Aw, Yeah. The 1965 International Six Days Trial

Aw, Yeah. The 1965 International Six Days Trial

Of course they don’t call it that anymore. It’s now the “International Six Days Enduro.” Same sort of badly tuned chainsaw tailpipe vibe, though, with lots of slipping and sliding and shaking of eurotrash fists at sproinged sprockets and fouled plugs along the wayside. Then some accountant with a stopwatch, a spreadsheet, and a hangover figures out who won, and gives them a paperweight.

Except for interregnums for two wars (the good ones, natch) they’ve been running some form of this race, or competition, or ugly pageant, or goat path-clearing scheme since 1913. It’s hard to tell you how to win, and I can’t pronounce most of the winner’s names anyway, so let’s picture ourselves in a pub, next to a peat fire, with a pint in our hand and a song in our hearts, while the dulcet Manx tones of the local commentators flood over us via the wireless. Beats standing in a ditch in the heather while some Spaniard goes by sideways mumbling jesucristo at his clutch:

We’ve got mud. We’ve got more mud. Look, there; there’s some more mud now! Oh, dear, I think a stone was mixed in there with the mud. Yes! We’ve found some muck there, to forestall monotony. Mind, the mire, fellows.



Oh, dear, we’ve got mist, now. There’s some more mist. Now some drizzle mixed in with the mist. Ooh! Foggy mist has now appeared. Looking forward to misty fog. Interestingly, I used to snogg and shag and whatnot with Misty Fogg back in University. But I digress.


Ooh, the Frenchman has some sort of clipboard violation! Give him a yellow card, or a caution, or a paddling, or a bath, or whatever the penalty is, and declare a winner from whoever hasn’t the brains to be here in the pub with us already. Where should we eat offal today, Percy? I hear Clague’s Chophouse has a special on organ meat bubble and squeak.

There’s “Nope,” And Then There’s Alex Honnold-Grade Nope

There’s “Nope,” And Then There’s Alex Honnold-Grade Nope

So much nope. Extra-nopey, that one. Incalculable nopishness. So nope you can’t get over it; so nope you can’t go around it; so nope you can’t get under it — Nope!

No. Nicht. Nein. No F-ing way. *begin George Bush Senior voice*  Not gunna do it. *end George Bush Senior voice*

Haven’t you watched The Guns of Navarone?  Anthony Quayle loses a leg and gets poked on the bruise by Nazis first — and that’s the Best. Case. Scenario. Don’t you watch Roadrunner cartoons? Hint: You’re not the roadrunner. A bag of acme chalk is not going to save you.

To paraphrase Nancy Reagan: Just Say Nope!

Alex Honnold.

They Said It Couldn’t Be Done!

They Said It Couldn’t Be Done!

[Warning: There’s a pretty woman right at the end who bought her shirt at a Sherwin Williams store, and didn’t use two coats]

Well, they said it shouldn’t be done. Actually, it was more like they said there really was no point in doing it. Really, though, they said that they weren’t exactly sure what the hell you were trying to accomplish, so there was no conceivable way to judge whether or not it couldn’t be done, or whether you’d done it. There was a small conclave of observers that said that you evidently had already done whatever it was you were doing, so saying “they said it couldn’t be done” was superfluous at that point, but they wanted to say “they said it couldn’t be done” anyway, to indicate that you had, indeed done that thing you were not supposed to be able to do, if that was it, I think it was.

[Thanks to Charles Schneider for sending that one along]

Noble Savage

Noble Savage


It’s very simple. If these sorts of shenanigans annoy you, there’s a cure. Saying, “Kids these days,” is not going to cut any ice. Calling the cops doesn’t work; these are human jackrabbits. Putting up chainlink fences to keep them out just expands the menu of near-crash stunts they can conjure up.

We could, you know, stop making every urban and suburban area into a dystopian concrete and pavement nightmare. If it wasn’t for graffiti and roadrash smears from skateboarding and BMX-riding stunts gone bad, there’d be no evidence of human life anywhere.

[Thanks to Gerard at American Digest for sending that one along. I hear he’s got a BB gun for just such occasions]