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Urban75

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The Urban75 homepage
Urban75 (also sometimes referred to as u75 or urban) is a Brixton-based website and messageboard. It was founded in 1995 and includes various content (photographs, games etc), as well as bulletin boards.

History

Urban75 initially originated from a football comic that started in 1991 as a reaction against sections of the media's representation of Cardiff 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 press comic in the UK." [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 a modem donated by The Levellers.[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.[[Citing sources citation needed]] 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".[The Urban Web Warrior:Urban75's Mike Slocombe] Online Journalism Review

In December 2000, the current version of the bulletin boards were launched, using Ultimate Bulletin Board and subsequently vBulletin.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Urban75 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 a cannabis tolerance experiment. However, when the tabloid press discovered Paddick's posting on the site, a scandal was born.[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".[Police chief rebuked over 'anarchy' remark], BBC A police investigation was launched, during which Paddick was moved to another position.[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, and additionally happening to be a gay man, led to many contributors joining the bulletin boards.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

While the site has a diverse readership, it is incorrectly regarded as being dominated by anarchists.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Site 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, and Wales, as well as various 360ยบ panoramas 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:

Football remains a solid part of the site, with articles and features on recent cup competitions as well information on the Criminal Justice Act and original strips from the Bluebird Jones comic.

The Boards

The bulletin boards have grown into a popular community, with around 20,000 registered members, although only a fraction of which are active posters. It is ranked as the 370th biggest forum on the internet by big-boards.com.[big-boards.com] At present, there are around a quarter of a million page impressions each day, with at least 5,000 new posts daily.[[Citing sources citation needed]] 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.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Some of the most notable forums are:

Drugs

A forum for open discussion and advice about drugs. Some members are frequent drug users or addicts, and there have been several frank threads where users have spoken openly and candidly about their experiences. Whilst not directly advocating drugtaking, the open nature of discussion can lead to recounting of specific experiences and a highly critical attitude towards anti-drug propaganda.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Health & Relationships

The forum for discussing relationships, health problems and sex. Discussion in this forum can be very frank and explicit.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Sports/Football

The forum full of Andy Grays. Members have a wide variety of sporting interests and everything from rally to walking is included. It is also the base for the websites own football club and the base of the popular Fantasy Football League competition as well as good natured, banterful footie chat.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Politics And Protest (P&P)

This is a collection of five sub-forums (often including a sixth for topical issues such as elections, conflict etc). This is where the main political debate takes place, and where discussion can be extremely heated.

Suburban75

Suburban75 is the forum for discussing domestic matters, and features topics such as cooking and recipes, knitting, gardening and DIY.

The Dustbin

If a thread quickly descends into flame wars, is posted in the wrong forum, or is simply spam, the moderators rarely delete it immediately. Instead the thread is moved to the Dustbin, where it can be viewed temporarily. This serves to avoid posters asking where deleted threads have gone.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Community

This is where some bulletin-board users discuss the state of the boards and organise meet-ups. Some posters meet up for meals, or go for a monthly walk. Meet-ups regularly occur at music festivals and raves, the highlight of the calendar being the Glastonbury Festival. There is a complex network of on and offline friendships and even relationships and family amongst the community. A recent addition is a recycling forum, where posters can advertise unwanted goods that they are willing to give away for free.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Feedback

This forum is for the posting of questions about board issues such as management policy, details of how the board software works, suggestions as to new features etc. Off-topic posts in the forum are strictly not allowed.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Travel & Places

A selection of forums dedicated to particular regions, with one generic forum dedicated to travel in general (travel and world), and several others dedicated to specific regions (London, Brixton, Bristol and South West, Wales/Cymru, Scotland/Alba, Northern forum (as in the North of England), and New York/US. The newest additions to travel & places were the Northern forum and the Scotland/Alba forums, added in July 2005.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Forum Culture

Urbanites club events

In September 2001, the first Urbanites club night was held at the Brixton Telegraph club. Organised by the site's posters already involved in club promotion, notably bulletin board members Zeedoodles, pk, and sam/phallocrat, the night came out of a desire to bring members of the fast-growing community together. There were at least 12 of these dedicated U75 nights between the end of 2001 and 2003, from which lasting relationships and even in some cases marriages and children were formed! Musically, these events were dance music based, and featured mainly house music and techno, with occasional diversions into jungle, ska, drum and bass and breakbeat.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

The 'Urbanite' events have now been effectively succeeded by the current once-monthy Offline night run by the sites editor. "Hedgeparties", (outdoor raves held in annually somewhere in South London), and the "People's Republic of Disco" (PROD) events still attract many clubbers. Individual posters also organise their own events privately via the board.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Offline

On 19th 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 of DJs, poets and artists, for no admission fee, as well as expanding the urban75 "community" further into the "real" world. On 30th September 2004, the night moved to the Dogstar club in Brixton, but has now moved to Jamm up the Brixton Rd. The night is held on the last Thursday of every month.[Urban75: Offline]

Chat

Urban75 also has a long-established but quiet Internet Relay Chat server, whose members discuss a range of subjects. Discussions may sometimes get heated, but are more likely to be long and slow or nonexistent at times. Chat tends to be busiest in the mid-to-late evenings (UK time) - or when the boards are down.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Clan

In January 2005 a former (see banned list link below) poster set up a website and a server for an [Urban75 Clan], which allowed members to play computer games with each other online. Although any online-enabled game can be played, the most popular is Counterstrike Source. Statistics from the U75 Clan Counter Strike Server, the best player by statistics is in constant dispute, can be found [here][[Citing sources citation needed]]

Radio

On May 1 2005 a group of posters made a pilot radio show for the website, available to download as an mp3. 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 October 2005 this project seems to be dormant.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Press

Quite a few journalists use the site - some openly, some not - and posters can find themselves quoted in national papers or other websites. The most recent example was when a survivor of the London tube bombings posted an account of her experience, which became a [blog on the BBC website].[[Citing sources citation needed]]

References

External links

 


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