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"See, you can't miss 'em," says the homeless man, chuckling in an indulgent way that sometimes accompanies age. Someone tosses him a beer, which he raises in a breezy toast before elegantly tapping the pull-tab. The muted staccato is broken by a carbonated hiss as we pass, and he beams: "Tonight is a good night."
At the end of the block, silhouettes gain detail in the glare of brightly lit doorways, then dissolve again into the darkness of the street. The dull thud of music can be heard as we approach, but it's no preparation for the scene that unfolds like a controlled explosion in the parking lot just beyond the last apartment building: It is a whirligig of flashing lights, gratuitous colors, roaring generators, flailing limbs, and shrieks of laughter -- a free-wheeling free-for-all casually known as the Cyberbuss Guerrilla Roller Derby.
"I've been training for this my whole life," says The People's Gardner, a dark, long-haired man with a pair of rollerblades on his feet and a children's push toy in hand. He launches into the wheeled melee of the track, wielding his toy like a vengeful hockey stick filled with tiny rainbow-hued balls that bounce like popcorn. Circling the potted shrub and teetering tower of plywood that act as the track's only reference point, he narrowly evades being tangled in a thick rope stretched between a speeding office chair, a bicyclist, and a roller skater wearing a cape and duct-tape armor. An accelerating wheelchair, occupied by a woman in a tutu shouting through a traffic cone and pushed by a wild-eyed, skirted rogue with antennae on his crash helmet, takes a corner too fast and tumbles into a heap. A push scooter, driven by a formidable opponent in full-camos, football padding, and welder's goggles, sails past, followed by a rolling toilet minus bed pan, an airport luggage cart equipped with a bean bag, and a cow-bike.
On the perimeter, a handful of slightly apprehensive spectators stands behind a line of sagging caution tape, but most of those gathered stand close to the track, moving only when unforgiving metal components and human extremities come flying toward them. They know the caution tape is only a token. With the Cyberbuss, perimeters are about as useful as rules.
"As you know, it's better to ask forgiveness than permission," says C y b e r sAM. "That's the good thing about the buss. If the cops come, we'll just take it on the road."
Recently resuscitated with a new crank shaft, the large silver school bus sits on one end of the track, offering Rollerball for our viewing pleasure and disco music for dancing, and acting as a very tall, narrow stage for performers and announcers. Throughout the year, the "buss" and its silver-painted denizens travel around taping and posting live footage of oddball events online, for long-distance "Cyber-fhREaKs" to enjoy. But tonight there will be no live Webcast. Too dangerous for the equipment, they say. Still, the fhREaKs are in full effect: Tinsel-covered crash helmets, polka dotted dresses, fun- fur armor, welding masks, kneepads, vel-vet overalls, and leather bodices jiggle to "Another One Bites the Dust."
A piercing trumpet call announces the beginning of the derby. The motley conglomeration of teams lines up with shopping carts padded with futon pillows. Riders jump in calling for weapons -- mop handles topped with baby-doll heads -- and sustenance in the form of cheap beer; the drivers, all on skates of some form or another, grab the handles and rev their "engines." Some misguided soul calls for regulations and rules.