SOUTH AFRICA
BEYOND THE ORDINARY
EAGLE
HUNTERS
Ancient Mongolian art meets new-age tech
SONIC
BOOM!
The Croatian who built the fastest electric hypercar at 21
FANTASTIC
VOYAGE
The America’s Cup powers up for the future
CHARLIE
HUNNAM Ditches the anarchy and digs deep as King Arthur
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CONTRIBUTORS
EDITORIAL
Jean Pierrot
Josh Dean
The New York-based journalist interviewed Olympic swimmer Anthony Ervin for our December cover feature. This time, we sent him to Bermuda to preview the 2017 America’s Cup. “I had no idea just how incredible those machines are,” says Dean. “They absolutely rip across the water. It really does look more like flying than sailing.” PAGE 30
06
Changing the game Innovation is a word that’s most regularly associated with technology, but as this month’s features demonstrate, the transformative power of fresh thinking crosses all boundaries – from sport to pop music, movies to motoring. On the cover is Hollywood star Charlie Hunnam, whose action-man persona masks a deep-seated desire to continue a journey of self-discovery begun during his childhood in north-east England. In sport, new technology has turned America’s Cup yacht racing from the preserve of an elite of blazerwearing dilettantes into an ultra-high-tech sport for elite athletes – the Formula One of the seas. Meanwhile, on land, Croatian entrepreneur Mate Rimac, the creator of the world’s fastest electric hypercar, is developing the road technology of the future and staying firmly put in his homeland. Finally, to music. Gorillaz began 20 years ago as a momentary conceit and developed into a virtual pop powerhouse – and as AI-inspired pop stars and music increasingly filter into the mainstream, they represent the shape of things to come. We hope you enjoy this issue. THE RED BULLETIN
MARC HOM/TRUNK ARCHIVE (COVER)
There are days it would be easy to envy Slovenian fashion photographer Jean Pierrot. Take, for example, when he shot Australian big-wave surfer and model Imogen Caldwell at her home in Red Bluff. The legendary surf spot on Australia’s west coast is 12 hours from Perth and was the perfect backdrop for a shoot that involved memories, motorcycles and shark tales. PAGE 52
CONTENTS 52 June
BULLEVARD Life And Style Beyond The Ordinary
12 Red Bull Hare Scramble:
rock-hard enduro
14 French rapper Seth Gueko:
every tattoo tells a story
16 The art of noise: Panzer –
sound system or sculpture?
17 How to make a damn fine
cherry pie, Twin Peaks style
18 Nu metal, old news: Linkin
Park ring the changes
19 Airbus: a flying car that
laughs in the face of traffic 20 Bebe Rexha: not just another pop starlet 22 I, robot: your sci-fi tech fantasy just became real 23 The Mirrorcube: check into the treehouse of the future
GUIDE
Get it, Do it, See it 84 Highlights from Red Bull
TV this month
86 Mightier than the pen:
the Montblanc smartwatch
88 Unmissable events for
your calendar 90 Have kit, will travel: our essential pick of what to pack for your holiday 96 Global team 98 Frequent flyer: air-racing legend Kirby Chambliss
08
IMOGEN CALDWELL
Nature’s child: on location with the surfing beauty who lives for the great Australian outdoors
30
AMERICA'S CUP
JEAN PIERROT, JANE STOCKDALE, SAM GREENFIELD/ORACLE TEAM USA
How state-of-the-art tech, revolutionary materials and fitter crews have changed the face of yachting
58 CAMO & KROOKED
The Austrian DJs take drum and bass back to its roots in the UK city of Bristol
FEATURES
24 Charlie Hunnam
Don’t be fooled by all the hardman roles – the King Arthur actor is more philosopher than fighter
30
America's Cup
Tougher, more physical and faster than ever before – thanks to the AC50 superboat – yachting’s premier contest has gone next-level
44 Mate Rimac
We talk to the motoring visionary who, at the age of just 21, built the world’s fast electric hypercar
52
Imogen Caldwell
58
Camo & Krooked
Who needs the city when you have your own Western Australian paradise? The 20-year-old surfer and model invites us into her world A night in the life of the drum and bass duo
64 Gorillaz
Singer 2D and drummer Russel get animated about their new album and forthcoming festival
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THE RED BULLETIN
Eagle hunting
One man's mission to marry technology and tradition in the subzero steppes of Mongolia 09
The ultimate adventure isn’t defined by limits. It is found by breaking through your own perceived barriers, as you ride off into extreme terrain on the most powerful production offroad bike available – the new KTM 1290 SUPER ADVENTURE R. Look beyond what you thought was possible!
Please make no attempt to imitate the illustrated riding scenes, always wear protective clothing and observe the applicable provisions of the road traffic regulations! The illustrated vehicles may vary in selected details from the production models and some illustrations feature optional equipment available at additional cost.
THE NEW DEFINITION OF ADVENTURE Photo: J. Fruhauf
BULLEVARD LIFE
&
STYLE
BEYOND
THE
ORDINARY
JARED THOMAS KOCKA/CHILLI MEDIA
The 27-year-old New Yorker is a superstar in the making
BEBE REXHA, SINGER: “I’M NOT JUST A POP TART” PAGE 20 11
BULLEVARD
Red Bull Hare Scramble It’s the toughest Enduro race on the planet. Don’t worry, it’s OK to be scared…
THE PEAK OF PAIN
12
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S
SEBASTIAN MARKO/RED BULL CONTENT POOL
WERNER JESSNER
ince 1995, 500 of the world’s toughest, most tenacious, and most talented bikers have gone wheel-to-wheel against the Erzberg mine in the Austrian state of Styria. In most cases it’s the mine that comes out on top. Riders come a cropper on the impossible incline, blow their engines at the fearsome Hell’s Kitchen, go hungry at Carl’s
Diner or end up in hot water at the Badewanne [Bathtub]. The evolving nature of the ultra-extreme course feeds into the legend – after all, it needs to hang on to its reputation as the world’s most challenging Enduro race, with just a handful of riders making it across the line within the four-hour time limit. Whenever more than 20 do, meaning a success rate knocking on five per cent, the organisers dream up fiendish new ways to make the following year’s event even tougher. It’s a very rare occasion indeed that one gets to see some of the world’s best riders suffer like this… Red Bull Hare Scramble is live on redbull.tv from 11:30am on June 18. For more Hare Scramble, watch Parallel Universe, the cult documentary with multiple winner Taddy Błażusiak, at redbull.tv/paralleluniverse
It is utterly normal to fall, get back up, fight on and then end up failing
THE RED BULLETIN
13
THE SKULL Hand on
face, the skeletal teeth lend Gueko a fearsome air. The arresting image formed the cover of his 2015 album, Professeur Punchline.
HERITAGE “I was
fortunate to have brothers who passed on their punk culture to me,” says Gueko.
THE TATTOOS are Gueko’s story, written in ink on his skin, representing a fusion of punk, hip-hop, rock and gore cinema. Religious iconography also appears– such as the Virgin Mary, dear to his Russian mother. Gueko is also half-Italian, through his father.
THE BARJOT AVATAR
14
PHILIPP MUELLER
PIERRE-HENRI CAMY
is of Gueko wandering the streets of Patong as a newcomer to Thailand. Gueko, a father of two, now owns the very hip-hop Seth Gueko Bar in the Phuket resort. The rapper is generally on hand, always ready with a punchline, and always up for a selfie.
THE RED BULLETIN
BULLEVARD BÉRURIER NOIR
Gueko’s favourite band and the band of the 1980s French punk scene.
Seth Gueko
The French rapper’s story is literally skin deep, inked onto his body in a tale that tells you all you need to know
PUNCHLINE IN THE SKIN RHYMES from Gueko’s track Fils de Jack Mess (Son of Jack Mess) written for the infamous French gangster Jacques Mesrine. An incendiary mix of holdups and maximum-security prisons. Pure Gueko.
‘PANAME’
slang for Paris: targeted, attacked and wounded, but always unbowed. Gueko, a child of the Paris banlieue, wrote Titi Parisien in the city’s honour, with Oxmo Puccino and Nekfeu, bringing three generations of French rappers together.
THE RED BULLETIN
R
appers move in packs, but not 36-year old Frenchman Seth Gueko. This one-man band is strictly a solo operation. Gypsy, selfstyled ‘bad cowboy’, hustler pornophile, slasher flick aficionado, provoker and relentlessly Parisian – though he now lives in Thailand – Gueko is French hip-hop’s punk poet, its utterly unique enfant terrible. the red bulletin: One of your noms des plume is Professeur Punchline. So, professor, what’s the secret of a good punchline? seth gueko: It happens spontaneously. I don’t try to make it happen. They’re just there, all the time. I come out with something and my crew bursts out laughing, “Write it down Seth, what you said is too funny – TFF!”
People think you’re either hilarious or shocking, depending on their view of you. You must sometimes ask yourself: “Where did that come from?” [Laughs] Yeah… sometimes, for sure. When I’m listening back to some old stuff, I do wonder. I surprise myself. There’s too much! I’ve released 10 records with 20 verses on each. With about 16 bars in each verse, that makes around 50 punchlines in each piece. So, if you ask me for my favourite punchline, choosing one would mean ignoring thousands of great lines. Is it important to push the concept of a compelling and powerful rhyme with each release? My rap is like a film. To make an outstanding horror film you have to find new ways of showing death and dead people. You have to shock.
Why did the Saw or Final Destination franchises work so well? Because they showed new ways of dying on screen that people hadn’t seen before. Ramping up the shock factor? Yes, a build-up of shocking images. My punchlines are like that! You have punchlines that you rap, and punchlines written on your body, all these motifs on your skin. For example, why have you got ‘Punk’s not dead’ on your neck? My older brothers were real punks. ‘Punk’s not dead’ was in their room – a rebel’s Mecca! My father was a painter and decorator and he went all out on decorating their room: English flag, [Sex Pistols bass player] Sid Vicious with a knife in his mouth, stockades... We lived on the second floor, so everyone passing by could see in. It was like a museum! My tattoos are a way of reproducing what was in that room and what made such an impression on me. And the ‘bad cowboy’ that covers your back? I remember when I first moved to Thailand, I used to wander around, a bit wasted, in jeans and cowboy boots with a beer in my hand. The choppers I rode were my ‘iron horse’. I was a modern cowboy, but – improbably – I looked more like an Indian [laughs]! sethgueko.net
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BULLEVARD
Nik Nowak
His Panzer sound sculpture brings us closer to life’s subtleties... at 4,000 watts
A SIGHT FOR SORE EARS
T
he Red Bulletin: Explain just what it is that makes a pile-driving, twotonne, armoured sound system a work of art. nik nowak: ...performance art, to be precise. The Panzer is the last in a long line of mobile sound systems that are all the result of my fascination with the symbiosis of visuals and acoustics. The object is a sculpture and a synthesizer at the same time. It takes acoustic possession of a space. Three 18in subwoofers and two 4,000-watt amps plus video projector controllers... It sounds like a Panzer performance might be pretty overpowering, and best-suited to the simple pleasures of hard partying.
It’s about much more than just loud dance music, if that’s what you mean. The object opens us up to a multitude of sound experiences that affect the whole body and the mind, as well. Can you give us an example? Take this one… During a performance, I project loud TV noise onto a screen and then begin filtering away the unpleasant frequencies. I also change the colours and suddenly the noise becomes this calming sound that resembles rainfall... After the show you have a better understanding of the way sounds affect us. So, are you also saying we aren’t aware enough of most of the sounds around us? Yes, I am. Unfortunately most places are normally acoustically cluttered. The Panzer frees them up again. niknowak.de
THOMAS HANNICH/PLATNUM
AREK PIATEK
Massive attack: German artist Nik Nowak and his 4kW Panzer sound sculpture
16
THE RED BULLETIN
BULLEVARD
METHOD For the pastry, place the flour, ground almonds, icing sugar and salt in a large mixing bowl and stir to combine. Add the butter and rub in with your fingertips until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs. Beat the egg with the vanilla extract and measured water. Stir the liquid into the flour with a fork, then your fingers, and bring the mixture together to form a firm dough. Divide the dough in half, flatten each portion into a disc, wrap in clingfilm and chill in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour. Meanwhile, place the jam and sugar in a saucepan over a medium heat and stir until the sugar has dissolved. Bring to the boil, then mix the cornflour and measured water or bourbon together and stir into the cherry mixture. Bring to the boil again, stirring all the time, until thickened. Remove from the heat, add the cherries, mix well and leave to cool completely. Preheat the oven to 200°C (400°F), Gas Mark 6. Roll out one pastry disc on a lightly floured surface and use to line the base and sides of a greased 24cm (9½in) pie dish (metal is best). Fill with the cherry mixture and brush the top of the pie edge with a little of the egg glaze.
Twin Peaks
Celebrate the return of David Lynch’s legendary TV series with the show’s iconic treat: cherry pie
ADDIE CHINN
FLORIAN OBKIRCHER
BON APPÉTIT, AGENT COOPER! O
n May 21, David Lynch’s cult mystery TV show, Twin Peaks, will return to our screens after a quarter of a century. The 18 new episodes, produced by Showtime, will see the return of iconic characters such as Laura Palmer, The Log Lady, waitress Shelly Johnson and the show’s hero, Agent
THE RED BULLETIN
Cooper, who is famously addicted to cherry pie. In order to get you hungry for the anticipated revival, Lindsey Bowden, founder of the Twin Peaks festival UK, has given us the recipe from her cookbook, Damn Fine Cherry Pie, a collection of dishes inspired by the show. lindseybowden.com sho.com/twin-peaks
Shelly Johnson’s Cherry Pie For the pastry 450g plain flour 50g ground almonds 100g icing sugar Pinch of sea salt 250g unsalted butter, cubed, plus extra for greasing 1 large egg ½tsp vanilla extract 5tbsp water For the filling 150g cherry jam 150g caster sugar 1½tbsp cornflour 3tbsp water or bourbon 1.25kg sweet cherries, pitted (750g pitted weight) 1 large egg yolk mixed with 1tbsp water for glazing 1tbsp granulated sugar
Thinly roll out the remaining pastry disc and cut into long zig-zag shapes. Arrange them on top of the pie, pressing to stick them to the pie base around the edges. Brush the pastry with more of the egg glaze and sprinkle over the sugar. Bake for about 20 minutes until the crust is golden, then reduce the temperature to 180°C (350°F), Gas Mark 4 and bake for a further 35-40 minutes until the filling is bubbling and the pastry is crisp, covering the pastry with foil, if necessary, to prevent it burning. Allow the pie to cool for about 1 hour before serving.
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No more howling, no more wailing guitars… and newly chilled Linkin Park vocalist Chester Bennington has given up on lecturing, too
“THE WORLD IS A DOG ON A LEASH” 18
W
e’re at the legendary Sunset Marquis hotel, right in the heart of West Hollywood. Linkin Park frontman Chester Bennington is lounging in an armchair on the Sunset Strip. He’s here to promote the band’s new album, One More Light, a work that confronts life’s hardships without a wall of guitars. Back at the start of the new millennium, Bennington – internally riven high priest of a lost generation – was performing anthems such as Numb and In The End. But now, more than a decade later, his one-time nu-metal band have morphed into something else, something more comfortable in its own skin.
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PHT/EXPA/PICTUREDESK.COM
Linkin Park
“It’s not my job to teach people anything,” says the 41-yearold when asked what it means to be a superstar. “We don’t want to change the world; we couldn’t even if we wanted to. But we do want to share our experiences and emotions with the world, and hopefully people can get something out of that themselves.” Bennington’s world-view certainly sounds very different these days. “The world just keeps on getting better,” he says. “It’s like a dog on a leash. It always wants to break free, but in the end it gets back home safely with its master.” A siren blares out on the Strip, but Bennington – formerly the embodiment of emotional turmoil – appears calmer than before. Perhaps that’s because he knows it’s not his job to carry the weight of the world on his shoulders. onemorelight.linkinpark.com
BJÖRN SPRINGORUM
Front-row privilege: Bennington goes eye-to-eye with fans
BULLEVARD
Airbus
Stuck in life’s slow lane? Gridlock got you down? The aviation giants believe the solution could be flying your way inside the next decade
ADAM HAY-NICHOLLS
THE JAM BUSTERS
F
lying cars have been a sci-fi staple for over a century, but this might be the closest to reality we’ve seen so far. Not least because of the weight of the name behind it – Airbus. Crafted in collaboration with famed design house Italdesign, the Pop.Up concept features a carbon-fibre pod that sits on a four-wheel, electric-powered chassis, but which can also link up with a large drone-style quadcopter to fly you out of snarl-ups. It’s autonomous, meaning you simply tap in your chosen destination and the car will either drive you or fly you
where you need to be. Stuck in traffic and need a lift? Just request a drone, wait while it attaches itself to the pod and disconnects the wheelbase, and up you go. It’s set to have a flying range of 60 miles and a driving range of 80. Awesome. How quickly can we get airborne? There’s the catch. Airbus plans to have a working prototype ready in 12 months, but due to regulatory red tape they won’t start taking orders for at least seven years. Mathias Thomsen, general manager of Airbus’ Urban Air Mobility operations insists that it’s not merely pie in the sky, however. “It’s not just for show, it is feasible,” he says. “Urban air mobility is quickly becoming very real.” airbusgroup.com
AIRBUS/WWW.ITALDESIGN.IT
Airbus’ Pop.Up is set to take flight in prototype form next year
THE RED BULLETIN
19
Rexha released her debut album in two parts – All Your Fault: Pt. 2 came out in April
BULLEVARD
B
ebe Rexha’s voice has been much in demand over the last couple of years: EDM icons David Guetta and Martin Garrix recruited her for their huge house hits; Me, Myself & I, her collaboration with rapper G-Eazy, was among the top 20 most streamed songs of 2016; and she topped the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart with I Got You. Another pop starlet forced on us by a major record label, you say? Well, it’s true that Rexha is on track to become the next mainstream music superstar. But it must also be mentioned that the 27-yearold New Yorker is one of the most honest and talented figures in the business right now. Here are five reasons why she deserves to be your new favourite artist…
1. She’s determined Rexha is sensitive to being viewed as an overnight
sensation. Last year, she tweeted, “I’m not just a pop tart. No one ever put me ‘on’. I write every single song I’m on. Been hustling from day 1.” That’s more than fair comment when you consider music is the big love of her life. As a child, she played the trumpet for nine years and taught herself to play the guitar and piano. Later, she independently studied music software in order to record her own demos, and, after many years of hard work, landed a record deal.
2. She’s a boss behind the scenes
Rexha probably co-wrote some of your favourite songs and you don’t even know it. The Monster by Eminem and Rihanna? That’s one of hers. Nick Jonas’ Under You? Yes, that, too. Before stepping into the limelight herself, Rexha also provided hits for pop stars such as Selena Gomez, Pitbull and Tinashe. Her talent was discovered early in life: she beat more than 700 others to the title of Best Teen Songwriter in a competition organised by Grammy.
Bebe Rexha
JARED THOMAS KOCKA/CHILLI MEDIA FLORIAN OBKIRCHER
If you haven’t already fallen in love with this US songstress, she needs to be filling your playlist right now. And here’s why…
NOBODY PUTS BEBE IN A CORNER
3. She’s at ease in her own skin
While growing up as a pop fan in the noughties, Rexha, who has Albanian roots, wasn’t always comfortable with her body. “As I started getting older, I had more curves, and I was looking at women like Britney Spears who were very thin with very boyish bodies,” she told the UK’s Evening Standard. “I thought, ‘Damn, I have really dark black hair and I don’t have that look.’” Today, she’s more confident in her appearance – something she partly credits to the Kardashians, who paved the way for those who don’t conform to the ‘American girl’ beauty standard.
4. She helps out superstars
People assume that Rexha was only invited to sing the chorus on David Guetta’s smash hit Hey Mama once it was at the recording stage. In fact, the French superstar DJ asked for her help when he was stuck while writing the song. Rexha listened to what he had and – legend has it – took less than 10 minutes to come up with the chorus. The song became a Top 10 hit in 21 countries.
5. She doesn’t mince her words
Many young musicians are overly cautious about airing views, for fear of ruining their career, but Rexha is not afraid to speak her mind. Take a song like F.F.F – or ‘F--- Fake Friends’ – in which the expletives fly as she brushes off all the people who have mistreated her. The fact that such songs might be too hot for radio airplay is of little concern to Rexha. “I curse all day, non-stop: I’m not changing myself,” she told the Toronto Star. beberexha.com 21
Big boys, big toys
Standing 4m tall and weighing in at 1.5 tonnes, Method-2 is the first robot with a cockpit, and it’s destined to be a lifesaver
HEAVY METAL MONSTER 22
T
ransformers: Age Of Extinction, Robocop, Ghost In The Shell… 3D designer Vitaly Bulgarov has dreamt up spectacular sci-fi robots for a long list of Hollywood hits, but now, with the help of South Korean company Hankook Mirae Technology, he’s making fantasy real. Since 2014, Bulgarov and 30 engineers have been working on the design of a 4m-tall aluminium and carbonfibre robot. The hulking Method-2 weighs a tonne and a half, with a single arm coming in at a hefty 130kg.
THE RED BULLETIN
VITALY BULGAROV/HANKOOK MIRAE TECHNOLOGY
Method-2’s first baby steps at the laboratory in South Korea. It will go on sale later this year
Quite aside from its futuristic design, this mechanical colossus also breaks new ground technologically. Method-2 is the first robot that can be operated both by remote control and also by a person sitting in the glasscovered trunk of the machine itself, with the movement of its limbs mirroring those of the operator. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos was the first celebrity to try out Method-2, at a tech conference in March this year, and the billionaire cited the perfect pop-culture reference. “Why do I feel so much like Sigourney Weaver?” he shouted from the cockpit, recalling 1986 sci-fi classic Aliens, in which Weaver – in the role of Ellen Ripley – operates a massive exoskeletal robot known as the Caterpillar P-5000 Powered Work Loader. According to Hankook Mirae’s CEO, Yang Jin-Ho, Bulgarov’s real-world metal beast will go on sale at the end of the year, with a projected price tag of $8.3 million. Not bad considering development costs of some $200 million, as some have claimed. But, says Yang, the mech is more than just a plaything for multimillionaires: Method-2 is the first two-legged robot in which a human can negotiate dangerous environments. The giant is therefore destined to be deployed in the event of nuclear accidents, and at other scenes of devastation. vitalybulgarov.com
FLORIAN OBKIRCHER
BULLEVARD
BULLEVARD
The Mirrorcube
Want to really hang out on your holidays? In northern Sweden, you’ll find 64 cubic metres of style suspended among the branches
ossessed by that childhood dream of spending a night in the treetops, but craving a little more luxury than that provided by a hastily cobbled together assemblage of plywood boards and plastic sheeting? Then it’s off to northern Sweden with you. In the dense forests of Harads, 50km from the Arctic Circle, the Mirrorcube – part of the Treehotel, which has seven individually designed rooms – is a 4x4x4m glass cube floating in the treetops, and the only way in is via a 12m-long bridge. But you’ll have to rethink your idea of a treehouse. In actual fact, you can hardly see the Mirrorcube. “The totally
Ingeniously folksy: birch interior
mirrored facade reflects the surroundings so the structure itself is barely visible,” says Treehotel co-founder Kent Lindvall. “That way it’s at one with the forest.” Which is a statement in itself. “Being close to nature and sustainability are important to us. The hotel guest should switch off, leave civilisation behind and remember where we come from.” The Mirrorcube has plenty of space for two, with the living room, bedroom and bathroom (and heated floorboards) all being made of birch wood. The balcony and six windows offer breathtaking panoramic views – think stunning opportunities to marvel at the Northern Lights – and there’s a sauna just a few metres away, down on the ground. And for those who aren’t all that serious about leaving civilisation behind, the Mirrorcube also has WiFi. treehotel.se
PETER LUNDSTRÖM/WDO
AREK PIATEK
ROCK-A-BYE BABY
P
Escape room: the Mirrorcube treehouse in northern Sweden
THE RED BULLETIN
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Charlie Hunnam 25
We know him as the testosterone-fuelled hero of shows such as Sons Of Anarchy, but as King Arthur in Guy Ritchie’s reboot of the medieval legend, Charlie Hunnam is more scholar than warrior, blending über-masculinity with introverted fragility. This is no coincidence: few other action heroes have dug so deeply into their soul WORDS: RÜDIGER STURM PHOTOGRAPHY: MARC HOM / TRUNK ARCHIVE
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Hunnam as King Arthur, whose destiny is set in stone – literally – in the form of the legendary sword Excalibur
“BREAK DOWN YOUR FEARS INTO PORTIONS AND YOU CAN OVERCOME THEM”
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environmental influences you were exposed to as a child. So, over the last four or five years I’ve been digging deep, trying to identify what’s helpful and good and healthy, and what are just hangovers from disappointments or traumas I experienced in my childhood. Are you doing this by yourself, or do you have your own personal Merlin to help you? I’ve been lucky enough to have had several mentors, one of them being Guy Ritchie. He turned me on to a book by Napoleon Hill, titled Outwitting The Devil: The Secret To Freedom And Success. It’s a 350-page interview between the writer and the devil. What you realise is that the devil represents our own struggle with ourselves. You have to break down your innermost fears into digestible portions, then you can understand and overcome them. I must admit it’s not a particularly fun way to spend a Sunday afternoon, but it’s incredibly valuable in the long run. What kind of traumas have you suffered from? As a kid, I got picked on. I got into a lot of fights, losing some and getting severely beaten a few times. When that happens to you, you just feel like, “I’m going to do everything in my power to never be in a situation like this again.” Hence you go out and learn how to fight. Sounds like a reasonable reaction... I still do martial arts training and I’m eager to never let that happen again. But then I developed this tendency to carry [that belligerence] into every room. I wanted people to know, “Look, if you’re going to f--k with me, it’s going to go badly for you.” But then you realise you’ve become a slave to the thing you’re afraid of. In a lot of ways, I started channelling my father. A father who, according to interviews with you, was something of a hard man in your home town of Newcastle. He was a formidable guy, and when I was younger I was actively playing the role of my father, especially in my film work. A lot of people who have come into contact with violence and felt victimised in their childhood will grow into a person who THE RED BULLETIN
WARNER BROS.
he red bulletin: What does it take to become king? charlie hunnam: In Arthur’s case, he comes from nothing and is suddenly presented with a destiny he never intended for himself. He’s terrified of this responsibility, because no external challenge can prepare you for that. What is the challenge? You have to conquer the demons within to be strong enough. While I was playing Arthur, I thought an enormous amount about Conor McGregor, the reigning Lightweight Champion of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He always says, “There is no opponent. I am fighting myself in the octagon. It’s only me and my own fears and the execution of my own ability that is going to win or lose a fight for me.” Even though you’re neither king nor champion, do you have inner demons to conquer? Yeah. When you get to your mid-30s, you realise that, for better or worse, you’re a product of the social and
“I WANTED PEOPLE TO KNOW, ‘LOOK, IF YOU’RE GOING TO F--K WITH ME, IT’S GOING TO GO BADLY FOR YOU’”
Being picked on as a kid prompted Hunnam to learn how to fight
perpetuates that cycle and themselves becomes a bully. What I did was play a lot of really hard characters. I felt that I exorcised those fears by being a macho dude on screen. But that also bled into my perception of myself in real life – it’s not that I was a bully, but I identified with having the respect of the men in any circle I was a part of. Now, I realise that’s just a bunch of nonsense, because I know who I really am. What’s the best technique for getting to know oneself? First of all, you have to be aware of the social and economic responsibility that we all get weighed down with. It can often prevent us from allowing ourselves to come forth with our essence and intentions. Look back at your childhood and think, “What were my intentions in life? What were my hopes and dreams?” But aren’t those childhood aspirations, well, childish? F--k it. What you want from life is the right to pursue it as a living human being. Unfortunately, too often people get discouraged or caught up in what is expected of them and forget what they really want. I’m an enormous fan of Joseph Campbell, the legendary American mythologist. He spent his entire life ultimately trying to understand the meaning of our existence and the human journey. A short time before his death, he gave a couple of wonderful TV interviews in which he tried to get everything off his chest. His motto was: “Follow your bliss.” He said, “The one thing you can THE RED BULLETIN
do for yourself, as difficult as it is, is just carve out an hour a day where you don’t do anything you have to do. Forget your bills, forget your work, forget your kids. Spend an hour living inside your own mind and body, and bring forth that intention. You can write a poem, you can go for a walk or listen to some music, but do something for yourself every day. You might initially find that nothing happens in that hour. But if you stay dedicated to it, after enough time your true self will start coming forth.” Now that you’ve found your true self, what’s next? As a kid, I spent an enormous amount of time reading the American philosopher and poet Henry David Thoreau. He wrote: “If one advances confidently in the direction of his dreams, and endeavours to live the life which he has imagined, he will meet with a success unexpected in common hours.” If you just throw yourself wholeheartedly into your pursuits and the desire to manifest your intention in life, the universe will conspire to help you. From your lips to God’s ears… My life is the best example. I completely f--ked up my education, because I was obsessed with becoming a member of the filmmaking community. Initially, my interest was in becoming a writer and director, and then that evolved into being more interested in acting. I left school with very poor grades and no prospects, and I enrolled on a film course. I began to apply myself in a way I never had in
my life before. I started writing letters to acting agents all over the country and really campaigning to get some momentum going in this field of acting. And at the end of a really, really focused year of trying to manifest this perception of what I wanted my future to be, things started to happen on Christmas Eve. On Christmas Eve? Yeah. I always left my Christmas shopping until two o’clock in the afternoon on Christmas Eve. I was in the pub at 11am, feeling pretty jolly by about 2pm, and then I thought, “Oh, time to go Christmas shopping.” So I went to a shoe store to buy some trainers for my brother. I was dancing and clowning around with a pal of mine when I saw a lady looking at me. I blew her a kiss and she came over and talked to me. It turned out she was the production manager for [UK children’s TV series] Byker Grove, which was the only show shot in the town where I lived [Newcastle]. She said, “You’re great. Have you ever thought about acting?” I did my whole spiel: “That’s all I’ve ever thought about.” She gave me three episodes on the show [in 1998]. Since I was a pretty savvy 17-year-old, I went to this one acting agency I wanted to be represented by. I said, “I’ve written you a bunch of letters. You’ve not responded. I’ve gone out and gotten myself a job. You have no real claim to the commission. But I’ll let you have a commission if you agree to represent me.” They agreed and sent me out to auditions. The first audition they sent me out for was [UK TV drama] Queer As Folk. I got the role and... You met with a success unexpected in common hours? Exactly. It was similar to King Arthur pulling the sword out of the stone. Which was followed by a period of prolonged failure. But now I’m on another wave of success, I hope. And the ultimate goal of the quest? To get closer to my truth. kingarthurmovie.com
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QUANTUM LEAP words: JOSH DEAN photography: SAM GREENFIELD / ORACLE TEAM USA
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After winning the last America’s Cup in dramatic, come-from-behind fashion, Oracle Team USA were allowed to select the location for this year’s races. In June, six teams will descend on Bermuda to contest the world’s oldest active sporting trophy on futuristic boats
Risky business: with increased speeds come increased dangers; preparation is paramount
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Over the last decade, the speed of yacht racing has increased by a factor of five and the age of the competitors has dropped by 10 years. When the 35th edition of the America’s Cup takes place in Bermuda in June, it will mark the beginning of AN ENTIRELY NEW SPORT
he first thing you see when walking through Bermuda’s only airport is a giant poster for the America’s Cup… and then another, and another. Signs emblazoned with slick overhead images of 50ft (15m) racing boats that look like stealth fighters are all over the tiny island, which in June will host the 35th edition of one of the world’s oldest international sporting events. The last cup, held in San Francisco in 2013, was just one of many attractions in the city, easily forgotten unless a spaceage catamaran happened to rocket past while you were en route to work. But this year’s competition will completely take over a windy island nation best known for rum drinks and knee-length shorts. You can think of the America’s Cup as basically two eras: everything up until 2010, and then the radical transformation that followed the arrival of multi-hull boats. It was in that year Oracle cofounder Larry Ellison and BMW Oracle Racing beat the defending champion, Alinghi from Switzerland, in a trimaran with a rigid wing – the largest wing ever made – instead of a sail. The Oracle boat averaged more than 20 knots (37kph), doubling the speeds from previous cups, and things got even crazier in 2013 as both Team New Zealand and Oracle Team USA sailed catamarans with foils that flew atop the water, with a top speed of more than 40 knots (74kph).
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50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 34
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A SUDDEN AND DRAMATIC RISE IN SPEED
11 2007 2009 2011 2013 2015 2017
Since 1851, the speed of AC boats had increased only slightly over the years – but then, in 2007, it began to skyrocket
“Imagine standing in front of a firehouse, on the roof of your car, while driving down the freeway at 90kph. This is the situation these guys are in, and they have to make a split-second decision that could decide the race: do they tack, jibe or go straight?” Ian ‘Fresh’ Burns, performance director, Oracle Team USA
FASTER BOATS, SHORTER COURSE
In 1851, America raced against 15 other boats on a 98km course around the Isle of Wight, off the coast of England. America won the race by eight minutes – roughly one-third of the time it will take to complete the course in Bermuda. This course, on a sound between two islands, is 16-19km and will take 20-22 minutes.
BARELY THE SAME SPORT
Yacht America, the first winner of the America’s Cup, was a 31m wood-hulled schooner with 490sq-m of sail volume when moving upwind. The AC50 is 15m long with a carbon-fibre hull and a rigid 102sq-m wing
This heralded the beginning of what was essentially a new sport, one that favoured technology and athleticism as much as sailing experience. “Imagine taking the 300-horsepower motor out of your Camaro and putting a 3,000-horsepower motor in the same car,” Oracle’s director of performance, Ian ‘Fresh’ Burns, told a reporter that year. Turning yacht racing into Formula One on water was exactly what Ellison had in mind, and in preparation to defend this year’s title he asked organisers and engineers to keep pushing the limits while also slashing costs to attract more teams. The newest foiling catamarans – AC50s – are the fastest sailboats ever made, capable of topping 50 knots (92kph), despite being just over half the length and costing half as much to develop as the AC72s used four years ago. As a result, six teams will compete to take the cup from Ellison and his brash Aussie skipper, Jimmy Spithill. Spithill will helm the youngest team he’s ever had on a sailboat, all boasting the fitness levels of an Ironman triathlete. Add to this a team of engineers and boat builders partnering with companies like Airbus and BMW to fine-tune the new-look multihulls. Spithill almost can’t believe how far his sport has come. “The question I ask myself is: what’s going to happen next?” he says. 36
1851-2007: MONOHULLS
2013: THE AC72 CATAMARAN
20-27m on the water line; top speed of 7-11 knots (13-20kph)
26m long, 5,900kg; top speed of 44 knots (81kph)
THE SMALLEST (BUT FASTEST) BOATS IN THE AC’S HISTORY In 1903, the Reliance, at 61m long, was the largest boat ever to win the America’s Cup. In 2017, the AC50s are a quarter of that size
2010: THE USA-17 TRIMARAN
2017: THE AC50 CATAMARAN
27m long, 3,500kg; top speed of 32 knots (59kph)
15m long, 2,360kg; estimated top speed of 46-50 knots (85-92kph) THE RED BULLETIN
THAT’S NO SAIL The primary sail on the AC50 is actually a rigid wing, not a sail. But instead of providing upward lift, as it would on a plane, this wing pushes the boat forward in the water. Airbus helped design the wing, which has a carbon-fibre skeleton and is wrapped in a plastic film known as Clysar.
WIND OF CHANGE Foiling boats are so fast and efficient they generate their own wind, known as “apparent wind”. As a result, it’s not unusual to see the boats reaching speeds as high as 25 knots (46kph) in meagre six-knot (11kph) winds.
the boat AC50
FROM SINGLE-HULLED TANKS TO FLYING CATAMARANS Following the first America’s Cup in 1851 – and for the majority of the event’s history – gains in speed were incremental. But thanks to the arrival of hydrofoils in 2013, boats now literally fly above the surface. Foils are aerodynamic wings that lift the boat’s hull out of the water at a certain wind speed – as low as six knots (11kph) in the AC50. There’s much less drag because only small pieces of foil, as opposed to an entire hull, are in contact with the water, which is why the boats got exponentially faster overnight. In practice, the AC50s have topped 50 knots (92kph). “It’s like Formula One on the water,” says Oracle Team USA skipper Jimmy Spithill. The comparison isn’t far off. Like F1 cars, the AC50s are purpose-built, state-of-the-art machines, designed using supercomputers to calculate fluid dynamics, and built from materials like carbon fibre and titanium.
BIG DATA The computer power available to Oracle Team USA is 100 times what it was just three years ago. About 100 tiny sensors on the boat capture more than 600 channels of data that’s transmitted in real time to an office, where engineers can study those results and make changes on a daily basis.
STEERING WHEEL Conditions on the boat are violent. The wind in a sailor’s face can exceed 113kph, so the controls must be as simple as possible. Oracle Team USA skipper Jimmy Spithill has a steering wheel, developed in part with BMW, which has both push buttons – to raise and lower foils – and sections of grip that twist to adjust the angle of the foils.
HYDRAULICS
HYDROFOILS Each team is allowed to design two sets of ‘daggerboard’ hydrofoils, one of which will most likely be for light winds, the other for heavy. Think of them in the same way as race tyres, which can be switched out depending on track conditions.
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Oracle Team USA’s hydraulic systems were co-developed with Airbus and the aerospace company Parker Hannifin, both of which have assigned engineers to the team in Bermuda for the past two years. Airbus worked mostly on the control systems, while Parker built the hardware.
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Every man wears a helmet, an impact vest, an oxygen canister, and a special harness that can clip to the high side of the boat if it capsizes
GRINDER
The powerhouses of the boat. There are three dedicated grinders in a crew. This is the most exhausting position in the team and requires your best, strongest athletes. Ideally they’re tall, because a taller person has longer ‘levers’ to generate power. That said, there’s no standard for how the power generation must be done: for example, Team New Zealand has decided to use pedals instead of hand cranks, and has recruited a professional track cyclist to join the crew.
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SKIPPER/HELMSMAN
The boat’s captain. He picks the team and is the on- and off-course leader. His primary job during races is to steer, and to work with the wing trimmer to generate and maximise speed.
TACTICIAN
He’s the boat’s eyes, watching its position in relation to the race course – and to the opponent. Tacticians look and think ahead, advising the skipper on where to go next. This is a job that requires a lifetime of sailing knowledge, but there are some tools of the trade – in particular, a tablet pre-loaded with data, which tracks the boat’s position in relation to the course with great precision.
WING TRIMMER
He’s the smallest man on the boat, and his job is purely to control speed by pulling a rope that ‘twists’ the wing to increase or reduce drag. Pull too much and the boat will tip; don’t pull enough and the sail will lose wind, bringing the boat to a stop.
the CREW
THE AC72 YACHTS AT THE 2013 AMERICA’S CUP IN SAN FRANCISCO REQUIRED A CREW OF 11. IN BERMUDA THIS YEAR, JUST SIX MEN WILL SERVE ON EACH AC50 RACING YACHT. HERE’S WHAT THEY DO…
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525 Maximum weight allowance in kg for the six-man crew
Calories burned, on average, by a grinder during a 22-minute race
9 Average body fat percentage of crew members
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“It’s the whole approach: diet, nutrition and training,” says Jimmy Spithill (pictured)
the FITNESS
NO MORE ROTUND GUYS WEARING BLAZERS – THESE SAILORS ARE SVELTE ATHLETES
1440 Number of organic eggs from Pennsylvania consumed by OTUSA in a single week
Average weight in kg an Oracle crew member can bench press
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PETER HURLEY
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Before 2013, the America’s Cup was a very different sport. “It was not very physical,” says Oracle Team USA trainer Craig McFarlane. There were always grinders, but they worked hard for short periods and then rested. The grinders on the Oracle team this time will be at 91 to 93 per cent of their maximum heart rate for the entire 22-minute race. It’s hard for McFarlane to even find a comparison in other sports because of the combination of endurance and power required. “Their power output is pretty phenomenal,” he says. “What elite cyclists do with their legs, that’s what these guys do with their arms.” Sensors on the boat’s handles provide real-time data to McFarlane and the team, telling him how much power, in watts, each man is applying at a given moment, as well as tracking their cadence. He can see who is off his typical pace, which positions seem to be working harder, and who’s recovering most quickly after intense spells of effort. McFarlane is still working on that mix, trying to find the right balance. He thinks the “optimal cadence” is 85-90rpm. “But we’re tweaking it,” he says. The advantage of keeping a lower cadence is that the heart rate doesn’t spike as much – but doing fewer, more powerful reps has a downside, too: a build-up of lactic acid in the muscles. Training takes place five days a week with McFarlane, with an optional sixth day on Saturday that most take advantage of. Three days a week, the team focuses on strength, then there’s one day of unloaded cardio in a pool, and another of intense aquatic work, typically in the open water at Horseshoe Bay. McFarlane runs a series of drills in which they swim out and perform exercises such as underwater weights and underwater running, then transition directly into land work – stairs or hills, typically. “This transitional training is very taxing, but it makes you resilient as an athlete,” McFarlane says. Even the shore crew for OTUSA works out every day, at 6.30am. “If they’re unhealthy and fat, they’re not going to do their job,” team nutritionist Scott Tindal says. The shore crew’s fitness, he says, “is a big difference this campaign”. Over one six-week period, the eight guys lost a total of 43kg of fat. Everyone boxes with trainer Brent ‘Honey Badger’ Humphreys a few times a week, too. 41
the NEXT GENERATION EIGHT SAILORS FROM THE RED BULL YOUTH PROGRAMME HAVE ALREADY MADE IT TO THE AMERICA’S CUP
Four years ago, Austrians Roman Hagara and HansPeter Steinacher came together with the goal of finding the next generation of competitive sailors. Today, the two pros – two-time Olympic gold medallists in 2000 and 2004 – are sports directors of the largest talentscouting programme in the world of sailing. “We try to open young sailors’ minds by sharing our experience with them,” Steinacher says. “And hopefully it’ll take them in the right direction for the future.” The programme is divided into two parts: the Red Bull Foiling Generation and the Red Bull Youth America’s Cup. Foiling Generation, founded in 2015, is an international regatta series for all up-and-coming sailors aged 16 to 20. Teams of two sail a 5.5m-long Flying Phantom catamaran at speeds of up to 35 knots (65kph). The next rung up is the Youth America’s Cup, where up to 16 national youth teams aged 19-25 battle it out in Bermuda with the hope of qualifying for the finals on June 20-21. The teams sail on the original America’s Cup course in a 13m-long AC45 foiling catamaran. “With all these races, we hope to find the best sailors in the world in every age group,” says Steinacher. It’s an ambitious goal for him and Hagara, but it seems to be working: since the first Youth America’s Cup was held in 2013, eight sailors have already advanced to the America’s Cup. Keep an eye out for 26-year-old Peter Burling, who after winning the youth race in 2013 will be the skipper for Emirates Team New Zealand in the America’s Cup proper, and Cooper Dressler, also 26, who will be a grinder on the Oracle Team USA boat. foilinggeneration.redbull.com; red-bull-youth.americascup.com
the SKIPPER
OTUSA HELMSMAN JIMMY SPITHILL IS AIMING FOR HIS THIRD AC WIN
THE SMALLEST CREW IN THE AC’S HISTORY The Reliance, which won the America’s Cup in 1903, had a crew of 72 people. More than 100 years later, each has only six members
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1992-2007
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Oracle Team USA skipper Jimmy Spithill, 37, literally grew up on the water. His hometown of Pittwater, Australia, wasn’t reachable by road, so any time he wanted to go into Sydney – or anywhere else, for that matter – he had to take a boat. Spithill made his America’s Cup debut at 20 – the youngest helmsman ever – and he’s been making history ever since. At the age of 30, he was the youngest skipper to win the cup when he and Team USA beat the Swiss team Alinghi in Valencia in 2010. Then, in 2013, he took his second title, leading the most dramatic comeback in the history of the sport by rallying Oracle from 8-1 down to beat Team New Zealand 9-8. This time THE RED BULLETIN
THE YOUNGEST CREWS EVER
31.4 = the average age of an OTUSA crew member. Sailing used to be a gentlemen’s sport, and crews were made up mostly of middle-aged men with years of experience. Now, aside from the skippers, America’s Cup teams increasingly comprise young, fit men. OTUSA’s youngest grinder, Louis Sinclair, is just 25.
AMORY ROSS/RED BULL CONTENT POOL
Since his America’s Cup debut at 20, skipper Jimmy Spithill has been at the forefront of revolutionary changes in the world of sailing
out, Spithill will try to become the first skipper ever to win three consecutive America’s Cups. How will this year’s race be different compared with San Francisco in 2013? The biggest difference is that we’ve got six competitive teams. Last time, we really only had two competitive teams: ourselves and Team New Zealand. But now everyone’s got the talent, resources and technology, so there are no excuses, and we’re seeing that out there on the water. The British team won the World Series [the competition that leads up to the America’s Cup]. Not only that, but every team won races during that series, and it went down to the final event. You often talk about making this sport accessible to everyone… We need to simplify the sport, because it’s complicated. The way to do that is through education. With TV now, the online graphics and tools that the commentators have at their disposal make it easier to follow – my grandmother gets it, and she’s not a sailor. And now we’ve THE RED BULLETIN
got high-performance boats with worldclass athletes. We no longer have this elitist mentality of rich, chubby guys from the yacht club, wearing blazers. In the past, you couldn’t really mess it up; now, there’s real risk. Speaking of risk, one sailor – Andrew Simpson of the Artemis Racing team – died in 2015 while training for the cup. How has safety changed? It sometimes takes a real catastrophe or tragedy to really learn from it. But when you step on that boat, you understand the risks. You’re never going to take the risk
“We no longer have this elitist mentality of rich, chubby guys from the yacht club, wearing blazers. In the past, you couldn’t really mess it up; now, there’s real risk. When you step on that boat, you understand the risks”
away, but collectively – whether it’s the engineering, the safety gear we wear, the way we practice, or how we communicate on the water if someone has a problem – I think we’ve taken huge steps forward. The cool thing is that a lot of those lessons will filter down through the rest of the sport: for example, we wear helmets now. And now you see little kids on sailboats wearing helmets. You also carry canisters of air on your vests, right? We have spare air. The biggest fear is getting pinned under if we flip over. We’re all at our max heart rate, and if you try holding your breath in that situation it’s virtually impossible. We do a lot of safety drills, and we’ve done freediving courses with some of the world’s best. You want to be as prepared as you can so you make the right decisions if something happens. What’s the biggest difference for you, as skipper, on these boats? I think it’s the anticipation needed to sail a boat like this. If you overreact, it goes bad real quick. You’re never really perfect. You’re just trying to manage it and stay ahead of the curve. The crews are changing, too, right? They’re younger. The age of our sailors has come down because of the physical limits. Not only that, but there’s a high rate of injury now. I’ve also found that the younger guys just want it; they’re hungry. They’ve just got that fire, and you can’t help but get caught up in it. It motivates you, because they want to knock you off and you want to keep up with them. This is the youngest team we’ve ever had, and, to me, it’s been a real positive step forward. Is it better for you to have a top-notch athlete on the team than a guy with 18 years’ sailing experience? It’s best to have both. In my experience, it comes down to the person. We’ve got Ky Hurst, who’s won a lot of the Australian Ironman championships. He’s come in and really set the bar in terms of physical limits and what you can do with grinding. For us to see that whole approach – diet, nutrition and training regime – from someone outside of our sport has been really beneficial. How has the art of sailing changed? We weren’t even foiling in 2010. That was a massive step. These boats are foiling in 10kph winds, but not only that: the lighter ones can travel at almost three times the speed of the wind, which is just incredible to think about. How can you go faster than the wind, let alone three times? oracle-team-usa.americascup.com Watch the action live on redbull.tv 43
THE
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INNO
BRIGHT SPARK OF
RIMAC
VATION
At the age of 19, Mate Rimac decided to take on the automotive superpowers and by 21, he’d built THE WORLD’S FASTEST ELECTRIC HYPERCAR. Now, at 29, he’s building his company into an engineering and technology powerhouse – and he’s done it all in a quiet corner of his native Croatia. Ask him why and the answer is simple: “Why the hell not?” Words: Justin Hynes
Electric dream: “I wanted to prove that electric cars could be fast and fun, and not just environmentally friendly… and a bit boring,” says Mate Rimac of his Concept One hypercar
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RIMAC
Want visceral, old-school supercar handling? Simply drop the graphic faders on the infotainment screen and bias the power to the rear motors
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WE HAD TO BUILD THE WORLD’S FASTEST ELECTRIC CAR BEFORE WE GOT ANY FUNDING Track wins evolved into something more special. In 2011, Rimac’s lime-green E30 set a slew of world records, including the Fédération Internationale de l‘Automobile (the world body for land speed records) recognising it as the quickest electric car in the world in its category. As a frame of reference, the vehicle beaten by Rimac was the EX1, a multi-million dollar concept car built by automotive giant Peugeot. For Rimac, though, beating the manufacturers in the rarefied environment of speed records was just the start – now he had to build his own car. The sizeable elephant in the room, however, was location. “It was horrible,” he says. “I went to the University of Mechanical Engineering in Zagreb – the closest thing to a development centre – and told them what I wanted to do and they said: ‘It’s impossible. The sooner you give up, the fewer people will go under with you.’ “There is not a single venture capital fund in Croatia. The government wouldn’t support us. International investors didn’t want to know. I think in Silicon Valley people raise money based on a PowerPoint presentation. We had to deliver products to 10 countries, break records and make the world’s fastest electric car before we got any funding. I borrowed money from everybody I could. The ‘3 Fs’ at the beginning – friends, family and fools.” THE RED BULLETIN
RIMAC
P
icture an electric car. Chances are the first image that icture springs to mind is of something small, something practical, something, to be unkind, a little bit worthy. A vehicle that’s going to save the planet one shopping trip at a time. It’s a template that, for a decade, almost all large-scale manufacturers of automobiles have vigorously applied to the building of electric vehicles: small, urban, driven as forcefully by demographics as the lithium-ion batteries under the floor. In a small corner of Croatia, however, the message didn’t get through. Nestling close to the border with Slovenia, the district of Sveta Nedelja is about as far from the traditional motor manufacturing hubs of Detroit, Stuttgart or even Silicon Valley as it’s possible to get. Yet it was here, eight years ago, that 21-year-old Mate Rimac, fuelled by twin passions for electronics and cars, began to formulate a different vision – one where alternative energy, speed and fun weren’t mutually exclusive concepts. “I just wanted to build a really fast electric car,” laughs the 29-year-old Croatian. “I wanted to prove that electric cars could be fast and fun, and not just environmentally friendly… and a bit boring.”
The result is the Concept One, a hypercar for the age, an all-electric 1,000+hp monster retailing for around $1.2 million or $1.6 million if you fancy the even more powerful S version Rimac’s fledgling company debuted at this year’s Geneva Motor Show. It’s a car bristling not only with power (the S tops out at 355kph and will hit 100kph in around 2.5 seconds) but also with cutting-edge technology. Power is derived from four electric motors and four gearboxes mounted at the centre of each axle. The motors are fed by 8,450 lithium-ion battery cells and controlling it all is a suite of software that puts every aspect of the motors’ behaviour at the control of the driver. To understand where the Concept One sprung from, though, it’s necessary to travel 20 or so kilometres east of Sveta Nedelja to Zagreb, where in 2004, 16-year-old Rimac translated an interest in the work of 19th-century electronics engineer Nikola Tesla into a high-school project that led to further local competition awards and enough prize money to indulge his other passion, speed. “I bought an old BMW, a 3 Series, and started racing,” he says. “Eventually the engine blew. That was the trigger. I converted it to electric power. At the start, people just laughed. And they were right; it wasn’t fast. But after every race I took it home and made it more powerful, lighter, more reliable and then it started winning.”
Mate Rimac: “My life is the company and I’m fine with that, but people who want to get into this kind of thing, they have to understand that it is hard”
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HIGH-CONCEPT TECHNOLOGY AS YOU’D EXPECT WITH A CAR COSTING UP TO $1.6M, RIMAC’S CONCEPT ONE IS PACKED WITH CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY, ALL OF IT BUILT BY THE COMPANY’S BOFFINS IN CROATIA
3 The motors are fed by 8,450 lithium-ion battery cells, which run along the centre channel of the car as well as the rear of the passenger compartment. The Concept One’s battery pack is designed to deliver 1MW of power during acceleration and to absorb 400kW during braking
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1
4 Rimac developed the world’s highest power density motor system to power each of the Concept One’s wheels individually. The company says the motors provide instant response, more than 90 per cent efficiency and full torque at zero speed. The new S specification Concept One will accelerate to 100kph in just 2.5 seconds and hit a top speed of 355kph.
3 1 The Concept One’s powertrain consists of four electric motors and four gearboxes mounted at the centre of each axle. The front powerplants are each bolted to single-speed gearboxes, while the rears get their own twospeed dual-clutch transmissions. Total output of all the motors is around 1,224hp and 1,600Nm of torque, 2 The car features a system called Torque Vectoring that maintains balance and grip by controlling each wheel individually, 100 times per second. Drivers can choose between various modes and settings to perfectly match their preferences and skills, and the given situation.
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5 Attention to detail is everything in a supercar and even the rear lights contribute to the car’s performance with integrated tunnels helping with cooling and aerodynamic performance.
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6 Twenty-inch forged aluminium rims house carbon ceramic brake discs, 390mm at the front and 380mm at the rear, which are supported by a 400kW strong regenerative braking system – like the energy recovery systems F1 cars use to harvest energy created during braking phases.
THE RED BULLETIN
Despite this, Rimac insists he never considered pursuing his dream outside Croatia. “Enzo Ferrari was from Modena and Ferrari is there. Ferdinand Porsche was from Stuttgart and Porsche is in Stuttgart. I’m from here, so why wouldn’t I do it here?” Rimac was determined, too, to develop all of the technology in-house, a radical move, but one the Croatian believed would avoid the fatal missteps taken by contemporaries. “The car industry is dominated by huge companies. Volkswagen has six times the revenues of Croatia’s GDP. This industry is not really made for newcomers and start-ups, but my role models were [hypercar builders] Horacio Pagani and Christian von Koenigsegg, who proved it is possible. “Inspired by them, I wanted to make my own car and in the beginning I knocked on the doors of major suppliers. But in order to work with them, we would have taken on hundreds of millions in debt. “That’s what [American auto maker] Fisker did,” he adds. “They hired automotive executives that only knew how to work in that way. They spent $1.4 billion on the development of their car because it was all done by suppliers. They folded. I wasn’t going to let that happen. So we had no option but to develop the technology ourselves, not solely because of the money, but because the technology I wanted didn’t exist.” Starting with just seven employees, Rimac developed his car in one year. The tiny band brought a prototype to the 2011 Geneva Motor Show, where it caused a sensation. “At that time, Tesla wasn’t where it is now,” he says. “When we I started it was different. People considered electric cars to be milk floats.” Under the glittering Palexpo lights, the Concept One shone like a futuristic jewel. Behind the scenes, though, the situation was darker. “We were in real trouble. We had potential clients upon whom the future of the company depended and I didn’t even have money to buy them lunch. It was incredibly hard.” The solution was to fall back on what Rimac did best – develop technology, this time for other companies. “Our car evolved over time, but steadily we became a technology provider. We are now growing into a serious supplier of technology for all kinds of companies in the automotive, naval and other sectors.”
RIMAC
THE NEXT STEP IS HIGH-VOLUME PRODUCTION. WE DON’T WANT TO DO JUST NICHE PROJECTS In the years since the Geneva show, Rimac has delivered a number of customer versions of the Concept One, and in March of this year the Croatian returned to the show with the lightened, more powerful S version or the car, emphatically proving wrong those who had, in 2011, dismissed Rimac as yet another purveyor of automotive ‘vapourware’. The Concept One, though, is now just one facet of a growing business. “Ultimately, the car is now more of a showcase of what we can do. It’s a very small part of our business. We are THE RED BULLETIN
The Concept One has two gears, most electric cars only have one. For face-melting acceleration, select first gear – the S variant can reach 100kph in around 2.5 seconds
now almost 300 people. That kind of growth would not be possible just making cars.” Many of Rimac’s technology partnerships are closely guarded secrets – “so many non-disclosure agreements” – while others are high-profile, such as the deal to provide battery technology for the collaboration between Aston Martin and Red Bull Racing – the AMRB001, now rechristened Valkyrie. “It’s huge for us, especially as it’s with Red Bull Racing and Adrian Newey, the most successful Formula One engineer in history,” says Rimac. There’s also an association with the Croatian’s great hero Christian von Koenigsegg. “What connects us is that we are very technical people,” Rimac explains. “He is not a bean counter or someone who does what he does to get rich. He doesn’t care about that. And it’s the same with me. I want to push the limits, I want to raise the bar. I want to be the best at what I’m doing. I want us to be a small company that pushes the limits in this industry.”
N
ot that Rimac wants the company to remain small. “The next step is to go into high-volume production. So, we don’t want just to do oneoffs and niche projects. It’s a good business, but our vision is to go into high-volume production. We see ourselves as a leader in electrification and connectivity, electric vehicle technology.” And the future of the Concept One? Now that the company is becoming a technology developer, is it the last car that Rimac will build? “Not at all. There will be more,” he says. “Building cars is not the wisest business decision, but it is my passion and it’s also a good playground to show what electric cars can do. When you have to make a car and make it work and make it safe, then you really understand the challenges and that gives us an edge. It’s a very expensive edge, though! “If you want to do something like this, persistence is hugely important. It’s really hard and you have to be prepared for that. You sacrifice your whole life. It is demanding, it is isolating and it is an obsession… but a very rewarding one. There are so many things we’re working on, the next car, the next production facility, which will have a 14th-century castle as part of it. I want to build a race track there. “Ultimately,” he concludes, “what brought me here, all the way from a kid’s science exam to building this company is curiosity. I’m just always really interested to see what happens next.” rimac-automobili.com 51
Siren of the surf Imogen Caldwell – model, big-wave surfer and pilot-in-the-making – shows us the little piece of paradise she calls home
Words: Robert Tighe Photography: Jean Pierrot
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There’s only one road into Red Bluff: a dusty, bumpy stretch of gravel that’s only recommended for 4x4s and those with a strong constitution. The Bluff, as it’s commonly known, is a 12-hour drive north of Perth, Western Australia, about 130km from the nearest city and a short stroll from the holiday camp managed by Imogen Caldwell’s parents. Just two families lived at The Bluff when Caldwell was growing up. Between the two families there were 13 children who made the most of their natural playground. “Mum would send us outside in the morning and tell us to be home by sunset,” says Caldwell. “We’d spend our days fishing, diving and surfing. There were eight girls and we all surfed. People would rock up to surf The Bluff and see this line-up of young girls. It must have looked pretty odd, but we more than held our own.” Three years ago, Nathan Webster, a former Aussie pro surfer and the head honcho for apparel brand RVCA in Australia, rolled into The Bluff on a road trip. “We drove into the desert and I saw this little mirage sitting, perched on a rock,” says Webster of his first impressions of Caldwell. “Then I saw her surf and some pictures and I knew it was a big story, such an incredible girl.” Since then, Caldwell has travelled the world as a brand ambassador/ model for RVCA, but this year she’s determined to prove her surfing credentials by chasing some of the heaviest slabs of water in the world.
Caldwell isn‘t a fan of gyms. “Motocross keeps me fit,” she says the red bulletin: Would you describe yourself as a surfer first and a model second or the other way around? imogen caldwell: Definitely a surfer first. If you met me you would not think I was a model. I am as far from a model as you can imagine. People who know me and know how active I am can’t believe that I’m able to sit still long enough to get my make-up done. The modelling business must be a stark contrast to the world you grew up in. How have you managed to cope with life in the fast lane? I struggle sometimes. I don’t like to be surrounded by lots of people. I’m much more at home in the great outdoors than in a big city. If I’m outside, I’m happy. When did you first realise that your childhood was very different
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THE RED BULLETIN
Caldwell grew up in remote Red Bluff, spending her days fishing, diving and surfing
“People who know me can’t believe I can sit still long enough to get my make-up done”
to the kind of upbringing most people experience? I always knew it was unique. We hung out with kids who came to The Bluff on school holidays and they would tell us how odd our life was. We were home-schooled, but if the waves were pumping or the fishing was good, then school wasn’t a priority.
“I’ve lost a lot of skin to the reef, broken boards and nearly drowned countless times”
The Bluff isn’t the easiest place in the world to learn to surf… The waves can get very big during the winter when the swells come in, so I got comfortable in big waves from a young age. My dad got me on a board when I was 10 or 11. There was nothing else to do so I learned quickly. It was the only option. I either got good or I would have been ridiculously bored. I pretty much spent all day, every day, on the water. Sharks and whales regularly keep surfers company at The Bluff. Have you had any close encounters? I saw a shark yesterday when I was surfing, but that’s not uncommon in Western Australia. I’ve lost a lot of skin to the reef, broken a lot of boards and nearly drowned countless times, but I’ve gotten away pretty lightly really, considering all the crazy things I get up to. What training do you do for big-wave surfing? I try to surf every day and I also do a lot of diving, which is great for breath training. I’ve been getting into motocross lately and that keeps me fit. I’ve never been a gym junkie or done any pilates or yoga. Salute to the Sun, that’s something people who practise yoga do, right? That’s the only move I know. What projects are you working on at the moment? I have a bit on. I’m studying for my recreational pilot’s licence. I’m also designing a small clothing collection
THE RED BULLETIN
This year, Caldwell is planning to surf some of the heaviest slab waves in Western Australia that will hopefully be launched later this year. That’s something I’ve been into since I was little, so it’s good to finally get it done. Finally? You’re only 20… I know, but I enjoy being busy. My big project this year is with my fiancé, Cortney Brown, and his brother, Kerby. We’re surfing some of the heaviest slab waves in Western Australia and I’m looking forward to heaps of adventures along the way. Hopefully I don’t die doing that. I’m excited, but terrified at the same time. instagram.com/imogencaldwell 57
WHY IT’S GOOD NOT T O TA K E Y O U R S E L F T O O S E R I O U S LY . A NOCTURNAL CRASHCOURSE THROUGH BRISTOL, THE BIRTHPLACE OF DRUM AND BASS, WITH
CAMO & K R O O K E D
WORDS: ALEX LISETZ PHOTOGRAPHY: JANE STOCKDALE
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D R U M,
BASS
AND
CRISPS
T
After three minutes and 20 seconds, the continental plates begin to shift. All of a sudden there’s a beat that is everything at once: brutal, chillingly perfect and yet full of soul. It reduces your synapses to tiny little pieces. You’re now merely vibrating carbon and hydrogen particles, a mass of oblivious molecules dancing around in front of each other. And it all feels so right, more right than anything you’ve done today, yesterday or last week.
he time is 1:25am and at Motion in Bristol, the dancefloor is heaving at force 10 on the open-ended Raver scale. The annual Hospitality festival has reached its climax and on the stage are headliners Camo & Krooked. Almost everyone on the scene considers these two Austrian DJs gifted geniuses of modern music. They’ve advanced the game in electronic drum and bass music; they’ve leant tracks to Fifa Street and Gran Turismo, and their YouTube hits number in the double-digit millions. And now they’re twisting that beat, sinuously morphing it into a tune so sweet, sexy and hypnotic that even the faces of the security staff soften. At this moment, there are only two people in the place who don’t idolise Camo & Krooked: Camo & Krooked.
LIGHTING THE FUSE
There are about a million things that Reinhard ‘Camo’ Rietsch and Markus ‘Krooked’ Wagner think are more interesting than themselves. Two hours earlier they’d languidly checked off the key statistics of their life stories in an interview in a hire car on their way here. They live in Lilienfeld and Salzburg, they’re 33 and 27 and they’ve been on the road as a duo for 10 years. Then they start thinking about more important basic questions again: how
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Markus “Krooked” Wagner (left) and Reini “Camo” Rietsch only look casual. In actual fact, every single one of their tracks is a finely honed masterwork of mathematical precision
crispy chips should be, the Gangster Party Line YouTube video, horror film heroes, bunnies mating at the motorway service station and PEZ characters. But a switch flicks in Camo & Krooked’s brains as soon as the conversation turns to music. Their eyes sparkle and they lean forward in their seats. They could go on for hours about old funk records, Skrillex, Eurodance, breakbeats and the sound you make when you bite into an apple. “We’re two good-natured guys who don’t like to be critical,” Camo explains. “But when it comes to music, we’re on a very short fuse.”
THE PURSUIT PERFECTION
OF
For 10 years now, Camo & Krooked’s full-time job has been reinventing drum and bass. And over the course of five albums, they’ve extended that remit somewhat. Few would now put a complete overhaul of electronic music beyond them. That’s not because Camo & Krooked have unmistakable stage presence or are extraordinarily charismatic showmen. It’s because they work harder than others. “Sometimes,” Krooked says, “we can sit at a single snare drum for two weeks or work on a single track for six months.” Camo & Krooked are incensed by music that isn’t made with love; a sloppy arrangement in a song that none of us mere mortals would even notice might ruin a whole album for them. A new technical trick that makes a sound clearer
“WHEN IT COMES TO MUSIC, WE’RE ON A VERY
SHORT FUSE”
DJ Magazine once voted Motion in Bristol one of the best clubs in the world. The Camo & Krooked fans there on this night would definitely have put it at number one
“ Y O U ’ R E T R U LY S U C C E S S F U L IF YOU’RE NOT THINKING
ABOUT
BEING
A home game in the birthplace of drum and bass. Another reason Camo & Krooked so enjoy playing at Motion is that the regulars recognise all the classics by Bristol pioneers such as Roni Size straight away
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SUCCESSFUL”
SCHNITZEL POWER
and more minimal might make them ecstatic for a whole week. “We’re looking to do something new and surprising with every tune. We’re looking for technical perfection, but we’re also looking for an emotion that touches you,” explains Krooked. Camo & Krooked certainly have this determination to thank for their success. They are also perfectly sure that hard work always pays off in the end. “Most other DJs will settle for 90 per cent, but we still put as much time and effort into that last 10 per cent as we do the first 90 per cent.”
W H A T R E A L LY HURTS
Hang on a second. Something’s not right with that picture. From what we see in our newsfeeds, the world works in exactly the opposite way. It’s never the worker bees cashing in on success. It’s always the nonchalant loudmouths who win through, the ones with a big ego who are good at selling themselves. Camo answers with a question. “But are they enjoying what they do?” he asks. “Can they stay at the top of their game for 10 years? Can they set trends that other people want to copy?” Camo & Krooked are so far beyond egotrips that all these things have happened to them at the same time. The downside is that music is also their Achilles’ heel. “I wouldn’t care if a stranger called me a dickhead,” Krooked explains. “But it goes straight to the heart whenever anyone thinks our music is crap.” The minivan draws up at Motion in Bristol. The pair head out into the driving rain. Dozens of fans recognise them as they make their way to the backstage entrance, people chat, take selfies. In the throng, it’s soon hard to tell the stars from their fans. The only obvious difference is that Camo & Krooked are the ones who’ve dolled themselves up for the gig.
Backstage there is a cold buffet that consists of solely of packets of crisps and there is so little room that wherever you’re standing you’ve got at least three superstar DJs elbowing you in the ribs. Camo is lying sprawled on a leather sofa. He’s swigging from a bottle of beer he’s found somewhere and he glances at the clock on the wall. There are still 20 minutes before they go on. Tell us, why it is the people out there so want to see you? Camo picks his smartphone out of his jacket pocket and clicks through to a photo from earlier days where he’s wearing shorts and a crash helmet and doing a railslide. Camo used to be a professional skateboarder. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a DJ, a skateboarder or something else altogether, it’s always the same: you’ll be successful if you give a little bit more than others do,” he explains. “People can sense when it’s not all about you, but about what you do,” he continues. “That’s why you’re only truly successful if you’re not thinking about being successful.” But what about when you really are successful? “Then you can’t pat yourself on the back for it. You’ve got to keep on working. Otherwise you’ll disconnect from it in no time.” It’s handy, then, that the crowd are more than willing to pat their idols on the back instead. Hands shoot up into the air when Camo & Krooked’s regular MC, Daxta, introduces the classics. Everyone’s dancing as they play the previously unheard material from their new album, Mosaik. An hour and a half later they’re back in the car, being driven to another gig in Birmingham. There, too, they will be the only overseas act performing alongside a line-up consisting solely of UK stars. “You were great, Schnitzels,” their English chauffeur tells them. They get back to their hotel at 6am and after three hours of sleep, they’re off to the airport. Camo, Krooked and MC Daxta are knackered, but Krooked has insisted on them catching the early flight. “You know there’s that one drumbeat,” he muses. “There’s something not quite right about it.” So there will be no early night tonight either once he does get home. He’ll be up for as long as it takes for that one beat to sound just as it should. Sleep won’t come until it does. soundcloud.com/camokrooked 63
“MOST POP STARS ARE ANIMATED” GORILLAZ
The most successful cartoon band in pop history are back. To celebrate the release of Gorillaz’ new album Humanz, their first in six years, The Red Bulletin sat down with lead singer 2D and drummer Russel to discuss combustible singers, the perils of inter-band relationships, and to look forward to their amusement-park-based festival, Demon Dayz Words: Florian Obkircher 64
THE RED BULLETIN
Gorillaz (from left): Russel, 2D, Murdoc and Noodle
Blur frontman Damon Albarn and comic-book artist Jamie Hewlett, flatmates at the time, were watching MTV and, hugely underwhelmed by the videos they saw – yep, music television actually once played music – decided to form a cartoon band. Three years later, their group, Gorillaz, had sold seven million copies of their eponymous debut album and been named the Most Successful Virtual Band by Guinness World Records. How was it possible? Well, for starters, there was Albarn’s knack for infectious melodies and the canny melding of elements from alternative hip-hop and electro-pop, which spawned bona fide pop anthems such as Clint Eastwood. There was also his unerring choice of star collaborators, from rapper Snoop Dogg to Clash guitarist Mick Jones and even 77-year-old R&B legend Mavis Staples, who features on Gorillaz’ fifth album, Humanz. It wasn’t just about the music, though. Hewlett – the artist behind iconic late ’80s comic character Tank Girl – crafted the perfect pop avatars to engage fans: cute but confused singer/ keyboardist 2D; Murdoc, the band’s evil mastermind bassist; formerly demonically possessed drummer Russel, and Japanese guitar virtuosa Noodle. Each has his/her own superpower and also a rich back-story that is expanded – often with surreal plot twists – with each Gorillaz release.
The new album is no exception: before the quartet met up in London to record Humanz, they were scattered across the globe. 2D was stranded on a supposedly deserted island where, due to his poor survival skills, he had to exist on rotten meat from the whale that had transported him there. Russel, who grew 60 times in size after eating radioactively contaminated fish, was captured in North Korea and exhibited in a cage as a Godzillalike attraction. It was only when he reverted to normal, thanks to a limited diet, that the regime’s leader let him go. To cut a long story short, there was a lot to talk about when The Red Bulletin got the chance to interview the singer and drummer…
the red bulletin: Gorillaz have been a band for almost 20 years now, and in that time you’ve had to deal with some pretty hairy situations. What’s the secret of maintaining a successful working relationship amid the drama? russel: Restraining orders. Gotta love your British legal system. Nah, only kidding. But, you know, getting out of each other’s faces does help. Because we’re different people, [we’ve] all got our own thing going on. Noodle reads a lot of existentialist philosophy; I’m highly politicised; 2D likes finding shapes in the clouds, and Murdoc is just a terrible person. 66
Which of your fellow bandmates’ special skills have proven most useful over the years? 2d: Noodle grew up in a super-soldier programme where she learned handto-hand combat and how to use heavy weapons. Those skills have helped us fight off pirates and zombies – and Murdoc when he’s drunk. russel: She used to choke him with a jujitsu move – but since he got into S&M, choking him only makes the situation worse. Now she just clips him with a tranq gun. Russel, imagine you’re in a recording session and 2D spontaneously combusts. Which singer would you replace him with? russel: First off, spontaneously combusts? If that happens, I’m asking some serious questions. Area would need to be locked down: nobody goes in or out, get forensics in. ’Cos people don’t just combust, y’know? Not in my lifetime. 2d: What about that inflatable lady Murdoc kept in his cupboard? russel: Oh yeah. She lit up like the Fourth of July during a post-coital cigarette. But let’s suppose forensics found no foul play at the scene… If we had to replace 2D, maybe we’d bring in Shirley Bassey – a national treasure and she sings like an angel, just like 2D. Of course, that’d make Shirley the number one suspect in 2D’s vaporisation. She had the most to gain. THE RED BULLETIN
GORILLAZ
IT STARTED AS SOMETHING OF A PRANK ALMOST TWO DECADES AGO.
2D: ”I had knickers thrown at me once. I put them on a 60°C wash and gave them back”
What’s the most ‘rock star’ thing you’ve ever done? 2d: That’s more Murdoc’s department. I get a bit tired of the rock star stuff. Someone once threw their knickers at me on stage. They were dirty, so I took them home and put them on a 60°C wash. I gave them back to her at the next gig. Then she started bringing her laundry to me at every gig. It got quite timeconsuming. Especially the woollens. What advice do you have for young, aspiring pop stars? 2d: Being a pop star is cool sometimes, but not other times, like when people take photos of you going to the toilet. So I’d say, “Don’t get into it for fame; do it ’cos you enjoy it.” My favourite job was running the dodgems at Eastbourne funfair. I’d go back in a second, but Murdoc threatened to take me down, Gladiator-style, if I ever left Gorillaz. He has a whip and a trident, and a leather loincloth, so I know he’s serious. 2D, which of the survival skills you learned on the desert island are proving most useful back in regular life? 2d: Learning that you need very little to get by in life: just a fire and some food. It was an enlightening experience. I’m actually hoping to go back to the island some day – partly to learn more survival skills, and also ’cos I left one of my flipflops. The flip, I think. Or maybe the flop. Never know which is which. The point is, they belong together – the distance must be really painful. If there had been no whale to live off on that island and you’d been forced to cannibalise yourself, which of your own body parts would you eat first? russel: What is wrong with you, man? That’s messed up! What, you want me to say I’d chew on my big, sweet ass? That what you want? That I’d chew my own ass? No way I’m saying those words. You’d only quote me out of context. I know how you people work. 2d: I’m a humanitarian, which means I don’t eat human meat. But you’d be surprised how much nourishment you can get from eating your clothes. I made quite a nice shredded T-shirt salad to accompany the whale blubber. Russel, on your latest adventure you 68
Russel: “If I was on a desert island, I’d chew on my big, sweet ass” grew 60 times your normal size. How does your perception of the world change when you’re a giant? russel: You learn that people can be very uncivilised when it comes to a person’s weight. They’re always judging. Sure, I was big, but I’ve got an underactive thyroid. People see a towering giant and assume you’re awake all night, sobbing into an empty tub of Cherry Garcia while listening to All By Myself by Celine Dion. It was MY THYROID! If your new album, Humanz, were an iconic film, which would it be?
2d: That’s not easy. Maybe Brazil [Terry Gilliam’s 1985 dystopian fantasy]. On the surface it’s quite fast-paced and seems light-hearted, but it’s actually a really dark fantasy about a scary new future. russel: Got to go deeper, man. Think about it… Maybe we’re all in a movie RIGHT NOW and we don’t even know it. A billion smartphone cameras pointed our way, and some psycho director calling the shots. Unplug, people. ’Cos when the credits roll, there won’t be no sequel. In recent years, we’ve witnessed the rise of Japanese virtual pop star THE RED BULLETIN
GORILLAZ
Hatsune Miku. What do you make of her and other animated musicians? russel: I’m no conspiracy nut, but I got some hard truths for you: most pop stars are animated. Every move they make is controlled, every word they breathe is scripted. But Gorillaz, we’ve got substance. We’re probably the most real thing out there. Your track Hallelujah Money is a cry for greater humanity. If we got rid of money, what could we use as currency? russel: What would be the point in getting rid of money just to swap it for THE RED BULLETIN
“WE’RE PROBABLY THE MOST REAL THING OUT THERE”
a new currency? It’s still power in some other form, and power is what’s distributed unfairly. Forget currency, what we need is a global revolution, meaning complete constitutional demolition, then a new start with a rigorously egalitarian system. 2d: Twiglets? On June 10, you’ll be hosting your own one-day music festival, Demon Dayz, at Dreamland, an amusement park in Margate on the UK’s south-east coast. What can revellers expect? 2d: Candyfloss, dodgems, and the smell of soggy chips: the three greatest things in the world. Unfortunately, the manager says I have to work that day. russel: What 2D’s getting at is all you folks with Demon Dayz tickets get to use the theme park, as well as catch Gorillaz at our first festival since the Escape To Plastic Beach World Tour. That was seven years ago. Whoa, a lot’s changed since then – Murdoc even became a feminist. Anyway, we got a crew of artists and friends joining us, but I can’t say much more about that now. You never know who’s reading. What would be your dream themepark attraction? 2d: A happy version of a ghost train, with tangerine trees and rocking-horse people, where you ride through the clouds on dodgems and get free candyfloss. No ghosts, though – that’s key. We see enough of them in our line of work. russel: Tell me about it. Ghosts really get under my skin. Literally. It’s kind of an affliction, harbouring the souls of dead rappers. Like having indigestion that rhymes. Personally, I don’t have time for theme-park rides. I’m too busy just clinging on to this out-of-control roller coaster we all ride, operated by The Man. 2d: Do you mean Paul? russel: Who? 2d: He runs the roller coaster at Dreamland. russel: No. The Man. 2d: Oh. I don’t know him. Gorillaz’ new album, Humanz, is out now. Watch the live stream of Demon Dayz, a music festival curated by Gorillaz, exclusively on redbull.tv on June 10; gorillaz.com 69
LIFE
HUNTING FOR
Entrepreneur Sam Cossman is guided by the belief that technology has the potential to help us better understand the most severe places on Earth. But when he travelled to Mongolia to train with an eagle master, he found techno match for ancient knowledge passed down through generations PHOTOGRAPHY: JUSTIN BASTIEN
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The last light of day catches eagle master Kazibek
ast year, there wasn’t an eagle-hunting competition that Kairatkhan didn’t win. The herder, a native of the Bayan-Ölgii region in the north-west of Mongolia, swept all three events in the sport, including the prestigious Golden Eagle Festival. His dominance was such that Mongolia’s president awarded him a medal of honour. But reputation isn’t the only thing at stake. During the harsh Mongolian winter, when humans are most challenged in the steppes, Kairatkhan’s golden eagles are a source of sustenance: the Arctic foxes and small animals they kill provide meat and the fur that clothes him and his family. It’s precisely that line between life and death that prompted explorer and start-up veteran Sam Cossman to fly thousands of miles to spend Christmas in an adobe hut in subzero temperatures. “I come from this world of developers using modern tools to disrupt and innovate, and essentially those are the wizards of our time,” explains Cossman. “They’re writing in a new language; they’re developing tech that they haven’t been able to in the past. You can almost call Kairatkhan a programmer. He has received tribal knowledge that has been passed down, and now his language is his ability to communicate with this animal and develop and program this animal. It’s the analogue version of the digital world that the rest of us experience.”
“THERE’S A CERTAIN BRILLIANCE THAT COMES FROM SILENCE, FROM SELF-REFLECTION” Cossman travelled to Bayan-Ölgii, the westernmost province and highest elevation point in Mongolia, where the Kazakh majority still practises eagle hunting. Kairatkhan is considered one of its finest exponents, and he’s eager to pass on his knowledge to younger generations – if they’ll listen
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A native of Georgia, USA, Cossman grew up in the outdoors. When it was time to choose a career, the hustle and energy of the start-up world attracted him. He worked at a few companies before a trip to Haiti, following the 2010 earthquake, changed his life. “It made me realise that life was short, and that I wanted to spend my time doing something meaningful and purpose-driven,” he says. “And the thing I always loved was adventure and exploration. I think of adventure as more of a selfserving act, whereas exploration has a purposedriven component.” He first launched his company, Qwake, as an online marketplace/idea incubator, hoping to match people with unique skill sets – say, falconers – with outdoor enthusiasts. But as a business it proved difficult to scale, so he shelved the idea for some time. Meanwhile, he was invited on a trip to descend into the lava lake of an active volcano in the South Pacific. A video of his experiences at the Marum crater, edited on his MacBook on the flight home, went viral and won him an appearance on Good Morning America. Now he’s resurrected Qwake as an exploration and tech-focused media company. “I feel like tech is opening new doors and peeling back layers to the unknown in a way we weren’t able to before,” he says. “And I had the idea that I’d like to go into the world’s extreme environments and leverage tech as a way to learn more about our planet so we can improve the quality of life for our species and solve problems in interesting ways.” And so he plotted the trip to Mongolia to visit Kairatkhan, from whom he hoped to learn how to
“EXPLORATION HAS A PURPOSE-DRIVEN COMPONENT”
Cossman shows Kairatkhan the data collected by GPS – from the eagle’s flight path to its attack speed
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Kairatkhan and Cossman work with White Shoulder
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THE MASTER
More than just a tool for hunting, eagles are almost like family
Born and raised in the Altai Mountains, Kairatkhan is a herder like his father before him. The 50-yearold says it took him 30 years to become a true eagle master
Mealtime in a Mongolian adobe hut
hunt with eagles. In his bags, he packed a tracking device from Marshall Radio Telemetry, a company that his friend Jim Tigan, a master falconer, had recommended. By way of a GPS transmitter and a mobile app, the system can geo-locate and map the flight patterns of birds of prey while tracking other metrics in real time. Over the course of a week, Cossman and photographer Justin Bastien lived in the adobe hut. Electricity had come to the area two years earlier, but the dwelling was heated by a stove fed with surprisingly fragrant manure. They accompanied Kairatkhan and other eagle masters as they hunted on horseback, which gave them an insight into the 76
ELECTRICITY CAME TO THE AREA TWO YEARS AGO, BUT THE HOME WAS HEATED BY BURNING A FRAGRANT MANURE
Where does eagle training begin? You have to become an apprentice of an experienced eagle master. You go to stay with him – at least for a month or two – and he will take you hunting, show you how to feed it, how to fly it. Then, once you have your own eagle, you have to practice with it. It’s not something you start and then give up. And the eagle is not a machine. It has its own individual behaviours and manners; each eagle is different. Were you a natural? No, it took me three years to understand how much effort you have to put in, and how much time you have to dedicate to your eagle. My first bird, I thought it had had enough training when I took it out. But whenever we went hunting, it wouldn’t fly. It would see a rabbit, a fox, a wolf, a wildcat – anything – and it would just sit there. It was a matter of my confidence in the eagle, but also of the eagle’s confidence in me. I went to see one of the elder hunters to get some advice. They said I should concentrate on the feeding. When you first start training, you have to know the right portion of meat to give your eagle. If you give it too much or not enough, the eagle won’t be tamed. And now you’re not only a master but a competition winner… My most important motivation is learning and sharing. I always learn from others, no matter how many years of experience I have. When I travel from one place to another, or when it comes to the festivals or any kind of contest, I usually go there to learn and to gain other experiences and skills, not just to win the contest. Are the youth as eager to learn? I’ve seen younger generations who were really committed to being eagle hunters. But after seeing all the difficulties – travelling in the cold, going up and down the mountains, not having the good luck every day to catch an animal – they just gave up. You have to be mentally strong enough to face some of the failures or some of the bad luck. But if there is a strong bond between you and your eagle, nothing is impossible. What I’ve learned from my own experience is that if you have the passion and the patience, it turns into dedication. So when you are passionate and patient, there is nothing you can’t achieve. Interview by Sam Cossman THE RED BULLETIN
“IF THERE IS A STRONG BOND, THEN NOTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE”
Eagle hunting is a dying art, with only an estimated 250 practitioners left; the youth are increasingly moving to the city to seek their fortune
Hunter Kazibek (this page) scans the horizon with intensity as his eagle remains hooded. The birds need to come in high and at great speed to catch the nimble red foxes
“THE EAGLE IS NOT A MACHINE. IT HAS ITS OWN INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOURS”
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TOOLS OF THE TRADE
Kairatkhan’s gear is all homemade and therefore easier to repair while on a hunt
1. Fox-fur hat lined and topped with silk and eagle feathers 2. Horsehide jacket
3. Thick leather
eagle-hunter glove to protect against strong, sharp talons
4. Eagle’s eating bowl
5. Saddlebags
for storage on long rides
6. Eagle treat bag containing pieces of fox meat and bone 7. Eagle brace to
support the load of the eagle on long rides. The brace rests on the saddle; the rider’s hand is placed on the sling to take the weight of the bird off the arm
8. Wire to get foxes out of fox holes
9. Classic ’80s binoculars wrapped in a protective silk scarf 10. Homemade binocular bag
THE RED BULLETIN
“HE SAID THE KEY TO SUCCESS IS HAVING A SENSE OF RAPPORT AND TRUST WITH YOUR ANIMAL” training and care provided to the birds by their owners, and the bond – developed over many years – necessary for success. “I wanted to know whether the bird was just a tool,” Cossman says. “And he said the key to the success in eagle hunting is having a sense of rapport and trust with your animal. It requires you to treat the bird as a friend – in many cases, like a child. We literally slept two metres from an eagle.” Cossman came to realise that hunting with an eagle was more art form than practice. He began to wonder whether the device he’d brought along was really worth introducing. “I didn’t want to impose technology as this almighty solution,” he says. But while Cossman was able to make the tracker work when he attached it to a drone, mounting it on White Shoulder’s 3m wingspan in temperatures of -30°C proved far too difficult a task. As a back-up, Cossman had a GoPro dog-harness mount, which was easier to fit. With the help of two others, he lifted White Shoulder’s wings and slipped on the straps. Using the AeroVision app, Cossman and Kairatkhan were able to watch the eagle’s flight pattern in real time. They learned that the path she covered was perpendicular to that of her prey, making the approach more direct. When she descended for a kill, she did so at a rate of around 72m per minute, hitting her prey at 68kph.
“Kairatkhan had engaged in many hunts, but this was the first he viewed through a data-driven lens,” Cossman says. “And while it was clear that modern technology was no match for tribal knowledge passed down through generations, the process of cross-cultural, generational and disciplinary knowledge sharing was enriching beyond words.” There are an estimated 250 eagle hunters left in the region – all of them Kazakhs who migrated from their nearby country during communism – but the younger generation, including a few of Kairatkhan’s five children, are choosing to abandon the practice for life in the cities. Cossman, who made a similar, if less rugged, transition from Georgia to Silicon Valley, understands their motivations. Still, when he looks at the life of focus Kairatkhan leads – in all of its analogue glory – he can’t help but think that the simplicity and generosity of the eagle hunter’s approach serves as a vital lesson in this digital age. “There’s a pace and cadence to his life that’s really admirable,” he says. “There’s a certain brilliance that comes from silence, self-reflection and valuing the things that really matter in life. It was clear he was an incredible family man, and also took a tremendous amount of pride in sharing his knowledge. There is no ownership. He was open-sourcing his whole depth of knowledge around this craft.” Watch the video of Cossman’s trip at redbulletin.com 81
WHICH SIZE SUITS YOU?
guide Get it. Do it. See it.
18
May 2017
PEOPLE, PACE AND PASSION
JAANUS REE/RED BULL CONTENT POOL
There are few places the World Rally Championship generates more excitement than in Portugal, where huge crowds cheer on their heroes. See the event live on Red Bull TV (page 84).
THE RED BULLETIN
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GUIDE
See it Olympic medallist Carlos Coloma takes on Nové Mesto
TRACKS TRICKS & TOP TUNES
Whether you’re after hardcore mountain biking, skate stunts or full-on festival mayhem, Red Bull TV is the place to be
WATCH RED BULL TV ANYWHERE Red Bull TV is a global digital entertainment destination featuring programming that is beyond the ordinary and is available any time, anywhere. Go online at redbull.tv, download the app, or connect via your Smart TV. To find out more, visit redbull.tv
84
Swiss Nino Schurter will be hoping to retain his title as men’s No 1
THE RED BULLETIN
May/June
21 THE RED BULLETIN
May
LIVE
UCI MTB WORLD CUP, CZECH REPUBLIC It’s the second round, and the season’s first cross-country showdown. Reigning world champions Annika Langvad and Nino Schurter will be among those tackling steep up-and-downs, treacherous tree roots and vicious rock gardens in the stunning setting of Nové Mesto na Morave.
BARTEK WOLINSKI/RED BULL CONTENT POOL/ ANTHONY ACOSTA/ GORILLAZ/ JAANUS REE/RED BULL CONTENT POOL
27 10 18
May
LIVE
VANS PARK SERIES, MALMÖ
Malmö is revered in skateboarding after Vans built a new park here for the final of last year‘s Park Series. See the elite of concrete skating – including Red Bull athletes Pedro Barros and defending champion Alex Sorgente – return to the Swedish city to do battle.
June
LIVE
DEMON DAYZ FESTIVAL
With three stages and an eclectic line-up, this one-day extravaganza at Dreamland amusement park in Margate, Kent, will be Gorillaz’ first UK show since 2010. The sold-out festival will be broadcast live exclusively on Red Bull TV, bringing viewers all the action.
to 21 May
LIVE
WRC 2017, PORTUGAL
Last year saw the 50th outing of the Rally de Portugal, one of the founding rounds of the WRC. The event has faced many setbacks down the years – crowd control issues, heavy rain, being dropped from the tour – but now it's roaring round again. Don't miss it.
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GUIDE Edited by Gisbert L Brunner
Get It
CASIO EDIFICE RACE LAP CHRONOGRAPH EQB-800
On the pace
Inspired by motor racing, this analogue timepiece has a retrograde indicator at the nine o’clock position to relay lap times to a smartphone app. casio-watches.com
Montblanc Summit strap options range from calf leather to alligator skin
PENNING A BRIEF HISTORY 0F TIME History, it’s said, is written by the victor. Doubly so if they’re Montblanc, the maker of pens that, in 1924, scribbled its success into eternity with the Meisterstück (masterpiece). Making history without being consigned to it, though, requires something more permanent than ink and in 1997, Montblanc began to dabble in time. Its first watch, also named Meisterstück, debuted to mocking comments of “Where do you fill it with ink?” But 20 years on, nobody disputes Montblanc’s reputation as an haute horologist. To the victor the spoils.
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MONTBLANC SUMMIT
New heights In 2015, Montblanc devised a unique solution to the emerging smartwatch scene without compromising its own mechanical timepieces – the E Strap, a wristband that fits to a normal watch, tracking sleep and activity, and sending alerts. Now, they’ve fully embraced the smartwatch ethos, but in that way only a luxury watchmaker can. Inside the Summit is enough silicon to power Google’s Android Wear 2.0 operating system, displayed on a vivid AMOLED screen. Wrapped around it, though, is pure Swiss material design – a domed sapphire-glass lens and a case cut from either stainless steel, black steel, a bit of both, or titanium. The price – at least twice as much as regular Android Wear devices – is governed by your choice of case and strap. If you really want to break the bank, Montblanc will make a custom dial just for you. montblanc.com
SKAGEN SKT 1110
Powerful ally This hybrid watch does all the usual tracking and links to your smartphone so you can operate the camera and music player via its buttons. Plus the battery runs for up to six months. skagen.com
FRÉDÉRIQUE CONSTANT E-STRAP
Doubling up
Fit this strap to any analogue watch with standard 20mm or 22mm lugs and transform it into a smartwatch with the same tech and features as their Horological Smartwatch. frederiqueconstant.com
THE RED BULLETIN
GUIDE
Do it
June
4 June
RUN BOET!
Each year, 20,000 competitors run the world-famous ultramarathon from Durban to Pietermaritzburg, with only 89km of muscle-eating tarmac separating them and a Comrades Marathon medal. It's an up-run this year, starting at City Hall before hitting renowned climbs including Cowies Hill, Botha's Hill and Polly Shortts. Durban; comrades.com
Across 11 days, Cinema Nouveau in Johannesburg and Cape Town play host to the continent's premier documentary film festival. The Encounters South African International Documentary Festival is a showcase of the finest home-grown films, as well as a chance to see outstanding international works which would not have otherwise made it onto the local circuit. Johannesburg/ Cape Town; encounters.co.za
10
June Inner city brews The Capital Craft Beer Festival returns to the picturesque National Botanical Garden in Pretoria this month. More than 35 brewers will be presenting their wares at the event, which is now in its fifth year. An added bonus for the expected 8,000-plus revellers is the bus shuttle service that will be running between the venue and the Gautrain station in Hatfield. Pretoria; capitalcraft.co.za/beerfest
17
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to 16 June Run wild If the thought of covering 200km in five days doesn't make you wince, it could be you’re hard enough for the Richtersveld Transfrontier Wildrun. This foot race from South Africa to Namibia, through the ancient arid landscape of the Richtersveld Transfrontier Park, is a running experience like no other. Richtersveld; wildrun.com/ event/calendar
June Vive la France! Launched in 1982, Fête de la Musique is an annual celebration of the electrifying ebullience of French music and culture around the world. The first on South African soil took place in Port Elizabeth in 2010, and last year as many as 30,000 visitors attended Fête de la Musique events around the country. Expect French-speaking artists from as far afield as Madagascar, the island of Réunion and – naturally – France, as well as many local acts, at this year’s main festival in the Newtown Cultural Precinct. Johannesburg; fetedelamusiquejhb.co.za
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COMRADES MARATHON ASSOCIATION/WWW.COMRADES.COM, BRAM LAMMERS
1
to 11 June Top docs
PROMOTION
must-haves
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1 ciTizen ecodriVe
The Citizen Eco-Drive Aqualand is the authentic evolution of the world’s first ever divers watch. With features such as a water pressure sensor, a depth metre and a maximum water depth indicator, this watch is the perfect companion for an underwater adventure. The latest models offer 300m water resistance and include a helium release valve for mixed gas diving. Price: R14 999. cjr.co.za
THE RED BULLETIN
2 hisense c30 rock
Hisense’s new superslim 7.95mm C30 Rock smartphone will make you Rock Every You. Featuring a durable combination of a metal frame and a soft rubber outer-casing, the smartphone also carries an IP68 certified rating, rendering it shock-, dust- and water resistant. The C30 Rock is equipped with a 5.2’’ Full HD display that offers a lavish 424 pixels per inch. RRP: R4 499. hisense.co.za
3 Finni hoT rod winTer jAckeT
The Finni jackets is different from your typical sports jacket. What started as a cycling jacket, soon became a jacket for your favourite denims. Finni now also offers a range of cross functional jackets which are tailored for cycling, running, hiking or any other outdoor pursuit. It features a ‘hidden’ pocket on the back which is barely visible. From R990. finni.co.za
4 k-wAY drAke down jAckeT
A lightweight, durable and versatile jacket which is made to keep you warm in the winter months. It will keep you protected from the elements as its 100% windproof. The high collar and streamlined fit, combined with the insulated with 650 duck down fill power, ensures that you keep warm. the down is ethically sourced allowing for guilt-free adventures. R1 499. capeunionmart.co.za
5 speciALized TAcTic ii
All mountain riding demands a helmet that's light, cool, and inspires confidence. The Tactic II helmet delivers on all of the above with large, optimized vents, extended rear coverage, and inmolded construction that maximizes strength while keeping weight to a minimum. R1 320. specialized.com
6 hAMiLTon khAki nAVY FroGMAn
Water resistance to 1 000 meters and a helium valve to equal out internal and external pressures in saturation diving conditions. a tough and sturdy titanium case. The solid case back bearing a scuba diver motif is a nod to this model’s maritime mission. The H10 calibre with its 80-hour power reserve proves just as useful on land as below the sea. SRP R22 900. hamiltonwatch.com
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GUIDE
Aquaman
Whether it’s a 4K HD shark shoot, five-star poolside lounging, or surfing a 30ft monster, true ocean dwellers know that making the right waves means packing the right kit
OGIO BIG MOUTH WHEELED TEALIO BAG luksbrands.co.za; FRESCOBOL CARIOCA TRANSCOCO BEACH BATS frescobolcarioca.com; PROTEST MUTANT BOARDSHORTS protest.eu; ANIMAL LAVA WETSUIT and RIPPLE FLIP FLOPS animal.co.uk; VANS DAVIS 5 PANEL CAMPER HAT vans.com; BAREDIVE DUO C DIVING MASK baresports.com; NIXON ULTRATIDE WATCH and MINI BLASTER BLUETOOTH SPEAKER nixon.com; SONY FDR-X1000VR 4K ACTION CAM WITH WATERPROOF CASE sony.com; POLO TWO-TONE SUNGLASSES ralphlauren.com; PROTEST BOWTIE STRIPED T-SHIRT protest.eu
THE RED BULLETIN GUIDE TO
HOLIDAY TRAVEL Photography LUKE KIRWAN Styling SARAH ANN MURRAY
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GUIDE
The Global Geek
For this perma-connected world citizen, the old adage that it’s better to travel is only true if you’re packing the right tech, and the clean, machined look to go with it
TUMI SHORT TRIP ALUMINIUM CASE busbyhouse.com; NINTENDO SWITCH CONSOLE nintendo.com; SONY SRS X11 PORTABLE BLUETOOTH SPEAKER sony.com; TROUBADOUR LEATHER BUSINESS CARD HOLDER troubadourgoods.com; OAKLEY HOLBROOK METAL SUNGLASSES oakley.com; BEATS SOLO3 WIRELESS HEADPHONES beatsbydre.com; ALICE MADE THIS MORRIS KEY RING alicemadethis.com; APPLE WATCH SERIES 2 apple.com; THE THORPLEY SHORT-SLEEVE SHIRT farah.co.uk
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The Power Ranger A firm belief that if you’re not killing, cleaning and cooking your dinner IBIZA a hundred clicks away from the nearest deep-fried cronut, doesn’t mean you can’t hit the trail in style A reliable wristwatch was a vital instrument for early pilots – and it’s a requirement that PATAGONIA JACKET thenorthface. LIGHTWEIGHT com; LEATHERMAN continued BLACK when man HOLE DUFFEL 30L free ofOHT MULTITOOL finally broke patagonia.com; leatherman.com; gravity andCAMO launched ANIMAL PILAR STANCE FUSION PRINT SHORTS SOCKS stance.com; into space.
animal.co.uk; NIXON PATRIOT LEATHER WATCH nixon.com; KINDLE PAPERWHITE amazon.com; SILVA EXPEDITION COMPASS silvacompass.com; CORNERSTONE LEATHER WASHBAG cornerstone.co.uk; NORTH FACE TANKEN
TEVA ARROWOOD LUX MID WP WATERPROOF WALKING TRAINER teva.co.uk
GUI D E
The Cultured Clubber
Searching for the biggest beats shouldn’t spell faded cycling shorts, body paint and glow sticks. The cultured clubber knows there’s a better, more stylish way
RADEN A22 GOLD CARRY CASE raden.com; SONY MDR-100ABN WIRELESS HEADPHONES sony. com; FRESCOBOL COPACABANA SWIM SHORTS frescobolcarioca.com; PROTEST NEWBEAT STRIPED COTTON T-SHIRT protest.eu; MONTBLANC SARTORIAL ELECTRIC BLUE LEATHER PASSPORT HOLDER montblanc.com; RAYBAN CARAVAN SUNGLASSES rayban. com; ALPINESTARS AGELESS CURVE HAT alpinestars.com; ALICE MADE THIS EDWIN BLUE LEATHER BRACELET alicemadethis.com; CORNERSTONE FACE SCRUB, SHAVE CREAM AND RAZOR cornerstone.co.uk; SONY XPERIA XZ PREMIUM SMARTPHONE sony.com
The Sharp Shooter knows that the only point of 21st-century travel is the perfect Instagrammed sunset or swordfish ceviche. And crafting the perfect image means sporting the perfect image
THULE SUBTERRA CARRY-ON BAG thule.com; SONY A6500 APS-C CAMERA and VARIO-TESSAR T*E 16-70MM F4 ZA OSS LENS sony.com; BEATS PILL+ WIRELESS SPEAKER beatsbydre.com; APPLE IPHONE 7 apple.com; CARAN D’ACHE NO 6 SCENTED PENCILS carandache.com; MONTBLANC TIMEWALKER CHRONOGRAPH UTC WATCH montblanc.com THE RED BULLETIN
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THE RED BULLETIN WORLDWIDE UK EDITION
BEYOND THE ORDINARY
GLOBAL TEAM Editorial Director Robert Sperl Editor-in-Chief Alexander Macheck
The Arthurian legend on a journey of self-discovery
FANTASTIC VOYAGE THE “WE’RE REAL MOST OUT BAND THERE”
GORILLAZ!
The America’s Cup powers up for the future
ON FACEBOOK
FACEBOOK.COM/THEREDBULLETIN
JUNE 2017 £2.50
The Red Bulletin is available in eight countries. Above is the cover of this month’s UK edition, featuring cartoon band Gorillaz. See all the editions at: redbulletin.com/ howtoget
Country Channel Management Isabel Schütt Country Project Management Natascha Djodat Advertisement Sales Martin Olesch, martin.olesch@de.redbulletin.com
Editor Louis Raubenheimer THE RED BULLETIN Mexico, ISSN 2308-5924
Deputy Chief Sub-Editor Davydd Chong
Editor Luis Alejandro Serrano
Art Directors Kasimir Reimann, Miles English
Country Project Management Andrew Gillett
Associate Editors Marco Payán, Inmaculada Sánchez Trejo
Advertisement Sales Andrew Gillett, andrew.gillett@za.redbull.com Dustin Martin, dustin.martin@za.redbull.com
Proof Reading Alma Rosa Guerrero
Production Editor Marion Wildmann Managing Editor Daniel Kudernatsch
Web Christian Eberle, Vanda Gyuris, Inmaculada Sánchez Trejo, Andrew Swann, Christine Vitel Design Marco Arcangeli, Marion Bernert-Thomann, Martina de Carvalho-Hutter, Kevin Goll, Carita Najewitz Photo Editors Rudi Übelhör (Deputy Photo Director), Marion Batty, Susie Forman, Ellen Haas, Eva Kerschbaum, Tahira Mirza
Printed by CTP Printers, Duminy Street, Parow-East, Cape Town 8000 Subscriptions Subscription price R250, for 12 issues/year, www.getredbulletin.com, subs@za.redbull.com Mailing Address PO Box 50303, Waterfront, 8002 South Africa Office South Wing, Granger Bay Court, Beach Road, V&A Waterfront, Cape Town 8001 +27 (0) 21 431 2100
Publisher Franz Renkin
Country Project Management Helena Campos, Giovana Mollona Advertisement Sales Humberto Amaya Bernard, humberto.amayabernard@mx.redbull.com
THE RED BULLETIN Switzerland, ISSN 2308-5886 Editor Arek Piatek Proof Reading Hans Fleißner
Country Channel Management Melissa Stutz Advertisement Sales Marcel Bannwart, marcel.bannwart@ch.redbull.com
Advertising Placement Andrea Tamás-Loprais Creative Solutions Eva Locker (manager), Martina Maier, Verena Schörkhuber, Edith Zöchling-Marchart
THE RED BULLETIN Austria, ISSN 1995-8838
Country Management and Marketing Stefan Ebner (manager), Magdalena Bonecker, Thomas Dorer, Manuel Otto, Kristina Trefil, Sara Varming
Editor Ulrich Corazza
Marketing Design Peter Knehtl (manager), Simone Fischer, Alexandra Hundsdorfer Head of Production Michael Bergmeister Production Wolfgang Stecher (manager), Walter O Sádaba, Friedrich Indich, Michael Menitz (digital) Repro Clemens Ragotzky (manager), Claudia Heis, Maximilian Kment, Karsten Lehmann Office Management Kristina Krizmanic, Petra Wassermann IT Systems Engineer Michael Thaler Subscriptions and Distribution Peter Schiffer (manager), Klaus Pleninger (distribution), Nicole Glaser (distribution), Yoldas Yarar (subscriptions)
Proof Reading Hans Fleißner Country Project Management Thomas Dorer Advertisement Sales Alfred Vrej Minassian (manager), Thomas Hutterer, Bernhard Schmied, anzeigen@at.redbulletin.com
THE RED BULLETIN France, ISSN 2225-4722 Editor Pierre-Henri Camy Country Co-ordinator Christine Vitel
Country Project Management Leila Domas
Global Editorial Office Heinrich-Collin-Strasse 1, A-1140 Vienna Phone +43 1 90221-28800 Fax +43 1 90221-28809 Web redbulletin.com
Partnership Management Yoann Aubry, yoann.aubry@fr.redbull.com
Directors Christopher Reindl, Andreas Gall
THE RED BULLETIN United Kingdom, ISSN 2308-5894 Editor Justin Hynes Associate Editor Tom Guise Music Editor Florian Obkircher Chief Sub-Editor Nancy James Deputy Chief Sub-Editor Davydd Chong
Country Channel Management Tom Reding Publishing Manager Ollie Stretton Advertisement Sales Mark Bishop, mark.bishop@uk.redbull.com
Proof Reading Audrey Plaza
General Manager and Publisher Wolfgang Winter
Red Bull Media House GmbH Oberst-Lepperdinger-Straße 11–15, A-5071 Wals bei Salzburg, FN 297115i, Landesgericht Salzburg, ATU63611700
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Proof Reading Hans Fleißner
Creative Director Erik Turek
Editors Stefan Wagner (Chief Copy Editor), Ulrich Corazza, Arek Piatek, Andreas Rottenschlager FOLLOW US
Editor Andreas Rottenschlager
Chief Sub-Editor Nancy James
Photo Director Fritz Schuster CHARLIE HUNNAM
THE RED BULLETIN South Africa, ISSN 2079-4282
THE RED BULLETIN Germany, ISSN 2079-4258
THE RED BULLETIN USA, ISSN 2308-586X Editor Andreas Tzortzis Deputy Editor Nora O’Donnell Copy Chief David Caplan
Director of Publishing Cheryl Angelheart Country Project Management Melissa Thompson Advertisement Sales Los Angeles: Dave Szych, dave.szych@us.redbull.com New York: Regina Dvorin, reggie.dvorin@us.redbullmediahouse.com THE RED BULLETIN
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GUIDE
Action highlight
Kirby Chambliss only has to step outside his house and he’s at the airfield – conveniently, the American Red Bull Air Race pilot lives on a ranch with its own runway. And just by glancing up at the sky, his neighbours can tell when he’s got the day off to a good start. For more on Chambliss, visit redbullairrace.com
“When I pull on the stick, it feels like a house is sitting on my chest” Red Bull Air Race pilot Kirby Chambliss describes the thrill of acceleration in his Edge 540 V3 raceplane
MICHAEL CLARK/RED BULL CONTENT POOL
Eloy, Arizona, USA
Makes you fly
The next issue of The Red Bulletin is out on June 13 98
THE RED BULLETIN
G ING OFF FF T TRACK? GET GOING AND ELEVATE YOUR OUTDOOR ADVENTURES WITH THE ALL NEW TOMTOM ADVENTURER GPS OUTDOOR WATCH.
TomTom Adventurer
R5499
FEATURES
Recommended retail price
TomTom Runner 3 Cardio + Music
R3999
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TomTom Runner 3 Cardio
R3299
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TomTom Runner 3 Music
R2999
Recommended retail price
TomTom Runner 3
R2699
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GPS Tracking Built-in Barometer Built-in Heart Rate Monitor 3GB Music Storage Route Exploration Goal Setting and Race Mode Interval Training Multisport Modes Hiking, Trail Running, Snow Sports Modes Automatic Lift Detection (in skiing mode) Step Counting Automatic Sleep Tracking 24/7 Heart Rate Tracking Calories Burnt Active Minutes Customizable Straps Heart Rate Strap Compatible Wireless Syncing Water Resistant to 40m (5ATM) Audio Performance Feedback TomTom Sports Bluetooth Heaphones
headphones included
*All Adventurer models available in black or orange. *All Runner 3 available in black & green or pink & orange. The Runner 3 Music SKU only available in black & green. Small and large available.
tomtom.com/o / utdoor /o
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