From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
Sacramento Critical Mass This Friday Dec. 6, 2002!
Whooping, cheering cyclists on bicycles of all shapes and sizes rolled through the streets of Sacramento last November 1st to an inspired 80's theme sound track. Bystanders on foot, pedal and even in motor vehicles cheered and applauded, danced along to the music, and eagerly accepted flyers describing the event. The ride occurs again this Friday, December 6.
SACTOCM November 1, 2002 Ride Report
with TWO-PART VIDEO!
Whooping, cheering cyclists on bicycles of all shapes and sizes rolled through the streets of Sacramento last November 1st to an inspired 80's theme sound track. Bystanders on foot, pedal and even in motor vehicles cheered and applauded, danced along to the music, and eagerly accepted flyers describing the event. The ride occurs again this Friday, December 6.
Sacramento Critical Mass, a rolling pedal-powered demonstration and celebration, occurs every month in the Capitol city of California. The right to ride has not come easily. Due to egregious civil rights violations by the local police, along with animosity from a small but vocal group of influential bicycle advocates, Critical Mass efforts have come to an early and unfortunate demise repeatedly over the past decade.
Due to an extended campaign by the Bicycle Civil Liberties Union (BCLU) and individuals from Sacramento and the Bay Area, culminating in a BCLU lawsuit directed against the Sacramento Police Department, a relative truce has emerged allowing this special form of peaceful protest to have the chance to flourish in the Capitol city as it has throughout California and indeed, the entire world in over 300 cities. The movement has just recently celebrated its 10th Anniversary in San Francisco. The loss of beneficial effects Sacramentans would have received from Critical Mass had police not suppressed the demonstrations beginning in 1993 is a true tragedy.
Given the tremendous bikeability potential of Sacramento -- flat, with a good climate, and significant progress on a bicycling infrastructure for a U.S. city -- along with the huge number of everyday cyclists throughout the midtown area -- Critical Mass here has an incredible opportunity to thrive. The many bike lanes and paths are due in large part to the ardent efforts of the Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates (SABA), a group which unfortunately has refused to discuss the Critical Mass phenomenon.
GETTING THERE:
The ride occurs every first Friday of the month, gathering on the north Capitol steps from 5-6 PM and riding after 6 PM. From the San Francisco Bay Area, the main group meets at the Emeryville Amtrak by 1:30 PM, using a discount ticket pass. Some riders get on at other stations (e.g., Richmond, Berkeley, Fremont, San Jose), and it's possible to leave on a later train. Returning, the last train back gets in around 10 PM. In the Bay Area, the San Francisco Critical Mass (frequently numbering in the thousands) takes place on the last Friday of the month, gathering from 5:30 PM to depart after 6 PM from Justin "Pee Wee" Herman Plaza at the foot of Market Street. In Berkeley, riders gather every second Friday on Constitution Plaza above the Downtown Berkeley BART (http://www.berkeleycriticalmass.org/)
A police vehicle followed the ride throughout the evening, which undoubtedly reduced the amount of motorist aggression experienced. Whenever the police car fell behind or to one side, potential problems began to appear. Sacramento drivers with their wide car-first, freeway-like, one-way streets and lack of first amendment activity is still getting used to the existence of Critical Mass.
VIDEO PART ONE HIGHLIGHTS
Begins with a drumming improv session on Amtrak to Sacramento from the Bay Area.
Speeches are made about sticking together and flyering, and about the potential for literally thousands of people to enjoy the ride every month.
The ride kicks off with one rather maniacally happy young woman falling to the ground and dragging from the four-seat home-made car bike she was pushing. "That video should be shown over and over and over again!" she proclaimed. (Not this edit :).
The music mysteriously cuts out just as riders are "corking" a major intersection to keep it safe for the entire group to get through. The sound system crew jokes about people who cannot understand the ride while restoring the system. "I want to be one of those people who calls 911 all the time, oh no, it's an emergency, there are bikes everywhere!"
A driver flagged as aggressive is told about why the ride is taking the street.
Folks clap and cheer from a sidewalk cafe as a woman holds her baby up, waving together.
A woman in a car cheers, "Right on -- you spoke for your generation after all! This is great!"
A poetic visual speedup through a maze of cars to the words, "I've got to get away...".
A bystander who wondered if Critical Mass was a band -- followed by hamming it up to "Feel the Noise" by Quiet Riot due to the ride's new status as rock stars.
A long interview about the misperceptions about Critical Mass, after someone outside Pacific Bicycles called out that the ride gives him a bad name, how a cyclist was hit three days earlier in a hit-and-run, and related issues. Guarantee you he's never even been on a ride.
People dilligently handed out informational flyers to bystanders. Only a small fraction of the many amazing and acrobatic hand-offs of flyers were captured or included here throughout the two parts of the video. For instance, an impressive handoff from a woman on a supertall bike to a man out strolling. And, kids in a bus stop reading the flyer. "Thank you for using public transportation, don't be afraid to care!"
Cheers from sidewalk restaurants, bars and cafes.
Another conversation with a motorist. This one who says the riders should go try to save Tibet and let him have his RV.
Bike dropping bike grease, plastic helment, and camera probably made by slave labor. He told the folks on the four-seater car-sized bike, "Get a job you fucking tree huggers".
Enjoy and don't forget part two!
with TWO-PART VIDEO!
Whooping, cheering cyclists on bicycles of all shapes and sizes rolled through the streets of Sacramento last November 1st to an inspired 80's theme sound track. Bystanders on foot, pedal and even in motor vehicles cheered and applauded, danced along to the music, and eagerly accepted flyers describing the event. The ride occurs again this Friday, December 6.
Sacramento Critical Mass, a rolling pedal-powered demonstration and celebration, occurs every month in the Capitol city of California. The right to ride has not come easily. Due to egregious civil rights violations by the local police, along with animosity from a small but vocal group of influential bicycle advocates, Critical Mass efforts have come to an early and unfortunate demise repeatedly over the past decade.
Due to an extended campaign by the Bicycle Civil Liberties Union (BCLU) and individuals from Sacramento and the Bay Area, culminating in a BCLU lawsuit directed against the Sacramento Police Department, a relative truce has emerged allowing this special form of peaceful protest to have the chance to flourish in the Capitol city as it has throughout California and indeed, the entire world in over 300 cities. The movement has just recently celebrated its 10th Anniversary in San Francisco. The loss of beneficial effects Sacramentans would have received from Critical Mass had police not suppressed the demonstrations beginning in 1993 is a true tragedy.
Given the tremendous bikeability potential of Sacramento -- flat, with a good climate, and significant progress on a bicycling infrastructure for a U.S. city -- along with the huge number of everyday cyclists throughout the midtown area -- Critical Mass here has an incredible opportunity to thrive. The many bike lanes and paths are due in large part to the ardent efforts of the Sacramento Area Bicycle Advocates (SABA), a group which unfortunately has refused to discuss the Critical Mass phenomenon.
GETTING THERE:
The ride occurs every first Friday of the month, gathering on the north Capitol steps from 5-6 PM and riding after 6 PM. From the San Francisco Bay Area, the main group meets at the Emeryville Amtrak by 1:30 PM, using a discount ticket pass. Some riders get on at other stations (e.g., Richmond, Berkeley, Fremont, San Jose), and it's possible to leave on a later train. Returning, the last train back gets in around 10 PM. In the Bay Area, the San Francisco Critical Mass (frequently numbering in the thousands) takes place on the last Friday of the month, gathering from 5:30 PM to depart after 6 PM from Justin "Pee Wee" Herman Plaza at the foot of Market Street. In Berkeley, riders gather every second Friday on Constitution Plaza above the Downtown Berkeley BART (http://www.berkeleycriticalmass.org/)
A police vehicle followed the ride throughout the evening, which undoubtedly reduced the amount of motorist aggression experienced. Whenever the police car fell behind or to one side, potential problems began to appear. Sacramento drivers with their wide car-first, freeway-like, one-way streets and lack of first amendment activity is still getting used to the existence of Critical Mass.
VIDEO PART ONE HIGHLIGHTS
Begins with a drumming improv session on Amtrak to Sacramento from the Bay Area.
Speeches are made about sticking together and flyering, and about the potential for literally thousands of people to enjoy the ride every month.
The ride kicks off with one rather maniacally happy young woman falling to the ground and dragging from the four-seat home-made car bike she was pushing. "That video should be shown over and over and over again!" she proclaimed. (Not this edit :).
The music mysteriously cuts out just as riders are "corking" a major intersection to keep it safe for the entire group to get through. The sound system crew jokes about people who cannot understand the ride while restoring the system. "I want to be one of those people who calls 911 all the time, oh no, it's an emergency, there are bikes everywhere!"
A driver flagged as aggressive is told about why the ride is taking the street.
Folks clap and cheer from a sidewalk cafe as a woman holds her baby up, waving together.
A woman in a car cheers, "Right on -- you spoke for your generation after all! This is great!"
A poetic visual speedup through a maze of cars to the words, "I've got to get away...".
A bystander who wondered if Critical Mass was a band -- followed by hamming it up to "Feel the Noise" by Quiet Riot due to the ride's new status as rock stars.
A long interview about the misperceptions about Critical Mass, after someone outside Pacific Bicycles called out that the ride gives him a bad name, how a cyclist was hit three days earlier in a hit-and-run, and related issues. Guarantee you he's never even been on a ride.
People dilligently handed out informational flyers to bystanders. Only a small fraction of the many amazing and acrobatic hand-offs of flyers were captured or included here throughout the two parts of the video. For instance, an impressive handoff from a woman on a supertall bike to a man out strolling. And, kids in a bus stop reading the flyer. "Thank you for using public transportation, don't be afraid to care!"
Cheers from sidewalk restaurants, bars and cafes.
Another conversation with a motorist. This one who says the riders should go try to save Tibet and let him have his RV.
Bike dropping bike grease, plastic helment, and camera probably made by slave labor. He told the folks on the four-seater car-sized bike, "Get a job you fucking tree huggers".
Enjoy and don't forget part two!
For more information:
http://www.bclu.org/sactocm/
Add Your Comments
Comments
(Hide Comments)
You watch these things online with a "free" RealVideo player, in case you
aren't familiar. Very common on Indymedia. Best to have DSL and sound,
although you can at least hear it on a modem and catch some of the images.
I wish I had a better solution (there must be one out there) but Real is
very common and free and right now that's the most readily available way I
know of for me to put my video on the web.
The free player is at http://www.real.com and they make it hard to find (ignore
the "14 day free trial" stuff, go to the "download free player" in upper
right and then ignore the 14-day stuff again). OR more specifically,
assuming this would work for you:
http://forms.real.com/netzip/getrde6_new_look.html?h=207.188.7.150&f=windows/OEM
/R1P01D/RealOnePlayerV2GOLD.exe&p=RealOne+Player&tagtype=ie&type=dl
and then...you could check out...
-=- more meggs video -=-
***************************************************
Snorkel snurkel: berkeley critical mass in the rain,
what exquisitely silly ecstasy
***************************************************
part 1: http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1542503.php
and part 2: http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1542525.php
It's kind of rough and video on bike is wacky but still it captures a lot
of fun stuff, and lemme tell you that was ONE HECKAFUN RIDE!!!
this one is wonderful, of kids at an anti-war demonstration:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/10/1534779.php
and here's one of me getting pulled over for a citation,
and telling off a poopster copper. people say it's very
funny:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/10/1536004
and FINALLY, here's one of the Measure O video (fair trade,
organic, or shade grown coffee initiative that lost big
but shouldn't have). DONKEYS! It's my most recent one
before the Rain Ride piece and includes a discussion of
some real life legal issues:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1541504.php
Well that's it for now. I also uploaded a video of an undercover
cop pushing a demonstrator (and IMC reporter/photographer) into
a wall of cops where he was arrested. It was in MPEG format.
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/05/126202
I'm always interested in comments or advice about how to make these videos better. The time constraints and equipment constraints certainly affect how they're produced.
THANK TO CP FOR THE CAMERA LOAN!
aren't familiar. Very common on Indymedia. Best to have DSL and sound,
although you can at least hear it on a modem and catch some of the images.
I wish I had a better solution (there must be one out there) but Real is
very common and free and right now that's the most readily available way I
know of for me to put my video on the web.
The free player is at http://www.real.com and they make it hard to find (ignore
the "14 day free trial" stuff, go to the "download free player" in upper
right and then ignore the 14-day stuff again). OR more specifically,
assuming this would work for you:
http://forms.real.com/netzip/getrde6_new_look.html?h=207.188.7.150&f=windows/OEM
/R1P01D/RealOnePlayerV2GOLD.exe&p=RealOne+Player&tagtype=ie&type=dl
and then...you could check out...
-=- more meggs video -=-
***************************************************
Snorkel snurkel: berkeley critical mass in the rain,
what exquisitely silly ecstasy
***************************************************
part 1: http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1542503.php
and part 2: http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1542525.php
It's kind of rough and video on bike is wacky but still it captures a lot
of fun stuff, and lemme tell you that was ONE HECKAFUN RIDE!!!
this one is wonderful, of kids at an anti-war demonstration:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/10/1534779.php
and here's one of me getting pulled over for a citation,
and telling off a poopster copper. people say it's very
funny:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/10/1536004
and FINALLY, here's one of the Measure O video (fair trade,
organic, or shade grown coffee initiative that lost big
but shouldn't have). DONKEYS! It's my most recent one
before the Rain Ride piece and includes a discussion of
some real life legal issues:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/11/1541504.php
Well that's it for now. I also uploaded a video of an undercover
cop pushing a demonstrator (and IMC reporter/photographer) into
a wall of cops where he was arrested. It was in MPEG format.
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/05/126202
I'm always interested in comments or advice about how to make these videos better. The time constraints and equipment constraints certainly affect how they're produced.
THANK TO CP FOR THE CAMERA LOAN!
For more information:
http://www.bclu.org/sactocm/
Go Jason and all, sorry I can't make it this month.
Saw pics from Amsterdam, local train station has a 4 story bike parking garage. Thousands of bikes parked.
CM every day. It CAN happen here.
Cars truly do SUCK
Saw pics from Amsterdam, local train station has a 4 story bike parking garage. Thousands of bikes parked.
CM every day. It CAN happen here.
Cars truly do SUCK
Fantastic. I have a question though! we've tried using boomboxes on Pittsburgh critical mass rides, but they're not loud enough. What kind of massive speaker was that, being towed around??? who has that kind of equipment?
I just had this super great idea of talking to one of teh college radio stations and having them come along with their equipment to do a piece about CritMass.
if anybody has any info/knows how the Sacramento folks scrounged that speaker up, let me know! emma [at] indypgh.org
I just had this super great idea of talking to one of teh college radio stations and having them come along with their equipment to do a piece about CritMass.
if anybody has any info/knows how the Sacramento folks scrounged that speaker up, let me know! emma [at] indypgh.org
For more information:
http://www.indypgh.org
Part two is posted to a separate story:
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/12/1547486.php
But please keep discussion to this story.
http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/12/1547486.php
But please keep discussion to this story.
For more information:
http://www.bclu.org/sactocm/
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network