-
When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just waiting.
Was just watching the the Steve McQueen movie "Le Mans". While the movie is about racing, it was an awesome reminder of why we ride.
When you're racing (or riding), it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just waiting.
Michael Delaney: This isn't just a thousand to one shot. This is a professional bloodsport. And it can happen to you. And then it can happen to you again.
Lisa Belgetti: When people risk their lives, shouldn't it be for something very important?
Michael Delaney: Well, it better be.
Lisa Belgetti: But what is so important about driving faster than anyone else?
Michael Delaney: Lotta people go through life doing things badly. Racing's important to men who do it well. When you're racing, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just waiting.
http://www.jdmfilmreviews.com/images...en-le-mans.jpg
Le Mans (1971)
106 min, 23 June 1971 (USA)
Almost in breadth and depth of a documentary, this movie depicts an auto race during the 70s on the world's hardest endurance course: Le Mans in France
Director: Lee H. Katzin
Writer: Harry Kleiner
Stars: Steve McQueen, Siegfried Rauch and Elga Andersen
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Would like to see this. He was a student of Bruce Lee as well.
This link is to an old magazine article of Bruce describing Steve. Good reading and interesting insight into the man. Steve apparently invested in motorcycle production in Italy as well.
http://www.mcqueenonline.com/bruceleefeature.htm
http://www.mcqueenonline.com/bruceleefeature02.jpg
CC
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
CC - Thanks for sharing this.
I wasn't aware of their special friendship. Interesting!
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Yeah, I liked it too, thanks. I try and find a bit of that every day.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Dear Luis Carlos,
Many thanks for posting. Very powerful short film! It's definitely making the rounds of motorcycle forums around the world, as I've received several notices. It's so good the final image is forgivable. Given that I started riding at 52, it'll come as no surprise that I shed a tear or two (but I'm a sentimental bastard...).:wheelchair:
Though this clip is a dramatization, it's based on a true story of a group of oldsters in Taichung, Taiwan, who decided retirement was not quite fulfilling enough and banded together for this circumnavigation of Taiwan. The story of the wife who died too young apparently is true. A few days ago someone posted links to some youku clips about a movie called Go Grandriders. The video quality made those clips almost unwatchable. But I've found another that's much, much better -- a trailer for the Go Grandriders film, which I'm assuming is a feature. Here's the clip in youtube, which, as always for mainland residents, will require a grannybuster (VPN, proxy tunnel, etc).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AjWnc54ZMUQ
I'd love to see the full feature!
cheers
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Steve McQueen aka Harvey Mushman also raced on the American Team in the ISDE in the sixties.The guy sure could ride.I like his saying "If I'm not racing I'm thinking about it" He also could drive.Did all his own stunt driving in the film Bullitt.Best car chase movie in history.
Here's another legend
On Your Bike
14/02/2011
Introduced by Wayne Gardiner, former motorcycle world champion
This week's program charts the adventures of an octogenarian motor bike rider who's suddenly become the centre of a social networking phenomenon.
When Doug Sunderland succumbed to the blues after losing his wife and being diagnosed with cancer, his GP told him to 'get back on his bike'.
He did... and it 'saved his life', so much so, that he decided to ride around Australia solo, surviving on tinned food and sleeping by the road.
Then, unexpectedly, the 85 year old was befriended by young bike rider Kris Growcott who started a Facebook page to rally support for the veteran.
Suddenly fans were joining up in their hundreds and, for Doug Sunderland, everything changed in the most delightful way...
http://www.abc.net.au/austory/content/2011/s3138700.htm
Just shows your never to old to ride.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Speaking of wonderful and inspiring videos, this one is timely and beautiful and moving -- something to warm your heart on a cold day when you can't ride.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fgw_zfLLvh8
I'd love to understand the lyrics (help us here, Slabo!) but I doubt anyone will miss the meaning.
:clap::clap:
cheers!
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Aye and at least 300 dead and many seriously injured. Freedom is so expensive, and we take it for granted in so many places.
I have been watching a TV series, 'Generation Kill', which shows how many innocents were wiped out and maimed, nearly half a million so far, in Afghanistan and Iraq as they are 'freed'.
I suppose 300 is a small price?
How many more to come?
Killing people is so easy to do, call in an air strike or aim, breath, press trigger. then go and have a cuppa. Been there, done that.
I wish there was another way. In all honesty, and after decades of reflection, I know of no other.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
0:17 I went down to the streets, vowing not to return
0:21 And wrote with my blood on every street
0:25 Our voices reached those who could not hear them
0:30 And we broke through all barriers
0:34 Our weapon was our dreams
0:38 And tomorrow is looking as bright as it seems
0:42 For ages we've been waiting
0:46 Searching but unable to find our place
0:51 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
1:24 We held our head up high to the sky
1:28 And hunger didn't matter to us anymore
1:32 The most important thing is our rights
1:36 And write our history with our blood
1:40 If you were one of us
1:44 Don’t blather and tell us
1:49 To leave and abandon our dream
1:53 And stop saying the word ‘I’
1:57 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
2:13 Dark Egyptian Hands; against discrimination, rise Outstretched amid roars of might O Novel Youth, Into spring the autumn weaves
2:26 Awakening the murdered by a miracle achieved Kill me, the dead shall not retreat your country
2:36 With the ink of blood, I write the future of my country Is that my blood or spring?
2:42 Both are in green I smile from happiness not grief
2:48 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
Found the transcript on the on youtube :mwink:
It's still not clear what's going on, let's hope this changes the region positively instead of being just one hopeful day in history.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Quote:
Originally Posted by
euphonius
I'd love to understand the lyrics (help us here, Slabo!) but I doubt anyone will miss the meaning.
:clap::clap:
cheers!
0:17 I went down to the streets, vowing not to return
0:21 And wrote with my blood on every street
0:25 Our voices reached those who could not hear them
0:30 And we broke through all barriers
0:34 Our weapon was our dreams
0:38 And tomorrow is looking as bright as it seems
0:42 For ages we've been waiting
0:46 Searching but unable to find our place
0:51 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
1:24 We held our head up high to the sky
1:28 And hunger didn't matter to us anymore
1:32 The most important thing is our rights
1:36 And write our history with our blood
1:40 If you were one of us
1:44 Don’t blather and tell us
1:49 To leave and abandon our dream
1:53 And stop saying the word ‘I’
1:57 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
2:13 Dark Egyptian Hands; against discrimination, rise Outstretched amid roars of might O Novel Youth, Into spring the autumn weaves
2:26 Awakening the murdered by a miracle achieved Kill me, the dead shall not retreat your country
2:36 With the ink of blood, I write the future of my country Is that my blood or spring?
2:42 Both are in green I smile from happiness not grief
2:48 In every street in my country The sound of freedom is calling
Found the transcript on the on youtube
It's still not clear what's going on, let's hope this changes the region positively instead of being just one hopeful day in history.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
Quote:
Originally Posted by
slabo
[It's still not clear what's going on, let's hope this changes the region positively instead of being just one hopeful day in history.
+1
كل شدة وتهون،الصبر مفتاح الفرج
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
+1
الأمل في مستقبل أفضل ، على استعداد للأسوأ
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
لا تلقوا بأيديكم إلى التهلكة
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
I will start chrging for lessons soon. If anyone's interested, it's not too difficult. English and Arabic have almost identical syntax structure. The Arabic alphabet is 28 letters, but writing is slightly more complex than English, with accentuation and tone marks.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
tempting, slabo. I must say I've been extremely impressed with the quality of the English of many young Egyptians interviewed on the streets of Cairo.
Is it true that, like Chinese, everyone can read a relatively standard Arabic script, though they may pronounce the words in ways that may be almost unintelligible to speakers of other dialects? Also, I've heard there's perhaps a classical form that omits some of the diacritics so you are left guessing about vowel sounds?
Fascinating time. I wonder if there will now be a spike in Arabic language studies in the west in the same way that many young people have been flocking to Chinese.
cheers
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
I went to London in 1999 to study. I remember being totally isolated, listening to two languages I was supposed to understand: British English, and Gulf accent Arabic. I was very funny, the only two languages I was supposed to understand, yet it took me 2 months to understand the many British accents. I gave up on the Arabic, for reasons better discussed over many beers .. just to get the facts straight :wink:
The most common Arabic variant is the Levantine Arabic. That's the formal tone/accent for Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and Egypt(slightly different in Egypt). That's very different from the classical variant. I use the term variant, because it's not only the tone that differs from classical Arabic, it's also the choice of words. Classical Arabic is still used in Saudi Arabia and the gulf region. Think 16th century English and before. Most Arabs now can't read the Quraan. Hence the need to 'interpreters'. Not much different than the Bible if you think about it. There's only one text, one edition, but it's written in an archaic language so it's up the interpreters to dictate the meaning suitable for them.
Like Chinese, to study Arabic one must learn the formal tone, even for natives. Unlike the Chinese, you will only hear politicians, lawyers, and news-cast readers speak that formally. Now if you were to learn how to speak Arabic, the Levantine tone, that would be useless to converse to in real life situations. The people who understand you're saying are probably well educated and speak English well, but they never use official tone to speak and would find it awkward to speak to you. They would much prefer speaking in English. I spoke to the Chinese ambassador in Lebanon once, he refused to speak in English, but it was so funny to hear him speak, even though he spoke almost perfect Arabic.
All written Arabic omit most of the diacritics, it's only included for students or when the meaning is not obvious without the marks.
I didn't know half of this before I started teaching in China. Actually, this is how I got into teaching. Someone asked for an Arabic teacher on a local Kunming forum. I figured I should try, probably being the only person who speaks Arabic here. Oops, never thought I could teach anything. Then I got a job teaching English.
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
So is there an Arabic "lingua franca" -- one variant that all Arabic speakers can understand, like Mandarin, or California English?:naughty::naughty:
(You can tell it's cold in China, if we are talking about variants of languages most of us don't speak rather than about our latest oil change...)
That said...
I did saddle up and take a short ride today -- my first since my mid-August mishap with young Slabo in Kunming. It was bloody cold, maybe 3C, here in Shanghai, but the sun was out, the streets were dry and my Jialing sprang to life like a trooper. What a treat!
cheers
-
Re: When you're riding, it's life. Anything that happens before or after is just wait
It's been bugging me all day!!!! You know that clip about the 5 old geezers who go on that road trip? Well I recognised the background music and was racking my brain... Finally I remembered that it's actually a Japanese song whose music video is animated by Miyazaki!!! Check it out:
http://v.youku.com/v_show/id_XMjMzMDIwMDQ=.html