November 19, 2009

Download The Newest Scraper Bike Song Free....

"On The Scene" Is The Latest Song From Recording Artist And Creator Of The Scraper Bike Movement, Baybe-Champ The Scraper Bike King.

The Song Was Released This Pass Summer Off The Roots And Branches Comp. Visit: www.rootsandbranches.info For More Information About The Soundtrack.

The Songs Was Produced By: Big Hurt Of North Oakland, Mixed And Scratched By DJ BASTA Of Roots And Branches.

Lets Us Know Wat You Think About The New Anthem To The Scraper Bike Movement!

...Having Problems? Copy & Paste Link-->

http://www.zshare.net/audio/65121639eefcb442

(Also Avalible On Fun4Mobile.com Search:"On The Scene")

.,.,.

November 18, 2009

Oaklandish - Original Scraper Bikes T-Shirts Coming Soon!!

Finally, The Official Oaklandish Scraper Bike T-Shirts Will Be Sold In Stores, And Fests, Near You...Coming Soon....For A Limited Time Only...(Online Sales Will Be Avaliable!)

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Photos Taken By: Johnnie Mitchel

All Images Are Copyrights Of Johnnie Mitchell.com

Here Are Some Pictures Taken By Johnnie Mitchell On Halloween At The 3rd Annual Scraper Bike Day - Halloween Bike Ride...

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November 7, 2009

3rd Annual Scraper Bike Day A Success

Never heard of "scraper bikes?" Watch this! from Oakland North on Vimeo.




Tyrone Stevenson Jr., alias the Scraper Bike King, celebrated the Third Annual Scraper Bike Day last weekend with an informal gathering at a park in East Oakland. The Scraper Bike community, part of yet another Oakland phenom that has gone bigtime, was invited to come out to show off the gussied-up bikes, listen to music, and watch a an all-female performance team do a bike dance...(Via Oakland North)

3rd Annual Scraper Bike Day- Halloween Bike Ride

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Our event goals are to introduce a positive movement to our community that is looking for safe alternative activities for the youth to engage. We want to bring Bikes from all over the bay to come together and ride for Peace and Empowerment. As part of our entertainment we will bring together the best Hip Hop Artistes from the Bay Area to celebrate Peace, Unity, and our love for Scraper Bikes.

The Scraper Bikes was recently honored by The Oakland Unified School District for giving Extraordinary Services to the OUSD Community. We have a record of planning and holding successful non violent events over the past few years to bring awareness of this grassroots movement. Oakland is the birth place of the Scraper Bikes. Scraper bike day is part of our fundraiser to help with the goal of getting a Bike Shop in East Oakland that will be set up by youth in the community we plan on creating a bicycle shop that focuses on customizing bicycles, bicycle repair skills, and youth mentoring services. We plan on creating a sustainable, positive, educational, and "Green" way of life in the inner city.

November 6, 2009

Scraper Bike Fan Videos

Check Out These Random Youtube Videos...Some Are Funny...Some Are Rude...Some Are Entertaining...And Some Is Just Questionable... You Be The Judge..LoL..Keep The Videos Coming!!!!




















(via youtube.com)

Just Some Random Youtube Videos Based On The "Scraper Bike Movement"

The Second Annual Halloween Scraper Bike Ride. 10/31/08. From East to West Oakland and back. Exclusive tshirts by Oaklandish. Video by BASTA.





Scraper Bike ride in Oakland, Ca. Led by Original Scraper Bikes. Filmed by Oaklandish.




GET THE DVD OFF THE HOOK SPECIAL APPERANCES BY THE TRUNK BOIZ AND TOO SHORT. facebook.com/ScraperBikeKing



Scraper Bikes Vol.1 DVD ft. Too Short myspace.com/scraperbikeking
(Sorry We All Sold Out!)



The Scraper Bike King Ghost Ride His 3 Wheeler In The Middle Of E14th.



A critical mass of scraper bikes went by our place in West Oakland the evening of July 25.(Cool Video!)



Bikes For Life, Silence the Violence Ride in Oakland 7/13/08



out filming the second scraper bike video in east oakland, we decided to make a quick stop in the middle of 90...(LoL..This Old School Right Here...LoL)

The Scraper Bike Music Videos

The Rough Cut Of The Scraper Bike Music Video Thats Currently At 2.7 Million Views And Still Going...



The Final Version Of The Scraper Bike Music Video Thats Currently Over 700,000 Views And Still Going. Enjoy!



-With A Total Count Of Both Music Videos The Scraper Bike Song Is Well Over 3.4 Million Views World Wide! Thats Wat Lead The Scraper Bikes InTo A Global Curtual Movement.

All Scraper Bike Cameo Music Videos

This Is The Very 1st Music Video The Scraper Bikes Cameo'd In.
18 Dummie By: The Federations (Bay Area Rap Group)

(Link Only)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0ou9rqJ9ss

The Next Video Following The 18 Dummie By The Federations,
Is Bay Area Hip Hop Artist Kafani: In "Fast Like A Nascar"



The Most Recent Music Video The Scraper Bikes Cameo'd In, Was Early 2009 In The Nation Wide Twitter Anthem "Hit Me On Twitter" By: Bay Area Ledgend Mistah FAB



Check Out This Video/Song The Scraper Bike King Is Featured On With Sac. Towns Very Own Lil Q Of The Scraper Boyz..(7 Years Old)..



Save The Best For Last...Download Now...The Newest Scraper Bike Song To Hit The Net...Preview of Baby Champ's new hit "On The Scene." Beat by Big Hurt, mix and video by DJ BASTA. Off of the upcoming Roots and Branches Sound System Vol. 3 dropping this summer. www.rootsandbranches.info



(via Youtube.com)

Scraper Bikes Featured On The Backstory Of "The Christian Science Monitor"

December 8th, 2008

Teens in Oakland, Calif., find an outlet in ‘Scraper Bikes’
Led by young Tyrone Stevenson, they create two wheelers from tricked-out scavenged frames, recycled rims, and Oreo Cookie Wrappers.

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The parking lot is full of boys. There are tall boys, short boys, rowdy boys, and shy boys. There are eager boys who clown around, hyper with anticipation. There are hard-looking boys with gazes that pierce like nails. On this rainy autumn evening, the whole group is spinning around a cracked, weedy corner of east Oakland on the souped-up bicycles and tricycles they call “scraper bikes.”

They’ve spray-painted the recycled old wheels orange and blue and white and red. They’ve pasted Reese’s and Skittles and Oreo wrappers on the scavenged frames. A few even have amplifiers wired to the back. Laughing, the riders zoom and turn, zoom and turn, often narrowly avoiding collisions.

One older teen – a soft-spoken dreamer with a sequined hat perched atop his head – serves as their leader. His name is Tyrone Stevenson, though most know him by his nickname, “Baby Champ.” He is, everyone agrees, the Scraper Bike King. He wants to change the rough, violent world that he and these other boys are growing up in. He thinks he can do it with bikes.
“I just want to give them something positive,” he says.

Until recently, most people had never heard of Stevenson or the tricked-out homemade bicycles he invented back when he was a troubled 13-year-old. Stevenson modeled his creations after “scraper” cars, which are popular in east Oakland and feature booming stereos, candy-colored paint jobs, and big wheels with matching rims. The cars’ name derives from the rims, which are sometimes so large they scrape against the wheel wells. Stevenson simply borrowed that idea – big wheels, bright colors, loud music – and applied it to bikes.

Last year, Stevenson joined forces with a local hip-hop group, da Trunk Boiz, to make a music video paying tribute to the scraper bike. Their videographer posted it on YouTube, and Stevenson soon forgot about it. Perhaps because hip-hop songs aren’t normally playful ballads describing a boy’s love of his bicycle, perhaps because the lyrics are simple and catchy, their video quickly soared in popularity. The two most popular online versions of the video have now been viewed 3 million times.

The chorus of the song goes like this: “I’m moving on my scraper bike. I’m cruising on my scraper bike. My scraper bike, go hard. I don’t need no car.”

Those words are now on the lips of teenagers from Germany to Russia to China. But nowhere are they so well-known as in the neighborhood where the Scraper Bike King grew up. The bikes have become a symbol of pride for east Oakland youth. They offer an outlet for kids growing up in troubled schools, troubled neighborhoods, and – often as not – troubled families.

Scraper bike boys may not have access to the expensive video games enjoyed by their suburban peers. There’s no promise of a car on their 16th birthdays. But there is the simple pleasure of refurbishing a discarded bicycle, of taking something old and broken and making it shine.

“He’s helping the kids that would otherwise be on the street – packing guns, selling drugs,” says Andre Ernest, who directs da Trunk Boiz and has a nonprofit called Super Innovative Teens.

•••

Six years ago, when he dreamed up his first scraper bike, Stevenson was spending his freshman year at a continuation high school. He’d been kicked out of middle school for smoking pot and fighting. “I was a problem child,” he says.

His father – never much of a presence in Stevenson’s life – had died of AIDS when the boy was in third grade. His mother, who worked two jobs, begged her only child to find a hobby, some constructive outlet for all his pent-up frustration.

One summer day, Stevenson was hanging out in front of his cousin’s house. The older boy showed him how to fold aluminum foil over the spokes of his bicycle so it would look like chrome plating. Impressed, Stevenson decided to spruce up the bike even more. He grabbed some green spray paint left over from a school project. “Let’s paint the bike,” he said.

Other boys were taken with Stevenson’s new wheels. “That’s town business,” they decreed – slang for “That has Oakland written all over it.” He started decorating friends’ bikes for free.

In 10th grade, someone told him to bring a few bikes over for a video shoot by the popular hip-hop group, The Federation. He was thrilled.
Then, in July of 2006, Stevenson’s close friend, Mikal Robinson, was hit by an SUV while riding around west Oakland on a dirt bike. Death has always been far too present in Stevenson’s life: Oakland, a relatively small city, saw 127 murders last year. After Mikal died, Stevenson wrote a song listing the names of 15 dead loved ones. He figures that number has doubled since then.

The loss of Mikal rocked Stevenson’s foundations. He threw himself more fully into his newly discovered hobby. Now he wasn’t just promoting scraper bikes for himself; he was doing it for Mikal. That fall, he approached da Trunk Boiz.

“I believe I have something to bring to the table that will further both our careers,” he remembers telling them.

From there, a phenomenon was born. Last April, Stevenson’s scraper bikes were featured on the front page of The Oakland Tribune – a day, he says, “I will never forget.” The Oakland Museum displayed one of his bikes in an exhibit on local culture. A local T-shirt company, Oaklandish, began sponsoring his work. “These are young people who normally wouldn’t be considered artists, but I definitely consider it fine art,” says Nicholas Basta, who does community outreach for the company.

Stevenson, who has been attending adult school and is set to earn his high school diploma this month, plans to take some business classes at a local community college. Soon, he hopes to patent his design, then open a scraper bike shop where he can employ other youth. His long-term goal, he says, is to win the Nobel Peace Prize.

•••

By 6 p.m. on this cold, wet night – which Stevenson has proclaimed the second annual Scraper Bike Day – the boys in the parking lot are getting antsy. Rain clouds have darkened overhead and the event’s main illumination now comes from a Burger King billboard.

Stevenson, who has affixed a speaker system to the back of his oversized yellow-and-white three-wheeler, lines the group up for a photo shoot. He tells them twice not to flash gang signs in any pictures. The scraper-bike movement needs to represent something positive, he says. There’s no room for street-level rivalries.

Finally, the three-dozen boys pull their bikes onto Foothill Boulevard, where Friday night traffic snakes by. They don’t have helmets or bike lights, so their main safety equipment comes in the form of the T-shirts Oaklandish has donated – black, with glow-in-the-dark letters on the back.

Late into the evening, Stevenson and his riders pedal their way across Oakland’s forgotten neighborhoods. They ride over broken glass, over discarded handwritten signs promising “Fast Cash for Houses.” They ride past bewildered families, past bow-tied members of the Nation of Islam, past a rowdy group of teenagers hanging out by the corner store. Some drivers honk their support, others their frustration.

Among the scraper-bike boys, a light-hearted enthusiasm abounds. At least for tonight, these streets belong to them.

(via csmonitor.com)

-This Is The Deepest Interview The Scraper Bike King Has Ever Done. He Really Opened Up His Heart, And Told His Life Story From Begining To End..

Scraper Bikes Featured On "Urban Alliance For Sustianibilty"

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Sometime In 2008

Straight outta Oakland- Have you been seeing this group of highly inspired kids riding around the East Bay on bikes that are hand built, colorful, engaging, and exciting? If you haven't, meet the Trunk Boiz, who spawned the world-wide trend known as Scraper Bikes, all while maintaining an active musical career, holding down day jobs, setting up non-profits, being community leaders, and having a great time.

While the Trunk Boiz are spread throughout the East Bay, from Oakland to Richmond and Vallejo, the bike movement that they created and showcased in their YouTube video has gone global. The music video "Scraper Bike" has over 2 million hits, thanks in part to a connection with the Bicycle Film Festival, which gave the group a chance to expose their special brand of bikesmanship to viewers in Japan, France, Italy, England, Switzerland, and beyond. "Scraper Bike" was also nominated in 2007 for YouTube's Best Music Video.

So what is a scraper bike? "The idea came from riding around and seeing scraper cars: old school [mid 1980's-90's] GMC model cars, mostly Buicks, with sound systems and rims that match the paint. They ride around with speakers and play music to promote it. So we did that with bikes," says T.B. member Bay-be Champ. Indeed, scraper bikes are hand-built from donated or salvaged bicycles, painted with matching bodies and tire rims, sporting speaker systems run on mounted battery packs, and the crew ride around at rallies, through the streets, and into your head with their unforgettable "Scraper Bike" anthem blasting.

It doesn't stop with the bikes and the music promotion. The Trunk Boiz are down-to-earth, incredibly dedicated community activists. When asked to define what the Scraper Bike movement means, they say, "It's fun, creative, positive, and educational." Like many urban communities in the late 20th century and into the 21st, there is a lack of opportunity for youth in Oakland, which often leads to increased drug use, behavioral problems, and broken families. "These kids don't got anything to do, so we're trying to interest them in bikes, fixing them and riding them, so they stay out of trouble," says Champ. "Me being 19 and living in the urban community, I see there's not alot of resources for creativity. But bikes are an [opportunity for] expression of that creativity, and that's where Scraper Bikes comes in." The rest of the band, all between the ages of 17 and 22, agrees: "We are community activists. Whenever there's a problem [such as the increase in violent gun crime in Oakland] we get together and say somethin'. Scraper Bikes is getting a group of kids together to voice our opinions," says T.B. member B*Janky. The Trunk Boiz are building bikes to donate to Silence the Violence and recently contributed a scraper bike on behalf of Youth UpRising to the Oakland Museum's Cool Remixed: Bay Area Urban Art and Culture Now exhibit.

The Trunk Boiz are also heavily involved with a bike rally and barbeque on July 13th, 2008 at the Lake Merritt playground in Oakland. The theme of the ride is "Bike for Life: Riding for Peace" and will be held in collaboration with the SF Bike Coalition, Silence the Violence, Books Not Bars, and anybody and everybody in the Bay Area who has a bike, a burning desire to come together for a worthy ideal, and some food for the grill. What better venue for community action than a unity barbeque! Imagine a world where bike cultures and hip-hop cultures come together for the sake of peace and life. In the past few years, Oakland has increased its reputation as a violent, dangerous place to live, but "we changing it. We doing something that people aren't used to, giving it a new vibe. In Oakland, they's a lot more out here than people dying, and we're trying to help change that image. We're not superstars, we're just regular people, doin' this for the kids," says T.B. member 2Deep.

To help make that happen, the Trunk Boiz bring the Scraper Bike mentality not only to bike rallies and music; the group have incorporated a non-profit organization called Super Innovative Teens, which according to B*Janky, is a headquarters for Oakland youth to meet up and work on bikes, as well as house young people with talents and skills in music, art, business, and education, and give them the resources necessary to succeed. The idea is to provide a safe place that becomes a bike youth center, get a dedicated membership together, and be creative with minds and bikes. Of course, the Scraper Bike movement here in the East Bay has spawned start-up community action bike groups in cities around the world who inspire the Boiz with news and updates on their impact: "That's showing some unity."

In Oakland in 2006, there were 36.4 murders for every 100,000 people, compared to the national average of 7 murders per 100,000; robberies, car thefts and aggravated assaults make the situation seem even bleaker. Oakland resident Dame Hooker, interviewed by Kevin Epps for Current.com, says, "It's a cold game out here, man." On the other hand, the soul-utionary thinking of the Trunk Boiz is making a healthy and real impact in the community. "Everything we do is positive... The future is endless," says Champ. B*Janky chimes in: "For real

(via uas.coop.com)

Scraper Bikes Featured On "News Desk"

December 24, 2008

Oakland, California, is not just the city with the fifth-highest crime rate in the country -- it's also home to the "scraper bike" movement, which according to Wiretap Magazine is giving young people an alternative to the violence plaguing their communities.

Scraper bikes are tricked out with unique paint jobs, rims and spinners, and have been modified to resemble "scraper" cars of the late 1980s -- American-made sedans decked out with stereo systems, huge rims and imaginative detailing.

Tyrone Stevenson, known by friends as Baby Champ and generally acknowledged as the Scraper Bike King, and hopes to make Oakland a little less violent with each customized bike he creates.

Scraper bikes came up from the Bay Area's "hyphy" hip-hop subculture, and gained attention when Stevenson posted a video with his group Da Trunk Boiz on YouTube that highlighted the bikes.

Stevenson made his first scraper bikes as a troubled 13-year-old, and now attends adult school and hopes to open a scraper bike shop where young people can learn the craft and meet positive role models.

He wants the bikes to show at-risk youth "that there's ... something else out there and people to support you being creative."

Scraper Bikes Graced The Cover Of "Momentum Magazine"

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July/Aug. Edition

Scraper bikes are a style spawned by teenagers in Oakland, and popularized by the hip-hop group Trunk Boiz on YouTube. Tyrone Stevenson Jr., one of the Trunk Boiz, pioneered the scraper bike style a couple years ago, creating pinwheel decorated spokes with tinfoil, re-used cardboard, candy wrappers and paint. Scraper bikes are a response to Oakland’s scraper car aesthetic. The video of the Trunk Boiz song “Scraper Bike” caught attention on YouTube in 2007 and has garnered millions of views since.

Stevenson participated in this year’s Maker Faire in San Mateo, CA where the momentum crew had the chance to meet him. He has also started making a living decorating bikes for other people.

The scraper bike crew are aware and proud of that their bikes help promote green transportation, and they have also connected scraper biking with another important cause: raising awareness and unity against gun violence in their neighbourhoods. In 2008 the Trunk Boiz, in collaboration with Bike 4 Life, and Silence the Violence, presented the Scraper Bike 4 Life ride and barbecue in West Oakland. The message was to stop the bullets and violence by calling for a gun truce. It was also a celebration of creativity and expression mixed with a physically active lifestyle and the love of the bicycle. The mile-long bike ride drew over 100 people and consisted mostly of youth riders on colourful scraper bikes. The Second annual Bike 4 Life ride is on Saturday, July 25 starting at 2pm at Lakeside Playground, 468 Perkins St. in Oakland finishing up with a celebration in Demfry Park at 3pm. With all the attention on scraper bikes this year, the ride is sure to have a big, bright, beautiful turnout – and a positive impact on the people of Oakland.

Now bikers from Portland to Albuquerque are making their own versions of scraper bikes. Search for scraper bikes on Flickr, or watch the Trunk Boiz video on YouTube for inspiration – then go build your own scraper bike!

(via MomentumPlanet.com)

Scraper Bikes Featured On "East Bay Express"

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June 25, 2008

Throughout his childhood, Baby Champ — whose name derives from his deceased father, Tyrone "Big Champ" Stevenson — was constantly getting in scraps with other kids. "If you said something about my daddy it would be, like, 'What? Okay, well, it's time to fight,'" said the nineteen-year-old East Oakland native, whose father died when he was in third grade. Champ's mother, always the last stop in a long chain of disciplinary actions, would enjoin Baby Champ to find more productive ways of channeling his anger. Then she would put him under house arrest: no TV, no phone calls, no playing outside after the sun went down. The only thing left to do, Champ recalled, was take apart his bicycle to see if he could reassemble all the parts. Being sequestered at home in this manner would ultimately do wonders for Champ's career.

He was the kind of kid who always liked tinkering with household appliances. He'd pry things apart, loosen the screws, twist off the knobs, and pull the springs out just to see if he could put everything back together in its original form. By the time he turned thirteen, Champ could build a bike more easily than the average person could put together an Ikea nightstand. Then he got the idea of improving on the vehicle's design in homage to the candy-colored Oldsmobile "scrapers" he'd see rolling through his neighborhood in East Oakland. He began adding 22-inch or 26-inch rims, gold aluminum foil (meant to resemble the "spinners" on scraper car wheels), and bright, electric paintjobs. Despite his mother's disapproval ("She was like, 'Don't make no mess, don't get no spray paint on the wall, that better not be my foil'"), Champ became passionate about his "scraper bikes," approaching them with the studied intensity of a craftsman making an abstract sculpture. As a senior at McClymonds High School, Champ launched his own mom-and-pop bicycle boutique, which later inspired a popular rap video and landed him in the sanctified pages of UrbanDictionary.com.

Champ is a bicycle enthusiast with a DIY business model that would garner approval from any punk rocker or Critical Mass activist. The yard outside his mother's apartment is a checkerboard of dirt and scrub grass, with scrap bikes piled in one corner, all in varying stages of disrepair: Some have handlebars but no wheels; some are just skeletal frames with the paint peeled off; some are rusted, while others reflect oily light from the sun. Around the side of the house he keeps seven bicycles that look like part of a modern art installation. There's a beach cruiser with chameleon pain that changes from purple to green, and a street bike with Reese's peanut butter cup wrappers woven in the spokes. Other bikes have similarly flashy accessories: gold aluminum foil; Capri Sun juice boxes; Oreo cookie wrappers; two-toned paintjobs; spray-painted 22-inch rims.

On a recent Sunday, Champ sits atop a washing machine in the basement of his apartment building. He is wearing baggy pants, skate shoes, a green Mack Bee T-shirt (from his friend's Vallejo-based clothing line), and an engineer's cap covered with silver sequins. On his right arm are tattooed epitaphs commemorating both his father and his cousin, who died two years ago when he rode his bike though an intersection in West Oakland, and was struck by an oncoming car. A treble clef and musical notes are scrolled across his neck on the left side. His flashy clothes and winsome smile belie his businessman's nature: Since selling his first bike at age fifteen, Champ has constantly been on the move seeking ways to expand his tiny empire. He currently customizes about five bikes a week by adding spinners and candy wrapper wheel decorations, and even tricking them out with real car stereo systems ($175 for the whole package if you bring your own set of wheels).

Champ calls himself an "opportunist," in the sense that "If I see an opportunity, I'm gonna take it." On this day, he's already gotten called to demo the scraper bikes at the Oakland Museum of California, and at a Father's Day picnic in Mosswood Park. Over the past couple months he's assembled a loose-knit street team called the Scraper Bike Boys, already about thirty men deep. Champ uses an each-one, teach-one approach: He made their bikes, showed them how to do it, then got them to ride around town and advertise his product for free. Thus, the self-proclaimed "Scraper Bike King" is at once a true populist, and a shrewd businessman. Champ figured out how to keep his overhead low by stashing about a dozen bikes outside the East Oakland apartment that he shares with his mother, and the rest at his grandmother's house on 74th Street. The itinerant business model is pretty cost-effective, though Champ eventually hopes to open his own shop (he got a couple complaints from grandma when she began planning for a recent backyard barbecue). For now, his storefront is the web site ScraperBikes.net, where Champ hawks bikes, bike accessories, and apparel, and also cross-promotes his rap group, Da Trunk Boiz. Their song "Scraper Bikes" gained its own cult following without any traditional A&R, and spawned a low-budget music video that's already gotten about two million hits on YouTube.

It's all pretty brilliant. Both Da Trunk Boiz and the Scraper Bike Boys (whose membership overlaps) do everything from a grassroots sensibility. The five crew members shot their Scraper Bike video in somebody's front yard, and on the street outside; the group's demo album, which they mixed and edited in Champ's laundry room, has an equally lo-fi production style (as in, so lo-fi, it's practically no-fi). Last Halloween Champ amassed some fifty bike riders at the corner of 51st Avenue and Foothill Boulevard to ride from East Oakland to West Oakland on their splashy vehicles. He promoted the event on radio station 106 KMEL by proclaiming it the inaugural "Scraper Bike Day" celebration. Making it to the Urban Dictionary was probably their biggest break thus far. The entry for "scraper bike" reads: "A new trend that is a part of the San Francisco Bay Area Hyphy Movement in which people ride their tricked out bikes and go stupid, dumb, retarded while on their bikes ... The term was coined by the rap group Trunk Boiz of Oakland, California."

It's no huge surprise that the scraper bikes are catching on in a period of economic recession, when prohibitive gas prices are deterring many folks — Champ included — from purchasing the actual scraper BMWs. In fact, said the Scraper Bike King — who unwittingly became a bastion of progressive environmental politics in East Oakland — "I have my bike, I don't need no car." He says that recent rap video cameos (for the Federation's "18 Dummy" song and Kafani's "Fast Like a Nascar") helped catapult the scraper bikes to national renown, though he's still trying to get the investment capital to launch his own shop. Even if he doesn't get rich, Champ will surely be remembered for his role in the greening of hip-hop. He said his mother finally gets it.

(via EastBayExpress.com)

-This Is Our Least Favorite Interview, The Writters Tone Sounds Very Negative, And Non-Supportive...Just An Opinion...Wat Do You Think?

"Youth Radio" Interview The Scraper Bike King About TV Show "Gang Wars"



September 29, 2009

The Discovery Channel's recent two-part documentary "Gang Wars: Oakland" has been the talk of Tha Town. We asked the founder of the scraper bike movement, Baybe-Champ, about what he thought about the controversial mini-series.

(via YouthRadio.org)

Scraper Bike Featured On "WireTap Magazine"

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December 15, 2008

It's a Wednesday afternoon, and in the administrative offices of East Oakland's Edward Shands Adult School, Tyrone "Champ" Stevenson is talking the finer points of legal patents. He's two weeks shy of his twentieth birthday, but already has a budding business to look after.

Stevenson invented "scraper bikes," and for the past two years, they've been seen almost everywhere in Oakland. The classic scraper bike is a small BMX frame with larger, 10-speed wheels decorated with foil, colorful tape wound between the spokes of the tires and elaborate custom paint jobs. Particularly ambitious folks can get high-quality speaker systems installed.

As the self-proclaimed Scraper Bike King, Stevenson coined the name "scraper bikes" because they were modeled after "scrapers" -- late-'80s model sedans tricked out with oversized rims, custom paint jobs and sound systems that came to fame during the rise of the Bay Area "hyphy" music movement. The bikes were a less expensive, do-it-yourself alternative that didn't require a driver's license.

But the "scraper bike movement" -- as it's called among riders and admirers -- isn't just a colorful way to get noticed. Stevenson describes it as a deliberate effort to meld artistry and entrepreneurship to develop skills and opportunities for young people in Oakland.

Something New

The scraper bike movement is characterized by one simple organizing strategy: Each One, Teach One.

Stevenson began building bikes when he was 13. After repeatedly getting into trouble at school, his mother grounded him, adding that he should put his energy into something he was good at that would keep him out of trouble. He eventually found himself in his backyard, being schooled by a cousin on how to put together bike rims. Soon, he was adding his own styles and colors, and by the time he began riding his customized scraper bike around his neighborhood, other people wanted in.

"At first, my friends thought it was something new, something they had never seen before," he says.

Slowly, he began to teach. Stevenson occasionally hosts informal workshops in backyards around his neighborhood. He invites friends, who in turn invite other friends, and together they learn practical skills such as building bike frames and adjusting sound systems. The idea is that those friends then go and teach others. In all, Stevenson says he's personally taught about 20 people how to build the bikes. His eventual goal is to open a bike shop.

The bikes are also available for purchase. Buyers can get a new, custom-made bike for two to three hundred dollars. If you bring your own bike frame to be customized, the price runs anywhere from $50 to $175. Stevenson also points out that he's quick to give away bikes for free to neighborhood kids interested in learning the trade.

The popularity of the scraper bike movement was bolstered by a homemade YouTube video featuring Champ with his rap group, Da Trunk Boiz. The video shows the crew on colorful, custom-decorated bikes proudly exclaiming, "I don't need no car!" The song gained a strong following, and Stevenson estimates that the video's rough and final versions have received a total of almost three million views.

According to Stevenson, bike orders started coming in from as far away as Germany.

There's also the Scraper Bike Crew, whose membership fluctuates in number and age. The crew, which averages about 20 men and women between the ages of 11 and 25, has been invited to local events, such as Grind for the Green, the first solar-powered hip-hop show in the spring of 2008, and the Living Word Festival, an annual spoken word event whose 2008 theme was "sustainability." The crew rides, shows off their creations and is ready and willing to enlist anyone who's interested in building their own.

"Any event that we go to has to be positive," Stevenson says. "[It's] a way of bringing the youth with me on their bikes and... showing them that there's... something else out there and people to support you being creative."

Organizing Against Violence

The movement's organizing strategy and business model are grounded in efforts to create better role models for Oakland's youth. The goal is to show that there's an alternative to potentially dangerous street lives.

The Oakland Tribune recently reported that Oakland has the fifth highest crime rate in the country. In 2007, the city reported 127 homicides. As of December 2008, 119 people have been murdered in the city. According to the Ella Baker Center, an Oakland-based non-profit, much of the violence affects young people under 24.

Stevenson's personal motivation to create better role models is in part inspired by the fact that, while growing up, he was missing one of the most important figures in his life. When he was in the third grade, his father died of complications from AIDS.

"A lot of the guys I ride with don't have fathers, and I didn't have my father, so we connect on the same level and help each other out," he says.

While his father's absence shadowed his life, his mother's presence anchored it. During his senior year at McClymonds High School, the scraper bike movement began to get attention in both the community and the media. News articles popped up in Oakland's independent weekly, East Bay Express, and on NPR. Stevenson admits he was caught up in the experience, letting his grades slip and failing to earn enough credits to graduate.

"My mom told me that if I wanted to be serious about my business, I had to get an education."

Eventually, Stevenson enlisted the help of adult mentors to work as a conduit for news reporters. He also began to collaborate with Bay Area organizations like the Ella Baker Center and Oaklandish, an independent clothing company also based in Oakland.

But can a youth-led bike movement help stop Oakland's violence?

"Scraper bike [culture]... is flamboyant, beautiful, colorful, creative... but it's also positive," says Nicole Lee, the political director for the Ella Baker Center's Silence the Violence campaign.

Through her work with Oakland youth over the past two years, Lee sees potential. "I think we already have our solutions at the community level," she says. "The question is how do we get the resources and how [do we] take youth seriously enough to build stuff up to scale?"

Stevenson is also optimistic.

"If we had a center, where a lot of kids could just come, I feel deep in my heart that would really reduce a lot of the crime," he says.

After we spoke, Champ was meeting with an editor to put the finishing touches on a $5,000 innovative small business grant application with Oaklandish.

He's now only three credits away from getting his high school diploma at Edward Shands Adult School. When he found out that one of his favorite teachers at Edward Shands, Mrs. Block, was married to a longtime businessman, he began to get serious about patenting his work.

"I can actually have a business with this, something for Oakland to have a trade," he says. "It's much bigger than me and the bikes."

(via WireTapMag.org)

The Trailer For The "Scraper Bike King" Short Documentry

This is the official trailer for "The Scraper Bike King". To purchase copies visit: www.GreenEyedMedia.com Description: A touching documentary about the original creator of the Oakland-based Scraper Bike Movement.

Scraper Bikes Featured On "Built From Skratch"

Jan. 7th 2009

Scraper Bikes Featured On "Current TV"

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Nov. 7th 2008



Oakland shows us the Scraper Bike, the attention grabbing two-wheeled answer to the Scraper cars and low-riders.

(via Current.com)

Urban Dictionary - Scraper Bike

Scraper Bike (n.)- A new trend that is a part of the San Francisco Bay Area Hyphy Movement in which people ride their tricked out bikes and go stupid, dumb, retarded while on their bikes. Generally, the bikes have nice designs, such as duo-tone paint jobs, and rims or spinners. The term was coined by the rap group Trunk Boiz of Oakland, California.

Example:

Jerome: Me and my buds was on our scraper bikes picking up on girls. My scraper bike go hard, I don't need no car.
Tyrone: That go!
Jerome: We was ghost riding them too.
Tyrone: That sounds like hella fun, bud.

Scraper Bikes Featured On "NPR"

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September 13, 2008

(Listen To The On-Air Weekend Edtion Of The Historical Interview With The Scraper Bike King, Only On NPR)



YouTube has spawned many sudden sensations. Take scraper bikes, for example. A music video about the tricked-out bicycles posted to the site by some teenagers in Oakland, Calif., has attracted a cult following, with nearly 3 million views.

The video spawned what is becoming a worldwide movement, even as it changed the lives of the young men who customized the bikes and made the video.

"Actually, scraper bikes saved my life," says Tyrone Stevenson Jr., who prefers the title "Scraper Bike King."

"Because I was at a young age, getting into a lot of serious trouble, selling drugs and on the verge of going to jail. So my mom told me this is a way to channel anger and frustration, just focusing on something that's creative, something that's me, and the bikes is me."

Oakland is a town where hip-hop is king and cars known as "scrapers" are huge. They're large, bright and have rims so big that they scrape the inside of the wheel well. Stevenson and his friends took those aesthetics and applied them to bicycles, fitting large wheels on small frames.

Stevenson, 19, started making scraper bikes a few years ago. He couldn't afford a car, so he made do with a bike. But not just any bike.

"The idea from the scraper bikes, it basically came from the cars that ride in Oakland — we call them scrapers — basically it's an old model car, such as a Buick, that's painted a custom color to match the rims. I wanted to take that and put a bike onto it."

To do that, he put the few resources he had to work. He added colorful foil food wrappers — from Oreos or Skittles — to the spokes, so when they roll they flash with color. Then he spray-painted the frames to match.

But scraper bikes didn't really catch on until he and some friends recorded a music video about them and posted it on YouTube. And now…

"Oakland has been taken over by scraper bikes," says Stevenson. "On the Internet, it is worldwide. There's people from literally across the world making these bikes, from Portland, Oregon, to Japan to Australia to Jamaica."

Stevenson says he's already making a living scraperizing bikes, but he's got big plans for the future: trademarks, patents and, someday soon, a scraper bike shop.

"The true meaning of a scraper bike is basically, I want to give back something positive to the community," Stevenson said.

"Because there's so much going on. Drugs and killing and stuff, this is a way of giving the kids a way to a positive future, but being creative at the same time."

Jacob Fenston reports from member station KQED.

(Via NPR.org)

New Scraper Bike Song!! zSHARE - Baby Champ - On The Scene.mp3

Download The Newest Scraper Bike Song By: Baybe-Champ The Scraper Bike King. Titled: "On The Scene" Produced By: Big Hurt And Mixed By DJ BASTA...In Stores Now On The Roots And Branches Comp. ....Scraper Bike Album Coming Soon....


zSHARE - Baby Champ - On The Scene.mp3

Visit: www.RootsandBranches.info