double_entendre
Well-known member
Well maybe they're really ragging on the wheelie thing, but still......
Bob
Huntington Beach, CA
At 70 mph, Motorcyclist Gives Drivers a Wheelie Scary Sight
Steve Harvey
Only in L.A.
August 22, 2006
A never-ending subject of conversation in these parts is the "you'll-never-guess-what-I-saw-on-the-freeway-today" story. On the laobserved.com website, mystery novelist Denise Hamilton relates "the most horrifying thing" she's encountered recently: a guy on a sports motorcycle on the 134 Freeway, near Glendale, "popping wheelies at 70 mph.
" 'Oh my God,' I said, not believing my eyes. Then, as I watched in horror, he did it again, riding on his back wheel for a while before slamming back onto the asphalt, where he wobbled precariously before righting himself …
"At that moment, I didn't really care if the guy died and removed himself from the gene pool. He deserved a big fat Darwin Award. But I didn't want him to take me down with him. Neither did I want to spend the rest of my life in therapy because I ran [him] over after he skidded into my lane."
Luckily for all, the biker, after revving the engine of "his ridiculously over-powered bike … darted off, weaving through traffic, up the highway and out of sight."
Bob
Huntington Beach, CA
At 70 mph, Motorcyclist Gives Drivers a Wheelie Scary Sight
Steve Harvey
Only in L.A.
August 22, 2006
A never-ending subject of conversation in these parts is the "you'll-never-guess-what-I-saw-on-the-freeway-today" story. On the laobserved.com website, mystery novelist Denise Hamilton relates "the most horrifying thing" she's encountered recently: a guy on a sports motorcycle on the 134 Freeway, near Glendale, "popping wheelies at 70 mph.
" 'Oh my God,' I said, not believing my eyes. Then, as I watched in horror, he did it again, riding on his back wheel for a while before slamming back onto the asphalt, where he wobbled precariously before righting himself …
"At that moment, I didn't really care if the guy died and removed himself from the gene pool. He deserved a big fat Darwin Award. But I didn't want him to take me down with him. Neither did I want to spend the rest of my life in therapy because I ran [him] over after he skidded into my lane."
Luckily for all, the biker, after revving the engine of "his ridiculously over-powered bike … darted off, weaving through traffic, up the highway and out of sight."