National Bikers Roundup Current Events & Info…



  

I am so sorry for the delay and getting this out to all who had questions on the National Bikers Roundup. One of our visitors posted this PDF and I am posting it for all who want or need more Information that hasn’t been shared. Also if you or someone you know need rooms check out Motel 6 in Kingdom City. Room rates are doable and you need to jump on them right now. For a double or queen my rate is $119.99 per night. When you call Motel 6 ask for Sonia or tell who ever you speak with that you were referred by Goldie and give her your dates that you will be at the National Bikers Roundup so your room rate will be lower then what is online. DON’T BOOK YOUR ROOMS ONLINE CALL TO GET THE LOWER RATE.

  

Motel 6 Kingdom City #4316
5750 Jade Road
I-70 at US-54/CR-201, Exit #148
Kingdom City, MO, 65262
Phone: (573) 642-5500
FAX: (573) 642-5503


  

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Ride your Motorcycle or Scooter Monday to Work

Annual Ride To Work Day! We ask for your support on Monday, June 21, 2010 to demonstrate:

  • The number of motorcyclists to the general public and to politicians.
  • That motorcyclists are from all occupations and all walks of life.
  • That motorcyclists can reduce traffic and parking congestion in large cities.
  • That motorcycles are for transportation as well as recreation.
  • That motorcycling is a social good.

      




  

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Who Is Cliff Vaughs?

SNCC photographer Clifford Vaughs is arrested by the National Guard, Cambridge, Maryland, May 2, 1964. Photo by Danny Lyon ©Danny Lyon/Magnum Photos

  




  

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It is almost impossible to be concurrently a chopper rider and be a success in Entertainment Business world. These two scenes just don’t recognize or respect one another.It is almost impossible to be concurrently a chopper rider and be a success in Entertainment Business world.

  

But in California today there are three men – Frank Reynolds, Gut and Cliff Vaughs who have not only made it successfully in business but also have been able to maintain active memberships in two of the state’s most publicized clubs.

  

Freewheelin’ Frank has written an astonishing best seller about his experiences for Grove Press called simply “Freewheelin Frank” and already has a second volume of poetry in the works.

  

Gut is the colorful manager of one of California’s heaviest rock groups, the Blue Cheer, which has already released a hit single and smash album on Mercury.

  

But it is Vaughs who is the interesting because not only is he a chopper rider but a successful film maker, producer, civil rights leader and black. Vaughs rides with a predominantly black cycle club out of the ghetto area of Los Angeles. (The Chosen Few MC)

  

Vaughs is college educated, BA from Boston University and formally began his film career as a maker of documentaries. His “What Will The Harvest Be” a story of the thrust of black power in the south was shown several years ago on ABC-TV. This film featured such civil rights leaders as the late Martin Luther King, Stokely Carmichael and Julian Bond according to Cliff. It was later suppressed, I guess, because they showed it here twice in California and in Chicago. But it wasn’t pushed. I think this was done because this was the first public expression of black power.

  

From documentaries Vaughs went into film production, and it is significant to note that this is the first time in the Hollywood film industry, aside from Sidney Poitier and Bill Cosby that an unknown black man has been able to break into production.

  

Chopper Magazine talked to Cliff Vaughs about his feelings toward the Hollywood manufactured cycle image, the integration of white outlaw clubs, Peter Fonda as a plastic hero and the emergence of the chopper rider as the final romantic American hero.

  

WHAT IS YOUR RELATIONSHIP TO THE WORLD OF CYCLING?

  

“In terms of my own relation with my own motorcycle, it’s the final romantic expression that is left in this country. Obviously the frontier is gone. The cycle is the one thing that you can build from nothing—just a basket, and make something very, very beautiful and really put yourself into it. This goes from a simple question of chrome, to developing new designs, sissy bars, new ways of riding and things like that.”

  

HOW DID YOU FIRST BECOME INVOLVED WITH A CHOPPER?

  

“Certainly bikes attract a great deal of people who have basically been frustrated in their life. I haven’t been frustrated but I do view my bike as another way of relieving a lot of tension from myself. I have been riding since 1962. I even missed the March on Washington because I was building a chopper. I like my bike and I like Choppers and I’m very concerned about the restrictive legislation that is coming out from most states against the rider. Laws that are trying to keep Choppers off the road, and I think that a Chopper is a typically American expression.”

  

WHAT IS THE ROLE OF THE CHOPPER IN YOUR NEW FILM?

  



“In “Easy Riders” the cycle is just a vehicle to get around on. It’s like the horse from the old days. What we are basically doing is psychological western. We have two guys who have problems and are into their own bag. They are good friends, they’ve made one big score and are off to Miami to retire. Now in the course of the film a number of things happen to them on their trip. These are things that could happen to a guy if he were driving a car, flying in an airplane or riding on a train—except for the fact that being on a bike—they are more vulnerable to what’s going on.” Chopper asked Vaughs if the movie was going to say the same thing its predecessors from American International have said again and again.

  

“This is not what we are into. I think we can change the image of the cyclist, and make a significant contribution to changing the development of the cycle image. I don’t feel that Hollywood today is producing anything of much significance. And I think that this is the time to make the change, because the western has been the major success in this country. If we can change the vehicle from a horse to a cycle—and still develop good stories and good concepts then I think we have made a significant and artistic contribution to bikes and films.”

  

We asked Vaughs if any fulltime chopper rider could be trained by Hollywood into a Fonda role.
“No Peter and Dennis are very heavy into a lot of cultural things. They are in a position to be very, very socially aware of what’s going on. A lot of bikers just don’t know what’s going on because the whole weight of having to deal with everyday situations or hustling to live precludes any awareness of other problems. I mean, theirs is a hunting and gathering culture. You must remember that most bikers are not in a medium where they can project anything. Even if an average rider went on ”Meet the Press,” he would give the same rap about oppressed bike riders, patriotism, etc.”

  

He stated that before the film was started he indicated that one of the main things “Easy Riders” should do was break down the whole idea of black and white motorcycle clubs. “Because my investigation showed that white clubs had restrictive clauses and it’s only the blacks that are integrating. The Chosen Few has been integrated for a long period of time.”

  

“In this film said Vaughs we have a situation where the two main characters are riding across country. Their bikes break down and they run into about 50 black cyclists. They are very, very up-tight, scared and shaken up. But, it works out very well because the black cats just say, “Can we help you get some gas?” Everything is very groovy. And that to me seems a real situation.”

  

“I maintain if that situation can happen and it does in real life there is still some hope. There are many, many people that maintain that it can happen. “But I’ve seen it happen this way.”

  

Does Vaughs feel this situation is only confined to the cycle world? Naturally he answers in the negative.

  

“The cities are still going to burn despite the fact that these black cats stopped to help these white cyclists on the road.” That baby is reality.

  

CLIFF’S BIKE REFLECTS TRADITIONAL DESIGN. THE 68 ENGINE NESTLES NEATLY IN THE EARL RIGID FRAME. THE REAR SEAT HAS BEEN UPHOLSTERED ALL THE WAY UP TO THE SISSY BAR, AND THE FRONT FORKS RAKED AND TENDED. THE EARLY BRAKE ROD HAS BEEN REPLACED WITH A DC CHAIN, AND THE TANK HAS BEEN FANCIFULLY DECORATED WITH MULTICOLOR FLOWERS.

  

THE FRAME ON CLIFF’S BIKE IS A 57 HARLEY STRAIGHTBAR. HE EXTENDED THE ORIGINAL GLIDEFORKS 8 INCHES AND RAKED OUT THE FRAME 7 DEGREES.

  

THE MOTORCYCLE IS THE LAST ROMANTIC EXPRESSION LEFT IN THIS COUNTRY. THE FRONTIER GONE AND THE MOTORCYCLE IS THE ONE THING THAT YOU CAN STILL BUILD YOURSELF FROM A BASKET CASE.
Written in Chopper Magazine around 1968.

  


Below is a photo of Cliff Vaughs today.

  


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Hurricane Biker Girls MC Celebrating their Anniversary in San Diego


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“Window Seat” New Single by Erykah Badu! Problem…it’s Art


MixUnit Hip Hop Shop - BLACK30 to get 30% OFF


  

THEY SAY WE NEED TO WATCH THIS VIDEO OF ERYKAH BADU’S NEW SINGLE RELEASED SATURDAY BECAUSE IT’S CONTROVERSIAL. ONLY AMERICA FINDS THIS OFFENSIVE. WE NEED TO LOOSEN UP. THIS IS ART…MONA LISA WAS NUDE WHAT DID THEY SAY ABOUT THAT. I AM AN ARTIST SO I APPRECIATE ARTISTIC EXPRESSION IN ITS TRUEST FORM.

  



  

These articles were captured from www.thegrio.com



  

Dallas native Erykah Badu’s new music video portrays her taking off her clothes and then dying near where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.

  

The “guerilla-style” video for the song “Window Seat” was shot in one take as she stripped while walking in Dealey Plaza on March 17. Badu released the music video Saturday.

  

“I was petrified while shooting this video … but liberation began to set in. I conquered many fears in that few moments,” Badu posted on Twitter on Sunday.

  

Families can be seen in the background. Badu said on Twitter that she prayed the children who were there wouldn’t be “traumatized.”

  

The video begins with a 1963 radio broadcast describing Kennedy turning onto Elm Street. Badu is then shown in a parked car. Then she walks toward Elm Street while taking her clothes off.

  

Badu said on Twitter that she could hear people yelling things at her but she kept going. People were yelling things such as “This is a public place,” “You ought to be ashamed,” and “Put your clothes on,” she said.

  

She said the people caught in the background were trying to ignore her as she shed the last of her clothing—except for one man who grabbed her clothes.

  

In the video, she falls to the ground at the spot where Kennedy was shot.

  

The blood at the end of the video spells out “groupthink.”

  

Groupthink is “the unwritten rule that states; I will not express my true opinion if it opposes those I love and fear. I volunteer to censor me,” Badu wrote on Twitter.

  

Badu, a mother of three, said on Twitter that she told her children about her plans to film the video. Her 5-year-old daughter just asked for another serving of pudding. Her 12-year-old son said he would tell anyone who teased him about the video that his “mom is great” and “she was having fun.”

  

“I immediately took myself less seriously,” Badu posted.

  

The city of Dallas said in a statement that Badu’s production company did not get permits or contact the city. Commercial film, video and photo shoots must be approved by the city. Guerilla videos are usually shot in one take because the crews know they would face arrest or penalties if they are caught, the city said.

  

Badu said she made sure to put money in the meter in case the police showed up.

  

“After last action, we ran like hell! lol,” she posted on Twitter.

  

She said they didn’t even take the time to look for the man who was picking up her clothes.

  

Dallas police said they do not plan on filing charges against Badu, who lives in Dallas. But the department said it would consider filing indecent exposure charges if witnesses came forward.

  

No one in Dealey Plaza at the time of the filming called police, Dallas police said Monday.

  

Badu’s latest album, “New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh,” will be released Tuesday.

  

Okay now a different spin on the video:



  

Erykah Badu added her distinctive voice to the “Culture Wars” over the weekend with the strategic premiere of her “Window Seat” video. The song, which is about taking space and time for oneself when love gets you down, is now eclipsed by images of Badu walking through the downtown area of her native Dallas, removing articles of clothing until she’s naked, only to be shot in the head by an unseen assailant. Blue blood flows to form the words “group think” and Badu as narrator comes on to speak of mob mentalities and the cowardly attacks made on those who choose to be individuals and live freely.

  

The video – done guerrilla style as Badu has tweeted that they shot the footage and ran to escape potential arrest – pays homage to a number of cultural moments, most notably the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The clip takes place in the same area of the historical killing and starts off with news footage announcing Kennedy’s motorcade. It’s also inspired by pop-punk duo Matt and Kim’s video for “Lesson Learned,” where they strip in New York’s Time Square. And, of course, it speaks of our current political climate, where conservative communities make death threats against the nation’s first black president.

  

Amidst the clip’s sociopolitical swirl, Badu’s latest album New Amerykah Part Two: Return of the Ankh places far more of an emphasis on romance and relationships than its predecessor Part One: 4th World War. Ankh sandwiches foot-thumping grooves (“Turn Me Away (Get MUNNY),” “Gone Baby, Don’t Be Long,” “Love,” etc.) between introspective, jazz-inspired cuts.

  


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