Skip to main content

Fan’s Ford Focus finds favour with Flavor Fav

Pop stars are noted for taking the most outrageous limousines to their gigs. But what should a singing group do if their transport doesn’t show up, leaving them stranded in a strange city? That was the question facing New York’s hip-hop legend Public Enemy when recently in the United Kingdom they found themselves in a record store and their taxi to their gig nowhere to be found. Public Enemy had booked a normal taxi amid their concern that their large tour bus could not navigate the narrow city street
December 2, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
A focussed fan hops to it to help his hip-hop heroes
Pop stars are noted for taking the most outrageous limousines to their gigs. But what should a singing group do if their transport doesn’t show up, leaving them stranded in a strange city?

That was the question facing New York’s hip-hop legend Public Enemy when recently in the United Kingdom they found themselves in a record store and their taxi to their gig nowhere to be found.

Public Enemy had booked a normal taxi amid their concern that their large tour bus could not navigate the narrow city streets.

They didn’t panic, but their management did, at least until a little help from their friends arrived in time, as the UK’s Telegraph newspaper reported.

The group was in a record store signing autographs when it came time to leave to get to their gig across the city.

To the rescues came a 50-year-old focussed fan who volunteered to drive them in his Ford Focus family car.

"People started panicking and looking for someone to drive, so I volunteered," the fan reportedly told local media.

During the drive they sang in the van, belting out to Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, in the style of the hit film Wayne’s World. And the fan-come-roadie took a selfie. "I was looking in the rear view mirror thinking, 'is this actually happening?'"

He said they got to the arena about 15 minutes before they were to play on stage.

"I drove up to security and said, ‘I’ve got the band in the back.’ They looked at me as if I was having them on, but then I rolled down the windows and Chuck D showed them the security pass. Amazing, it just didn’t feel real."

To see pictures, %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal click here Visit www.telegraph.co.uk website false http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/12026764/How-gangsta-Hip-hop-legends-Public-Enemy-squash-into-fans-Ford-Focus-on-way-to-gig.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&amp;utm_medium=twitter false false%>.

Related Content

  • Highways England and Keir trial warning airbag
    May 3, 2021
    “Home Safe and Well”* is not just an inflated phrase put out by Highways England to raise awareness of work zone dangers
  • E&E Event 2018 in Berlin: an asphalt industry fit for purpose
    May 15, 2018
    The provisional programme is now available for this year’s Euroasphalt and Eurobitume Event in Berlin. June 14-15. The focus of E&E 2018 will be on the preparations needed by the asphalt industry to ensure that it is fit for purpose in the future. Important strategic issues will be explored, some of which were highlighted in the E&E Congress 2016. These include the increasingly stringent economic aspects of supply and demand, the growing environmental issues over highway construction and use, health
  • Making machines last another generation
    October 1, 2023
    The shift toward a circular economy approach is key to the transition towards net zero carbon emissions. At Volvo Construction Equipment (Volvo CE), keeping construction machines – and their parts – in action for longer, to maximise their useful life, is a core part of its sustainability ambitions.
  • Putzmeister adds five-section pump
    January 6, 2017
    Putzmeister has added a five-section 38m, 160m3/hr concrete pump, which can be used to place loads inside buildings some 3m higher than the four-section option. Built on a 26tonne chassis, the new 38.5 can reach heights of 31m while leaving the final boom section to pass inside the building. In common with the company’s other machines, the 38.5 now has outrigger sensing, which feeds into the control system and prevents the boom from extending/slewing if the outriggers are not fully deployed. The machine als