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OPINION

The tough and at times exhilarating life of the lowly bike journalist

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Decisions, decisions. We’re out in the Italian sunshine riding new Bianchis. Shall we carry on for another half hour on these empty roads, or shall we head back to the hotel and crack into the cake and coffee? It’s issues like this that makes the life of a bike journalist so darn stressful. How did it all go so horribly wrong?

We – that’s editor Tony and me – are just back from Bianchi’s launch of their 2012 range in Bergamo, near Milan. I thought you might be interested to know what happens on launches like this, not to show off (despite that first paragraph), but to give you an idea of how it all works.

Most of the bike launches come at about this time of year. Next year’s bikes can make it into the shops any time from late summer onwards, but we get shown them a few weeks or months in advance of that.

Sometimes information is embargoed – we went to a Shimano launch way back in February and aren’t allowed to tell you about certain new technologies and products until next week. Brands might do that if they don’t want to affect sales of a current product, for instance. We could tell you, but Shimano would never invite us back again, so we have to play the game. But more often than not, brands want to show us their new kit and for us to tell you about it as soon as possible.

From the brands’ point of view, it’s all about creating a buzz of expectation. From our point of view, it’s all about providing you lot with as much information as we can. They want to show their products in the best light possible, we want to filter out the bullshit and tell you about them. It works well all round.

So, at this time of year the big brands will often invite us out to their place to see the new line-up. They’ll invite journalists from all over Europe, maybe all over the world depending on the size of their budget. At this Bianchi launch there were hacks from the US, France, the Czech Republic, South Africa (I think), the Democratic Republic of the Congo… Okay, maybe not the Democratic Republic of the Congo, but 13 different countries in all.

Me and yer man Tony had met up in Bath at 3am, driven to the airport and flown out to Bergamo (Ryanair, not BA), waited for a bus that never arrived, waited even longer for one that eventually did arrive, then walked a zillion miles from the bus stop to the hotel, resolved to take a cab next time, and eventually got to our rooms.

When you get to your room you always have to sort out the internet connection – otherwise nothing is going online until you get home and that’s no good. It never, ever works first time so you have some back-and-forth with reception until it’s vaguely working. And once that’s done, it’s time to get busy.

Bianchi took us out to a castle in the back of beyond to see their bikes – an hour away on a coach once the driver’s questionable navigation skills were factored into the equation. And once there, Bianchi showed us the bikes.

Bike presentations come from the marketing guys and it’s their job to accentuate the new and the positive and the interesting. That’s what they’re employed to do – to big-up the brand and the products. They usually bring the tech guys out to help with the detail, but the marketing guys present the stories the brand wants to highlight. Sometimes they have a big new product. Sometimes they have a bunch of updates and have to make it sound major. And it’s always lighter and/or stiffer than last year’s equivalent, faster, and usually more carbon.

Bianchi are bringing out a new aluminium bike called the Impulso and it features what they’re calling Triple Hydroformed Technology. They tell us that it makes the head tube area 10% stiffer than a conventional design. 10% stiffer? It sounds far fetched so we ask a bunch of questions about how they do it, but we’ve not seen the bike at this stage let alone ridden it, so we’re just getting the background here.

We’ll get the lowdown on the entire range. That might take a couple of hours. It depends how much new stuff they have to show us. Then we usually get to check out the products for ourselves – get photographs, pick them up, examine them, scratch our chins knowledgeably, that kind of thing.

There’s always a big meal in the evening and Bianchi’s are legendary. Go to see any brand in Italy and they’ll feed you pretty much constantly for the duration of your stay. Even by Italian standards Bianchi’s food is… plentiful. There were so many courses this time that I lost count. About seven? Something like that. It just kept on coming. Loads of wine too (I didn’t, actually). It’s just a big social occasion.

After a final slice of cake, we got onto the coach and were back at the hotel for just gone midnight. One of the beauties of being online is that road.cc can be more timely than a magazine. And one of the drawbacks of being online is also that road.cc can be more timely than a magazine. We can get content onto the site anytime of the day. Or night.

23 and a bit hours after we got up our day is over.

Five hours later, we’re up again to bolt some breakfast down and head out to ride the bikes. This is the best bit. Of course it is. We get to ride new bikes on foreign roads. We’re playing on bikes for a living. It’s cool.


We ride in a group to start with, at a pretty easy pace. For once, everyone does as they’re told and sticks behind the ride leaders. That normally doesn’t happen. Usually, someone will push the pace on a climb, people will drop off the back and those at the front start to race each another. But everyone is well behaved today… including me. It could be the lack of sleep.

Once we know the short route, we can all do our own thing: grab different bikes, put our own pedals on and ride them. It’s a bit of a taster session, really. We never get in enough riding on a press launch to do a full bike review with ratings and everything. A few weeks ago, I went out to the launch of Cannondale’s new SuperSix, again in Italy, and got to ride it for [checks training diary]2:30hrs one day and 5:25hrs the following day. That’s not typical. Usually, we ride two or three bikes for an hour or two each and can write a ‘First Ride’ where we explain all the background, present the tech information and give our initial impressions – but it’s not a full-on review.

So, we did some more riding, found a decent spot for action photography and got everything in the bag… or, more precisely, on the memory card. No pics, you weren’t there – that’s the way these things work.

Back at base, there was just time to add extra detail to last night’s story and grab a spot of lunch before jumping in the back of a little hatchback and getting a lift to the airport to do the whole Ryanair thing again. Queues, cramming everything in your hand luggage, coffee, cramped seating… it’s the same every time.

Less than 44 hours after leaving home, I’m putting the key in the front door again. It’s fun.

Press launches

The 5 best bits
1 Riding new bikes
2 Finding out about new tech
3 Sunshine (usually)
4 Smooth roads (usually)
5 Switchbacks (often)

The 5 worst bits
1 Sleep deprivation
2 Airports
3 Ryanair
4 EasyJet
5 Ryanair again

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. We send him off around the world to get all the news from launches and shows too. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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18 comments

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dob90210 | 11 years ago
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Very interesting to get an honest inside view. Thanks

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fuzzy | 12 years ago
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Gissa job!

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Tony Farrelly | 12 years ago
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yeah, if you knew the lengths we had to go to to make our hand luggage look like it weighed less than 10 kilos…

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Mat Brett | 12 years ago
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Have I come across as unappreciative here? I don't mean to. I love it, which is why I do it. All I mean is, a pair of socks – even nice celeste socks – don't really swing it either way.

And sleep? Pah, sleep when you're dead.

I stand by the Ryanair bit though. The sooner we get the road.cc private jet, the better. I'll settle for a hang glider.

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Adey | 12 years ago
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You dont want your Bianchi socks Mat? I'll gladly take them off your hands (feet)
Or anything else Bianchi!!  4

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merino | 12 years ago
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i'm completely fine with sleep deprivation and ryanair. swap?

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dave atkinson | 12 years ago
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which is why freebies didn't make it onto the list of the 5 best bits

unless it's socks. all bike hacks love socks.

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simonmb replied to dave atkinson | 12 years ago
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dave_atkinson wrote:

unless it's socks. all bike hacks love socks.

Socks? But it seems you're chained to your *fantasy* computer these days. So why would you need socks? A pair of furry carpet slippers would probably do  15

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Mat Brett | 12 years ago
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Yeah, that's true; there's not a big market for once-used socks, shorts and jerseys so brands don't tend to want them back. I mean, if they do want clothing back that's not a problem, but there's not a lot they can do with stuff we've sweated in... other than incinerate it.

To be honest, we'd rather ride in our own kit on press launches; it makes the pics look less like publicity shots. But it seems polite to go with what the brands would like us to wear.

Believe me, bike journalists really aren't short of riding kit. It's not as if yet another branded Buff is going to make a jot of difference to our write up... which is why freebies didn't make it onto the list of the 5 best bits.

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WolfieSmith | 12 years ago
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Bend those elbows Tony! Suspiciously new looking shoes as well in the shot....In the plus points did you forget to mention freebies? Surely they let you keep the Bianchi socks?

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dave atkinson | 12 years ago
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Still, at least you weren't sitting in the office looking at the fantasy game's matrix code, eh mat  4

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simonmb | 12 years ago
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It's reading pieces like this that reminds me why I keep coming back to road.cc

Connecting with the readers. Nice piece by a regular guy, for other regular guys  41

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Tony Farrelly | 12 years ago
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Ryanair may well get you there are on time but that only gets you so far when set against their apparent desire to screw you for every penny. The cabin crews always seem very pleasant though.

We tend to travel with Easyjet more than Ryanair simply because they seem to be that bit more flexible and accommodating… I wouldn't say there were more on time though. Funnily enough what I've also found in the past when booking flights is that depending on where you are going BA can be cheaper than both of the Budget airlines & you get a much more generous baggage allowance for checked in luggage and hand luggage and they are much more flexible about stuff too.

+ If you're flying in to Stansted you could well end up taking another hour or so to get through passport control - last week the queue pretty much started at the point we got off the plane.

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dave atkinson | 12 years ago
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you know what you pay

i remember the good old days when you really did know what you were going to pay, in the sense that the ticket price included things like paying for the ticket, and getting on the plane, stuff like that.

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Adey | 12 years ago
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Great article

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paulj | 12 years ago
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I'm surprised you have a go at Ryanair - You know what you get, and you know what you pay, and generally the service is on time. Ryanair bashing is always good fun, but actually probably unfair.

I should point out I have no interest in Ryanair (or Easyjet), but do use their service to Poland where they definitely beat the alternative "scheduled" services!

Bike testing does sound like fun though!

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iggy pete | 12 years ago
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Tough at the top eh??

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Shiny Flu | 12 years ago
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Great write up!

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