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None of it worries me at all! When there was not a penny in BMX was by far the best time to be a rider.I hope it dies tomorrow.
Insurance hassles were another major contributing factor to BMX facilities closing and the decline of the sport in the late 80s/early 90s.
am i right in thinking it did definitely fall out of "commercial favour"i always had a feeling alot of it being down to the lightweight parts breaking all the time and kids just not being able to keep up financially?and like you said moeller/moliterno/hoff etc seemed to keep its pulse alive but there whole approach was "stronger bikes" which further backs up the idea,i've never heard it talked about and i could be wrong so tell me if i am like!!why did bmx seem to die for a while? any views on it?Bloke who owns BIG local bikeshop/ framebuilders told me just that...colours changing, all about fashion, kids couldn't keep up with the money for 'the next parts'
I had a fooking riot with the other things too
have some respect.bmx never 'died'.so, you met a girl/bought a car/took drugs/went raving/started a job/grew up/started drinking/ etc, etc, etc. how self centered are you all to think bmx 'died' when you didnt feel like riding?sure, no one should be tied to riding a bike every day for ever to be considered a 'bmxer', and yes you can come and go as you please, but don't insult the intelligence of the true riders who rode right throughout the 'lean times'.if you think it all stopped when you took up other interests, then you're the loser.
"put the buckfast on the floor and take two steps back"when i said "bmx died" i meant commercially, i rode through the dark years too so i do know just how small bmx got in those years,yes i did all the birds/cars/drugs stuff but alway found time to ride aswell, in the mid 90's when i was at uni in edinburgh my bmx was even my main form of transport, if you actually bothered to see what i was trying to say from this thread, you see i was "subtley" trying to get folk to support the genuine bmx companies instead of the big "corporates" "real riders" eh? whats that "batty riders"?
as far as i'm concerned, bmx died in the late 80's / early 90's due to everyone "growing up".
just my opinion....
Quote from: darksunday on November 27, 2007, 10:34 AM"put the buckfast on the floor and take two steps back"when i said "bmx died" i meant commercially, i rode through the dark years too so i do know just how small bmx got in those years,yes i did all the birds/cars/drugs stuff but alway found time to ride aswell, in the mid 90's when i was at uni in edinburgh my bmx was even my main form of transport, if you actually bothered to see what i was trying to say from this thread, you see i was "subtley" trying to get folk to support the genuine bmx companies instead of the big "corporates" "real riders" eh? whats that "batty riders"?hoho, i wasnt referring to your post in particular, dude. more like this ones like this-Quote from: Trev on November 26, 2007, 03:47 PMas far as i'm concerned, bmx died in the late 80's / early 90's due to everyone "growing up".however, he slightly redeemed himself here-Quote from: Trev on November 26, 2007, 03:47 PMjust my opinion....it only died if it died in your heart.