- Urban75
.
History
Urban75 initially originated from a football
comic that started in 1991 as a reaction against sections of the media's representation ofCardiff City F.C. fans. Its editor claims that "the first issue sold out in three hours and at one point became the fastest-selling small presscomic in the UK." [ [http://www.urban75.org/comics/bjonesintr.html Bluebird Jones] ] .From here, a "Football Fans Against The Criminal Justice Act" campaign started in 1994. The campaign received large amounts of exposure in the media, and in May 1995 a helper on the campaign from
Brighton put together the first version of the Urban75 site, using amodem donated by The Levellers. [ [http://www.mcspotlight.org/media/press/wired_17jun97.html Wired world: Eighties survivor cracks the zine scene] , "Wired"]The first bulletin boards appeared in 1996, when the site was still largely based around
Cardiff City F.C. , but were soon abused by users and quickly taken down.Fact|date=February 2007 Gradually, as the site expanded into areas other than football and protest, it grew in popularity and was moved to a different, bigger server (becoming part of The Head-Space Project until it moved to its own domain in 1998). Early publicity was generated by Shockwave games in which celebrities could be virtually "slapped" or "punched". [ [http://www.ojr.org/ojr/workplace/1017968134.php The Urban Web Warrior:Urban75's Mike Slocombe]Online Journalism Review ]In December 2000, the current version of the bulletin boards was launched, using Ultimate Bulletin Board and subsequently
vBulletin .Fact|date=February 2007Urban75 entered the national news when Brixton's police chief
Brian Paddick posted on the bulletin boards in order to discuss issues with Brixton's internet users while he was conducting acannabis tolerance experiment. However, when thetabloid press discovered Paddick's posting on the site, a scandal was born. [ [http://www.guardian.co.uk/gayrights/story/0,12592,1095048,00.html The Guardian profile: Brian Paddick] ,Guardian Unlimited ] In particular, the press highlighted one post on the boards, where Paddick supposedly said "The concept of anarchy has always appealed to me". [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/1866274.stm Police chief rebuked over 'anarchy' remark] ,BBC ] A police investigation was launched, during which Paddick was moved to another position. [ [http://www.gnn.gov.uk/content/detail.asp?NewsAreaID=2&ReleaseID=24086 MPA STATEMENT CONCERNING CMDR BRIAN PADDICK] ,Government News Network ] The front-page attention from the tabloid newspapers, outraged at the concept of a senior police commander being attracted to anarchism, led to many contributors joining the bulletin boards.Fact|date=February 2007While the site has a diverse readership, it is incorrectly regarded as being dominated by
anarchist s. Fact|date=February 2007ite content
The 'Action' section of the site contains an events diary, information, articles, reports and photos from various protests and marches.
Urban75 features around 3,500 original photographs, mostly taken by the site's owner. There are galleries of Brixton,
London ,New York ,Chicago ,Brighton , andWales , as well as various 360ºpanorama s and photography tutorials.The drugs information section of the site calls itself a 'bullshit free guide'. There is information on most well-known drugs available, with the aim of being honest about their effects and legality, "'neither condemning nor condoning drug use'. The site says the information "is for people to access the facts and make their own, informed decisions."
The site features dozens of 'useless' games, made by various web designers.The games section revels in the fact that many games are pointless and have no meaning (such as 'The DOT-CLICKING game' and 'The Curious Thingy!'). The most popular games are:
* "Mr Insult" - a series of games based on a character who swears frequently
* "The Cossack" - games with a mysterious Soviet character
* "Punch a Celeb" - a hugely popular section where images of nominatedcelebrities are clicked on and are, supposedly, punched.
* "Slap a Spice Girl" - a hugely popular game that was available at the height of theSpice Girls fame, similar toWhac-A-Mole , it was inspired by thegirl group 's political campaign to back the Conservative Party in 1996, with bonus point for slappingMargaret Thatcher , [http://www.smug.com/5/such.html] would go on to inspire the slap a person nomination which led to "Punch a Celeb" and "Slap A Superstar DJ" [ [http://blog.wfmu.org/freeform/2005/06/slap_a_supersta.html WFMU's Beware of the Blog: Slap A Superstar DJ ] ] . Despite being the website's popular feature, the "Slap a Spice Girl" game has since been removed for unknown reasons [ [http://www.urban75.com/Punch/spicebelt.html urban75 information page ] ] .
Football remains a solid part of the site, with articles and features on recent cup competitions as well information as on theCriminal Justice Act and original strips from the "Bluebird Jones" comic.The boards
The bulletin boards have grown into a popular community, with over 40,000 registered members. At present, there are around a quarter of a million page impressions each day [ [http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details?url=urban75.net Alexa Traffic rankings for Urban75] ] , with around 5-6,000 new posts daily. There are currently 26 sub forums covering a range of topics. The boards are managed by a team of moderators, led by the site's owner.Fact|date=June 2008
The forums are divided into "General discussion", "Community forums", "Politics, protest and current affairs", "Travel & places" and "Art, tech & science", in addition to an archive section. [ [http://www.urban75.net/vbulletin/ urban75 forums] ]
Offline
On
19 February 2004 , the first Offline club night was held at the Brixton Ritzy cinema. Organised by the site's editor and various other members, it showcased a mix ofDJ s, poets and artists, for no admission fee, as well as expanding the urban75 "community" further into the "real" world.On30 September 2004 , the night moved to the Dogstar club in Brixton, before moving to the larger Brixton Jamm club.Offline has put on well known acts such as Mercury Prize nominees The Portico Quartet, author Howard Marks, comedians Rob Newman, Stewart Lee, Josie Long, Robin Ince, Richard Herring and new wave legend Tom Robinson, with all acts being paid two pints of beer.
The club offers a mix of eclectic live music, comedy, video and DJs with events in two Brixton venues, with occasional gigs in Crystal Palace and New York.
The Prince Albert (418 Coldharbour Lane, Brixton, London, SW9 8LF) events take place twice monthly, while the bigger JAMM (261 Brixton Road, London SW9 6LH) nights are held on the second Thursday of every month.
The club nights are always free, with the Londonist website describing it as being "Like someone's friendly house party, opened up for the general public....Entertaining, friendly, and free. [ [http://londonist.com/2008/05/review_offline.php/ Londonist] ]
[http://www.urban75.org/offline Offline Club]
Radio
On
May 1 2005 a group of posters made a pilot radio show for the website, available to download as anmp3 . The three pilots that followed including an interview with the manager of the site, some originally recorded music contributed by members, documentaries, and live recordings from the Offline club night. As of August 2006 the project has folded, and its domain's registration has lapsed. [ [http://www.urban75radio.com/ Urban75 Radio] ]Press
Quite a few journalists use the site - some openly, some not - and posters can find themselves quoted in national papers or other websites. An example is when a survivor of the London tube bombings posted an account on the boards of her experience, which became a [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4670099.stm blog on the BBC website] . [ [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4670099.stm#saturday Tube Survivor Blog] ]
Corporate resistance
Urban75 has often been approached by corporate multimedia drawn by the popularity of the site and its huge forum membership database, but the site has a strict anti-commercial philosophy with a resolute anti-advertising policy in place from the very beginning.
The subject has, however, come up for discussion amongst forum members, and a public vote showed the majority backing the site's stance, even when it came to carrying advertising for 'politically acceptable' items like Fairtrade and ethical products.
http://www.urban75.org/info/about1.html
References
External links
* [http://www.urban75.com/ Urban75]
* [http://www.urban75.net/vbulletin/ Urban75 bulletin boards]
* [http://www.u75clan.com/ Urban75 clan]
* [http://www.urban75.org/offline/ Offline Club Night]
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