AltWeeklies Wire

(Syn)gled Out? Club's Owners Insist Violent Rap Isn't Their Faultnew

Scott Collman and his business partners are reacting to negative stories about a violent couple months outside their club, Syn, culminating in a Dec. 27 shootout in a nearby alley that left one man hospitalized after apparently being shot by a police officer.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Anthony Lane  |  01-05-2010  |  Recreation

A Screwball Crew of Gearheads Retool the Outlaw Cross-Country Car Racenew

Just like the madcap Cannonball Run races of three decades ago, the idea is to go as fast as you fucking can. And if that means doing 115 mph in a junky old police cruiser, rigging up auxiliary gasoline tanks, subsisting on beef jerky and peeing into plastic bags to save time, well, so be it. Welcome to the "twenny-nine-oh-four."
Riverfront Times  |  Nicholas Phillips  |  12-01-2009  |  Recreation

For the Society for Creative Anachronism, Playing with Swords is Part of a Lessonnew

Don't call them geeks, call them history lovers. Members of the Society for Creative Anachronism often get pegged as Renaissance fair actors, but they prefer to think of themselves as experiential learners who happen to wear armor.
Boise Weekly  |  Deanna Darr  |  08-19-2009  |  Recreation

Why Cafe Racers are the New Kings of Speednew

The cafe racer is minimal and slim-lined, unlike the mainstream Harleys and those angular sport bikes you're used to seeing on the road.
Metro Times  |  Travis R. Wright  |  08-04-2009  |  Recreation

Take a Seat: How the Adirondack Chair Became a Classicnew

What started as a regional, functional craft is now mass-produced in countries thousands of miles from the Adirondacks and bought by people who couldn't locate the majestic park on a map. But this emblem of rural industry still means something to the people whose lifestyles inspired the chair more than 100 years ago.
Seven Days  |  Lauren Ober  |  07-31-2009  |  Recreation

Outdoor Clothing Companies Go Greennew

New materials are giving outdoor gear a green hue as companies look to bamboo and recycling clothing to meet consumer demand for environmentally friendly options.
Boise Weekly  |  Deanna Darr  |  07-15-2009  |  Recreation

Bowfishing: Catching Carp With a Bow and Arrownew

As partisan bickering over Minnesota's budget bubbled over in the Legislature this season, a little-known bill sailed through without controversy. It amended laws crafted during WWII and opened up pretty much all lakes and rivers to nighttime bowfishing.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Bradley Campbell  |  07-01-2009  |  Recreation

The Sometimes Illegal and Often Dangerous Sport of Urban Explorationnew

Urban exploration, or "urbex," is about seeking out forgotten stories, about searching for the places of which we know nothing, about turning down the dirt roads we’ve never before noticed and, above all, trying to understand them.
Weekly Alibi  |  Ty Bannerman  |  06-09-2009  |  Recreation

Birminghamians Embark on the BABE Rallynew

Imagine for a moment that you have the chance to participate in a real-life version of Cannonball Run, traveling across the country with friends in a race across America's highways. Now take away the beautiful cars, and replace them with vehicles that must have been purchased for under $500. Still sound like fun?
Birmingham Weekly  |  Kenn McCracken  |  06-02-2009  |  Recreation

Outdated Rules Threaten the Life of San Fran's All-Ages Clubsnew

The livelihood of San Franciso's best-known all-ages venues is under siege based on issues that have nothing to do with public safety, but rather on archaic views of how a nightclub should operate.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  05-27-2009  |  Recreation

East St. Louis Nightclubs Are Under Siegenew

East St. Louis mayor Alvin Parks decided late last month not to curtail the 6 a.m. closing time for bars and nightclubs, but the controversy is far from resolved.
Riverfront Times  |  Keegan Hamilton  |  05-22-2009  |  Recreation

Bikes at Play in Orlandonew

Building monster bikes out of recycled parts is as much about fun and friendship as it is about staying true to bike culture and using less fossil fuel.
Orlando Weekly  |  Lindy T. Shepherd  |  05-21-2009  |  Recreation

To Be a Kinetic Sculpture Derby Star, You Must Sacrificenew

Since its maiden derby in 2007, the Kensington Kinetic Sculpture Derby has become a sort of hallmark of the creative community in Philadelphia's Kensington, Fishtown and Port Richmond neighborhoods.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Andrew Thompson  |  05-19-2009  |  Recreation

Bingo: The Game that Pays to Playnew

"B-9," says the caller over the loudspeaker. Tonight the caller is a young man who looks just old enough to gamble, but he's seasoned enough to know how to taunt the crowd, telling us when the first chance "to bingo" arrives in a game, reminding us just how much money is at stake in the high-money games.
Boise Weekly  |  Rachael Daigle  |  05-01-2009  |  Recreation

Indigenous Sport to the Boise Bike Scene: Velocachenew

Essentially, velocache is an excuse to ride a bike, be with friends, find hidden treasure and, often drink a beer or two while you're at it. These are the ingredients for what velocache creators Brook Slee and Barton Kline thought would make a great new sport for the Boise community.
Boise Weekly  |  Mathias Morache  |  04-22-2009  |  Recreation

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