carretero
Ace Carretero

SFsmugLefty. slob on my knob, like corn on the cob. 

MC Zezoone
MC Zezoone

Big ups to Sean, Joe & the entire TOLA fam, Hern, Ace, and everybody else that got shout outs on this one, good looking out fellas! BEWM™

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