For eight years now, the pedal-happy camera toters at Freeride Entertainment in Nelson, British Columbia, have exposed and documented the aerial evolution (revolution?) of new-school mountain bikers. The company’s latest flick – “Disorderly Conduct” – is the fifth in its award-winning “New World Disorder” series and continues to overturn every traditional boundary set by the ancestral mountain bikers who created the sport three decades ago.
Piloting suspension-heavy rides that barely can be pushed uphill, new-school athletes such as Cedric Gracia, Wade Simmons and teenage phenom Kyle “Kayodic” Strait define a new world of pedal-powered possibility in “Disorderly Conduct.” From New Zealand, Australia, Whistler, Europe, Alaska and Utah, the Freeride crew captures images of rushing and reckless riders soaring up, over and through obstacles most people would approach only on hands and knees.
From flowing single-track through trees to urban jumping to course competition, “Disorderly Conduct” exhibits the cutting edge of just about every discipline in the emerging sport of freeriding.
Get it — To order DVDs or find a shop near you that sells “New World Disorder” videos, click over to www.nwdfilms.com.



