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ON OUR STEREO Air Massive

The Top 10 discs that get us through the night...

1. Deerhoof - "Friend Opportunity" (Kill Rock Stars)
2. El Perro Del Mar - "El Perro Del Mar" (EMI)
3. Lily Allen - "Alright, Still" (Regal/Parlophone)
4. Cat Power - "The Greatest" (Matador)
5. Kanye West - "Late Registration" (Roc-A-Fella)
6. Gorillaz - "Demon Days" (Virgin)
7. M.I.A. - "Arular" (XL)
8. Kaiser Chiefs - "Employment" (B-Unique)
9. Bright Eyes - "I'm Wide Awake It's Morning" (Saddle Creek)
10. Mos Def - "The New Danger" (Geffen)


Kickin' It Ol' Skool on Our Stereo...

1. Bob Marley and the Wailers - "Exodus" (Island)


Favorite Kicks ...
Grand Theft Auto
Adidas "Adi Color Winner" -- Fresh high-top sneaker design from the German tennis shoe maker.


Favorite Video Game on Our PlayStation...
Grand Theft Auto
Grand Theft Auto - San Andreas (Rockstar Games) -- The greatest GTA eva'! It's been out for over two years and we're still freakin' playing it!



Overheard...

Guy talking into cellphone on West Broadway in Soho, NYC:

"Hey man, can you hear me? Got a new cell phone -- it's a Treo, man! That's right, a Treo. Yeah, the Palm Treo 650 and it's aaaawesome ... uh ... hello, can you hear me? Hello? Hello ... Shit!"

MASSIVE

Supercore:
Ivan Corsa
Princess Lower
East Side:

Reiko Oishi
OK Computer:
Typhoon
Lost in Translation:
Ken Taniguchi
Sources Direct:
Rob Samra
D. Carter Witt
Damon Smith
Adrian Tharani
Jess Eddy
Gravy to Potatoes,
Luke to Darth Vader:

Lao Tzu


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TECH GEAR
Mobile Devices We Like:
T-Mobile Sidekick and Sidekick II
Easy to use, unbusinesslike and not too techy-looking, we like the Sidekick 'cause it's easy on the thumbs for typing and is probably the most comfortable cell phone and text-messaging device in terms of keyboard size and design.

Palm Treo 650
The treo 650 is to the Sidekick what Prada dress shoes are to Adidas sneakers. Despite that analogy, the Treo will not win points for style compared to many cell phones, though the Treo is well-designed and nice on the eyes. The Treo is a so-called Smartphone and runs an OS for its Palm PDA functionality. Part phone, part PDA and part e-mail and Internet-enabled handheld computer, the 650 comes in slightly different versions for Cingular, Verizon, and Sprint. The best part of the 650 is its keyboard and high-resolution color screen.

TEST




April 02, 2004

Do You Parkour? New York Gets French Kicks as Euro Urban Street-Stunt Phenomenon Hits U.S.

033004_1_scion_parkour_stil.jpg

Question: What do you get when you mix skatebording (minus the actual skateboards) with martial arts, gymnastics, suburban boredom and some French joie de vivre?

You get "parkour." Or rather le parkour, as they say in the fine land of croissants, café créme and pomme frites.

The New York Times' Sunday Style section recently devoted a feature article to parkour just as the French phenom establishes a foothold in North America and seems poised to become the next big subcultural urban-athletic trend in the United States.

Also known as "freerunning" in the United Kingdom, where parkour has firmly taken hold and spawned a large underground following, the sport, if one can call it that, involves navigating urban terrain and architectural obstacles.

One does parkour by employing a single (or combinations of ) physical movement such as jumping, climbing and twisting one's body and playing off railings, walls, stairs or platforms.

The simplest moves can be something as common as leaping from a low wall onto the ground and falling into a prat roll. At its riskiest, the most adept parkour practitioners traverse steep, angled rooftops and leap from building to building.

In recent years, Parkour has spread throughout continental Europe and the United Kingdom, with British practitioners --those who do parkour call themselves "traceurs"--providing a plethora of English-language resources, via numerous websites, for inspired American youth eager to immerse themselves in the ways of freerunning.

One of the best websites is Urban Freeflow, which notes that it is "Run by traceurs for traceurs." There you'll find loads of links, photos, tips on parkour techniques and--best of all--short homegrown digital video clips documenting parkour moves by various traceur crews throughout the U.K.

Parkour, which means "circuit" in French, is not new. It was developed 16 years ago in Lisses, France, by a couple of understimulated suburban teenagers named Sebastien Foucan and David Belle. Although they are no longer a team, both founders are still relatively active traceurs. Foucan recently appeared in an entertaining and energetic commercial for the Scion in which he does his parkour thing to Spiderman-like effect. Belle has also parlayed his parkour fame into television work. He appeared in a BBC promo a couple of years ago.

The Times' Anna Bahney writes:

"These days, Mr. Foucan, who is now engaged to be married and is living in the Parisian suburb of ƒvry with a 1-year-old daughter, has taken a more philosophical view of his sport-cum-art, which he refers to as a 'discipline.' He said he is working to carve out a future for parkour that includes the construction of training parks but no tournaments."

For her story, Bahney hung out with a couple of infant freerunning "gangs" in town from the New York City suburbs. The reporter tagged along with them as they explored the parkour potential of Manhhattan's urban jungle-gym, from Grand Central Station down to Wall Street. One of the gangs Bahney followed is called the Gravity Pac, the other the Street Ninjas.

As semi-regular habitués of the Financial District on weekends, Air Massive can attest to the fact that the area surrounding Wall Street seems to have a lot going for it as a freerunners' paradise, at least more so than Midtown Manhattan.

On weekends, the Financial District is virtually a ghost town, so would-be traceurs would have a lot of space to themselves, though they might be competing with skateboarders who have long used the mini-palazzo around the First Precinct Police Building near Water Street as a kind of sanctuary (it's public property--so no hassle from corporate security guards.)

But here's an inside tip for you budding parkouristes, if you will. The Massive has done a little scoping out of ideal parkour playgrounds in Lower Manhattan and surveyed some local parkour wannabes as to their thoughts on the subject. In fact, we've even felt inspired enough to give the freerunning thaaaaang a try.

The consensus is that two places that might be great for for parkour are (1.) the South Street Seaport complex at Pier 17 (check it out here), which is a multi-layered structure with lots of railings and outdoor staircases; and (2) the Winter Garden complex with its huge ampitheater-like stairs, imported palm trees and brass railings at Battery Park City, just across the street from the World Trade Center site.

The big question, however, is Will parkour or freerunning amount to much of anything in the United States? Are we witnessing the beginning of a trend--something of some lingering substance? Or merely a fad? (speaking of which, remember flash mobs?) Or is parkour the birth of a U.S. movement akin to the one in the U.K.?

Whateva the case, we're confident that sadly, sooner or later, someone is going to get hurt freerunning in Lower Manhattan. And when they do, this being New York City, there will be a big, fat, ugly lawsuit. That's one osbtacle nobody wants to have to jump over, not even the world's fittest traceur.

--Le Bob


RELATED LINKS

+ The Art of Le Parkour [BBCi]
+ Urban Freeflow Website
+ South Street Seaport
+ PKUSA: Urban Freeflow's U.S. Parkour Message Board

Posted by Supercore at April 2, 2004 02:56 AM


COMMENTS

Hey we've got three people, we're trying to form a free running clan in Sacramento CA, USA. So if anyone lives in or around Sacramento,mabey we can meet up. rply

Posted by: G.B.G at August 30, 2004 06:39 PM

I'm trying to get people started in Tampa, FL. anyone just reply or something. :)
-Froda

Posted by: Froda [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 4, 2005 03:40 PM

Hey i've got a team of 4 runners, and we've been practicing for about two or three months. We know that basics, we just need to find a gym somewhere in Virginia where we can practice advanced moves. If anyone knows about a gym in Virginia that has a parkour or free running program, please post a comment. Thanks very much

Posted by: Aussy@Heart [TypeKey Profile Page] at February 8, 2005 07:55 PM

GBG, i definatly wanna get into this stuff, im in fair oaks- sacramento, definatly call me, my # is (916)863-7900 and my name is victor, lets hook up and get this started. my yahoo im is recon_delay , so contact me asap cuz i want this so badly, and most of all, i need it. heh, c ya guys!

Posted by: Sgt. Lo Forte [TypeKey Profile Page] at July 11, 2005 04:07 AM


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