Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Members of the Galloping Goose MC were at the 1947 Hollister Rally which was the basis for the 1954 film The Wild One. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] This led to the beginning of the highly visible and structured [ 5 ] 1% or outlaw motorcycle clubs , along with the Boozefighters MC when the AMA forbade club members to participate in AMA events unless they took ...
Goose has been regularly compared to jam bands such as Phish and Umphrey's McGee, both of which the band's members count as influences. [7] Goose describes itself as an "indie groove" band, but does acknowledge its jam band influences; speaking to Uproxx music critic Steven Hyden, guitarist Rick Mitarotonda said "Frankly there are a lot of cheesy and not great jam bands that have existed over ...
The three go out in Goose's dad's runabout on the harbour searching for cockles to sell to fix their own crashed bikes, as well as getting Judy her own and stumble onto and steal a box of police-band walkie-talkies that the bank robbers were hoping to use to monitor on police traffic. After stealing the box, the kids pass Whitey and Moustache ...
The Sons of Silence Motorcycle Club was founded in Niwot, Colorado in 1966 by Bruce Gale "The Dude" Richardson, who was living in Longmont after serving in the U.S. Navy from July 1958 to February 1960. [2] Richardson later left the club and died of natural causes in Scottsbluff, Nebraska on March 26, 2013. [7]
Bullshit Motorcycle Club, most commonly shortened to Bullshit MC, was a Danish outlaw motorcycle gang and organized criminal group active during the 1980s. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] They were best known for engaging in a violent turf war against the rivaling Hells Angels Motorcycle Club . [ 7 ]
A car bomb attached to Matter's pickup truck exploded outside his motorcycle shop ten minutes after he exited the vehicle. [94] A second attempt was made on the life of Eddie Murphy, on February 10, 1994, when Kevin "Spike" O'Neill and two other Outlaws ran Murphy's car off the road in Fox Lake and tried to force him into their van.
Rio Grande Southern Railroad (RGS), Motor Number 6 (affectionately nicknamed Galloping Goose Number 6) is a gasoline engine powered narrow gauge railroad motor car. The Galloping Goose body and chassis were built from a Buick automobile. The new Buick body was cut off behind the front seat and a new rear wall installed.
William "Wild Bill" Gelbke (1936–1978, born in Green Bay, Wisconsin) was an American engineer and motorcycle designer.He is noted for having designed and constructed large motorcycles powered by automobile engines, particularly the Roadog [2] and the Auto Four, the latter a motorcycle intended for mass production.