The Red Bulletin July 2014 - ZA

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july 2014 R30

beyond the ordinary

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adrenalin playgrounds

M A K ING C H A N G E PAY

to blow your mind

So uth Afr i ca’s br i ghtest so c i a l entrep re n e u rs

L INK IN PA R K O n thei r n ew al bum a n d Tw itter madness Neymar JUnior, Brazilian Football Star

NEYMAR! Can the boy genius w in the World C up for Bra z il?

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July 2014




RED BLOODED PERFORMANCE INFINITI Q50 EAU ROUGE CONCEPT www.infiniti.co.za

INSPIRED PERFORMANCE

Model displayed: Infiniti Q50 Eau Rouge Concept. This is a concept car and is not available for purchase. Concept cars are automotive studies and may look different when released. For more information on this and the Infiniti Q50, visit www.infiniti.co.za


THE WORLD OF RED BULL

32

into the wild

Extreme sports stars reveal the playgrounds of their dreams

david clerihew (cover), Kolesky/Nikon/Red Bull Content Pool

Welcome

The biggest sports tournament in the world is underway and Brazilian fans’ hopes of success on home soil have never been higher. For Neymar, the player at the heart of the Brazil team, it’s a fairy tale ready to be written. Meanwhile, Linkin Park – who some call the biggest rock band in the world – take time out to chat exclusively about their latest album, The Hunting Party. Need some eye-candy? Check out Arto Saari’s brilliant photos for an insight into how skateboarding has grown in the last 20 years, and eyeball some of the best adrenalin playgrounds ever discovered. And don’t forget the very first Red Bull Amaphiko Academy, where great minds meet South Africa’s brightest social entrepreneurs. the red bulletin

“The World Cup has always been my goal” neymar, page 44

05


July 2014

at a glance

68

Bullevard 10 gallery Amazing pics 16 give peace a chance  Marking 100 years since the outbreak of World War I

skate Eye

Boarder-turned-photographer Arto Saari has captured his sport’s emergence into the mainstream

Features 32 Great adventures

Top destinations for extreme sports

56

44 Neymar’s World Cup

Playing without a care in the world while carrying the hopes of a nation

50 Tiki taka tech

Robot players and virtual reality training: this is the future of football

land of linkin

With the music industry in a state of flux, Linkin Park figured out how to make hits. What do they know that others don’t?

red bull amaphiko academy Where South Africa’s social innovators learn how to solve community problems through entrepreneurship

83 82 into the deep

Why would you want to swim under the water when you can fly in a SuperAviator, a one-of-a-kind submersible 06

get the gear

Rickie Fowler brings colours to the fairways, but his new shoes are more than just a fashion statement

The secrets behind their staying power

60 Sorted in Soweto

Helping SA’s social innovators harness entrepreneurial skills

68 Skate and shoot

The amazing work of skateboarderturned photographer Arto Saari

Action 82 83 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98

Travel  Plunging the depths get the gear  Kitted out for golf my city  A filmmaker’s Shanghai Music  Owen Pallett’s top tracks training  Get fit for pole vault Watches  Breitling’s best Party  Legendary London club, Fabric gaming  The Evil Within save the Date  Unmissable events magic moment  Running results

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arto saari, corbis, Sydelle Willow Smith, stephen frink, getty images

60

56 Linkin Park


JHB 45967 As seen on DStv/SuperSport

2014 FIFA WORLD CUP BRAZILTM ON SUPERSPORT LIVE STREAMING ON supersport.com

Get front row seats to all the action on the go with DStv mobile Walka 7 or live streaming on the SuperSport app. Watch all the highlights on Catch Up using your DStv Explora.

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OFFICIAL BROADCASTER


Contributors who’s on board this issue

The Red Bulletin South Africa, ISSN 2079-4282

The Red Bulletin is published by Red Bull Media House GmbH General Manager Wolfgang Winter Publisher Franz Renkin Editors-in-Chief Alexander Macheck, Robert Sperl Editor-at-Large Boro Petric

Sydelle Willow Smith The Joburg-born but Cape Townbased photographer has a degree in social anthropology (focusing on visual anthropology), which made her a perfect fit for shooting this month’s feature about the Red Bull Amaphiko Academy near Soweto. “I felt very honoured to be involved,” she says, “and being around masters of fear and creativity such as Andy Walshe inspired me and helped me prepare for an interview I had for a scholarship to Oxford University. I got it, and I’m moving to the UK in October!” The story begins on page 60.

arto saari The Finnish photographer learned his way around a lens after he became a professional skateboarder at the tender age of 16. Now 32, Saari is a still top skater and has brought the strength, agility, and grace of his sport to The Red Bulletin this month for a pictorial that catches skaters in unguarded moments away from the traditional competition circuit. “It helps to have a drained pool in my backyard,” says Los Angelesbased Saari, “it allows me to capture the impromptu action.” His portraits start on page 68.

Simon Kuper

08

David Clerihew

Editor Paul Wilson Creative Director Erik Turek Art Directors Kasimir Reimann, Miles English Photo Director Fritz Schuster Production Editor Marion Wildmann Managing Editor Daniel Kudernatsch Chief Sub-Editor Nancy James Deputy Chief Sub-Editor Joe Curran Assistant Editors Ulrich Corazza, Werner Jessner, Ruth Morgan, Florian Obkircher, Arek Pia˛tek, Andreas Rottenschlager Contributing Editor Stefan Wagner Bullevard Georg Eckelsberger, Raffael Fritz, Sophie Haslinger, Marianne Minar, Holger Potye, Martina Powell, Mara Simperler, Clemens Stachel, Manon Steiner, Lukas Wagner Design Martina de Carvalho-Hutter, Silvia Druml, Kevin Goll, Carita Najewitz, Esther Straganz Photo Editors Susie Forman (Creative Photo Director), Rudi Übelhör (Deputy Photo Director), Marion Batty, Eva Kerschbaum Repro Managers Clemens Ragotzky (manager), Karsten Lehmann, Josef Mühlbacher Head of Production Michael Bergmeister

David Clerihew and Simon Kuper Brazilian footballer Neymar came, saw and wrapped our photographer David Clerihew and writer Simon Kuper around his little finger. “He is one cool guy,” says Clerihew. “He has such a distinctive look, the job is half done before you start.” Kuper is a football columnist for the Financial Times and has written several books about the

Editor, South Africa Angus Powers

Production Wolfgang Stecher (manager), Walter O Sádaba, Matthias Zimmermann (app) Advertising Enquiries Andrew Gillett, +27 (0) 83 412 8008, andrew.gillett@za.redbull.com

Printed by CTP Printers, Duminy Street, Parow-East, Cape Town 8000. Finance Siegmar Hofstetter, Simone Mihalits Marketing & Country Management Stefan Ebner (manager), Elisabeth Salcher, Lukas Scharmbacher, Sara Varming Marketing Design Julia Schweikhardt, Peter Knethl

Neymar gets patriotic in a Barcelona studio

beautiful game. “You almost never see a footballer show up on time for a meeting with people from outside football, but he did,” says Kuper. “Then there’s his smile, which is impossible not to love. After his dribble, I’d say that’s Neymar’s main weapon.” After undertaking serious

research ahead of his trip to meet the Barcelona playmaker, Kuper reckons he got Neymar to open up in ways others haven’t. And one other thing: “Isn’t it unfair that Barcelona, one of world’s nicest cities, also has one of the best football clubs?” The interview begins on page 44.

Subsriptions Peter Schiffer, Alexandra Ita, Yoldas Yarar, Nicole Glaser (sales), Klaus Pleninger (distribution) subscription price: 228 ZAR, 12 issues, www.getredbulletin.com, subs@za.redbull.com Advertising Placement Sabrina Schneider

The Red Bulletin is published in Austria, Brazil, France, Germany, Ireland, Kuwait, Mexico, New Zealand, South Africa, Switzerland, UK and USA Website www.redbulletin.com Head Office Red Bull Media House GmbH, Oberst-Lepperdinger-Strasse 11-15, A-5071 Wals bei Salzburg, FN 297115i, Landesgericht Salzburg, ATU63611700 South Africa Office Black River Park North, 2 Fir Street, Observatory, 7925 8005 +27 (0) 21 486 8000 Austria Office Heinrich-Collin-Strasse 1, A-1140 Vienna. +43 (1) 90221 28800 Write to us: letters@redbulletin.com

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H I EN D EL AEN C I NA , S PAI N

leisure pursuits Alfredo Gomez, one of the world’s best enduro riders, has an unusual hobby: enduro racing. Here he is, in his free time, ploughing his Husqvarna bike over a flat dirt track. That, too, is uncommon: enduro is mostly about thrashing a bike down steep slopes until you can thrash no more. The thing is, says the Spaniard, “I love anything that burns petrol.” alfredogomez.com  Photo: Alberto Lessmann/Red Bull Content Pool

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M elb o u rn e , Au str alia

rushin’ russian At the first race of the Formula One season in Melbourne, Daniil Kvyat finished ninth. By scoring World Championship points in his debut race, the Scuderia Toro Rosso driver, aged 19 years and 24 days, beat the old record for youngest pointsscorer, held by Sebastian Vettel. Kvyat has since turned 20 and, after five races of F1 in 2014, had three top-10 finishes. “There’s no such thing as a prodigy in motorsport,” says the man from Ufa, about 1,200km east of Moscow. “Just hard work.” scuderiatororosso.com  Photo: Robert Cianflone/Getty Images/Red Bull Content Pool

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Algarve , P o rtu gal

spray time Teammates vying for the world title is a hot topic in motorsport. Atop the World Rally Championship are Frenchman Sebastien Ogier, reigning champ, and Volkswagen teammate Jari-Matti Latvala. In the fourth special stage of the Rally de Portugal, Latvala first found a water feature, and later flipped over spectacularly, which led him to finish 14th (Ogier won). “That’s rallying,” said the Finn, who bounced back to win the next race, in Argentina. jmlatvala.com  Photo: Richard Balint/Volkswagen Motorsport

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GIVing PEACE A chANCE

TOMMY VERSUS FRITZ a christmas miracle Hundreds of German and British soldiers agree their own truce on the Western Front in Flanders, after months of fighting during World War I. Christmas is more important than war, and for one afternoon, the enemy troops shoot at goal, not each other. The no man’s land between the trenches becomes a football pitch, their caps marking the goals. Legend has it that, of course, the Germans won 3-2, but the winners did at least have the decency to provide a barrel of beer. 16

blood bank Oswald Hope

1915

Working Woman Socialist revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg says we should strike, not fight. She campaigns for workers’ rights, is jailed for incitement to civil disobedience and killed by German soldiers in 1919.

Robertson is the first man to carry out a blood transfusion using blood that had been stored. His medical breakthrough goes on to save millions of lives. It’s quite an improvement on the first ‘transfusion’, in 1492, when a dying Pope Innocent VIII drank the blood of three 10-yearold boys. All four of them died.

1916

1917

THE NOBEL PRIZE The Red Cross receives the Nobel Peace Prize for its good works during the War. To this day, military hospitals and staff carrying the red symbol are off-limits in international law.

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imperial war museum, Getty Images

1914

World War I began 100 years ago, on July 28, 1914, when AustriaHungary declared war on Serbia. In this special section we pay tribute to 101 people and ideas who have defied this kind of madness and championed peace and humanity ever since


Bullevard

1914

TRENCH FOOTBALL

1915

ROSA RISES UP

1916

BLOOD BANK

1917

RED CROSS NOBEL

1922 radio The British

Broadcasting Company (BBC) goes on air and lays the cornerstone for press freedom and impartiality. People in trouble spots worldwide tune in to the BBC news, often risking their personal safety to do so. Jolly good show, indeed.

1918

Nelson Mandela The man who brought down apartheid in South Africa, and embodied peace and reconciliation worldwide, is born.

1919

GIRL POWER

1920

Technological advances don’t come more soothing than this: the Theremin, forerunner of the synthesizer, makes its public debut.

1921

PEACE DOLLAR Lady Liberty looks relaxed. The US mints Art Deco peace dollars.

1925

ELECTRONIC MUSIC

Clarence Darrow is a fierce Ohio lawyer with a mission to defend the innocent. A few months after defending a schoolteacher for teaching evolution (still a hot-potato subject in the US) he joins a headlinegrabbing trial in Detroit, of a group of black men accused of murdering a white man who was part of a mob that had stormed a house. Darrow’s closing argument, lasting seven hours, convinces the jurors of the defendants’ innocence and becomes a key text in the civil rights movement.

1922

‘THIS IS THE BBC’

1923

Hitler OUT! Feminist activists Anita Augspurg and Lida Gustava Heymann, try, in vain, to have Hitler expelled from Germany for incitement of the masses.

1924

1919

Peace Award

WOMEN GET THE VOTE

corbis

martin udovicic

girl power The suffragettes of the 1910s are no longer willing to be second-class citizens. They want to mark a cross on the election ballot. They roll up their sleeves, go on strike and hold demonstrations including chaining themselves to railings and setting postboxes on fire. By the end of the decade, 27 countries have given women the vote; America follows suit in 1920. Slowest on the uptake are the Swiss. In the district of Appenzell Innerrhoden, women have only had the vote since 1990.

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The American Peace Award, endowed by Edward W Bok to the tune of $100,000, is awarded for the first time. It wasn’t awarded again until 2008.

1925

clarence darrow

1926

WINNIE-THE-POOH A bear, a piglet, a donkey, an owl and a rabbit all live in harmony in the wood. Because the most important thing is friendship. And honey.

“ I do not believe in the law of hate. I may not be true to my ideals always, but I believe in the law of love, and I believe you can do nothing with hatred.” c l a r e n c e da r row ( 18 57 — 193 8)

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Bullevard

1927

12,000 DOLLS

1932

Sent by US missionary Sidney Gulick to Japan, to foster friendships among children.

1928

erich maria remarque The German WWI vet secures a publisher for his book, All Quiet on the Western Front, which becomes the classic pacifist novel.

1929

mother Teresa The famous nun moves to India on her mission of service to the poorest of the poor.

1930

Mahatma Gandhi Declares his country independent. Britain doesn’t recognise it for 17 years; Gandhi practises his nonviolent struggle.

WHY WAR? Alber­t

1931

PEACE OF MIND The a hangover loses its first battle to Alka-Seltzer when the miracle treatment is introduced in the US.

1932

EINSTEIN AND FREUD

1933

OLD AND BOLD

“ I am a militant pacifist. I am willing to fight for peace”

In Berlin, 91-year-old Julie Bonhoeffer breaks a Nazi cordon to shop at a Jewishowned store.

a l b e rt e i n s t e i n

1934

RIGHT IS WRONG

AA OK

Alcoholics Anonymous is founded in Akron, Ohio, USA.

1936

ALL FOR ONESIE The Phantom, the first fully costumed superhero, begins fighting crime in US newspapers on Feb 17.

1937

GUERNICA

GUERNICA

German bombers destroy the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War. Pablo Picasso captures the ruins and suffering on canvas in his famous painting, which he says can be given to Spain once Franco’s fascist dictatorship has come to an end. Sadly, the artist did not live to see it: he died in 1972, nine years before his greatest work came home.

dietmar kainrath

1935

1937

Getty Images

A right-wing coup in France is thwarted. Several anti-fascist organisations are founded in its wake.

Einstein a smart fellow if ever there was one, has one problem that he just can’t get his head around. “Is there any way of delivering mankind from the menace of war?” he asks fellow genius Sigmund Freud. In reply, the Austrian shrink says, “The ill success… of all the efforts made during the last decade to reach this goal leaves us no room to doubt that strong psychological factors are at work which paralyse these efforts.” In English: people, foolishly, like destroying things.


Bullevard

1938

1939

SAY NO!

Getty Images

REVUE GIRL OF THE RESISTANCE josephine baker, a girl from Missouri, dances her way into the hearts of Parisian audiences at scandalous revue shows and from there takes continental Europe by storm. When the Nazis occupy France, she doesn’t want to sing any more. She works for the Resistance instead, sweet-talking officers to get information out of them and smuggling secret documents over the border. When that fight ends, another begins: Baker goes on to support the civil rights movement in the US.

What’s the bigger scandal here? The naked ladies on stage, or the uniforms of the men watching? Josephine Baker knows the answer

194 5

WO R L D I N M OT I O N: THE UNITED NAT I O N S

“To keep peace throughout the world.” That is one of the pillars of this international community of 193 member states established on October 24, 1945. Even if it doesn’t always succeed, that ambitious mission statement is inarguably noble.

“This train is going to hell.” These words come to Franz Jagerstatter in a dream, and will him to vote against Austria’s Anschluss with Nazi Germany, the only person in his village to do so. He is executed in 1943 and beatified by the Pope in 2007.

1939

Josephine baker

1940

CYCLE OF PROTEST When Norway is occupied by Hitler’s troops, naval officer turned pacifist Olaf Kullmann pedals his bike around the entire country in protest. He died in a concentration camp in 1942.

1941

MUM’S THE WORD Mother Courage, Bertolt Brechts anti-war play, is first performed, in Zurich.

1942

anne Frank In the red-and-white chequered notebook she got for her 13th birthday, the Dutch girl begins a diary of her family’s two years in hiding from the occupying Nazis.

1943

KEEPING THE PROMISE In Albania, besa refers to a code of honour which must be upheld. In WWII, the country is 70 per cent Muslim, but besa means its people ignore religious differences to save 2,000 Jews from Nazi persecution.

1944

LIST FOR LIFE German industrialist Oskar Schindler catalogues, for the Nazis, indispensable staff required for the smooth running of his munitions factory, thus saving the lives of 1,200 Jews.

1945

NATIONS UNITED


Bullevard

1946

BR IGH T F UTUR E

1958

GIVE ME A SIGN Graphic designer Gerald Holtom is asked to make a logo for the CND’s first major protest march. And he comes up with a new Mercedes star. That’s not quite fair: his design incorporates the letters N(uclear) and D(isarmament) as displayed by the flagwavers doing semaphore, inside a circle.

The Fulbright Program sends US scholars and students overseas to learn and educate.

1947

saving lives Raphael Lemkin coins the term genocide and lays the foundation for its prevention and punishment.

1948

keep it peaceful The UN dispatches peacekeepers for the first time, to the Middle East.

1949

peace dove

1950

HELiGOLAND Occupation of the North Sea island by former residents leads to its return to civilian life after military use.

1957

1951

the right to flight

1952

MAD magazine The US humour mag’s satire and critique would go on to inspire students worldwide.

“It takes a very long time to become young”

sputnik 1 is launched

pa b l o p i c a s s o

( 1881 — 1973)

1953

TUGGING IRON CURTAIN Imre Nagy appointed leader of communist Hungary, but breaks with Soviet ideology.

1954

Franco-German thinker Albert Schweitzer warns of the dangers of the nuclear arms race.

1955

ROSA PARKS

1956

RUSSIA THAWS

Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev denounces Stalin in the four-hour Secret Speech.

1957

SPUTNIK 1

1958

CND SIGN

DOVE IS ALL AROUND pablo picasso doesn’t come up with the dove as a symbol of peace. The white bird with an olive branch in its beak was a peace-loving icon in the Bible. But it is the painter from Malaga who makes the bird the emblem of the modern peace movement. He is asked to design a poster for the International Peace Congress in Paris and makes the white dove its centrepiece. Childhood memories could have come into it, too. His father, an art teacher, enjoyed painting pictures of pigeons and doves above all else.

1955

1949

ATOMIC BOMBSHELL

into orbit from what is now Kazakhstan. The era of space travel begins with the Soviet satellite, which gives us a new perspective on our home planet. Many people learn that the Earth is smaller and more worthy of protection than they had previously thought.

rosa parks, an African-American secretary from Alabama, refuses to give up her seat on the bus to a white person, as instructed by the bus driver. Her brave action is one of the key moments in the Civil Rights Movement in the US.

picturedesk.com(2)

The UN regulates humanitarian care of refugees.


Bullevard

“And so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream” m a rt i n lu t h e r k i n g

1959

icy cold war truce Twelve countries, including the Soviet Union and the US, agree that the uninhabited Antarctic will only be used for peaceful purposes and scientific research.

1960

IMRE KERTESZ

1961

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

1962

Getty Images

PLEASE STOP British philosopher Bertrand Russell intervenes in the Cuban Missile Crisis by sending telegrams to Kennedy and Khrushchev. He warns them of the consequences of impending nuclear war, and they listen.

1963

MARTIN LUTHER KING

1963 I HAVE A DREAM hundreds of thousands of people gather at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC to hear civil rights campaigner Martin Luther King deliver his speech for equality and against racism. Advisors had actually cut the “I have a dream...” passages, but King improvises them back in during his 17 minutes at the microphone and writes a truly significant page of history.

1960

NO S UC H THING AS FAT E Hungarian censorship does not quash journalist and Auschwitz survivor Imre Kertesz’s drive to write about his experiences. His 1975 novel Fatelessness, about a teenage boy in the Holocaust, gets worldwide acclaim.

TWO STUDENTS drink a toast to freedom in Lisbon and are arrested. Reading of this injustice is allegedly what makes English lawyer Peter Benenson start Amnesty International. The organisation has fought for political prisoners and against human rights abuses all over the world ever since.

1961 21


Bullevard

1964

WAR IS(N’T) FUNNY Dr Strangelove Or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb, a potent and hilarious anti-nuclear war film, comes at the height of the Cold War.

1965

Flower Power The slogan for the anti-war movement supposedly comes to US poet Allen Ginsberg during an LSD trip.

1966

fly like a dove Peace activist Abie Nathan flies from Israel to Egypt on his Shalom 1 plane to urge peace talks. He is arrested on landing.

1967

DOWN THE BARREL Jan Rose Kasmir holds a daisy to the bayonet of a soldier at a demo outside the Pentagon and becomes an icon of the anti-Vietnam War movement.

1968

Black Power At the Mexico Olympic Games, 200m medallists Tommie Smith (gold) and John Carlos (bronze) give the Black Power salute on the podium.

1969 Bed-in

1970

SAINT OF el salvador With his appointment as assistant bishop of San Salvador, Oscar Romero’s stand against social injustice and the dictatorial government becomes more visible. In 1980, as Archbishop, he’s killed saying Mass.

1971

‘GREEN PEACE, NO SPACE’ The same year a twoyear-old environmental organisation makes its first waves after US coastguards turn its boat back before it can reach an Alaskan nuclear-test site, it also settles on a name: Greenpeace.

1969

THE LIE OF THE LAND This is how John Lennon and Yoko Ono spend their honeymoon. For a week they welcome journalists to the Presidential Suite of the Amsterdam Hilton Hotel to promote world peace. The press pack expects something scandalous, but the newly-weds keep things chaste. They just sit there among the pillows and placards, “like angels”, as Lennon puts it.


AFP/picturedesk.com

Bullevard

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1972

SHOT TO END A WAR Nick Ut’s photo of a naked napalm-burned Kim Phuc turns public and political opinion against the Vietnam War.

1973

WORLD IN HARMONY Over 1bn watch Elvis in Aloha From Hawaii Via Satellite, the first concert broadcast live in this way.

1974

Peace KO’d: Muhammad Ali v George Foreman for the heavyweight crown – and human rights

1974

Rumble in the Jungle

1975

TRUCE IN SPACE

1976

ACROSS THE DIVIDE Peace People is formed of Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland.

1977

mothers know best In Argentina, the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo demand to know what happened to their children ‘disappeared’ during the Dirty War.

1978

LET’S GET TOGETHER …and feel alright: Bob Marley reconciles rival Jamaican politicians on stage at the One Love Peace Concert.

1979

Apocalypse now The greatest war movie ever made is released.

rumble in the jungle Muhammad Ali and George Foreman punch each other’s lights out and it’s somehow about peace? Not right there in the ring, maybe, but that legendary fight for the world heavyweight championship in Kinshasa, in Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo) raises the profile and self-esteem of an entire continent. And with the eyes of the world on Africa, what dictators want hidden can be seen. Muhammad Ali, conscientious objector, wins again. 24

1975

NAUTS CROSS OVER

Two years before Star Wars, the biggest thing in space is no science fiction, but Cold Wardefying fact. Alexey Leonov is weightless alongside Deke Slayton after the first joint USSoviet space mission. An Apollo module docks with a Soyuz craft, after which three astronauts and two cosmonauts spend 44 hours together. the red bulletin

AP Photo, nasa

One-Two Combination


DANNYWAY \ AUANGA, CA. 2003 \ WORLD RECORD 23.5 FOOT BACKSLIDE AIR \ BLABACPHOTO.


Bullevard

bob geldof

1980

FROM TINY ACORNS Jadav Payeng plants a tree on the banks of the Brahmaputra in India. Where there was once just a single tree, there are now over five million.

1981

PROTEST CAMP William Thomas pitches his tent by the White House as a protest against nuclear weapons. He would stay 27 years.

1986

“Give us as much money as we know you have”

burning up At a small event on Baker Beach in San Francisco, the eponymous wooden sculpture defining the Burning Man Festival is set alight for the first time. Today, pyromaniacs and the counter-cultural meet in the Black Rock Desert in Nevada, to honour the Burning Man’s 10 principles: radical inclusion, gifting, decommodification, radical self-reliance, radical self-expression, communal effort, civic responsibility, leaving no trace, participation, immediacy. In a nutshell: peace.

1982

DEAR MR PREMIER US schoolgirl Samantha Smith, 10, writes to Soviet leader Yuri Andropov. He writes back. Samantha realises they’re “just like us”.

1983

LITTLE A LONG WAY Muhammad Yunus founds the Grameen Bank, which gives microloans to the poorest of the poor.

1984

CHEST READ THIS Designer Katharine Hamnett wears an anti-nuclear slogan T-shirt while meeting Margaret Thatcher at an official reception.

live aid concert

1986

1985

THE WORLD STAGE Bob Geldof rounds up rock and pop royalty for two simultaneous concerts on July 13 in London and Philadelphia. More than 1.5 billion people watch Live Aid live on TV, and the next day the donations are around £50 million, about £135m in today’s money. Queen, U2, David Bowie and The Beach Boys do turns; Phil Collins flies on Concorde to appear at both venues. Led Zeppelin, The Who and Black Sabbath reform for a day to fight hunger in Ethiopia and, like many of the acts, enjoy a boost in record sales.

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1967

1985

burning man festival

The Youngbloods Get Together

Queen One Vision

1987

“Come on, people now. Smile on your brother. Everybody get together. Try to love one another. Right now!”

“No hate no fight Just excitation! All through the night It’s celebration. Wo-wo-wo-wo-yeah!”

old people’s homefront

GIGGING FOR GIVING

THE BEST PEACE SONGS OF ALL TIME

In Canada, the Raging Grannies group of elder ladies forms to protest against nuclearpowered US Navy ships in Victoria harbour.

1988

grave of the fireflies One of the most powerful anti-war films, an animated drama from Japan, is released.

1989

what goes up David Hasselhoff sings Looking For Freedom to 100,000 fans from a crumbling Berlin Wall.

1971

2003

Cat Stevens Peace Train

Michael Franti Bomb The World

“Everyone jump upon the peace train. Come on, come on, come on. Yes, come on the peace train. Yes, it’s a peace train.”

“We can chase down all our enemies, bring them to their knees. We can bomb the world to pieces. But we can’t bomb it into peace.”

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getty images(3), corbis, Reuters

1985


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Adrenaline

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Ingenious

ho are The people w e world changing th

Extreme

Š Miles Holden / Red Bull Content Pool

at Adventure th aries d n u bo s break

Your Moment. Beyond the Ordinary

FREE DOWNLOAD


Bullevard

1990

1992

IN THE RUBBLE OF SARAJEVO

Vedran Smailovic sits in the ruins with his cello and plays Tomaso Albinoni’s Adagio in G-Minor while the war-torn city is shelled by Bosnian Serb troops. Thousands of people lose their lives, with 22 civilians queuing for bread among the first victims. The cellist performs 22 solo concerts on 22 consecutive days, at exactly the time and place a grenade hit, each time wearing his tails, and each time putting his own life at risk.

Internet Romance Tim Berners Lee invents the World Wide Web. It’s thanks to him we can now tweet and hyperlink messages of love.

1991

brotherly kiss

1992

CELLIST OF SARAJEVO

1993

VIKTOR POPKOV The Russian pacifist delivers food to Abkhazian towns besieged by Georgians.

1991

KISS GOODBYE TO COMMUNISM

1994

Sex Bomb

premiers in league? Leonid Brezhnev and Erich Honecker no doubt spent plenty of time together, as the respective heads of the Soviet Union and East Germany, but exactly how close they got is not recorded in the official minutes. In 1991, the USSR shows solidarity with the GDR in together exiting the stage of world history. Muscovite artist Dmitri Vrubel paints his most famous work – the goodbye kiss – on the Berlin Wall.

1995

Peace Villages Areas free of violence founded in crisis-torn parts of Latin America.

1996

write stuff

“ I am part of the town. I do what I can”

Yoko Ono asks fans to write their wishes on bits of paper and attach them to her wish trees.

v e d r a n s m a i l ov i c ( a b ov e , i n t h e b o m b e d - o u t n at i o n a l l i b r a ry i n s a r a j e vo )

THE SEX BOMB sex hormones

music

body smells

drugs

28

1994

love

the red bulletin

action press, Mikhail Evstafiev

tom mackinger

Love Kills The Pentagon comes up with the concept for a new sort of “weapon”: the sex bomb, but – sadly? – they never produce it. Aphrodisiacs would rouse the enemy to the point of sexual ecstasy and put them out of action without force of arms. The bad breath bomb was also shelved.


Bullevard

1997

“ If you don’t like how something is, change it ” ta r a s t i l e s

LIBRARY IN THE SADDLE Luis Soriano rides his donkeys to remote villages in Colombia and lends out the books they have carried there. His library has grown from 70 titles when he started out to more than 4,500 now.

1998 viagra

1999

ANNA POLITKOVSKAYA The Russian journalist begins her columns critical of the Kremlin and on the horrors of the war in Chechnya. She is murdered seven years later.

2000

firing blanks

2001

cycling around the world

2002

no home field advantage SportsUnited takes Americans abroad and brings young foreigners to the US to do sport together, in a scheme to promote international dialogue and co-operation.

2004 1998

2001

hot pills

CARLOS SERRAO

Searching for a high blood pressure treatment, scientists discover a drug that unleashes high pressure somewhere else. Viagra provides peace of mind between the sheets ever since.

A crash course in peace

2000 bang!

The British Royal Navy orders its soldiers to stop using live ammunition. They are to shout “Bang!” instead. Sadly this only applies to training exercises and new recruits.

South Korean Okhwan Yoon sets off on a round-the-world bike ride aiming to reconcile North and South Korea. Number of countries visited: 192. Crashes: 6.

YOGA: FOR INNER PEACE “Sun salutation” and “mountain pose”. Yoga has promoted harmony between body and mind for thousands of years. But Bellur Krishnamachar Sundararaja Iyengar is the first person to systematise the various yoga poses. That makes yoga popular in the West, which is why Time magazine lists the guru among the world’s 100 most influential people. It is an honour that will probably never be awarded to yoga starlet Tara Stiles, but she has time on her side.

2003

Peace Race Tegla Loroupe is the first African woman to win the New York City Marathon. Back home in Kenya she organises an annual Peace Race, where politicians and soldiers from all over East Africa run together instead of waging war on each other.

2004 Yoga

2005

footballing truce When Ivory Coast qualifies for the World Cup in Germany, Didier Drogba goes on TV and asks the parties in his country’s civil war to “lay down your arms!” It begins peace talks and a truce is observed from 2007-2010.


2006

HIGH POINT OF PEACE In the Himalayas, the border crossing between India and Chinese Tibet at Nathu La reopens after 44 years.

2007

Skateistan

2008

football diplomacy Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan and his Turkish counterpart Abdullah Gul watch a World Cup qualifier between their two countries together on TV: no small measure, due to the Turkish genocide of the Armenians during World War I.

2009

sounds of war The British Post War Orchestra makes musical instruments out of old weapons, thus turning the harmful harmonious.

2010

Doubly good India’s Rohan Bopanna and Aisamul-Haq Qureshi of Pakistan team up in doubles and show that tennis can bridge the political divide. They go on to reach the final of the US Open.

2011

Tomo KriZnar

2012

Brown Moses

2013

Kid President

In June, 100 years after the assassination in Sarajevo that triggered World War I, Bosnia’s capital will host thousands of young people, activists and peace researchers from around the world. There they will share info, hold discussions and party for peace. Mir svijetu! (Peace to the world!)

2007

AUSSIE OLLIE OLIES skateistan With three skateboards in his luggage, Oliver Percovich heads from his homeland of Australia to war-torn Kabul. It doesn’t take long for the skateboards to attract the attention of local kids. With every trick and ride, social barriers disappear and a little light is shone on dark lives. Percovich’s bright idea becomes an NGO, Skateistan. He gives courses and arranges for a skatepark to be built. Soon, his young freestyle pupils are a common sight in the city – and about half of them are girls.

Skateistan

2014

SARAJEVO PEACE EVENT


Bullevard

PEACE AT THE PUSH OF A BUTTON The internet has allowed peace activism to flourish. But how to choose between causes? Take our test and find out who you’re for YES

Y

N

START: Do you hang out on social media?

Y

N

NO

2012

KONY 2012 wants to save all Africa in one fell swoop, but feels the wind of criticism and fizzles out.

Y

Do you share content without thinking?

N

Do you know how to handle a weapon?

Do you like watching YouTube videos?

n

Do you like partying?

N

Y

N

Y

Y Y

Y

Y

Do you purr when you like something?

brown moses uses YouTube videos to analyse the weapons being used in the Syrian Civil War.

N

N

Tomo KriZnar gives cameras to the Nuba peoples of Sudan, so that they can document war crimes.

Do you like to pick fights with politicians and corporations?

Y

Peace Parties will be held all over the world, not just in Sarajevo, to mark 100 years since the outbreak of WWI.

2014

2 0 14

2013

you tube, Getty Images, shutterstock(2)

N

#royalbaby is a common hashtag this year. Will cuddly little George bring us peace on Earth?

Y

2011

2011

CAT VIDEOs because anyone who can sit and watch Nyan Cat for hours hasn’t got time to think of evil.

2012

N

Are you happy to write in zeros and ones?

N

kid president gives motivational speeches on YouTube. Watch this and you’ll believe all is good in the world.

2013

Do you motivate yourself in front of the mirror?

Do you love sitting at your computer?

anonymous is still the leading hacktivist group, promoting freedom and ‘lulz’ with anticorporate stunts.

31


extreme t rav e l

INtO the WIlD PARAGLIDING ACROSS WATERFALLS, FREECLIMBING GIANT ROCK FACES, WHITEWATER kayaking OVER RUINS. EXTREME SPORTS STARS REVEAL THE PLAYGROUNDS OF THEIR DREAMS

eric parker

w o r d s : A r e k P i at e k

32


The two-stage Toketee Waterfalls in Oregon, USA, are 36m high, remote, demanding and dangerous – an irresistible spot for extreme kayakers. American Fred Norquist had to abseil down into the gorge with his kayak in order to reach the falls. “The reward was worth the hassle,” he says. “A magnificent view and 20m drop into raging water. Superb”


Johannes Mair/Red Bull Content Pool, Elias Holzknecht


“the red sandstone

is burning hot in the sun, but you happily take that for the sensation you get climbing here”

freec l imbin g

Badami, India About 150km south of the well-known Indian bouldering location of Hampi is the small town of Badami, which is gaining favour with competitive climbers. There is wonderful sandstone to climb. That Badami has barely been developed for tourism means you can choose your own climbing routes, many of them unspoiled. There’s an old-style sense of adventure here. The downside: rural India public facilities and infrastructure.

i love it here Kilian Fischhuber World-class competitive climber and boulderer Sandstone paradise. You can choose from a wonderfully large selection of demanding, unspoiled routes. The best thing of all is the quality of the rock face. All the compact sandstone’s grips are nice. There are no sharp edges or broken fragments: that’s a real luxury. But sometimes the rock gets so hot that freeclimbing isn’t possible here. Oh, and look out for the monkeys! They’re as quick as a flash and notorious thieves. Food, rucksacks, lighters. Always leave your stuff out of sight.

35


surfin g

Tahiti, French Polynesia People have been surfing in Tahiti since the 1960s. Conditions are consistently good between May and September when the wind – the so-called ‘roaring forties’ because this is about 40 degrees latitude – creates permanent waves that break off the Tahitian coastline.

i love it here Michel Bourez ASP World Surfing Tour event winner

“visiting

teahupo’o

for the first time? wait for the gentlest conditions”

36

Ben Thouard/red bull content pool, alex laurel/red bull content pool

Life in Tahiti takes place in the water, and Teahupo’o is one of the most infamous surfing locations in the world. Its powerful waves and the reef just below the surface of the water are a dangerous combination and even top surfers get scared. My tip for those on their first surfing trip to Teahupo’o is to wait for the gentlest conditions! Ideally, you should paddle out at low tide between five and nine in the morning. The best-case scenario would be waves from the south-west, a northerly wind and clear water.


pa r ac h ut in g

Eloy, USA A small town in the middle of the Arizona desert is the centre of the biggest skydiving region in the US, and a hotspot for parachutists who flock here from all over the world. Its favourable climate offers good conditions all year round: hardly any rain, wind or clouds. There is a large number of both skydiving clubs and suitable aircraft.

i love it here

michael clark,/red bull content pool(2)

jon devore leader of Red Bull Air Force skydive team

“The area is huge and superbly isolated and that guarantees, as a skydiver, that you won’t get in trouble with local residents because there aren’t any. Up in the air the view is terrific: sky as far as the eye can see. Extra special are jumps at sundown. Sand, rocks, cacti – all shimmering in orange light while you’re hurtling towards the ground at about 300kph. What more could you want?

“up in the air here

the view is terrific: sky as far as the eye can see”


pa rag l id in g

Victoria Falls, Zambia/Zimbabwe On the border between Zimbabwe and Zambia, these falls are the largest in Africa. The Zambezi River, almost 1,700m wide at this point, drops 100m into a narrow gully. Locals call the resulting mist of spray Mosi-oa-Tunya, the smoke that thunders. It can reach 300m into the air. Book an official guided tour by helicopter if you want to see the falls from above.

38

Thomas de Dorlodot Paraglider who once flew 225km in eight hours We took off under a full moon in powered paragliders at 5am, just above the trees. Our plan was to do a not-necessarily-permitted scenic flight over the falls before the first sightseeing helicopters arrived. It’s dangerous competing for airspace with helicopters and the authorities, including the army, have no time for paragliders. Plus, there’s nowhere really to land if you have engine trouble. But it all went well: it was a breathtaking experience. Incredible rainbows in the mist, the violent roar of the water. Faced with the biggest curtain of water on Earth, we felt like Livingstone, the first European to see the falls back in 1855.

Thomas de Dorlodot/Red Bull Content Pool, Vitek Ludvik/Red Bull Content Pool

i love it here


“it was a breathtaking

experience.

rainbows in the mist,

the violent roar of the Water�


wild wat e r

Ottawa River, Canada The Deschenes rapids, west of the capital city, are fascinating and dangerous. The Ruins, the remains of a 19th-century dam, have turned these rapids into a kayaking whirlpool and wave paradise. There is no better place for whitewater freaks, especially in the spring when the river is in flood.

Dane Jackson Kayak freestyle world champion

Ten years ago, the municipality wanted to rebuild the dilapidated dam. Thankfully they didn’t. The Ruins create extreme waves, the biggest waves I know of. Which means a huge amount of airtime when you take off and you can perform tricks that you couldn’t do anywhere else. The current is also damned fast, intense and steady. You never have to wait for a wave. Or, to put it another way, you never get your breath back. It’s paradise.

“I know nowhere else

with waves as big as here.

There’s not even a chance to get your breath back”

eric parker, John Rathwell/Red Bull Content Pool

i love it here


/redbulletin

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“every strike of the ice pick

was piercing.

the ice really

screamed”

c l imbin g ic ebergs

Labrador, Canada There are only 400 people living in the hamlet of Makkovik, on the north Canadian coast. The average annual temperature is 0°C: ideal conditions for icebergs, which drift not far off land even at the height of summer. And these are very particular icebergs. The significant difference between the temperatures of the core and the surface create such tension that an iceberg could explode at any second and fall to pieces.

i love it here Will Gadd One of the world’s best ice climbers

Christian Pondella/red bull content pool

If you want to go ice climbing in Makkovik, it will be hard to convince a local to take you out to an iceberg by boat, because they will think you’re crazy when you say what you’re planning to do. They know icebergs roll over, which is dangerous for anyone nearby. When I was on the iceberg, every strike of the ice pick went right to the tips of my toes. I thought the area I was hanging onto would break off and take me with it. And that happened when I was back in the boat. Exactly where I’d been climbing, a chunk broke off and fell into the water. A great experience, but I wouldn’t do it again.

42



Being the best Brazil player of your generation comes with a large weight of expectation, but Neymar seems to be taking it all in his stride


home

winner Neymar is the latest in a long line of superstar brazilian footballers. The 22-year-old playmaker is under no illusion about what is expected of him this summer: play well and help his team win the world cup on home soil for the first time. No pressure then I n t e r v i e w: S i m o n K u p e r , P h o t og r a p h y: Dav id C l e r i h e w, P r o d u c t i o n: J o s e f si eg l e

A

painfully thin little chap walks into our meeting place, an old industrial loft converted into a studio in a quiet corner of Barcelona. This is Neymar: the first great Brazilian footballer to emerge in over a decade, hero of teenage girls and middle-aged men, and the forward who, aged just 22, is charged with delivering his country its sixth World Cup this year. Neymar greets us with that magical smile – which you sense he uses as a weapon to charm and ward off the world. Then he walks into the dressing-room, and we are granted a sight for which some would kill: the shirt comes off. Beneath the tattoos, he still looks slight, not like the typical muscle-pack footballers of today. But then he has only been in playing in Europe, with FC Barcelona, for a year. The camera loves Neymar. He isn’t beautiful, like David Beckham, but his smile is, and he has ‘ginga’ – that peculiarly Brazilian rhythmic, jaunty way of moving, almost like dancing. Finally he sits down – shoulders hunched defensively, but still with that smile – and talks for an hour in his informal, colloquial Portuguese about what it’s like to be Neymar.

45


the world cup has always been my goal in life. It’s funny that today it’s nearly come true”

the red bulletin: How do you deal with the them teach their kids that they can make their pressure of the whole country asking you to dreams come true, if they fight and work for them. win the World Cup? I think you can make any dream come true. neymar: It’s been a dream since I was young, and Your gift is dribbling. Did you copy feints from today it’s right before me: I’m Brazil’s number 10, other players? I’m going to play the World Cup, in my own country. I followed Robinho closely because when I went to I can’t see that as pressure. It has to give me pride Santos, he was the star there. He’s my idol, and he and happiness to take onto the pitch. Everyone says dribbled a lot. And I’d watch Ronaldinho, Ronaldo, winning the World Cup is an indescribable joy, so I’m Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo; any skilful player you can dying to feel that myself. I can’t wait to shout “We’re think of, I’ve seen videos of them. In kickabouts or champions!” They say, “You’re under pressure, being training, I’d try and do the same. When it was game the big name in the squad.” I’m not under pressure, time it would come naturally. All dribbles where I’m happy. I’ve always done things my way. I’ve had you’re trying something different, it’s about practising press with me since I was 13, saying I’d be the new them. I don’t have a trick that I’ve invented yet. Robinho. I’m someone who doesn’t really worry. If I have normal dribbles like using your body to trick you don’t tell me that I’m Neymar and that I play for the opponent, or the step-over, which I train and Barcelona and Brazil, I’ll forget it. People imagine use a lot. I’ve used Zidane’s roulette. I’ve copied a lot. me as they see me on television, but I’m completely Has dancing helped develop your football? different because I don’t feel pressure about anything. I think every Brazilian likes to dance a little. Put on What are your memories of Brazil’s last victory some music that gets you in the mood, and a Brazilian in the World Cup, in 2002? might be sitting down, but he’ll always dance a little. I was 10, so I understood football. I woke up before I come from a family that loves samba and pagode. dawn to watch the final at home. I even had Ronaldo’s I think I have a little Brazilian ginga, something in haircut. I watched with my parents and sister, everyone the hips. I love to mess around with friends, to dance. together. Then we went to my granny’s house, we had It even got into my goal celebrations at Santos: a barbecue, everyone shouting “We’re Champions!” that‘s how we’d have fun, scoring and doing dances like real fans. The World Cup has always been my in tribute to a singer friend or to the song. goal in life. It’s funny that today it’s nearly come true. Your football looks joyful. Do you still feel joy How was your childhood? playing or is it more a job now? Tough. We didn’t have much money, but It’s fun that has to be managed. You I never went hungry, my Dad always must be serious with it. But I’m always Full name provided. I don’t think I was ever unhappy, happy when I play. When you’re happy, Neymar da Silva even if I didn’t have what my friends had, things naturally work out; when you’re Santos Júnior as they had more money. There’s a story sad, things never work out. Born I told my mum: that when I became rich, In 2010, you quarrelled on the field with February 5, 1992, I’d buy a cookie factory so I could eat Santos’s coach after he stopped you Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil cookies whenever I wanted. So there taking a penalty. Did that change you? Pelé who? were all these funny things I remember. It was one of the worst moments of my Neymar is the only I never complained or asked, “God, why life because I knew I was wrong. After the Brazilian athlete to ever grace the cover am I poor?” I always fought for everything, match I apologised to the coach. But what of Time magazine. all my family was like that. I always went shook me most was arriving home and Team talk to school; I wasn’t the kid who always finding my mum crying. She said she’d There’s a good chance paid attention, but I obeyed my parents. watched it on TV and that wasn’t the son Neymar will come up My dad was a footballer, and knows the she had raised. I cried all night, I didn’t against some Barça footballer’s path. He always knew what sleep. It made me grow into a man. teammates at the was going to happen, and maybe I don’t I think that was my worst moment in World Cup. “We joke, saying, ‘We’re going go through the same difficulties he did. football because it involved the whole to win it,’” he reveals. Did your childhood inspire you to start family. My dad was ill then, in bed, and “I’ve joked with Messi the Neymar Jr Institute, which uses my mum said he’d always fought for me. and said, “This one sport to help needy young people? How do you look back on your first is Brazil’s, and I’ve The institute was founded in Praia season at Barcelona? told Iniesta and Pique, Grande, 50m from where I lived. The It wasn’t perfect, but it wasn’t bad. It’s ‘You’ve already won one, let us win this one.’” point was to inform parents, to help my first time living outside my country. 46


“My style? I can’t explain it, but you guys who watch me know how I am. I’m chilled”


‘We’re all monkeys’ means we’re all the same, whether you’re white, yellow, rich or poor”


We’re all close, we joke around,

egos are left at the door. We only have one goal. Since we all help each other, we’ll very likely achieve it” I miss my friends and family. It was hard at first. I’ve learned a lot, professionally, but also in my personal life. I study my teammates, what they talk about, how they act with other people. I take a little from many players and adapt it to my style. Some people are good on the pitch, others off it, some show good behaviour in training. I pick attributes from each one. What’s surprised you about Lionel Messi, seeing him every day here? He surprised me in every way. Before coming here, I heard all the horrible things people say: that he’s very reserved and doesn’t talk to anyone. Now I see it completely differently. Aside from being the genius, off the pitch he’s always great with me – not just me, but when I see him with other people too. There’s nothing bad I can say about him. What prompted your banana campaign, #somostodomacacos (“we’re all monkeys”), on social media against racism? The picture of you and your son with bananas went viral. The motivation is that I suffered racism in other matches. I think racism is practised by people without brains. I talked to my dad and people working for us, and the campaign was all practically ready. Then when this incident happened with Daniel [Alves, his Barcelona teammate who ate a banana thrown at him on the pitch], I thought it was the moment to launch this campaign. It was a joke: “we’re all monkeys” means we’re all the same, whether you’re white, yellow, rich or poor. You’re close to fans via social media, but they ask a lot of you. Does that bother you? It doesn’t as such. What bothers me is when they get into my personal life. I understand that fans love knowing everything, but my personal life is when I’m the same as anyone else’s. It was a little difficult to get used to at first when I was quite shy, but nowadays I’m used to it. I’ve always been the way I am, speaking to everyone, playing around. I’ve never changed and never improved. Diego Maradona used to long for the days before fame. Do you ever feel that? No… I get what he means. It’s difficult for me to do what a normal person does. For example, I can’t take my son to the beach in Santos. It’ll get crowded, people will take photos. In the street, a Brazilian will spot you a mile away. He’ll run over shouting, “Neymar!” Here in Barcelona, they’re more like, “Neymar, could I have a photo with you?” They’re more relaxed. You do miss taking your child to the fair or beach. I think that’s what he meant. But I don’t complain about it because this is something I asked of God. I always told Him I wanted to be

a footballer, to be famous, to give my family everything they want. I have to enjoy even the annoying parts. I always find a way to have fun, whether it’s going clubbing, to the beach, the cinema. There’s always someone who recognises you, and I will face them. If I have to talk to 50 people, I will. The moment I step onto the street, I have to remember I’m the Neymar everyone knows. But at home, I’m the Neymar the family knows. I’m not even Neymar, I’m ‘Juninho’ – I’m someone else. At home, you do things that people aren’t allowed to see! Let’s talk about Brazil’s team, the Seleçâo. Firstly, who chooses the dressing-room music? Anyone can choose a song. People like pagode, funk, sertanejo. I always go to the stadium wearing headphones, listening to gospel music. Then, to get in the mood, we put a pagode on the hi-fi so everyone can listen. We’re all close, we joke around, egos are left at the door. We only have one goal. Since we all help each other, we’ll very likely achieve it. Brazil’s coach, Felipe Scolari, won the 2002 World Cup. What does he tell you about that? He talks a lot about it. He says the World Cup is the toughest tournament. There’s no room for error, you must be at full speed from the get-go. It’s a short tournament where your margin of error is much smaller than in other matches. And he talks about the pleasure of winning, how good it feels. He’s certainly going to help us win another one. During last year’s Confederations Cup, Brazilians protested against corruption, poor public services and the cost of stadia. A banner at one of the protests said, ‘A teacher is worth more than Neymar’. What’s your response? I think the teacher‘s salaries have to be valued like all the professions. Even us football players because only five per cent receive more than the others. I agree that all us need to fight for better salary, better days and a great world with education, health and security. The value must exist in all areas. Should Brazilians protest again at the World Cup? I think we’ve already had the protests we needed, but I’m always for the protests. If it’s without violence, I don’t see any problem in people wanting to fight for a better country. I’m with the people. Now that the World Cup is happening, I think we have to enjoy it. We have this opportunity to show the world that we’re a country that can host any event, that can welcome any kind of person, everything that’s good about Brazil, not only the bad things. Will Brazil win the World Cup? It’s what I want more than anything.  neymaroficial.com

49


The future of football: Robotinho dribbles around Iron Rush

ri se of the mach i ne s

2060: Metal-Man City 1 Artificial Madrid 1 “It won’t be too long before androids play against each other,” says futurologist Dr Ian Pearson, “in what will be pretty poor football games, but give it 40 years and these things will develop a lot. Androids will get better very quickly, to the point where they could play alongside humans, then better than humans, so if we wanted them to play alongside us we’d have to handicap them to stop them running around at 50mph and kicking the ball far harder and more accurately than any human could. At some point you have to limit it to human capabilities, or have a different game for robots that isn’t football. Robots also offer an even greater connection to fans. Could a crowd, or all the fans watching on TV, control a robot player by feeding him instructions? You would have to have a very sophisticated computer to process all the data, but it will be possible.” 50

the red bulletin


Tika Taka Tech

Robot players, cameras in the pitch and virtual reality training: they’ll be in football within 50 years. You don’t think? It’s scientific inevitability Word s: Paul Wil son Illu st rat ion s : Tom Mack i nge r

the red bulletin

51


D

r Ian Pearson is a futurologist. In 1991, he invented text messaging. “I was working at British Telecom at the time and BT decided that nobody would want to bother sending texts because people had phones and answer phones. So we didn’t develop it and it happened independently as other people had the same idea. We didn’t patent it. It could have been a good one, but that’s with the benefit of hindsight.” It is with foresight that Dr Pearson, now head of futures consultancy Futurizon, has forged a career. He says that a futurologist is an engineer who applies common sense to uncommon knowledge. “Most engineers come up No crystal ball needed: with the same ideas; it’s Dr Ian Pearson more or less the same science. Robotics, AI, LED lighting – we all know how fast these fields are moving. Predicting is common sense from an engineering point of view, really.” Dr Pearson was commissioned by Taiwanese smartphone and tablet firm HTC to write a report, The Future Of Football, to see how technology and the beautiful game will intertwine over the next 50 years. Here he explains why the androids are coming, and how refs may one day never be blind – plus Rio Ferdinand gives a player’s eye view of the future. 52

officials using augmented reality

2025: “The ref-eree’s on wi-fi! The ref-eree’s on wi-fi!” “Wearing smart eyewear, or active contact lenses, a referee could have images superimposed in his field of view so he can look at a moment of play from whatever angle he wants, look at all the data that has been collected and make a decision based on that. If he’s a long way from the action, then he can blow his whistle, replay the incident for a few seconds and make his decision. It would liberate him to concentrate on his decisions, with equipment to monitor technical detail – there is indisputable data, already available to others, which he could be provided with to inform his decisions. If refereeing was just about where a player is when something happens, a robot could do that. But the intent has to be decided with a human judgement, and that goes far beyond the data available.”

the red bulletin


In football’s future the referee will only be blind if the batteries in his eyewear go flat

TV cameras in the turf and on players

2020: Ball’s-eye view

Televised football as we know it will be revolutionised by a new set of camera positions and angles

the red bulletin

“Putting cameras in the pitch is not a trivial thing to do, but the technology does exist now and you could do it next year if you were determined. The cameras would have to be powered, so you’d need to rip up the turf and lay in wiring, and put sensors in them so that they retract when a player comes close. With a lot of technologies, and I suspect it would be the case with this one, health and safety regulations slow it down, rather than the tech itself. You can get cameras the same size as a piece of jewellery now, so to have something even smaller, the size of a button weighing a fraction of an ounce, wouldn’t be difficult. Or a patch, with a camera sewn in, which forms part of the logo or sponsor name on a shirt. A lot of companies are working on systems in footwear that will power devices, so very soon you could have football boots powering a camera inside them.” 53


real-time data given to fans

2040: #jonseysgothighbloodsugar #subjonsey “You can imagine a lot of computing equipment doing analysis and creating data about a player – heart rate is too high, too much stress in his leg – to be used by a manager during the game, and also in training. Will the rules of football allow earpieces for players, so that a manager doesn’t have to stand and yell over the noise of the crowd? Those are debates that the game will have at higher levels. And what would fans do

with that real-time data? They could use Twitter hashtags to feed analysis to the clubs, who could decide whether that was useful or not. I’m sure that some of the data could be misused for chants: if you make a tool, then someone is going to bang someone on the head with it. But some people would say it would make the game more fun, and create a closer relationship between fans and players.”

A pint, a song and data analysis: fans’ matchday in 25 years?

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the red bulletin


Rio Ferdinand: “ Leave it the way it is”

the view from Rio

Ferdinand’s Future Of Football

Instead of studying match footage, players learn about opposition tactics in simulations

virtual reality in training

2045: Man-to-hologram marking

Getty Images

“In training, a manager discusses a certain type of attack or defence, then the players try to recreate it. But it would be so much better to have a computer simulation of the opposition, or of just one player, if it’s about trying to handle a certain player in a certain situation. If you can have a computer recreate a match situation on a full pitch, that is so much better. It’s kind of like the holodeck in Star Trek, and it’s very sophisticated, so it’s 30 years away. Thirty years is a long time in technology development: 30 years ago we were just starting to see CDs come out. This technology could also be made available to fans, in a football game of some kind, so that they can play against real players. Technology really is good for getting people involved in something in ways that they otherwise couldn’t manage. In this case, that would lead more kids to play football for real.”

the red bulletin

“I think the game is going to be taken over by technology,” says the 35-year-old defender, who has won six Premier League titles with Manchester United, and 81 caps for England. “The way the world is going, everything seems to be about tech and to me it seems that football wants to be a part of that. “But my personal feeling is that they should leave it the way it is. All the Prozone stats stuff is great, but when tech messes with decisions in the game, I don’t like it. I don’t like goal-line technology, or video analysis to see if something is a free kick or a foul. It should be left to human error, because that creates the debate. Radio shows, TV shows, print media, social media, all of that. Waiting a minute to see if something is right or wrong takes out an element of excitement, the not-knowing, and that is a great part of the game. “Man United lost the league when Didier Drogba scored a goal at Old Trafford [in April 2010], he was offside by about two yards, Chelsea won the game and went on to win the league that year. That killed me. But at the same time, I know I’ve played in games that we’ve won because the referee made a mistake, or didn’t see something. It all adds to the up-and-down, the fire in the game. I like that. “I also like technology in boots and kit. I’ve got an area in my house, in the floor of a corridor, which has got boots from every season I’ve played. It lights up. Quite a cool thing. It shows how much the boots have changed. Huge difference in colours, of course – from mainly black to ridiculous – but also in the weight of the boots and the materials. Totally different. But it can’t go too far in terms of lightness of material because a player still needs protection in the tackle. Your feet are your tools, and they need to be taken care of.” 55


Linkin Park’s first five studio albums t o pp e d t h e a l b u m c h a r t s a r o u n d t h e w o r l d . their debut has sold more than 27 million copies.

land This is Linkin Park (from left): Chester Bennington, Dave Farrell, Brad Delson, Joe Hahn, Rob Bourdon, Mike Shinoda

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of


linkin as the music industry struggled through seismic uphe ava l, the ba nd h as f igur ed out how to m a k e hit s a n d m o n e y. W h at d o t h e y k n o w t h at o t h e r s d o n ’ t ?

Bill Boyd

Words: Ann Donahue


W

hen Linkin Park released their first album, Hybrid Theory, in 2000, people still bought cassettes to listen to in the tape decks of their car, Napster was just taking off and the best way to hear new music was on the radio. Times have changed, and no band has adapted better than Linkin Park. With the release of their latest album, The Hunting Party, they can anticipate hitting the top of the album charts for the fifth time in a row, a streak that extends more than 10 years. A thrashy guitar throwback to the days when rock music actually rocked, The Hunting Party has been marketed and distributed in the same innovative style that has earned the six-piece fan allegiance for more than a decade, this time employing everything from smartphone apps to video games. Band founder and rapper Mike Shinoda and bassist Dave Farrell sat down with The Red Bulletin in West Hollywood to talk about the state of rock and the brave new world of geekery.

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the red bulletin: The Hunting Party has a heavy, propulsive sound. It’s a style not often heard these days. Why did you take that route? mike shinoda: I read a piece somewhere online with the headline ‘Rock Music Sucks Now And It’s Depressing’. Its tone was, think back to Nirvana, and then think about where rock is at right now. His gripe was, ‘Really? Rock is like Mumford & Sons?’ The word he used was ‘pussified’ rock. I have felt this way at various points – that there’s this thing that is missing out there that I want to hear. If we wanted to fill that void, where would we go to fill it? What would we listen to? It ended up being albums like The Shape Of Punk To Come by Refused, At the Drive-In’s Relationship Of Command and the first couple of records by Helmet. When I go back to those albums, I feel like that’s the visceral, grimy inspired music. You’re about to go on a massive tour with Thirty Seconds To Mars and AFI. It seems like this kind of heavy rock music is best when it’s played live in front of a lot of people. dave farrell: Totally. It’s good that the red bulletin


The band that still rocks: Linkin Park’s Carnivores Tour takes in huge arenas and stadia across the US, with Thirty Seconds to Mars and AFI supporting

Corbis, getty images

“Ov er tim e, t ec h n olo gy is s o m e t hing t h at ’s b uilt i n to t he band. We did t wo pr o m ot ions t h is tim e t hat I was real ly exc i ted ab out: S h a za m and P r oj ect Spar k” you heard that, too, because at different points in the process for me, part of the way you think about what you’re hearing is, ‘Would it be fun to play live?’ During the research for this interview, we learned that Hybrid Theory came out on cassette, which speaks volumes about how long you’ve been around. ms: I was surprised to find out that a lot of our albums are still released on cassette. Certain territories, particularly Asia, love the cassette. df: Particularly Nashville. ms: Particularly truck stops and Cracker Barrel restaurants. They love cassette. But yeah, I’ll do you one better than that. Back when we were starting out and playing clubs in LA, we started a mailing list for people to sign up to if they were interested in more info from the band, and more often than not they would sign up with their snail mail home address because people didn’t have email yet. df: Those were the days. When we started touring, I didn’t even have a cell phone. That was crazy. ms: And neither did our crew! When we first started hiring crew, cell phones were new and people would still check in with the red bulletin

venues on landline phones. We’d pull over and somebody would get on the pay phone and call the venue. For real. df: And ask for directions. ms: It was crazy. So while some of your music is still released on cassette, your latest album was launched with help from mobile music recognition app Shazam. ms: We did two promotions this time that I was really excited about, and Shazam was one of them, because I use it, and everybody uses it. I remember the first time I used it, we were in Mexico, and I was sitting at the little bar in the hotel. It was outside on the beach, and it was so nice. This cool song came on, and I was like, ‘Oh my God, I just got this new app,’ and it worked! So the promotion was that any time anybody Shazamed anything, they got their results and a banner for Linkin Park’s new song, and that was the first place anyone could hear it. The other thing that we did that was really exciting is instead of making a video for Guilty All the Same, we worked with Microsoft’s Project Spark. They have this new community-slash-technology that allows people to make and remix their own games in a social way. You’ve also been involved with video games: as well as recording a song for Call Of Duty, in 2010 you created your own multiplayer smartphone app game called 8-Bit Rebellion. Are you gamers? df: We have a history of video games extending back to like when we were six years old. ms: Were you ever, like, super jealous that you had a friend that had a ColecoVision, or whatever? df: Yeah! Baseball on Intellivision was better than baseball on the Atari 2600. ms: Totally! I had a cousin that had an Intellivision, and I couldn’t have been a bigger pest to my parents about getting

one. They never got us one, but once I got a generation one Nintendo, that literally defined me for like years. df: My brother and I, on the game RBI Baseball, we used to keep stats. We set up our whole season, with each team playing each other team maybe three times. ms: You played a whole season?! df: Dude. It took us months and months and months. And we’d always update, from the game, the top pitchers, the top batting averages, stolen bases. It was really crazy. Technology, games and otherwise, has changed radically since then – do you think you’ve adapted well? ms: Over time, the technology part of it is something that’s just built in to the band. It’s as simple as, like, this morning, I just showed Chester [Bennington, the lead singer] this photo app I just found out about, Facetune. It’s a photoshopping, airbrushing thing that’s really good at smoothing out people’s faces and wrinkles. And I know that some people are using that to glamorise their photos, but I want to use it to make people look really crazy. I want to take somebody’s picture, and then I want to zombiefy it, and then I want to take them into Facetune and smooth it out. And this is the dumb stuff that goes on in my head! Technology isn’t exciting because we’re going to change the world, it’s exciting because I get to kill time doing dumb shit that makes my friends laugh. What about social media? ms: I’m not a believer that every band or every person with a fan base needs to be on social media. We have two guys in the band, Brad [Delson, guitarist] and Rob [Bourdon, drummer], that do not have a Facebook account, do not have a Twitter account and don’t have an Instagram account. df: Thankfully. ms: Right? First of all, it would be madness. Second of all, madness in the most boring sense. Brad’s sense of humour does not lend itself to Twitter. df: My Twitter feed is usually more personal. Not in the sense of here’s my family, but in the sense of this is my idea of a funny joke and has nothing to do with the band. It’s more of my personality than information about what’s coming up. ms: That’s your Twitter feed? What about your Tinder feed? df: That gets crazy. And if you follow me on Pinterest, watch out, because it’s about to get wild. linkinpark.com

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Sorted in Soweto Above: Amaphiko Academy participants wind down at Uncle Tom’s Community Centre. Below: Eugenio Netto and Beto Chaves brought a Brazilian perspective to the Amaphiko Academy. Bottom right: Host Ian Calvert takes participants through their schedule


lift  o ff

T h e i n a u g u r a l Red Bull Amaphiko Academy h e l p e d S o u t h A f r i c a ’ s m o st p r o m i s i n g s o c i a l i n n o v a t o r s p e r f e c t t h e i r st r a t e g i e s o f s o l v i n g c o m m u n i t y problems through entrepreneurship Words: Kwanele Sosibo  Photography: Sydelle Willow Smith

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T

Red Bull amaphiko academy p a rt i c i p a n ts

New talent, fresh ideas (left to right, top to bottom): Siphiwe Ngwenya, Meshack Sitoe, Thokoza Mjo, Lauren Joseph, Vuyo Mayesa, Ntabiseng Letsoso, Thandazile Raletooane, Sifiso Ngobese, Zakheni Ngubo

hato Kgatlhanye, co-founder of Rethaka Repurpose Schoolbags, seemed nervous when she sat on the couch to introduce herself at the Red Bull Amaphiko Academy. But when she announced that she’d quit her job the day before, her eyes shone behind her spectacles. “I guess this is like starting with a clean slate,” she said. “Resigning was a way of saying that I actually am serious about being a social entrepreneur and making that commitment loud and clear: this is what I’m going to do. I don’t know how I’m gonna survive; I never know how, but that’s fine!” Red Bull Amaphiko Academy, a ground-breaking social entrepreneurship conference featuring 18 participants from all corners of South Africa, was all about leaps of faith and breakthroughs. Ten intense days of lectures and breakaway ‘kraal’ sessions were kickstarted by Red Bull’s director of high performance Andy Walshe, who fascinated the audience with tricks to “hack talent”, a concept which aims to smash preconceived performance boundaries by tapping into underestimated personal strengths. With her thought patterns rearranged, Kgatlhanye, for one, had several epiphanies. She realised that the Rethaka range, which had premiered with repurposed

Smiling along Academy participants leave their smiles, courtesy of Berlin street artists Mental Gassi, on a fence outside Uncle Tom's Community Centre. The rest of the centre underwent a major transformation at the hands of public art aficionados Trinity Session

schoolbags fitted with a solar-powered lid to aid late-night studying, was ripe for expansion. So, now there is Purpo: a new brand of laptop cases, iPad sleeves, and travel and change purses. There are also shopping bags, but the revamp sparked an entire brand revolution that made the initial schoolbag product a “whole lot more attractive” for kids by refining the design and craftsmanship. It was an idea from one of the Academy mentors that she ran with – letting the higher LSM product subsidise the more accessible one. A few weeks after the Academy, Kgatlhanye laughed when asked about how she’s handling “that rent issue”. “You know, I don’t stress about my rent because my business has grown exponentially,” she said. Instead of sourcing their raw materials (discarded plastic bags) from landfills, Rethaka will soon be in partnership with Rustenburg municipality. “There’s been such a huge improvement we’ve had to hire two more staff!” 63


now hear this Crowd-sourced funding, an enduring theme, made its mark on pretty much everyone, but the knock-on effect on Thokoza Mjo’s product was unique. Teaching crowd-funding to those who participate in her Beyond the Lemonade Stand project (where kids pursue tasks they consider out of their reach), she was able to expand a typical two-year programme by including short-term technical courses (like app development) for more privileged kids who, in turn, used crowd-funding to sponsor another group’s project. While some participants – like Zakheni Ngubo, the brains behind the Syafunda tutoring app – needed both their thinking and the structure of their products untangled, other characters like dancer Jarrel Mathebula needed practical pep talks on how to navigate the treachery of the corporate world. There was a particularly revealing session where Mathebula let it slip that his concept for a dance competition had been stolen in the kind of brand theft often found in entrepreneurship circles. For all his street smarts, Mathebula had been blindsided. Instead of being cut down to size, he was given a pep talk, 64

Above: Academy studio manager Shallom Johnson gets sunkissed in Mzimhlophe during the bicycle tour of Soweto. Right: An inspiring exchange of ideas was a key feature of the events during Academy week

encouraging him to get legal aid and reclaim the idea, or move on. While Mathebula searched within himself for clarity, urban farmer Moegamat Ganief Manuel looked for ways to use Walshe's concepts to mobilise a community, as his pioneering aquaponic technique (which farms fish, and uses their waste to grow vegetables) needs community traction if his dream of eliminating food insecurity from South Africa is to be realised. Much of the Academy’s focus was on self-development, with the morning lectures spurring inspiration on into the afternoon’s specialised sessions. There were several moments when host Ian Calvert stressed that participants should tailor the experience according to their own needs, and the more experienced participants, like Siphiwe


Street Style From left, top to bottom: Rayne Moses, Thato Kgatlhanye, Jarrel Mathebula and Sechaba Teefu. Participants not pictured: Moegamat Ganief Manuel, Joshua Cox, Theo Ndindwa, Yonela Khetsheza and Ramona Kasavan

Ngwenya from the Maboneng Township Arts Experience, needed no second invitation to exploit the presence under one roof of some of the world’s greatest thinkers and some of the country’s brightest future potential. The mix of lecturers was designed to appeal to different aspects of the participants’ world views, with Pat Pillai of Life College speaking to his audience’s sense of self-determination, and the link between entrepreneurship and social conscience. Coming from a corporate background, Sifiso Ngobese of Unconventional Media Solutions was particularly sensitive to the perception that social entrepreneurs regard money as a dirty word. This was an idea that differed from the approach of Mundano, whose own Pimp My Carroça campaign aimed not to turn Brazilian street reclaimers into mobile advertising billboards, but to give them visibility in the form of aesthetically improved carroças (carts) and other related services.

“Pat Pillai said something that stood out for me,” said Ngobese. “He said that as social entrepreneurs our aim is do good in society, but we’re also running a business. We should be bold in communicating it. It’s something we should identify with. In meetings we sugarcoat it, but we shouldn’t be shy in communicating that we want to make money. We need to be able to tell a story that is sellable and appealing to convince people to see value in our ideas.” Ludwick Marishane – youthful, brashly articulate and with his eye on the proverbial prize – struck another chord with his listeners. “People who are doing good in the community are not allowed to enjoy the excess of success,” he said, while preaching the importance of separating one’s business and bank accounts. “Every business is a mess; as an entrepreneur, you try to keep it from falling apart.” Although Uncle Tom’s Community Centre in Orlando West had been transformed into a fantastic home away from home for the participants – from the pastel pastings on the toilet tiles to reconfigured furniture in the circular

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the mentors Left to right: Entrepreneur Ludwick Marishane answers questions about his product, DryBath; Martha Cooper ready to capture another Amaphiko moment; Julius Akinyemi from MIT Media Lab talks innovation

kraals – one of the highlights of the Red Bull Amaphiko Academy experience was a bike tour that stopped off at iconic neighbourhood spots like the former women’s hostel in Mzimhlophe, Orlando Stadium, Mooki Street and the Hastings Ndlovu site (where the first victim of the June 1976 uprisings was killed). During the ride, Vuyo Mayesa of the Kimberley-based Mayibuye 52 had a brainwave. A similar heritage project (which he was hoping to beef up) is on the go in Kimberley, but the physicality of this bicycle tour – as opposed to driving or even walking – had him talking to Lebo from Soweto Backpackers about the possibility of franchising the concept of township bicycle tours. There were also excursions into Kliptown, for the screening of Bryan

“These people are already changing the world, we're just giving them more tools to do it”

s p r ay j o b Left: Cape Town graffiti artist Falko took time out from the Academy to brighten up some walls in Kliptown, Soweto. The effect was remarkable

Little’s African Cypher and Viviane Blumenschein’s Dance For All, and to visit a street art project involving graffiti artists Falko, Breeze and Mundano that was taking shape under the watchful lens of acclaimed photographer Martha Cooper. A recurring motif in the mural-style pieces Falko was painting was the rooster. “The rooster has human qualities,” he explained. “He is a caregiver but rarely ventures out of his environment.” The project was transformative without being self-conscious. Its effect on Kliptown residents was contagious, precisely because it offered aesthetic beauty in a place where, as Breeze stated, “people only care when it’s election time”. As the Academy progressed, the impact of what was essentially a supercharged life skills boot camp was clear to those tasked with mentoring South Africa’s premier game-changers. “These people are already changing the world – we’re just giving them more tools to do it,” said Andy Walshe. “When you give people this kind of experience, you’re not sure how they will take it. Some have latched on to the ideas and will know what to share [when they leave], others were not quite sure what to experience. Some will have lost focus as a result, which is fine, because when they come back around and open their eyes, their horizons will have expanded. Then they’ll start thinking about how these concepts work for them.” For Meshack Sitoe, the Academy was merely the end of the beginning. “I’ve changed the business model of Fadimehang Mental Care into two separate companies: Staunch (a crafts and handiwork element) and Fadimehang (the parent company),” he said. “I’ve been developing content for the website and the Live Mag guys [who ran a content studio at the Academy] have created a logo for Staunch. Writer and filmmaker Roger Young is coming in a few weeks to do a YouTube channel for us. And I now count Andy Walshe as a mentor. Everything is continuous.” amaphiko.redbull.com the red bulletin


JHB 46286/RW As seen on DStv/SuperSport

2014 FIFA WORLD CUP BRAZILTM ON SUPERSPORT ALL 64 GAMES LIVE

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OFFICIAL BROADCASTER


skate EYE skateboarder-turned-PHOTOGRAPHER ARTo saari was on the front line as his sport burst into the mainstream. here, he tells stories of the shots that helped define skating words: Ann Donahue


Says Arto Saari: “Louie Lopez blasting a very stylish frontside ollie over the hip in my pool”

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Facing page: “This is a rad DIY spot constructed by Pontus Alv in Malmo, Sweden. Here, Pontus and Oski Rosenberg are double trouble”

“This invert nose grab by Willis Kimbel at Washington Street skatepark in San Diego, USA, was one of the best things I’d seen in a while”

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“Scott Oster is epic. I have been lucky to be able to witness some of the manoeuvres he has executed with style and grace in my pit of concrete. Here is a photo of a perfect slash�

Facing page: (clockwise from top left) skaters Jay Adams, Heath Kirchart, Steve Olson, and Willis Kimbel


the red bulletin

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Above: “I had an eerie feeling when I was shooting this, but after seeing Curren Caples perform this manoeuvre like it was child’s play I figured my worries were pointless. This is Curren doing a boneless under one of the freeways in Melbourne, Australia.” Below: “Andrew Reynolds doing a stylish frontside flip”


Above: “Curren Caples executing a very stylish kickflip in Malmo, Sweden.” Below: “My dog, Banger, and freshly blasted concrete in my garden”

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“Ryan Sheckler, here in Sydney, Australia, has an incredible amount of talent and skill on a skateboard, with strength and style and absolute passion�


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Facing page: “I call these ‘Pooltown 1 and 2’. These two collages are the result of four years of skating and shooting different pools with my friends. This, to me, represents the very essence of skateboarding: fun”

Above: “This is a photo of my friend Kynan Tait on an excursion to the Arctic Circle, through North America, on his bike. One of the raddest trips I’ve ever been on and one of the best photos I’ve ever shot”

ARTO SAARI Key to taking great skate shots, says the Finnish photographer, a house with a drained pool in the garden. Saari captures his friends from the skating world in their most unguarded, yet still triumphant, moments. One of his favourites in this collection is the opening image of 19-year-old Louie Lopez. “Louie is one of the best up-and-coming skateboarders. He is where style and skill come together in extraordinary fashion.” the red bulletin

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WINGS FOR EVERY TASTE.

CRANBERRY. LIME. BLUEBERRY. AND THE EFFECT OF RED BULL.


Wood you believe it? A bamboo speaker for your iPhone. MUSIC, page 86

Where to go and what to do

ac t i o n ! T r a v e l   /   G e a r   /   T r a i n i n g   /   N i g h t l i f e   /   M U S I C     /   p a r t i e s /   c i t i e s   /   c l u b s   /   E v e n ts

Stephen Frink

Depth charge The world’s fastest mini sub takes you to places other mini subs can’t reach travel, page 82

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Action!

travel

Deep impact: speed past sharks and turtles in the world’s fastest bubble sub

And Anoth er Thing to do after resurfacing

Row out For Hawaiian adventure on top of the water, try a hardcore 16-mile kayak trip along the remote and stunning Na Pali Coast, battling strong seas and aching biceps. hawaiiactive.com

Sub club SUPER AVIATOR  Why swim underwater when you can fly, in this one-of-a-kind submersible

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Heat up Hike to the Kilauea Volcano, which has been continuously erupting since 1983, and get within feet of Pahoehoe, as the molten lava flows are known. kalapanalavaboat.com

Advice from the inside Learn to fly “It’s not a passive experience,” says John Lewis. “Both cockpits have full flight controls, and we don’t carry passengers. To be in the sub, you need to learn to operate the sub. The actual flying is easy. Anyone who’s played video games figures out the joystick and rudder pedals pretty quickly.”

Think outside the cockpit

“Everybody’s seen Das Boot and

thinks being in a sub is going to be a claustrophobic experience,” says John Englander. “But once the water comes down over the top of the Super Aviator, the dome disappears, it’s optically perfect, so you don’t get any sort of distortion. It’s like flying in an open biplane.”

Take in We don’t expect you to take on Jaws, Hawaii’s colossal surf break, but a beer on the beach watching world-class surfers do it is the next best thing. gohawaii.com

the red bulletin

Stephen Frink, shutterstock(2), Brian Bielmann/Red Bull Content Pool

The Super Aviator is less a submarine more an underwater plane. Where other mini-subs can be slow and cumbersome, the Super Aviator is sleek and manoeuvrable, able to stop and hover, do banking turns and keep up with marine mammals that swim alongside. It’s seat-of-the-pants stuff. It was developed by Sub Aviator Systems as a prototype for their Orca sub, which is now available to anyone with a couple of million to spare. For lesser mortals, the company’s co-founder and managing director, John Lewis, will be your co-pilot on the Super Aviator during free time on the film and scientific projects for which it’s used. “The max speed for the Super Aviator is six knots,” says Lewis. “All conventional bubble subs max out at three knots. That’s fine if you’re near a reef, but if there’s any current you can’t deploy them. The Super Aviator can operate perfectly in a current, so there’s a wealth of new places you can go.” John Englander from Florida went down in the sub off Hawaii. “As an oceanographer, I’ve spent thousands of hours in Scuba gear,” he says. “I’ve also been in a sub before, but being in the Super Aviator was a new, exhilarating experience. It moves at far higher speeds than other subs or divers. It’s a great feeling and you’re not encumbered by equipment. It feels weird to be in Super Aviator a dry, comfortable environment experiences in and have an amazing view of Hawaii start from US$3,350 for a day. the underwater world. It’s right there. It feels like there’s nothing incredibleadventures.com between you and the water.”


Action!

get the gear

WELLCO I LED MAC H I N E RICKIE FOWLER USES COBRA CLUBS AND GEAR. HERE’S WHY

Light fantastic They’re tough, durable and moisture-wicking and each shoe weighs just 366g

All tied up A lacing system separate from the upper helps to support your foot more correctly

BIO CELL PRO DRIVER Eight different loft settings, which adjust the club head angle, mean you can fine-tune the trajectory of the ball.

Sole aims Grooves here aid flexibility, ensuring that the shoe moves only when it should

BIO CELL IRON

Sticking point Puma’s Swing Speed Quill spikes system is a hit with those who favour stability

There’s tungsten in the club heads: of the long and mid-length irons, for forgiveness, and in the short ones, to aid control.

Oranges and greens   G oLF  RICKIE FOWLER BRINGS COLOUR TO THE FAIRWAYS, BUT HIS NEW SHOES ARE MUCH MORE THAN JUST A FASHION STATEMENT Major factor: Rickie Fowler is a good outside bet for the US Open at Pinehurst on June 12-15

the red bulletin

When Rickie Fowler turned pro, aged 20, it wasn’t just his golfing prowess that made him stand out. His colourful attire has, along with his ability to hit the greens, become something of a trademark. The Californian, who won the 2010 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year Award and tied fifth at this year’s Masters,

worked with Puma on a new range of golf shoes, which of course is available in fabulous Fowler shades. “The levels of flexibility, lateral support and comfort are perfect,’ says the 25-year-old. “The Bio­fusion is the best shoe I’ve ever worn and it provides ideal support on my swing.” rickiefowler.com

BIO STAFF BAG In which Rickie Fowler’s caddy, Joe Skovron, lugs about 20kg of equipment and provisions over 18 holes. cobragolf.com

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Action!

City Guide

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TOp Five Director and filmmaker Cheng Liang

Where East meets West   S hanghai  filmmaker CHENG LIANG on where to find boozy expats, the best steamed dumplings and the most unique bird market in the chinese megacity “What’s special about Shanghai? It’s a metropolis showing how modern and ancient Chinese society is,” says Cheng Liang, an up-and-coming director with a passion for bringing Shanghainese culture to the screen. His silent short movie City Of Black And White has been viewed more than two million times on Chinese websites and he’s touting his next project, an adaptation of Lu Wenfu’s novel Gourmet, at the Cannes Film Festival. “As a former colonial city, Shanghai has always had a diverse atmosphere,” he says, “and Western and Chinese culture have merged into a unique Shanghainese trait: pragmatic yet hedonistic.” Join Cheng on a tour of his top hometown haunts, then watch City Of Black And White online: bit.ly/1rYhkjZ

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cheng’s shanghai sights

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Suzhou river and is composed of British Art Deco style with a marvellous labyrinthine interior. There is a boutique hotel called Chai apartments inside, the rooms have a fantastic view.”

1 Fuxing Park

2 Gaolan Road “This French-style park reminds me of my youth. The greatest charm about it is its diversity: you meet all kinds of people there, from lovestruck youngsters to grandmothers doing Tai-Chi.”

4 Wanshang Flower

& Bird Market 417 South Xizang Road “This is an eye-opener. I have visited a lot of flower and bird markets in China, but this one is the biggest and best. You can also watch crickets fight and fish for goldfish with scoops.”

3 Riverside Mansion

400 North Suzhou Road “This is my favourite old Colonial building in town. It lies next to the

A one-stop fun palace of bars, laser tag and one of the city’s few mini-golf courses – all done in a glow-in-the-dark theme park. bigecn.com

Ufly Free flight Tunnel

2 40 Bars on one Street

Yongkang Road “A typical Shanghai street, with boozing expats and calm locals. I used to live here, and I chose my neighbour, a chic old lady, for the leading role in one of my films.”

Big E Entertainment

5 Shanshan Steamed

Dumplings 774 Xianxia Road “A simple, hole-in-the-wall street restaurant. I always have breakfast here. The steamed dumplings are so much better than everywhere else. And the prices are hard to beat.”

Want the thrill of skydiving, but without a parachute? Feel the uprush as you hover in the only indoor flight tunnel in China. crwind.com

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Xifan Yang

DISC KARTING A sizeable indoor racing track with a fully equipped bar. Probably the only place where a blind eye is turned to driving under the influence.

corbis(4), shutterstock(3)

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Š JÜrg Mitter

Li k e What you Li k e

Your Moment.

Beyond the Ordinary


Action!

Music

Under the influences Playlist  THE MAN WHO PLAYS VIOLIN WITH ARCADE FIRE TELLS US ABOUT THE FIVE RECORDS HIDING IN HIS NEW SOLO ALBUM

Over the last 10 years, Owen Pallett has earned a reputation as the Paganini of pop. In 2004, he signed up to play violin for Arcade Fire and has written all the string arrangements for their music. Now, other musicians, including Robbie Williams and The National, let him give their songs the symphonic once-over. But Pallett’s solo work is closest to his own heart. His emotional and melodically complex indie pop songs sound like Brian Eno accompanying the young David Bowie on a Stradivarius. In January, the 34-year-old Canadian’s score for the Spike Jonze movie Her (feat. Arcade Fire) was nominated for an Oscar and out now is his fourth album, In Conflict. These songs inspired him while he was working on it.

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yelpie.co.za

1 Eurythmics

2 Silver Apples

3 The Luyas

“When I was five, I used to listen almost exclusively to classical music, but somehow Eurythmics fitted into that listening environment really well. It’s thought out like a game of chess. This song is the perfect fusion of a very sterile synthetic environment and a very mannered vocal performance with a deeper range of emotions.”

“The feel of Silver Apples’ drum sound was what me and my drummer Rob [Gordon] wanted on my new album. It has to do with recording with no click track, so tempos are fluctuating. Listen to my song, The Sky Behind The Flag: Rob is getting tired towards the end and suddenly gets this burst of energy and rushes ahead. That feels very human.”

“This song features an instrument called a Moodswinger, a really bizarre and rare kind of guitar thing that looks like it was made by a child. It creates this amazing eerie atmosphere, where the sound drifts and warps in and out of focus. I’m not an electric guitarist, but hearing the sound of that song informed a lot of string writing on my record.”

4 The Blue Nile

5 Green Velvet

“This Scottish band released two critically acclaimed albums in the 1980s. The first bears the title of this song and it is a masterpiece. That song’s iciness had a large influence on my song The Secret Seven. There’s this beautiful silence in it, where you hear warbling synths in the background. I got that from The Blue Nile.”

“I didn’t have much time for dance music until recently. But I’m really into the brutal approach to rhythm on this Chicago house track. Green Velvet takes a simple rhythm and crosses it with another one to create a unique groove. That was the goal with The Sky Behind the Flag, to create simple brutal rhythmic interaction. It’s easy to understand.”

Love Is A Stranger

A Walk Across The Rooftops

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Program

The Stalker

three music festival must-haves

Yelpie

Moodslayer

SpeakaBoo Bamboo bassboosters for an iPhone, no power source needed. Perfect for parties around the campfire. speakaboo.co.uk

M o b i le M ixi n g Gadget of the month

Monster Go-DJ

The first professional DJ mixing unit that fits in your jacket pocket. Select the tracks saved on the device and arrange them in real time via the two touchscreens. It’s easy to mix and effect tracks on the mini console in the middle. Hook it up to a sound system and let rip.

Opteka BP-SC4000 Slimline solarpowered charger. Eight hours in the sun will give it enough juice to fully charge your phone or camera. opteka.com

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Peter Juhl

The thing’s the strings: Owen Pallett

good tim es gizmos

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Action!

workout

Get over it: a lot of work goes into pole prep

Medal man: Raphael Holzdeppe won Olympic bronze in 2012 and world championship gold in 2013

High achiever

raphael-holzdeppe.net

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1

Lie on side, stretch out arms and legs, increase the tension in your body, raise upper body and lower legs, maintain balance for 10 seconds.

2

Place arms on thighs and maintain balance for 10 seconds (this is the abs bit). Repeat the whole exercise five times.

LE A D I N G R O LL THE TOOL THE WORLD CHAMPION SWEARS BY

blackroll

Faster, higher, harder: “There is no muscle a pole-vaulter can neglect,” says Holzdeppe

“This is fitness kit, physio and masseur in one. For me, it’s indispensable. You place the Blackroll under a part of your body – could be any muscle group; let’s say your lower legs – and then use your bodyweight to actively roll back and forth. It releases tension and assists recovery in record quick time. And it’ll fit in any gym bag.”

the red bulletin

heri irawan

“My daily training programme is a brutal, full-body workout,” says Raphael Holzdeppe, of the routine that has kept him among the world’s elite pole-vaulters for the last four years. “Because, in our sport, you use every muscle,” he explains, “you need strong legs to be fast on the run-up, a buff upper body to get yourself up on the pole, pronounced abs so you can bend your hips quickly once you’re in the air and a strong torso for stability. If you can keep your body stable and still in the air, you’ll gain more height.” To achieve all this, the 24-year-old German trains six-and-a-half hours a day, Monday to Friday. “Lifting weights in the gym, sprints on the track, balan­ce exercises on a medicine ball and vaulting, which I do about 100 times a week.”

Strengthening your torso, abs and your sense of balance, all in one move

Ray Demski/Red Bull Content Pool(3), blackroll

P OLE VAULT  What part of his body is most important to a pole vaulter’s success? Every single one of them

A L L- R O U N D E X C E L L E N C E


Epic moments from the world’s best clubs and festivals: Strobelight Anthems on rbmaradio.com


Action!

watches

Tim e Line

Latest model Navitimer: automatic with a full 70 hours of power reserve

From the Chronomat to Navitimer: evolution of style and functionality

Come fly with me   B reitling Navitimer  The pilots’ watch of choice is as precision engineered as any aeroplane

1941

coil spring. Then they only matched the parts in perfect harmony with each watch. The process is so exhaustive that Breitling decided to make the mechanisms themselves, thus freeing themselves up and making them non-dependent on other suppliers.

Secret workshop In 2004, Breitling opened an office near the airport in Geneva to develop its B01 calibre. This was strictly hush-hush. By 2005, the mechanisms had taken shape. And in 2006, the first dozen prototypes were put together. Did it their way That same year, the calibre For a long time, and as was passed the COSC chronometer the case with many other luxury tests. Breitling then set up a brands of watches, Breitling ‘Chronométrie 2’ department. LOVE THE LOGOS timepieces didn’t use their own The aim was to automate The AOPA logo on watch mechanisms. Instead they the early Navitimers B01 production. The experts (top) and the 1960s adapted a high-tech assembly used those made by specialist Breitling logo Swiss watch manufacturer line concept from the ETA, who churned out calibre pharmaceuticals industry, clockwork. But that all changed when whereby software intertwined the Breit­ling decided that henceforth all its analysis and manufacture of separate mechanisms would be designated as components. The first equipment ‘chronometers’, meaning they would appeared at Chronométrie 2 in 2008. have to go through the rigorous test cycle In 2009, a full five years after the set by the Contrôle Officiel Suisse des project began, the first 1500 B01 Chronomètres (COSC). For the calibre calibre models were produced. The to achieve this level of excellence, the mechanisms were first used in the watchmakers had to take measurements Chronomat model. The second Breitling including the moment of inertia of every to enjoy the privilege was the Navitimer. breitling.com balance wheel and the torque of every

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Breitling Chrono­mat: first wristwatch with integrated slide rule (pictured: 1946 model)

“ y ou could work out currency exchange rates and fuel consumption. The watch was a hit with technicians, traders and the military”

1952

Breitling Navitimer: designed to meet pilots’ needs during flight

Alexander Linz

Breitling produced a technological stroke of genius for people on the go long before the calculator had been invented. The watchmakers from Grenchen in Switzerland unveiled a wristwatch in 1941 in which they had integrated a round slide rule. On the Breitling Chronomat, you could turn the bezel, the ring around the edge of the dial, in both directions so that you could align different scales and work out values such as currency exchange rates or fuel consumption. The watch was a hit with technicians, traders and the military. Breitling launched a prototype for pilots 11 years later, on May 2 1952. The Navitimer meant pilots could work out how long they had left to fly, when they should start their descent for landing and any number of other factors relevant to navigation. The Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association liked the chronograph so much they made it the official AOPA watch.

the red bulletin


FATE DOESN’T ASK. IT COuLD ALSO bE mE. Or yOu. David Coulthard.

13-time Formula 1 Grand Prix Winner and Wings For Life Ambassador.

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your contribution makes a difference. Donate online at www.wingsforlife.com

Free advertisement.


Action!

party

British rapper JME is a regular at Fabric

Club sound FABRIC’S MIX CD SERIES OF FAVOURITE DJS IS 13 YEARS OLD AND 150-STRONG. HERE’s our TOP THREE

Jacques LU Cont Ultimate party mix from the one-time Madon­na producer. His smooth transition from Al­so Sprach Zarathu­stra to Sweet Dreams by Eurythmics still remains unsurpassed.

Bass place

There used to be meat hanging on the walls at Fabric. Before the club opened on the premises in 1999, the east London venue was a cold storage warehouse for the market next door. “There wasn’t a lot going on in the area, culturally. There was no scene here,” recalls club manager Cameron Leslie. “That was one of the reasons why we started our own mini-cab service, because people couldn’t get away at that time of night because taxis didn’t come to this part of town.” Clubbers loved the place: 25,000 square feet of dance space with thumping under­ground sounds, from techno to dubstep, over three dancefloors. One of them is ‘bodysonic’, because 400 built-in bass transducers turn sound waves into body-shaking vibrations. DJ Magazine has twice voted Fabric the best club in the world. What does Leslie love about the venue? “A lot of people find the club’s maze-like layout confusing,” he says, “but that’s exactly what’s great about it. You often end up in a new room by chance, which means you get to discover new DJs.” Fabric 77A Charterhouse Street London EC1M 6HJ, England fabriclondon.com

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A full Fabric means 2,500 revellers, three nights a week

After Party It’s 8am on Sunday. Fabric is closing, your eyes are wide open. What should you do?

Get breakfast Market-traders and revellers come together at beautifully restored Victorian pub The Fox And Anchor, to see the sunrise and eat fortifying bacon and eggs. foxandanchor.com Go for a rummage Only four Tube stops to the shops and market stalls of Brick Lane: vintage clothes and furniture, great coffee and music to go from Rough Trade East. visitbricklane.org Keep on going! London’s leading afterhours party is Jaded, which starts at 5am on Sundays. Endurance dancers and early-risers party there with tea and techno beats. jadedlondon.com

David Rodigan The 62-year-old DJ is a musical folk hero for bringing reggae to the masses in England in the 1970s. This is his celebration of four decades of Jamaican music.

Four Tet With this mix, the master of delicate electronica helped bring about a revival of garage. Forgotten classics like Crazy Bald Heads meet hits by young talents such as Floating Points.

the red bulletin

jasper Brown(2), Sarah Ginn(2)

l ondon  FROM COLD STORAGE meat WAREHOUSE TO THE COOLEST CLUB IN THE world, FABRIC HAS got UNDERGROUND MUSIC ALL WRAPPED UP


p ro m ot i o n

Must-haves! 1 NixoN Baja Watch Whether your needs take you off-road or completely off-the-grid, The Baja is your self-contained survival station. Its protective angled bezel conceals an arsenal of digital assets including: compass, flashlight and thermometer, strapped with a nylon cuff and band. R1 899.

1

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2 thule atmos x3 smart PhoNe covers Ultra thin, ultra tough. The Atmos Phone Collection is designed with different levels of protection ranging from everyday drops and scratches to fully submerged underwater use. The Atmos X3 features highly engineered Bicomponent Armor and Shock-Stop Corners to protect your phone from up to 2 meter drops without compromising the functionality of the device. Whether you are navigating the city, entertaining the kids or exploring your passion in the great outdoors, Thule Atmos X3 is the perfect solution for you to safeguard your gear. The Atmos X3 is available for the iPhone 5/5S and the Samsung Galaxy S4. R399.

www.thule.com 3 coNverse jacked-uP Converse Jack Purcell shoes are designed after the man himself, a badminton world champion with a taste for the finer things in life. Today the legacy of Jack Purcell lives on, playing wherever, whenever and with whomever. R1 099,95.

www.converse-sa.co.za

3

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4 mWeB FoN WiFi router Listen up techno-fiends. MWEB has introduced some revolutionary technology to South Africa, and it’s about to rock your socks off. Presenting the MWEB Fon-enabled WiFi router. It turns your home into a hotspot, and gives you FREE Uncapped WiFi* access at selected malls, restaurants, hospitals, hotels and airports, as well as over 12 000 hotspots all over the country. The Fon service is also international, meaning that you get FREE Uncapped WiFi access at over 12 million hotspots around the world. Sign up to MWEB’s Uncapped ADSL Data from just R199pm and purchase the Fon Router to get access to all of this. It’s time to say goodbye to high data costs, and hello to MWEB’s incredible world of WiFi. *T&Cs apply.

www.mweb.co.za

5

5 soNy 3-iN-1 WalkmaN Wh series The new Walkman® WH Series brings you the best of Sony – speakers, headphones, and digital music player – in one innovative, wire-free design! With powerful headphone drivers, this wireless music player showcases years of audio and headphones expertise from Sony and allows you to also switch sound modes to suit your preferred music style. Pump out a truly immersive, out-loud listening experience and move to music without the tangle of cables. Created by a combination of proprietary xLOUD™ and VPT Speakers technologies, you can also keep the music playing all day long with a full charge of 20 hours and built-in storage of 4GB. R2 499,00.

www.sony.co.za


Action!

games

Fear factor: The Evil Within

P L AY A ND M O VE Three games for your mobile life

Overkill Mafia Shoot-em-up from the makers the huge Overkill games. In a retro world of gangsters and guns, this has a comic-book, Sin City feel. On Android and iOS. craneballs.com

Survival is thriving

up next

Now see this

THE EVIL WITHIN  The father of Resident Evil is back with more of the fright stuff The bodies are ravaged and burnt out, as are the buildings and the upturned ambulances. A psychiatric hospital has been ransacked by someone, or something. This could be the backdrop of a dozen survival horror video games, but only The Evil Within comes from the mind by Shinji Mikami, the man who devised Resident Evil. The first Resident Evil game, on the original PlayStation in 1996, made survival horror – exploration, puzzles, action, unsettling atmosphere and genuine shocks – a pillar of gaming and gave new life to zombies in popular culture. Without its impact and popularity, there’d be no Shaun Of The Dead, The Walking Dead, The Last Of Us and none of the reboots and remakes of the …Of The Dead film series, the original three of which, Night, Dawn and Day, were huge influences on Mikami when he made that first game. His latest will emphasise survival over action. “Not much has changed when it comes to instilling terror in the player,” Mikami said, at the most recent Tokyo Game Show, “but… in that sense it is harder to make them afraid.” No one has worked harder than Mikami to make playing games so thrillingly scary. The Evil Within is out worldwide in the last week of August for Windows, PS3, PS4, Xbox 360 and Xbox One. theevilwithin.com

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Don’t play Xbox, watch it The discovery of old ET game cartridges in the New Mexico desert was notable for two reasons: unearthing the nerd treasure chest of the games themselves, and that the TV show of the dig will only be available on Xbox. Like Netflix and Amazon, Xbox wants to disrupt traditional TV with platform-specific content. Its first show, on US music festival Bonnaroo, is out this month; Halo and street soccer series will follow.

xbox.com

Warbits Be a pocket general with this battle simulation game, which has a tough strategyheavy heart beating beneath its colourful, cartoony armour. On iOS. riskylab.com

Definite Lee

You can be Bruce in EA Sports UFC

On June 17, the Ultimate Fighting Championship makes its debut as one of the EA Sports stable of games. There is the full-on, incredibly comprehensive redo of a sport, that EA does so well with FIFA for soccer and Tiger Woods for golf, only this time for the top level of mixed martial arts. For fighting fans of a certain vintage, that Bruce Lee is an unlockable character in EA Sports UFC is reason enough itself to buy the game.

easports.com

Botanicula Adventure-puzzle cross in which you control a team of bugs trying to save the last seed on the tree on which they live. Tricky and beautiful. iPad only. botanicula.net

the red bulletin


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Action!

save the date

The one to beat: Julian Wilson won last year’s Mr Price Pro Ballito June 30-July 6

Last year the seven-day Mr Price Pro Ballito surf festival attracted more than 100,000 fans and next month organisers are bracing for more. Julian Wilson, Dane Reynolds, Jordy Smith, Travis Logie and Slade Prestwich are five of the big names who will be doing battle for the R2.7m purse, with local rippers like Beyrick de Vries also keen to impress. There are also music concerts, beer tents and a food and wine fest. mrpricepro.com

July 3-13

Culture vulture

July 1-13

Ghostly gamers Prizes and bragging rights are up for grabs as the MWEB GameZone Master Series tournaments for Call of Duty: Ghosts continue with a huge nationwide 4v4 online contest. gamezone.co.za

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The annual National Arts Festival in Grahamstown will blow your mind. If the theatre, art, music (including afro jazz star Lira, right) and lectures don’t float your boat, check out the huge Fringe offering, which includes street performance, poetry, comedy and a film fest featuring some of SA’s finest directors. Also, don’t forget the free daily sundowner shows at the Monument. nationalartsfestival.co.za

June 29

Unlock and roll The country’s top skaters will take on the inviting (and usually off-limits) ledges, stairs and rails at the Library Gardens when Red Bull Unlocked comes to Joburg CBD. Expect high quality competition and demos, as well as the rare chance to cruise the downtown precinct without being hassled. redbull.co.za/unlocked

the red bulletin

craig kolesky/red bull content pool, Kevin Sawyer/Red Bull Content Pool, Ryan Janssens, nico bustos, Kody McGregor, cobus bosman, Jacques Marais

Ballito goes big


June 22

Red Bull Rising The Austrian Formula One Grand Prix returns after more than a decade off the calendar, at the newly refurbished Red Bull Ring in Spielberg. Although the track layout remains the same as the old A1-Ring, a new generation of drivers and cars will be on the grid. Infiniti Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo (below) and Sebastian Vettel will be looking for a good performance in front of their team’s home crowds. infiniti-redbullracing.com

June 30-July 20

The wave that bites The fourth annual Tand Invitational (as in tand, Afrikaans for tooth) will go down just outside Tittiesbaai on the West Coast. South Africa’s best 16 bodyboarders will be on show in this internationally recognised event, and with the big winter swells marching in from the icy Atlantic, it’s set to be a competition worth missioning north of Cape Town for. facebook.com/TandInvitational

don’t miss ink these dates in your diary

5 july

Tour de UK The United Kingdom hosts the first three stages of this year’s Tour de France. Tune in to see who looks good in yellow after the opening 191km through the Yorkshire moors.

June 28

Fun in the Sun One of KwaZulu-Natal’s biggest dance parties takes over Hazelmere Dam for 28 hours of non-stop waterside revelry. Four stages and more than 50 DJs and bands bode well for an epic night, but remember to pack a picnic blanket and a well-stocked cooler box. fitsfest.co.za

letour.com

5 July 4-13

Tackle the Big Five The Knysna Oyster Festival is not all cocktails and seafood platters. There are some serious athletic feats going on as well. The Big 5 Challenge includes an 80km mountain bike race, the Knysna Forest marathon or half-marathon, an Xterra triathlon, a 14km trail run, and a choice of a 100km road bike race, a 22km paddle or a lagoon swim. oysterfestival.co.za

july

July fever Not all the fittest fillies and stallions will be found on the track at South Africa’s biggest horse race, the Durban July. There will be top talent at the afterparties, too. vodacomd urbanjuly.co.za

13 july

July 10-20

Winterfest Jeffreys Bay is synonymous with surfing and the ASP world tour will return in July with the superstars of the sport doing battle at the JBay Open. But there’ll be a whole lot more going on than just barrel-riding. A downhill skateboard jam, a mountain bike race, a stop on the MSA national rally tour, an open-water swim and a fishing competition will make the wait for waves a lot more entertaining. jbaywinterfest.com

the red bulletin

World Cup final Watch soccer’s superstars strut their stuff in Brazil. You’ll be in good company: Bafana Bafana will be watching on TV too, dreaming of making it back to the big time. supersport.com/ football

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Magic Moment

On May 4, in 34 locations worldwide 35,397 runners together ran a total of 530,928km before they were overtaken by catcher cars, which had been following them with increasing speed. This was the first annual Wings For Life World Run, in support of spinal cord research. The last man running was Lemawork Ketema of Ethiopia. After 78.58km (48.83 miles) the 28-year-old prevailed over Peruvian Remigio Huaman Quispe, running in Lima, 11,200km away, and only 90m less than Ketema. wingsforlifeworldrun.com

“ I knew I would have to sprint at the end. So I saved up my energy� Lemawork Ketema, Wings For Life World Run winner

the next issue of the red bulletin is out on july 8 98

the red bulletin

Philip Platzer/Red Bull Content Pool

Donautal, Austria May 4, 2014



www.kiska.com Photos: R. Schedl, H. Mitterbauer

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