Sunday, December 29, 2019

Why did BMX freestyle happen?

 Blog post: Why did BMX freestyle happen?

How did 2020 go for you?  This is how a lot of people think of this year, drawing to a close as I compile this ebook.  I have no idea what was supposed to happen in this photo, but obviously it didn't go as planned.  BMXers weren't the first people to do stupid stuff on bikes.  But BMX freestyle took trick riding to all new levels, and to millions of people around the world, something that didn't happen in the 100 or so years of bike riding before freestyle got going.   

In the original version of this blog post, I embedded a video clip of a young man and woman, riding bikes on a domed roof of an old building.  In that clip, we saw a man and a woman, probably in their early 20's, around college age, riding bikes on the edge of this dome, on a windy day, at some point in the 1920's, the Roaring 20's, as they've come to be known.  Not insane by today's standards, but they had a 20 to 30 mph wind they were dealing with, it was definitely dodgy.  

I'm 54 now, as the crazy year 2020 draws to an end, and my grandparents were born between 1900 and 1909, I think, which would put these riders right around the same age.   So if you're middle aged like me, imagine your grandparents riding 1920's bikes on a domed roof in the wind, as young people.  Pretty radical for those days.

Then we see a guy on a 1920's mega ramp, below, basically, clearing a gap of 25 to 30 feet.  Sure, there are a lot of riders who could make that jump today, on their BMX or mountain bikes.  But that guy did it when the grandparents of us Old Schoolers were young, on a mild steel frame.  What we call 4130 chromoly (or chrome-moly) steel today, was aircraft technology from the 1920's, to the best of my knowledge.  It wasn't a material used to make bikes then, it was way too expensive.  All these old bike trick videos and photos were people riding what we call mild steel frames.  You know, the kind of frames you could snap in ten minutes at your local trails.  These are the bikes Mike and Frank from American Pickers find in a barn of they're having a really good day.  There were actually people riding bikes with wooden rims in that era. 

I don't care how good of a rider you are, would you try that gap below on a skinny tire, $200, mild steel, beach cruiser-style bike from Walmart?  Hell no, you wouldn't.  My point is, people were getting crazy on bicycles from about the time modern bicycles were invented, which was around 1875.  The Fred Flintstone-style, "hobby horse," foot push bikes, adult sized versions of today's toddler balance bikes, popped up around 1830.  But pedal bikes came along around 1875.

As I've thought about those early bike riders while blogging, and as I've dug into these old clips and vintage photos, it's become apparent that there were some crazy ass motherfuckers on bicycles from the earliest days.  And I mean crazy... by Morgan Wade Dakota Roche standards.  They were doing Evel Knievel caliber shit 120 years ago.  This photo below dates to 1905.  My oldest grandma was kindergarten age when this photo was taken. Most people rode horses into town in those days.

Speaking of grandmas, it wasn't just guys getting crazy back then, somebody's grandma did trackstands.
Not crazy enough for you?  I said above that some of these ancient bike tricksters were crazy by Morgan Wade standards, I wasn't exaggerating, like this guy below.
Yes, there were even sponsored riders back then, as well.  It was a lot different from today's sponsorship deals.  Young riders making $30,000 at one contest today, for five minutes worth of contest runs, makes them seem pretty badass.  But you know who was really badass, Annie Oakley.  She had a bike sponsor AND a gun sponsor... around 1900-1905.  Sure, Larry Edgar can do a 37 foot high tabletop off a curb jump, but can he shoot six glass balls out of the air with a lever action 30/30 before they hit the ground?  I don't think so.  Annie Oakley could.

 And yes, even back then, girlfriends and wives got pissed off when you bought too many bikes in those days.  Some things never change.
There were even street riders 120 years ago.
Not only were people doing crazy and amazing stuff on bikes 80-100-120 years ago, on mild steel frame bikes, they were shredding without Red Bull, without helmets, without Emergency Rooms, and without Red Bull video production budgets.  I don't know who this crazy fool is but I'm betting Morgan Wade is one of his descendants.  Morgan's my go to favorite rider these days (and Dakota Roche), when I want to watch amazing new school riding, which is why I keep mentioning him.

You get the idea.  There were people doing tricks on bikes from the get go.  My personal belief is that bicycle trick riding was invented about ten minutes after the first guy learned to ride the first bike, when a cute girl walked by.  That's just an educated guess.

We didn't know about this history when freestyle began spreading in the early 1980's, as Bob Haro, Bob Morales, Eddie Fiola, R.L. Osborn, Mike Buff, and other freestyle pioneers started doing demos and shows and letting other riders see what they had learned.  After 1980, trick riding on BMX bikes began to spread slowly around Southern California, and the BMX racing world.  Then a few hundred weird kids, myself included, caught the fever, and it blew up in small scenes dotted around the U.S., the U.K., and Europe, into the first wave of popularity in the late 1980's.  Martin Aparijo and Woody Itson, who could both jump and ride pools, focused on flatland, and opened all our eyes to the what was possible with a BMX bike and a parking lot.  We didn't all have skateparks, but we all had local parking lots for flatland.

So why did BMX freestyle, which started with Bob Haro and his friend John riding pools, just about on the 100 year anniversary of bikes being invented, take off and blow up world wide?  Why did all the other action sports seem to pop up, grow, and explode, just as us Generation X kids were coming of age?  This is one of the themes I went into in my online book/blog Welcome to Dystopia: The Future is Now, Book 1 (You can google it).

I think I've found the answer to this question, based on a little known social theory from India.  The concept comes from a thinker, and pretty weird guy, P.R. Sarkar, and it's called The Law of Social Cycle.  Basically, Sarkar came to the conclusion that there were four main mentalities of people in any society, The Intellectuals (smart people), The Acquisitors (smart people who focus on building wealth), The Laborers (average people who work normal jobs), and The Warriors (people focused on physical skills and courage).  At any given time, in every society, one of these mentalities dominates society.  That mentality is most looked up to, and shapes every aspect of their world.  These mentalities can dominate society for decades or hundreds of years.  But the mentalities dominate society in a particular order.  The Warriors, The Intellectuals, The Acquisitors, The Laborers, and back to the The Warriors again.

An American economist, of Indian background (India Indians, not Native American Indians), named Ravi Batra, applied this concept to the U.S. in the 1980's, and came to the conclusion that we've been in the Acquisitor Age since our colonial days.  The U.S. has been about business people, businessMEN primarily, as any woman who knows history can tell you.  In the 1980's, when Batra figured this out, he wrote that we're nearing the end of the Acquisitor Age, a time when things turn to massive business and government corruption, the common working people get the shaft, and their standard of living goes down and stays down.  Eventually, the working people become fed up, and they rise up in a huge populist movement.

Guess where we are now?  Yep, the Occupy Wall Street movement, in 2011, was the beginning of the American populist movement rising to national awareness.  It had been brewing under the surface for decades.  Then the unexpected rise of both Donald Trump (on the political Right) and Bernie Sanders (on the political Left) were more examples of the rising populist movement.  While they are on opposite ends of the political spectrum, they both tapped into millions of  average working people who were pissed off at how much of a struggle everyday life, and making ends meet financially, had become.  The new crop of both Progressive Left, and some of the Right Wing political extremes, tapped into millions of The Laborers rising up in protest.

In Sarkar's theory, The Laborers rise up, shit gets completely crazy and chaotic for a while, then one of two things happen.  Either the society collapses and/or gets taken over by a rival (the bad option), or The Warriors rise up and take control and lead a new version of society.  While the vast majority of people are Laborers, they aren't leaders, by nature.  So The Laborers' populist movement rises up, shakes up and collapses the business people's corrupt system, then it kind of dies out.  That vacuum is filled by Warriors, physically strong and truly courageous people.  The average working people are sick of smooth talking con men at that point, they want actual, courageous, leaders.

So what does this have to do with BMX freestyle and actions sports?  Simply, we as BMXers and Action Sports people, are one part of The Warrior mentality.  Watching Sarkar's theory play out over 30 years now, since I read the book about it, I realized that the Warrior mentality people don't just pop up when The Laborers revolt, they slowly build, and the Warrior mentality spreads across the society little by little.  

The entire action sports world, we are all part of the Warrior mentality that's been rising up in society, from the few weirdos on the fringe, decades ago.  When all those crazy and fun-filled riders in the photos above got crazy on their bikes, they were freaks.  Society wasn't ready for them, they didn't get thousands of other people to go out and do crazy things on bicycles. Bicycle trick riding was a novelty, but it didn't take off as a mass movement.  But bicycling itself, then newer than BMX is today, did grow in a practical way.  These shredders in the photos above, they were the handful of people pushing the limits in a highly conformist, Industrial Age, businessman's world.

But when Bob Haro and friends started doing tricks in the 1970's, they appeared on the heels of us Generation X kids seeing a couple of amazing and crazy people.  Those two people, who influenced so many of us as little kids, were Evel Knievel and Bruce Lee.  Their skills, daring, and general badassness really appealed to us kids, whose dad's (and a few moms then) worked either blue collar factory jobs, or suit-and-tie, 9 to 5 office jobs.

We were born into a world of massive, "company man" conformity, and Evel and Bruce showed us it was possible to be a bad ass.  Those two came along right after surfing got popular in the 1960's, and as martial arts was gaining steam in the U.S..  Motocross, the other root action sport, besides surfing, had been slowly growing in the U.S., as well.  These were all modern people with a Warrior mentality, but unlike the soldiers, police, and firefighters, professional athletes in mainstream team sports, the Warrior mentality people of earlier eras, these action sports pioneers turned that mentality towards a new group, a whole new kind, of "sports."

Another aspect of The Warriors that P.R. Sarkar described, was that people with the Warrior mentality are big on individualism.  They like to do their own thing.  So as the Warrior mentality was slowly spreading throughout American society in the soldiers, police, firefighters, and professional athletes in traditional sports, a whole new world of very individual-oriented sports, Action Sports, from BMX to rock climbing to surfing, and all the rest, evolved.

I published a zine in 1998 called "The Warrior Sports" explaining this idea.  I passed about 50 of those zines out at the X-Games in San Diego that year.  Much to my surprise, a year later, I was on the deck of the X-Games vert ramp, shooting video with a scammed press pass.  Dennis McCoy rolled out next to me.  Out of nowhere, he said, "Hey, that warrior zine you wrote last year was pretty cool."  I didn't even see Dennis the year before, he nabbed a zine I gave to Mark Losey.  But when Dennis McCoy remembers a zine a year after you publish it, you know you hit on a pretty cool idea.

So, in the Big Picture of things.  BMX and BMX freestyle happened when they did, and took off and grew worldwide in the way they did, because society was finally ready for some radness.  The Warrior Mentality was creeping through society, slowly becoming more acceptable to more and more people.  By the time Bob Haro got his bike into a skatepark about 1975, a whole bunch of kids in Generation X was ready and looking for something wilder and crazier than the things our parents did as hobbies.  You know, exciting things like bowling and miniature golf.  Us Generation X kids were looking for a new type of excitement, and BMX freestyle was it for us, skateboarding for others, surfing for others, and the same with all the other Action Sports.  Without realizing it, we all played a small part in creating a new version of the Warrior mentality.  We found ways to do scary stuff, push our physical and mental limits, and get crazy, without actually going to war and killing other people. The early human tribal people, and later warriors and soldiers, were the root of warriorship, and the warrior mentality in ancient times.

As we move forward in the world today, we'll see more and more people who are actually physically good at something, from many different Warrior-type backgrounds, rise up to positions of importance in society.  People are sick of silver-tongued, douchebag politicians.  OK, a lot of people are, not everyone, there are still plenty of those politicians in office.  As we navigate these chaotic times, we will see more courageous people emerge, actual leaders, and maybe some will be people we sessioned with in days past.  Hopefully we'll take this into a type of society that's better for the vast majority of people and less of a 1% versus the 99% world.

One last thing, if you spend a chunk of your time in a bike shop, take heart, you never know what a small group of people from a bike shop will accomplish.  Check the meme below.

The Wright Brothers' bike shop in Dayton, Ohio in the early 1900's. 

I have new blogs out, check them out:


 

Thursday, December 19, 2019

My annual Punk Rock/Alternative Christmas Playlist


What better way to start the list than this Dropkick Murphys video of an all American family living a wonderful life.

Let's start with my new holiday favorite this year...
It's a Bad Brains Christmas Charlie Brown
"You're a Mean One Mr. Grinch" - Dr. Seuss (animated movie)
"Silent Night" -The Dickies 
"Merry Christmas (I don't want to fight tonight)" - The Ramones
"Father Christmas" - The Kinks
"Little Drummer Boy"  - Joan Jett and the Blackhearts
"White Christmas" - Bad Religion
"Jingle Hell's Bells"- AC/DC 
"Oi to the World" - No Doubt 
"I Won't Be Home For Christmas" - Blink 182 
"Christmas Wrapping" - The Waitresses 
Jewish"Christmas Wrapping" - Monique Powell/Save Ferris 
"Chanukah Song" - Adam Sandler 
"Yuletide Romeo" - Kerry Getz 
"Little Drummer Boy" - David Bowie and  Bing Crosby
"Jingle Bells" - Brian Setzer Orchestra 
"Blue Christmas" - The Partridge Family 
"Santa Claus is Coming to Town" - Bruce Springsteen
"Run, Run Rudolph" - Lemmy from Motorhead (acoustic)
"God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" - Annie Lennox 
"Carol of the Bells" - Pentatonix 
"The Hippo Song" - Gayla Peevy
"Silver Bells" - Bing Crosby 

And one for the New Year...
"The End of the World (as we know it)" - No Doubt

 I just started a new blog for Marvin Davits, to promote Marvin's business of putting Dinghy Davits on boats and yachts.  Check it out.  

Monday, December 16, 2019

A funny thing happened on the way to sell art yesterday...

After being busy trying to sell art online, opening an fledgling online store (WPOS Kreative), I finally took a couple of the art skate decks I've made (#sharpiescribblestyle) to set up on Hollywood Boulevard yesterday.  The star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame dedicated to our current president, has taken some abuse over the years.

At one point, a group was trying to have Trump's star removed.  Back then, Mark Hamill, Luke Skywalker himself, then tweeted that he knew whose star should replace it, Carrie Fisher, a cause championed by Kristin Grady at #astarforcarrie.  I talked to Kristin last night, she has over 5,000 names on her paper petition to get Carrie Fisher a star, which, let's face it, is needed.

All that aside, I came up the escalator from the Red Line (subway) and saw this gold toilet sitting on the black marble of the Walk of Fame.  I have no idea who did this, my guess would be pranksters with a YouTube channel.  I haven't seen any news since yesterday morning, maybe the prankster is known.

In any case, I laughed my ass off, and snapped a photo.  The was even a turd in the toilet, apparently a fake one.  Some Mexican chicks actually reached down to touch it and see if it was real, as I walked up.  I didn't need to know that bad, but it was hilarious, whomever did it.  As our nation teeters on the brink of collapsing into theocratic totalitarianism, and presidential impeachment looms, it's good  we can still laugh at the whole fucked up situation we're all in at the moment.  Now... if we can only solve this issue, and get a competent president in the White House again, and pull the Constitution out of the trash can and put it back to use.

After that, I set up with the other artists on the sidewalk, between the TCL Chinese Theater (check footprints below) and the Hard Rock Cafe.  I had a couple of my Harley Quinn art skate decks to show off.  It was cold, super windy, and I didn't sell one.  But I did get the cosplay couple who dress up as Harley Quinn and the Joker on Hollywood Blvd. (they take photos with tourists for tips) to give my art decks a thumbs up.  Pretty cool.  It's warmer, and hopefully less windy, today.  I'm working on a sea turtle skate art deck, but don't have any done yet.  I'm still drawing the turtle, based on a Barspinner Ryan freedving photo, which will look pretty dang cool.
My little set-up on the Walk O' Fame.  The big white tent on the left, that's a block long, part of the HUGE set-up for the new Star Wars movie premiere, which I think happens tomorrow night.

I wrote a while back that I went to the hand and foot print ceremony for Jay and Silent Bob, Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith, made legendary in the movie Clerks, and many films since.  The latest, of course, is Jay and Silent Bob Reboot.  The hand and foot prints for the bong-namic duo are now out and set in the TCL Chinese Theater fore walk area.  The got placed right below the Fantastic Four prints, I think.  I got to watch a live podcast with Kevin Smith there the night before last, of the Fatman Beyond podcast, and Kevin was stoked on the placement of his and Jason's prints.

Kevin Smith, left, in his trademark backwards, white baseball cap, and Mark Bernadin, right.  My view of the Fatman Beyond live podcast taping, two nights ago, in front of the TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood.  Seriously, it was some funny ass shit, and I had no idea just how little I know about Star Wars until sitting in that crowd.  Oh, and if you ever had a dream of having sex while standing in Darth Vader's footprints at the Chinese, it's been done.  Really.  Amazing what you learn at a podcast taping.  The podcast will be up soon, and video version will be on YouTube, too.

 So that's a funny, cold, windy day's tale from the weirdness that is Hollywood Boulevard. 

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Alma Jo Barrera's VW Bug: The Tribute


Built as a tribute to veterans of all U.S. armed forces, by veterans, The Tribute bug has quite a story, well worth the five minute this video takes to watch.

If you read this blog on a regular basis, you know I blog about three things mostly, Old School BMX freestyle, my Sharpie artwork, and the economy/future trends.  Those are the things I'm most into these days.  So why the VW Bug post?  Because the woman you see in this video, Alma Jo Barrera, is an Old School BMX freestyler, and a cool chick in general.
Here's a drawing Alma Jo asked me to do, back in 2016, from a photo of her doing a surfer while competing at the Velodrome AFA Masters in 1987.  

In the 1980's, as it was just becoming a sport of its own, BMX freestyle was a boy's sport.  There were a few hundred of us young guys that rode enough, and were hardcore enough, to show up at a major AFA contest in any region.  It was not a girl friendly sport, but there were a handful of young women who got out there and learned a few tricks.  A couple of women got to be really solid riders.  All you guys from that era remember Krys Dauchy, she got a ton of coverage in that era.  But the other solid female rider of the late 1980's, was Alma Jo, out of the epic Austin freestyle scene.  Austin was the home of several riders then, Robert and Reuben Castillo being the best known at the time.
Alma Jo with a stomach stand at the 1987 AFA Masters at the Velodrome.

I met Alma Jo in 1988 when she was out in California for the spring Velodrome contest, and we rode and hung out for a week or so.  The same thing happened when I went to the Austin AFA Masters that year.  Even as a young mother trying to handle all the things necessary  as a mom, she also got out to ride every day, and competed against us guys, because that was the only option then.

Alma Jo went on to join the Army, and served in the Gulf War, I believe.  I know she's a proud veteran, though we've never talked much about her time in the Army.  Since then, she's gotten really into fixing up, and rebuilding Volkswagons.  The last time I asked her how many VW's she had, the answer was "about 15," I think.  Obviously, The Tribute is in a category of its own.  I'll be honest, that video above made me tear up.

I'm sharing this post in all the BMX groups, like most of my BMX posts, because it's a little bit of BMX freestyle history, a rider who was a pioneer for the girls of her region, and one overlooked then and since.  Plus there are plenty of car guys, and some veterans, in the Old School Freestyle community who'll dig the story of The Tribute bug in the video above.

                                                                                                                                 
Check out my new mash-up book/blog about the future:
Welcome to Dystopia: The Future is Now                     

I also have a new blog that will eventually take over as my main blog.  Check it out:

 

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Thursday, December 12, 2019

The Best Interview I've seen on our current economy: CNBC w/ Jeffrey Gundlach


Wow, a major person in the U.S. financial world willing to actually tell it like it is.  This interview is incredibly refreshing, although depressing in the long run.  If you have ANY interest in investing, financial markets, or the future, this is worth watching. 

When I started this blog in June of 2017, bringing all my blogging into one place, I soon started talking about some longer term issues, like technology taking human jobs, the next recession, and other major trends I saw building into a serious recession.  In the beginning of January, 2018, right after President Trump signed the huge tax cut (corporate bailout) bill into law, people in the financial world were predicting the markets would take off, and soar for another 3 to 5 years.  I, however, predicted the markets would rise for 1 to 2 months, and then head downward.  That's exactly what happened.  The Dow, S&P 500, and Russell 2000 all peaked on January 26, 2018, then headed down.  The Nasdaq headed up a few more months before heading down, buoyed up by the big tech stocks everyone was clinging to. 

Largely, I got the point right that Trump signing the taxi bill was the reason stocks were heading higher early in Trump's presidency.  The big corporations and Wall Street new a widfall was coming.  After the bill got signed, and major corporations did some major buybacks of their own stock, and there was no more serious, fundamental reasons for stocks to keep heading up.

At that point, from my point of view the major recession was ready to happen.  Then something really crazy happened, that I didn't expect, stocks began grinding slowly upward again, until a huge collapse in late 2018.  Then they ground slowly upward again.  My analogy was the the stock market is now like a couple of bulldozers trying to push a dead whale up the side of a mountain.  Yeah, you can push it a bit higher, but it really just doesn't want to go.  And at some point, gravity will send it rolling back down the mountain in a big way, that's inevitable. 

While I've said for years that I have a big interest in economics, I've found in the last couple years that I make financial predictions largely on big picture trends and mass psychology.  I'd check the markets to get a take on where the financial world was in the larger cycle I saw playing out.  I never really dug into the nitty gritty numbers of economics.  Sidelined by outside pressure, and struggling to just survive, I had no reason to dig deeper, I have no money to invest.  I wouldn't put a dime in the stock markets, anyhow, at this point. But without digging deep into numbers, I could predict recessions and other market trends using the group human psychology I saw happening over the last 25 years.

What I got wrong, was the incredible level of market manipulation going on since 2008 by the The Federal Reserve, other central banks around the world, the big investment banks, and Wall Street.  While financial people often talk about "free markets," that's really the last thing they want.  The financial world wants markets highly manipulated, in their favor, to make a killing.  Since The Great Recession, though, the markets have become so manipulated, that we now, functionally, have two economies.  We have the "financial world" economy, where the Dow is hitting a new "all time high" today, yet that high is less than 6% above the high it hit on January 26, 2018.  It's up less than 3% a year in the last 23 months. 

Our second economy is the everyday economy that us average American people live in.  About 65% of America is struggling to make ends meet, and a third of everyday people are making decent salaries, but many are weighed down with a huge amount of student loan debt, and often other debts. The "financial world" economy is being pumped full of money, literally to keep it from completely collapsing at this point.  Something like $380 billion has been pumped into the Repo Market since September, a market most of us never new existed.  Yet, if it seizes up for a while again, the world economy begins to collapse.  Like, REALLY. 

We are in a complete financial Never Never Land, a place of countries putting out bonds with negative interest rates, a place where everyone is "living off their credit cards," individuals, corporations, and whole countries.  The world is piled high with more debt than ever in human history, and being pumped full of money to try and inflate markets, continue devaluing currencies, and kick the debt can further down the road.  But the biggest manipulations in history are barely keeping things functioning at this point. This current financial world can't last for long, and the collapse is going to annihilate entire regions and maybe whole countries.

In the interview above, Jefferey Gundlach, hardcore bond expert, actually gets into the reality we're facing, and gives really insightful thinking on where we are, where we're heading, and how to deal with it. 

Thursday, December 5, 2019

New MTB vid: Fabio Wibmer takes the stairs...


Pretty serious theme of insane stair rides in this one.  Fabio also hits a legendary skate spot, the Lyon 25, who a skater known as Jaws ollied in 2015.  Fabio steps up the game again, as usual.  Progression. 

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Dave Vanderspek in action: Curb Dogs II video


I went looking for some more footage of Dave Vanderspek, and realized I've never seen this whole video, somehow.  Dave was all about having fun riding your bike and your skateboard.  He was a seriously talented rider, founder of the most popular independent freestyle and skate team of the 1980's, the Curb Dogs, one of the first to really push street riding, was sponsored by Skyway, Boss, and Kuwahara,put on the first BMX street and the first BMX halfpipe contests, and just a ton of fun to hang and ride with.  If you want to know why I drew the picture below as a tribute to him 31 years after his death, watch this video. 

"No one got hurt, no one got arrested."
-Dave Vanderspek 
(from the demo in the video above)

This drawing, in my Sharpie Scribble Style, is 11" X 14", and signed and numbered copies are available for $20 (includes shipping in continental U.S.)  Email me at: stevenemig13@gmail.com for details.  It's a limited run of 75 drawings, about 26 are gone already.  If you're a 1980's freestyler with a man cave or BMX collection, you need this in that mix. 

An anthropologist's look at skate spots

This 12 minute video about skate spots popped up on my feed the other day, and I took the time to check it out.  For the first minute or so,...