The Black Biker Experience
At The Vintagent, we’re interested in the stories we haven’t seen or heard before, and film is an ideal medium for telling stories. Today, on Juneteenth (June 19th), we celebrate films about the experience of African-American motorcyclists, although we lament they are few. There are almost no films about the early experience and deep history of African-American riders, like the board track racers we featured in the ‘Black Streaks’ article, or Bessie Stringfield, the cross-country rider and founding figure in the Motor Maids, or the story of Cliff Vaughs, the Civil Rights activist and filmmaker who played a seminal role in the creation of ‘Easy Rider.’Via our parent organization the Motorcycle Arts Foundation we are actively laying the foundation to tell the Cliff Vaughs story on film: it’s production will be our focus starting Autumn 2020. We would also like to encourage filmmakers with such a story to tell: if you’ve got an idea for a motorcycle-related film about black history or any other under-shared narrative with a social justice angle, we’d like to hear about it, because that’s what our non-profit was created to do. Give us a shout.
Even when films are made about black motorcyclists, they are vexed with the problem of distribution. Websites like TheVintagent are one way to get the word out, but are limited in how we can compensate the producers for the high cost of creating a film. It’s our hope that the current climate of support for social justice stories will reach the decision-making rooms at the major online media channels, the Netflix/Prime/AppleTV nexus that now dominate film distribution. It’s a whole new scene today, so let’s see some new stories.
1. Sugar & Spade
“When I got my name, there was nobody around riding these bikes.” – ‘Spade’ George


2. Take None Give None (2015)
“It’s an organization that might have some criminals. But it’s the same with the police. It’s the same with Google.”


3. Outcast Forever
“They keep their tradition of being all black, wearing all black, and riding all black motorcycles.”


4. 12 O’Clock Boys
“I’ve been on this earth for a decade and a coupla years. That makes me a grown-ass man.”


Thanks for continuing to be the ONLY custom / classic bike site to give the time and effort deserved to minority Bikers . I’ll look forward to the films becoming available or accessible
Rock On – Ride On – Remain Calm ( despite it all ) and do Carry On ( regardless of those who’d stand in your way )
(FYI ; I’m white as they come … but owing my entire career as a composer / musician / folk / jazz / rock blues ] to the African American community I’ve stood beside them etc since the 60’s )
…. errr … in light of the blues/jazz ‘ outlaw ‘ ( by classical standards ) tone of my compositions … bets add classical to that list as well . Or to sum it up … I owe my entire professional life to the African American community and culture
And don’t we all owe a huge and unspoken debt to the contributions of African American culture? How much poorer would our lives be without jazz, rocknroll, hip hop, a million dance moves, and thousands of incredibly talented artists in so many fields, whose skin was brown, and for that reason were not properly celebrated.
Yup !
… and errr … regardless of the pain this may inflict upon those bigoted racist white folks out there ….
… best add County Music to your list as well Paul …. cause suffice it to say whether they’d admit it or not … no African American influences … NO country music either …. not even that pollyanna as Keith Richards calls it ” stoneless excuse for R&R ” that passes its self off as … ‘ country music ‘