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唯一的限制就只是我的想像力-丹尼·麥克阿思吉爾(Danny MacAskill)

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這位丹尼·麥克阿思吉爾(Danny MacAskill)是John非常推崇的單車騎士,看過他在YouTube上的影片後,真的只能以神乎其技來形容,他和單車可以說做到人車和一的境界了。在紐約時報的訪問中他甚至說:「我在單車上比我雙腳站在地面上還有信心。」(I'm more comfortable on my bike than I'm on my feet.)

而他的影片去(2009)年四月十九日上傳到 YouTube 上(引用於紐約時報的報導中,如下),至今九個月,已有1,456萬多人次的瀏覽了。也是 YouTube 有史以來最受歡迎的運動類影片

隨著影片的大受歡迎,原本時薪九美元的丹尼,收到許多演出的邀約,也有許多廠商排隊要成為他的贊助商。可是除了接演幾蔀廣告片之外,丹尼把所有的邀約都束諸一旁。這位17歲就因為閱讀障礙而輟學的年輕人還頗有想法,「我不想在我還能做的時候,來者不拒,通通接受,讓自己看起像個呆瓜。」

丹尼能完成許許多多高難度,甚至是匪夷所思的特技和他的態度息息相關:「所有的一切都是準備、自信與正向思考。」「現在我有這麼多機會,唯一的限制就只是我的想像力了。」不妨點選下面的影片看看這位24歲蘇格蘭年輕人神乎其技的單車表演吧!

Bravo!  Danny MacAskill!



December 29, 2009
A Stunt Cyclist’s Tour de Fence
By CAROL WALLACE

EDINBURGH — Like his fellow Scot Susan Boyle, who made a meteoric entry into show business, the stunt bicyclist Danny MacAskill can divide his life in two: before his YouTube video and after.

Eight months ago, MacAskill’s daily routine was fairly predictable. He would leave the apartment he shares with a roommate, hop on his bike and maneuver through strangling traffic to his job as a bicycle mechanic.

Along his route, he passed a metal fence with a spiky top. He had eyed it for years.

“I’d look at it and say, ‘I can ride that rail,’ ”said MacAskill, 24.

He eventually got up the nerve, and the subsequent 30-second trick — which took four days to shoot — became the jaw-dropping highlight of a 5-minute-37-second video posted on YouTube in April.

The video shows MacAskill on his bike, jumping over fences, walls and other obstacles; doing a back flip off a tree; riding the spiky fence; and performing other hair-raising stunts that could make him the toast of orthopedic surgeons everywhere.

I am more comfortable on my bike than I am on my feet,” he said.

The video was filmed over six months by his roommate, Dave Sowerby. It made MacAskill an instant inspiration to a generation of young cyclists. With more than 13 million views, it is the Top Favorited sports video in YouTube history, according to the Web site’s statistics.

Within days, MacAskill’s life was upended.



“Everything went crazy,” he recalled recently over a pizza lunch. “I’d get up in the morning and be doing interviews while I was still in bed.”


One day, he was asked to appear in 10 countries. Filmmakers wanted to make documentaries about his life. Advertisers pounced. Big companies, like Red Bull in Britain, lined up to sponsor him. People wanted his autograph. Ellen DeGeneres, who bears a faint resemblance, wanted him to dress up as her and ride around Los Angeles. The Doves, a British rock band, wanted him for a video. Lance Armstrong called MacAskill’s video “a must watch.” A circus in South Korea wanted to hire him to perform stunts.

pounce    to move suddenly forwards in order to attack or catch somebody/something 猛撲;突襲

“It was unmanageable,” he said.

MacAskill took advice from friends and did some commercials but mostly let the offers pile up.


Jayne Emsley
Danny MacAskill preaches positive thinking. “Whether it's 10 feet or1,000 feet from the ground,” he said, “I do not plan to fall.”

I didn’t want to grab everything while I could and look like an idiot,” he said.

He took months to find a manager, Tarek Rasouli, a former professional mountain biker whose firm, Rasoulution, is based in Munich.

This was quite a turn of events for MacAskill, who said he rode only for fun and, until he was 18, called his bicycle his best friend. One of six children of a local businessman and an office worker, he grew up in the rural village of Dunvegan on the Isle of Skye. He started riding when he was 4.

“I got my first proper bike at 11 that was a gift from my parents and my aunties,” he said. “I owe them a lot.”

In horizontal rain, cold temperatures and anything else Mother Nature hurled at him, he would ride his bike each day, practicing old tricks and dreaming up new ones.

“I could do the longest wheelie among my friends,” he said.

The police were not amused and frequently cited him for reckless riding, sometimes confiscating his bicycle for weeks.

“I wasn’t an angel, but it was a place where maybe one or two cars would come by every five minutes,” MacAskill said, and that was during rush hour.

Hindered by dyslexia, he left school at 17 and moved to a resort town in the Scottish Highlands.

“My goal in life was to work at Bothy Bikes in Aviemore,” MacAskill said. He stayed there and lived under the watchful eye of his aunt Jean Hamilton.

“He was always a risk-taker, much to my horror,” Hamilton said. “As a family, we like to feel he wouldn’t try anything that would kill him.”

As he had on Skye, MacAskill would turn up at cycling shows and demonstrations in the Highlands. Trials riding, with elements of extreme cycling and mountain biking, is a small sport with a passionate following. Cyclists maneuver over obstacles with nothing touching the ground but their tires. MacAskill has been credited with carving a niche called street trials riding because he cycles in urban locations and has added tricks to his repertory.

As his reputation grew, offers from cycling event organizers began to roll in.

Three years ago, in search of bigger challenges, he moved to Edinburgh and took a mechanic’s job, this one at MacDonald Cycles, the store whose roof he leapt onto in the popular video.

He built his 24-inch stunt bicycle with components from an assortment of A-list parts makers and frames supplied by Inspired Bicycles, an English firm specializing in mountain bikes. Inspired’s founder, Dave Cleaver, was an early supporter of MacAskill’s and posted the video on YouTube. His company recently unveiled two models similar to the bikes MacAskill rides, which cost about £1,300 (about $2,080).

After MacAskill made an appearance in early 2008 in Birmingham, England, he and his friend Iain Withers formed the Clan, an all-Scottish stunt cycle team that began performing at trade shows, events and schools.

There was enough interest in what we did that I realized for the first time I could ride my bike for a living,” MacAskill said.

Jayne Emsley
MacAskill's tricks include a back flip using a tree, and he has jumped fences and walls and leapt onto a roof.


Withers said he knew of MacAskill but did not see him in action until 2007.

“I’d heard about this awesome kid from the Highlands,” Withers said. “From the first shows we did, it was clear he had a totally different attitude toward what was possible on a bicycle.”

MacAskill’s attitude is simple: it’s all about preparation, confidence and positive thinking.

“Picturing anything negative will make something bad happen,” he said. “You have to be relaxed. Whether it’s 10 feet or 1,000 feet from the ground, I do not plan to fall.”

But positive thinking goes only so far. MacAskill broke his collarbone in a fall as he turned a corner during a visit to San Diego in October. That was days after he terrified friends by clowning around on his bike on a lookout by the Hoover Dam. Over the years, he has torn ligaments in his ankles, dislocated fingers, broken his right wrist and been a fixture in X-ray rooms around Britain.

He is careful at school appearances to stress the importance of the basics, including road safety, bike maintenance and learning to ride properly. MacAskill is not a worrier by nature, but picturing thousands of youngsters trying to ride spiky fences without training would worry anyone.

Ian Aitken, the chief executive of Cycling Scotland, a government-sponsored group, said MacAskill was a superstar among youngsters ages 9 to 11.

“Danny has done more to help the organization than any celebrity we have ever had,” he said.

For the moment, Rasouli, his manager, has brought a calming hand to MacAskill’s life.

“He loves riding his bike and capturing his riding on film or videos, so that’s what we try to organize for him,” Rasouli said.

He said MacAskill could easily earn six figures next year if he stays healthy. That is a long leap from his $9-an-hour mechanic’s job he quit shortly before the YouTube video was posted. Rasouli added that the Hollywood director and screenwriter David Koepp wanted MacAskill for stunt work in a movie he is directing about a New York bicycle messenger. Work projects will take MacAskill to South Africa, Australia, Germany, Canada and Las Vegas in 2010.

In an action that became a measure of his popularity, he donated the bike in his video to the BBC’s annual charity drive, Children in Need, last month. It was auctioned for more than £3,000 (about $4,800).

MacAskill said he lived in a style that was “a cut above a student.” Still, he has treated his parents, whom he described as “embarrassingly proud,” to some nice meals. And he now buys a better caliber of takeout food, he said.

“It’s all been such a surprise,” MacAskill said. “I never thought people would react to the video that way. Now I’ve got so many opportunities. The only thing stopping me now is my imagination.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/29/sports/global/29cyclist.html?_r=1&scp=4&sq=bike&st=cse


The story was taken from The New York Times.  The copyright remains with The New York Times Company.  The author of the story and the New York Times are not involved with, nor endorse the production of this blog.


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