Skilled or what?

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by El Toro, Sep 13, 2013.

  1. :upyeah:
     
    #1 El Toro, Sep 13, 2013
    Last edited by a moderator: Mar 16, 2014
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  2. you modest bastard John, you were layin that stuff down ^ last weekend like it was your job and reading the paper and rollin a 'fag'
     
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  3. He might want to edit his video: "You no who you are" isn't great, is it?
     
  4. Glid When you can do what he does with a bike, speeling good aint a priority:biggrin:
     
  5. Scott Reddings twitter was full of really bad spelling mistakes. I started tweeting back corrections. Think he has spell checker now as he's improved.
     
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  6. I appreciate the skill of any of these guys. But the Japanese bloke, well, what can you say? The video is really well shot, the bikes look the biz and his skill level is on a whole different plane: backwards wheelies sitting on the handlebars?

    The British video is a bloke hooning around on a bit of country road, not very well shot and ends with the most appalling grammatical error. If I was a guy looking for a stunt rider and had equal access to both, I'd only be dialling one number. As a promotional video, it's sub-par. Sorry. Can do better!
     
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  7. Sorry to disappoint you with the quality of the video . It was the only one I found with a quick Google search. It's probably outdated now.
    I can assure you that Sparky is on a different level from the Jap chappy, His skills were not fully represented in the clip I posted and he does backwards wheelies sitting on the handlebars- and an awful lot more. I have seen him performing on a couple of occasions, and if it wasn't for being a 60 year old geriatric I would run away and join him and his circus:tongue:


    [h=1]Sparky[/h] My name is Marc Chennell AKA Sparky. I have been fascinated by anything on wheels from a very young age.
    My mum told me that when I was a baby I would reach out of my pram with my hands clenched and roll my clenched fists as if I was revving every time I heard a bike.
    I had my first bicycle at the age of two which my dad made for me as there was not one small enough and by the age of two-and-a-half my stabilisers came off.
    “At the age of 4, I was lucky enough to be bought my first motorbike”
    At the age of 4, I was lucky enough to be bought my first motorbike which my parents figured was best due to my fascination for motor cycles, (so that I did not kill myself when I got old enough ) which my dad taught me to ride.
    On my fifth birthday I made a film for ‘That’s Incredible’ (which was an American TV program about extreme stuff ) in which I jumped my 50cc PeeWee over 10 double decker buses … bought by the film crew from Hamleys!, and made to look real on screen.
    I used to practise in fields as I was too young to join a club until I was offered the opportunity to use a practise circuit by the Slough Aces motocross club, which was rather boring as it was just a flat circle for testing, but the club members were very friendly. Shortly afterwards I was invited to join a trials club even though I was under age. As my parents had done some research and found that Trials was one of the very few sports in which no-one had ever died (the other was badminton!) so they joined me up.
    That summer I was asked to join their display team, and had a wonderful time showing off at various carnivals and fairs around the South of England. I was the little one on the end - all the Mums said: “Aaah” and all the little kids watching wanted a motorbike! I rode with the team for two years - officially six years old for both of them!
    Later I joined Surrey Schoolboys Trials Club as well as the others I was involved with and began to compete at national level.
    This is when I started trials riding, competing up to a school boy level. Trials taught me the art of balance and gave me the determination never to give in to the seemingly impossible.
    I felt an outcast at school, because I could not express myself through the constrictions of an academically orientated environment. Later I was discovered to be severely dyslexic. The frustration caused by this pushed me into a destructive downward spiral. The only thing I found which could break this cycle was riding!

    The reason I started doing what I do now was down to the pressures in my life at that time. It was a way of channelling negative energy, in a more positive form. I want to break through the mundane realities of day to day life.
    “Changing people’s perceptions of what is humanly possible on a bike is an exhilarating feeling second to none”
    I feel it is something that I am good at. I always knew I had an undiscovered talent. Being on the bike makes me feel complete, it is part of my physical make up. Riding makes the rest of the world stand still. Stunting allows us to bend the laws of physics. Changing people’s perceptions of what is humanly possible on a bike is an exhilarating feeling second to none. There are a proportion of people who do not fit in to the stereotypical forms that society dictates to us.
     
    #8 CRYSTALJOHN, Sep 14, 2013
    Last edited: Sep 14, 2013
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  8. Unfortunately Scott Redding can't pronounce 'with' or 'think'.
     
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