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Saturday, April 30, 2022

Technology Shifts What It Means To Be "Self-Supported"

(L-R) Troy Meyeraan and GT. Self-supported circa 1995
NOTE: Large doses of "my opinion" will be handed out in gloppy dollops today. You've been forewarned.....

There was a big kerfuffle involving a bike packing event and a certain individual recently that got me to thinking about "rules", 'self-support', and why those terms don't mean what they used to anymore. 

I made the mistake of reading a Facebook comment thread that went into the depths of several folk's opinions, feelings, and ideas on those terms, (and others) which has helped prompt this post today, but this post is not about that specific situation. Just to be perfectly clear.

I've had the special privilege of having done self-supported cycling before, during, and after the start of the"Age of Information", as we once called this. (Maybe we are in the "Age of Disinformation" now, eh?) The times when if one wanted to 'disappear', it was as easy as just walking out the door without telling anyone where you were going. Now? Good luck with that, because you likely are addicted to a smart phone, and 'getting lost' is about 1000 times harder to do these days than it used to be. 

In fact, we are so inundated with information and 'contact' that we don't really even understand what being 'disconnected' even means, much less what it feels like. Take anyone the age of 25 years or younger. They have no memories of pre-smart phone days, most likely, and for sure, they cannot imagine a world where one would have to wait for information a day, a week, or two months, like we used to have to wait for news back in the day. 

I remember weekly T.V. shows where you had all week to wait until the next episode. Now people 'binge-watch' streaming series in one sitting. Marathon watching season after season of a T.V. series as if they were some sort of content-gobbling, ultra-entertained athlete.  And yet, we want more....

Ryan taking a photo of me. We had to wait to get it developed until after the tour!
And all of this affects ultra-endurance events like bike packing, and some forms of gravel events as well. The changes in society which have occurred run cross-ways with some folks who had some sense of 'the times before social media' and how things felt and were done back then. Some others say it is 'no big deal', while others just cannot even begin to understand why anyone is upset. And even if they are, it doesn't matter. 

This all goes back a decade or more. Events of recent times are just a further manifestation of what happened in the 00's. I recall some individuals who were trying to hold to a certain standard for ultra-endurance events, but eventually, it was of no use. The tsunami of adopted tech, cultural change, and appetite (addiction?) for more content won the day. 

So, who is right? Who is wrong? What is 'better'? Those are great questions to ask, discuss, and ponder. Answers will vary from person to person. I can only say one thing with any certainty- Things are very different now, and you cannot recreate how it was in the past. 

Technology is so pervasive that any notion of doing something- say like what John Stamstad did in the late 1990's when he ITT'ed the Great Divide route- is no longer a possibility. What he had to go through, experience, and overcome is different than how one would experience things now. Was it 'harder to do' back then? Well, if technology makes our lives easier? Then yes, it was harder back then. Both mentally and physically. Again- you can discuss that all day long, but having done things myself on either end of the technology divide, I fall on the side of "things are easier now".

Ted King winning the DK200 in 2016

And now you have people, entities, municipalities, and more making money off this "content creation" which comes out of gravel racing, or bike-packing events. That changes things even more. When Trans Iowa started in 2005, only the small community of endurance cycling fans even cared about the event, or what had happened. There was no 'money' in doing it from a promotions or athlete side. Now? 

Pffft! 

You've got to wonder how many athletes would fall away if there were no longer any endorsements, media fame, or salaries involved in participating in gravel events or bike-packing events. Yes- some measure success by monetary and social worthiness metrics. But trust me, that ain't how it got started. 

Of course, I would be a hypocrite if I did not recognize that I have personally benefited from those who have made a living out of the gravel and ultra-cycling/bike packing arenas. The cycling industry made us great products, and that doesn't happen without money being made. Events happened which made some amount of money, which perpetuated the gravel scene, and eventually brought a light to my contributions. Sure, I get that. 

But if no one had noticed us in 2005, or cared, I would still be happily riding my 2003 Karate Monkey on gravel roads here. It is what I love to do, and being "famous", or having had some modicum of "success" is not my central focus for what I do. In fact, it doesn't really matter in the end. By the way, my life would have been way less complicated and stressful had no one cared or noticed us and our little gravel event. That said, there have been a lot of good things come out of this, and I am happy now. So, there is that as well. 

My Karate Monkey which was my gravel sled here shown in 2006.
But what about the whole 'self-supported' ethos now? Well, here's the thing as I see it: Content creation is at odds with what many see as being 'self-supported'. Just how that works is what isn't quite as clear, or as easy to explain, maybe because, as I previously mentioned, most of the youth of today have never experienced 'disconnection', and many adults past the age of 25 have forgotten what that feels like. And then- there is a large sub-set of people who don't give a damn about what it once was like and would rather define what 'self-support' means on their own terms. 

But you have to realize that a lot of what drives the friction we're seeing in gravel events and in bike-packing events, (and in other sports as well) is how changes are being made to accommodate more content for consumption. Film crews, drone shots, cameras mounted to bikes and athletes, announcers, fancy finish-line areas, media access, and in-event reporting via social media has created access heretofore unheard of for cycling events. Even format changes and rule changes are being made to accommodate more content creation to engage more people.  Sure- there are predecessors which one can point to. Motos in big stage events on Pro road tours being a good example. But content extraction during events is pervasive now and people want more. Well, that's what we think and what makes money, anyway. 

And I'd argue that the original philosophy behind 'self-support' is antithetical to 'fame' and/or making coin off your efforts. But that philosophy is under attack, and is changing, and as I stated before, can we ever really go there again? Our addiction to technology would seem to point to that answer being a hard "No". 

Note: I may do another companion post to this speaking about "rules" for events. Stay tuned....

6 comments:


  1. On the flip side of that, one could argue that it's not just the racers, but also race promoters who have benefited tremendously from technology and social media. While they may not be getting rich, it's undeniable that digital "content generation" and social media platforms have increased interest and participation in their events, regardless of the event format. But with increased exposure comes increased responsibilities, responsibilities that unfortunately not everyone is able to meet.

    That's what makes the situation you reference so perplexing: The race director in question has a documented record of visiting, interacting with, and photographing riders--many of whom he's friends with--to promote the event on social media, while accusing the media crew (without evidence) of both interacting with and assisting the rider at the center of the current controversy. There is such a thing as professional standards of journalism, which involve not interacting with or unduly influencing a subject, and which said rider's media crew said they adhered to, but which said race director clearly did not adhere to in the past. This is a double standard and clearly paints a picture more complicated that a simple asterisk. John Watson over at The Radavist had an excellent summary of the situation (including details of his correspondence with said race director), I'd recommend everyone read it but unfortunately it appears to have been removed.

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  2. @Owen - Thanks for your comments. Two things here...

    One- I am not making direct comment on "The race director in question...", as you put it. I have no specific things to comment on in that situation, and I so this post - while it touches on things related to that specific situation- is not meant to address that specific situation. So, I appreciate your comments, but I have nothing further to add to that specific deal.

    I would agree that race promoters can, and have, leveraged social media in regard to making their events more well known and 'enticing'. And that adds to what I was asking here, "Can we ever really have self-supported racing again?" Once more, at the risk of repeating myself, I think the answer is "No".

    That's the world we live in now. It is all about "Content Creation" and that is all that matters.

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  3. I will dip my toe in the pool on this. A few short thoughts about bike packing. Every person has their own reason for doing it. And maybe the real problem is us as competitive beasts? I think/feel bike packing started off with the best of intentions of taking bagger life to the woods and back roads and getting lost. Then someone drew up a challenge of a course to see if it can be done, pushing the know limits of what cycling knew. Then someone completed the challenge scenario, and the next cat in line said, hold my Latte, watch this. And on and on it went, snowballing into people trying to eek out some coin from doing a hobby into a business. It is when the dollars or the perception of dollars being made that we get weird.
    Also, it is upon the person taking the task, to know and understand the rules of an event. Not what they want the rules to be. It is also up to the person in charge of the challenge to be clear about their rules and hold people to them. The rules exist for a reason, and generally they exist to level the playing field and provide structure. Both parties have an obligation to each other, one is adherence, and the other is enforcement. Like it or not that is the relationship dynamic of events and challenges.
    Finally I will offer my 2 pennies on Lael's effort she put in. The only opinion that matters is her own. If she feels she put in and honest effort and she achieved the record, then that is what should matter most to her. I have a lot a balls called strikes in my life, and in the end, we have to live within ourselves before venturing out in to the wilderness of life. Now the flip side of that, if the Race Director feels/knows their rules have been violated, then they must enforce them and call it a strike. That is their entire reason for existing. It is a scenario of two competing interests in outcomes, one is trying to advance in the challenge, while the other is trying to regulate and administer a challenge.

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  4. @N.Y. Roll - A lot of what you are saying here in your comment is about rules, which I address in my 5/3/22 post.

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  5. @GT, Agreed, and thanks for responding. It's clear the "self-supported" era of bikepacking racing is over, I'd just argue that BOTH riders and race organizers are responsible for that. From my perspective it seems like pro and semi-pro riders are being unfairly blamed for "commercializing" these events while race organizers are not because they're often working on a volunteer basis. Both parties are basically doing the same thing but folks seem quick to pounce on riders for perceived rule infractions--because they are theoretically, somehow getting paid--while race directors aren't. Everyone should be held to the same standard, otherwise any purported sense of "organized racing" just seems like a joke, regardless of whether or not or to which degree it's "self supported."

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  6. @Owen - Agreed. Thank you for the reasoned discussion.

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