Create your own Bike Snob franchise

Contest below!

Regulars readers of Cyclelicious know I have no skill for humor. I thoroughly enjoy Bike Snob NYC, however. A couple of copycats have popped up who try to copy his formula for humor, including my own computer scripted Autosnob experiment.

A couple of people have asked me how the Autosnob works. Like any computer program, it follows a formula, and I follow the formula perfected in the Bike Snob’s “Worst of Craigslist” posts. If you want to create your own Bike Snob franchise blog, here’s how you, too, can gain fame, fortune, and interviews with Bicycling magazine and big name bike blogs.

Write the preamble. This is an introductory paragraph or three setting up the overall theme of the post. Bike Snob makes effective use of metaphors and similes. For the Autosnob, I grabbed the text from various “worst similes” websites. Here are some freebies:

  • Visiting Craigslist is like the required community service you did cleaning the homeless shelter bathrooms.
  • Craigslist is like the trailer trash of bike want ads. Let’s make another visit to the trash heap.
  • This Craigslist bike ad is like Def Leppard on a bad hair day, except just like Def Leppard, every day is bad hair day on Craigslist.
  • Reading Craigslist bike ads hurts just the way your tongue hurts after you staple it to the wall.

You get the idea.

Select your Craigslist ad. The best ads are ones with photos, so select your city or region and search for “fixie,” limiting your search to the title text and posts with photos. You might also want to set a minimum price to weed out the small trash (like old broken pedals) that people peddle on Craigslist. Here’s an example of this search.

I’ve selected this ad for you to experiment with in the comments. It’s an ugly 25 year old bike with missing parts, junky cell phone photos, and a ridiculous price.


The owner is also obviously clueless: “just got a new bike. this one’s too big for me(i’m almost 5’10”). it’s almost 33″ stand over hi. it’s probably from the ’90s. i’m not too sure. it’s a fuji del rey. it’s set up with a fix gear cog. i have a free wheel for it. i also have a smaller front chain ring for it. i even have the old deraillers and gear shifters if you want to turn it back to a bike with gears. i have drop bars or bullhorns that i chopped from drop bars. i have one or two brakes and levers for it.”

Mock the ad. But do it with cleverness and style and pop culture references. The obvious things to mock on this bike are the missing saddle, “33 inch stand over hi,” “one or two brakes” (He’s not sure? At least he spelled it right), $225 for a bike that sold for $300 new in 1983, and what looks like a Polaroid as a spoke card. You can probably do something clever with the color — BSNYC likes to find similarly colored objects for his Craigslist finds. This color reminds me of eggplant, but people pictures are funnier. It takes more work, but a photo of a has-been celebrity in a purple outfit would work well here. Here’s the best of both worlds: A has-been celebrity who looks like an eggplant!


Obligatory mentions. If the bike is a Pista, be sure to mention the Pista-dex. For any recent fixie, be sure to compare the price against a new bike’s MSRP. If the handlebar is partially wrapped, you must mention the “dog erection” look of the bar.

Colorful euphemisms. I’m a fan of BSNYC’s euphemisms. For example: “I loudly admonished him for having Oedipal tendencies.”

Try your best! Write a snobby review of the Fuji Del Rey linked to above. Put your “Worst Of” review as a comment here or in your own blog (be sure I can find it). A panel of celebrity judges (TBD) will determine the best ad among the entries. The winner gets a $20 Amazon gift card. The usual rules apply: I need your valid email address if you’re the selected winner, and this contest must be legal in your area. Contest deadline is next Wednesday, December 5 at 6:30 p.m. U.S. Pacific Standard Time.

4 Comments

  1. …sorry fritz, but i just don't get it…you're intelligent, erudite, informative…your perspective on the bike 'scene' is well balanced, easy to grasp, but i just don't 'get' the fascination w/ bsnyc to the point of creating autosnob or the contest…

    …appreciating a tree in the woods is great…going home & describing or even painting a picture for others is meaningful…but trying to rebuild the same tree ain't gonna work well or be as successful as the original…
    …you're involved in growing a couple of lovely trees of your own…i enjoy watching them grow…

    …sheesh, now i sound like chauncy gardener but maybe that ain't a bad thing…

    …i'm not gonna try & be any more descriptive & i'm not gonna denigrate ya any more than i have, but from a guy like you, i just don't get it…

  2. …sorry fritz, but i just don't get it…you're intelligent, erudite, informative…your perspective on the bike 'scene' is well balanced, easy to grasp, but i just don't 'get' the fascination w/ bsnyc to the point of creating autosnob or the contest……appreciating a tree in the woods is great…going home & describing or even painting a picture for others is meaningful…but trying to rebuild the same tree ain't gonna work well or be as successful as the original……you're involved in growing a couple of lovely trees of your own…i enjoy watching them grow……sheesh, now i sound like chauncy gardener but maybe that ain't a bad thing……i'm not gonna try & be any more descriptive & i'm not gonna denigrate ya any more than i have, but from a guy like you, i just don't get it…

  3. Wild, I appreciate your comments. I saw your comment today over at BSNYC also. I guess it is kinda lame….

  4. Wild, I appreciate your comments. I saw your comment today over at BSNYC also. I guess it is kinda lame….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.