|
|
|
|
Our Mission |
DRAG
RACING Online will be published
monthly with new stories and features. Some columns
will be updated throughout the month.
DRAG RACING Online
owes allegiance to no sanctioning body and will
call 'em like we see 'em. We strive for truth, integrity,
irreverence, and the betterment of drag racing.
We have no agenda other than providing the drag
racing public with unbiased information and view
points they can't get in any other drag racing publication.
|
Staff |
Editor/Publisher |
Jeff
Burk |
Managing
Editor |
Kay
Burk |
Senior
Editor |
Ian
Tocher |
Webmaster |
Matt
Schramel |
Asst. Managing Editor |
Caitlin
Moriarity |
Bracket
Racing
Editor |
Jok
Nicholson |
Contributing
Writers |
Mike Bumbeck
Cole Coonce
Cliff Gromer
Darr
Hawthorne
Bret Kepner
Jeff Leonard
Dave
Wallace
Dale
Wilson
|
Editor
at Large |
Bret Kepner |
Senior
Photographer |
Ron Lewis |
Contributing
Photographers |
Adam Cranmer
James Drew
Todd Dziadosz
Steve Embling
Steve Gruenwald
Zak Hawthorne
Bret Kepner
Tim Marshall
Mark Rebilas
Ivan Sansom
Jon Van Daal |
Tech
Contributors |
Dave
Koehler
Jay
Roeder
Jim
Salemi
Wayne
Scraba
Mike
Stewart |
European
Correspondent |
Ivan Sansom |
Australian
Correspondent |
Jon Van Daal |
Poet
Laureate |
Bob Fisher |
Director
of Advertising |
Darr
Hawthorne 818-906-8222
Fax:
818-990-7422 |
Accounts
Manager |
Casey
Araiza |
Editor
at Large Emeritus |
Chris
Martin |
|
Website
Hosting |
|
Website
& Ad Design |
Matt
Schramel |
|
|
|
Clearing out the Burkster’s
2005 notebook
1/5/06
Art by Star Pixel Graphics |
SIX-FIGURE PAYDAYS BECOMING COMMON IN
BRACKET RACING
Have you noticed the increasing number of bracket races being advertised
with six-figure payoffs and four- or even five-figure entry fees
that are limiting the number of entries (except for George Howard’s
“Million Dollar” race)?
If bracket racing wasn’t already getting pushed aside in
mainstream racing by the increasing numbers of heads-up and index
heads-up classes and races, it’s my opinion that elitist bracket
races limited to those racers who can afford multiple entries costing
anywhere from $1,000 to $10,000 are squeezing the rank and file
bracket racers out. If that isn't bad enough, they are even limiting
the number of racers who can compete -- even if they have the price
of admission! In my opinion these high dollar bracket races only
encourage professional multi-car teams to participate and discourage
the participation of the weekend warriors.
Already many tracks are cutting back on weekly bracket events due
to lack of participation. Special events like Norwalk’s Halloween
special, and George Howard’s Million Dollar race attract 500
or more entries, but many others are having problems attracting
200 entries. There is already a de facto circuit for big money bracket
racers with big entry fees and paydays. I can see the time where
a couple of hundred hardcore bracket racers would support a circuit
of sorts, a giant traveling crap game for professional bracket racers
that give track promoters a big payday once-a-year just like any
other circuit except without spectators.
BLOGORRHEA
The Merriam Webster defines “Blogorrhea” as pathologically
excessive (and, in my opinion, often incoherent) blogging. As far
as I’m concerned, driver’s blogs in general do more
harm than good. First, I’m fairly certain that most of the
“star” drivers who attach their names to a blog have
someone else (usually a PR type) write the blog for them. As a result,
most of the information contained in most of the so-called racer
blogs have been sanitized for your protection and made politically
correct before the readers see them and really aren’t personal
at all.
Second, publishing a hero driver’s supposedly personal diary,
in my opinion, strips away the mystique that makes that person larger
than life and a hero driver. As a fan and a journalist I really
don’t care what (fill in the blank here) had for breakfast,
where he or she shops, what music they listen to, who they vote
for, whether they are getting cosmetic surgery, liposuction, or
having a boil on their ass lanced.
Driver blogs have become the new way to get PR and even this publication
ran one last year. Not again! So unless Conrad Kalitta, Jerry Toliver,
or either Paul Romine or Paul Smith start a blog that I know for
sure they’re writing themselves, one of my 2006 New Year resolutions
will be that you’ll never read another blog in DRO! Consequently
blogs are on the same banned-by-the-Burkster list as chatroom-orrhea,
bulletin boardorrhea, Podcastorrhea and realityshoworrhea.
NATTERING NABOBS OF NEGATIVISM
I love that name which was given to the press by former Nixon VP
Spiro T. Agnew right before he was forced to resign from office.
Occasionally DRO runs a feature, column, or 1320 note about a race,
racer or sanctioning body that isn’t a glowing endorsement
of that race, racer or sanctioning body, and as a result we’ll
occasionally get an e-mail or phone call regarding that feature,
column, or note decrying the “negative” press it contains.
It’s as if the recipient of the “negative” press
believes DRO is in the business of promoting them or their project.
Wrong, wrong, wrong.
DRO is in the business of providing its readers with an overview
of everything about the sport of drag racing. The fact is that almost
every racer or sanctioning body has their own newspaper, magazine
or website dedicated to promoting themselves. Even today’s
mainstream paper and ink drag racing magazines are loath to print
anything “negative” about the sport for fear of hurting
someone’s feelings. Now I’m not saying that’s
a bad policy, I’m just saying that DRO and a few other publications
have a slightly different policy.
There are a few editors (myself, Competition Plus’s Bobby
Bennett, and Todd Silvey at Drag News Magazine come to mind) who
strive to bring their readers the whole story, positive or negative,
and let the readers decide what they want to read or know. Besides
and a great PR man once said, “The only bad press is no press!”
Or was it, “I don’t care what they say in the newspapers
as long as they spell my name right!”
NHRA NOT FOR PROFIT? NOT ON YOUR LIFE!
I don’t know about the rest of you, but, despite the legalese
in their incorporation paperwork, there is no doubt in my mind or
anyone else’s that has seen their 2004 tax returns (available
in the archives of this magazine) that the NHRA is all about making
money and a profit. Maybe if we all just accept and live with that
fact some of the business decisions they make wouldn’t make
us so angry. It’s just "bidness” as the man says.
So, another resolution I’m making this year is to not rant
so much about the way NHRA -- the most successful and largest sanctioning
body in drag racing history -- conducts its business. However, I
will continue to inform DRO’s readers what they are doing
good or bad.
LOOKING FORWARD
A happy and prosperous new year to all of you! The new issue of
DRO for 2006 goes up on Monday night, Jan. 9. It marks the beginning
of the seventh full year of publishing for this magazine and I just
have to tell you all that I have enjoyed every day of it. I’m
just hoping you guys keep reading the mag so I won’t have
to get a real job. I’ll have a new Burk’s Blast for
your reading pleasure on Monday. My resolution for the new year
is that I write a new Blast at least every other week. Hell, if
my journalistic hero, Chris Economacki at National Speed Sport News,
can do one a week at age 86 then I ought to be able to do half as
well.
|