C.R.A.N.K. MOB in BPM Magazine
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richtotheie at 05.12.09 - 11:15 am
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by Jared Morgan
"It was a hazy Saturday night on LAâs west side. Several LAPD cops stood, waiting, on the sidewalk across the street on Sawtelle Boulevard. This is a commercial neighborhood, but tonight the shoppers, restaurant goers and cars are replaced with teens on 10-speeds and beach cruisers, early twenty-somethings on double-deckers and hipsters on fixies. Itâs a young, a racial, and socio-economic goulash of a crowd.
âThe big thing that everyone notices is that there are a lot of young riders in C.R.A.N.K. Mob,â said Shawn Bannon, a LA-based photographer whoâs been involved in the bike scene for years. âThere are criticisms about that, but I think itâs pretty cool. As far as the drinking goes, in C.R.A.N.K. Mob or anywhere else, thatâs always going to be an issue with teen-agers.â
C.R.A.N.K. Mob, only two years old, spun off from another popular group of cyclists called the Midnight Ridazz. This group, started in 2004, had an older crowd that would ride from parking lot to parking lot, some would drink and talk, some were just in it for the ride. Much more organized, C.R.A.N.K. Mob is and has what Midnight Ridazz lackedâcrazy carnivalesque entertainment and a party spirit. On a previous C.R.A.N.K. Mob ride a couple of people figured that bike jousting was the thing to do. Two people rode at each other with pillows tied to long poles. The next ride will have a gang wars theme with pillow fights.
âI havenât missed one C.R.A.N.K. Mob ride since the beginning two years ago,â said Alex Thompson, one of the C.R.A.N.K. Mob founders. Alexâs hair was cropped short and a pair of clean-cut sideburns extended to the bottom of his ear lobes. A blue silk pajama top and a checkered, gray sport coat hung snugly from his tall, lanky body. Alex looked like the sort who was built for hard-core, drunken biking.
There were about 20 to 30 of us in a row, riding away from the squad cars and toward our first parking lotâŠan Albertsonâs grocery store.
âRolling, rolling, rolling,â sporadic shouts from the front rolled back through the mobile crowd like a wave as the mini mob of riders cruised through the red light.
âSometimes drivers donât know how to act when they see a bunch of bikes,â said Alejandro âBoogaloo Shrimpâ Cantarero, a veteran of the C.R.A.N.K. Mob and volunteer mechanic at LAâs community bike shop, Bikrowave. âThatâs why you see everyone riding together.â
He peddled off to help cork the intersection of cars, some honking and cheering, others yelling cuss words and pointing. Looking back, I could see Boogaloo peddling to catch up after the last rider passed the limit line of the intersection. A large, hooded flash bulb swung from his back, his SLR camera from the front.
There were something like 50 riders milling around the Albertsonâs parking lot by the time we arrived. What happened to the hundreds upon hundreds that were supposed to be here? I reached into my backpack, figuring that now was a better time than ever to mix my apple juice and Captain Morgan, heavy on the Morgan. After a couple shwills of the spiked cider I walked over to a guy wearing a paper chefâs hat and something that resembled a tarp made up to look like a slice of pizza.
âBoogaloo Shrimp said you were one of the ones who started this,â I said, off my seat and standing with my beach cruiser between my legs.
âStarted what, pizza?â
âNo. C.R.A.N.K. Mob.â
âI started pizza.â He said it with the enthusiasm of a stripper. At this point I was expecting upbeat dance music and confetti to burst out of nowhere, followed by friends jumping out of bushes yelling surprise and happy birthdayâa cruel jokeâbut that didnât happen.
âYou want us to make you a pizza?â a voice called from right behind my head as another pizza-costumed gentleman straddled my bike seat.
âLetâs make pizza,â he said and started dusting me with flour while his cohort squirted me with tomato juice.
âTime to cook it,â said tomato juice boy. I knew âitâ was me and I didnât like the sound of that. Lifting a lighter in one hand and a can of cooking lube (I think) in the other, tomato juice boy tried once, twice andâŠa small, inadequate flame sputtered out of the can. I wasnât going to tell him that he had the can too close to the lighterâŠpyro-tech 101.
âOK, guys, Iâm outta here,â I said as I freed myself from the straddlerâs loin grip of death. I bike-walked away shamed and defeated then pounded my booze.
Just then a few bikes appeared at the entrance to the parking lot. Then an entire mob, a hard dance beat rocked along with them. The crowd in the parking lot started cheering and yelling âC.R.A.N.K. Mob, C.R.A.N.K. Mob.â The parking lotâsome three or so city blocks in sizeâwas immediately filled with close to 1000 chattering enthusiasts, spinning wheels to loud, thumping music.
I located the epicenter of this massive music quake. It was a custom-built speaker box on a wagon attached to a bike. Almost as immediately as it parked, people were dancing. First a bloke in a schoolboyâs uniform, obviously an AC/DC fan, then a girl in short shorts and rainbow socks, then a guy in a Tigger costume.
The music got quieterâŠâOK, if you came here in a costume, you get a spoke card or you can buy one for $5. If not, you donât get shit,â said Richie Thomassen, another of the infamous bike crewâs organizers. âThis is a picture of a girl in bed early in the morning (he holds up a spoke card), there are condoms and tequila shots on the nightstand and it says âThanks for the ride last nightâC.R.A.N.K. Mob.ââ
These spoke cards, meant to reflect the theme of tonightâs ride, âC.R.A.N.K. Mob impregnates LA,â are sought-after mementos seen as symbols of status.
A minute later I heard an electric guitar warming upâŠthe band started playing.
These gypsies, I thought, how did they get set up so quickly? A crowd gathered and the pizza guys made their way center stage. Flouring the crowd, juicing the crowd, the area was covered in flour and tomato juice. The pizza guys started rolling around in the flour and the crowd exploded into applause and laughter.
The recipe yielded 12 police cars. Some of the cruisers were tucked away around the side of the grocery storeâsome were up on the street, all out of plain view. It was time to move. The mob funneled out of the parking lot and poured down Sawtelle, toward a warehouse party in the heart of Culver City five miles away.
After a few hours the party hit the road. It lasted until somewhere around 4 amâŠthis is what C.R.A.N.K. Mob is all aboutâitâs about the ride, but more importantly, itâs about where and how the ride takes you.
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