Ride the Lobster Publicity

Just before Christmas I got an email from the local paper saying they wanted to do an article about my taking part in Ride the Lobster. I thought it would probably be a tiny article tucked away in a corner of the paper, and said OK. The reporter called me, asked lots of questions, and arranged for a photographer to come and take some photos. The photographer turned up last weekend, took about a thousand photos (that’s what it felt like!) and this appeared on page 5 of the paper on Tuesday…

That’s almost the whole of page 5, not quite what I was expecting! The words are here.

Has anyone else been in the paper or on TV yet as a result of Ride the Lobster?

Paul

Paul -
Fantastic article! Congrats on being famous!:smiley:

… and the cash from the betting shop will come in handy too :smiley:

A whole page. Nicely done. I like the last paragraph. “But most of my mates have come to terms with it now.”

My family is starting to “come to terms with it”:wink:

This in yesterday’s paper from Nova Scotia:
http://thechronicleherald.ca/NovaScotia/1001327.html

I also read an article in a Korean paper. I’ll see if I can find it again.

Congratulations on preparing to participate in RTL the first of it’s kind!

Thats a nice write-up, I bet you people are going to recognize you as the “guy in the paper”.

Maybe I should contact my local paper and ask them if they still wanted to interview me. They called my parents place near the start of exam time asking if they could interview me about RTL but the number that my mom gave me to call turned out to be a fax number.

Now that I am not so busy I could look up the proper number and give them a call.

What the hey, they used up a third of the third page last year to say I unicycle to class every day (see profile) :slight_smile:

Congratulations Cambridge, UK.

Here’s a link to a 7-minute telephone interview between radio station CJOB 680 in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada and RTL’s Doug Dockerill (media coordinator).

Cheers
Edward
First Wheel, RTL

Radio interview mentioned Eric P

The Manitoba radio interview mentioned Eric P. name as the closest unicyclist rider.

To bad he lives in Saskatchewan.

Way to go Eric, you’re a celebrity.

:wink:

How did they get your contact info?

That’s a great article! I think that as we create a buzz about RTL locally, we better the climate for participation, sponsorships & media coverage come June. There’s a reporter visiting our club this week to write about Ride the Lobster and unicycling in general.

I think one of the RTL organisers contacted them, I’m not totally sure.

Paul

Me too! :slight_smile:

Nice article, dude!

Joe Marshall and myself have now made it on to Page 3 of the Nottingham Evening Post.;

The text is;
Cycling across Canada on two wheels would test any biker to the limit.

But two Notts men are determined to try the 500-mile cold trek on just the one.

Joe Marshall, 29, from Beeston, and his pal Spencer Owen, 32, from Bramcote, will attempt the Ride the Lobster challenge this June.

It will see them ride the length of Nova Scotia in just five days, at speeds of up 15mph.

It is dubbed the unicycle equivalent of the Tour de France and is named after the shape of Nova Scotia - which almost forms one of two ‘claws’ on the east coast of Canada.

Joe, a University of Nottingham student, and Spencer, an IT worker, are currently in the middle of a gruelling training regime to get them ready for the 100-mile-a-day ride.

Both are long-time unicycle fans, using the single-wheeled bikes as their preferred mode of transport.

Joe, 29, fell in love with the unicycle when he was living in London.

“I got into unicycling originally just because I love circus stuff, then I discovered there were people riding them down mountains and things,” he said.

"I’ve not done much ‘circus’ unicycling.

“But when I lived in London, I only had a tiny flat so I couldn’t fit a bike in there, so I used my unicycle instead. It turned out to be more practical.”

The pair, along with American James Amon, have dubbed their team The Goonies.

They will be supported by Joe’s wife, law PhD student Penny Munro. She is not a unicyclist but will be going along to help co-ordinate their route.

“She’s quite supportive of my stupid ideas,” Joe said. "I unicycled in New Zealand last year and we went down a field just after the first snow of the season and that was pretty tough.

"It was rocky, downhill and steep.

"I do ride normal bikes as well, it’s just a bit more of a challenge on a unicycle.

“We’re riding about 50 to 60 miles a week at the moment,” Joe explained. "Last weekend, we had a big training weekend with a whole bunch of people from around the country.

"We did a big ride from Beeston to Cromford in the Peak District and back.

"The hardest thing about Ride the Lobster is probably going to be going up against the fastest riders in the world.

"We all know we can ride the distance at a comfortable speed. But the speed will have to be about 15mph or so to keep up which might be tough.

"We’ve got to do it in five days, we’re sure we can do that.

"We’re certainly thinking we’ll be in the middle of the pack as far as places go, but we’re training hard to do as well as we can.

"The unicycles we use have got big wheels, which makes them faster and more stable.

“Once you’ve learned to ride a unicycle they’re quite stable really. It’s just like riding a bike.”

The challenge runs from June 16 to 20.

A spokesman for the organisers said: "Ride the Lobster is a unique, international unicycle race, unlike any other ever held.

"It’s an ultra-marathon for the unicycling community.

“The distance will be 800km in stages, over five days, and, with over 25 teams of three riders each from around the world competing for at least (10,000 Canadian dollars) in prize money; it will be one event you won’t want to miss.”

All the teams taking part in Ride the Lobster will be tracked and mapped by global positioning satellites, and their positions in the race will be available in almost real-time via the internet.

Visit www.ridethelobster.com for more details

Me too, RTL Top story

It is top story on the website and i am on the whole cover of the western star as well as page 3.:slight_smile:

Nice article! I would really love to participate and go to Nova Scotia for RTL, but I guess you need three on a team and ride approx 33 miles per day each? I’d definitley be up for that but would need to find two ppl to team up with. my guess is everybody is probably already teamed up.:frowning:

hey terry i was thinking about going next year and i also will need two partners. just somthing to keep in mind for the future. we could win it all!:slight_smile:

I made the front page of local paper for RTL

See details here

http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/front/article/228617

Granted I’ve yet to do my qualifing run I hope to have the support of my community and bring awarness to the event.

RTL riders still trying to put together teams.

By my count so far RTL has 60 qualified riders and eight teams of 3 riders, so looks like 36 riders loose. 'Course the Berkley “Yam’s” and “Totally Doable” haven’t been thru registration yet, and we have yet to get a bunch of Europeans. Even Ken Looi and the NZ crowd haven’t qualified yet, so I’m guessing a canvass of the riders might turn up team mates.

Check qualified riders at www.ridethelobster.com. click RACE, then RIDERS, then click the map of the country of your choice.

We’d love to have you, Muniaddict. Maybe AARP can sponsor Team Geezer? :roll_eyes:

Team Goonies = #1 !

Is there a limit to how many people can enter?