The stated goal of Travis Pastrana’s Evel Live show on HISTORY channel was to simply conquer three of Evel Knievel’s biggest jumps in one take, a throwback tribute to the OG daredevil. This wasn’t just about jumps, though, because Evel was about much more than jumping.
Evel Knievel wasn’t a math equation of X MPH + X ramp angle = X distance. Evel was performance art, from his personality away from the ramps to his showmanship on them. Evel was cool and ridiculous all at once. He’s known just as much for the misses as the makes. His outfits, style, and bikes exist on the bookends of right and wrong. Everyone knew with Evel, the threat of it going catastrophically wrong was not a perception, but a reality, and he owned it before owning it was a term.
That’s what it takes to entertain people for hours while doing something that takes merely seconds. Evel’s equation was ramps + MPH + buzz.
Only Travis Pastrana can deliver that today. His nice-guy personality is completely at odds with everything evil about Evel, but attention adheres to him in the same way. Travis’ appeal, too, goes way beyond the results. Anyone who watched his brief run as a racer in this sport knows he created an electricity like no other. ESPN can say the same about his life at the X Games. Same for rally car. Same for his attempts at NASCAR, which weren’t successful on the track but absolutely, positively, left positive reviews in his wake. Any time Travis’ name gets brought up in NASCAR, they talk about how cool and fun he was and how he made time for everyone. It’s really the same story as motocross—we all wish so badly it had worked out, because Travis is just so awesome.
Literally went to the grandstands and signed for every fan. Good guy! https://t.co/J7HQGaZsTU
— Steve O'Donnell (@odsteve) July 9, 2018
Travis does amazing things, and his failures only happen because he’s always trying to do stuff at the highest level. Even his motocross career is better than 90 percent of those who have ever swung a leg over, although it still seems like it fell short. Judge him as an all-around motorsports guy and he’s about as good as it gets.
But it’s about more than results. Travis Pastrana trades in infectiousness. With Travis, everyone is on board. He’s not the most famous athlete in the world, and he is not as famous now as Evel Knievel was in his prime. But he has so much credibility with so many people because he’s had so many great interactions through the years.
My favorite part of last night’s show wasn’t the jumps, but Travis actually riding his bike from one Vegas venue to another, on the street, with a police escort. See, the easy thing to do would be to just get a limo ride from spot to spot or do it all cool with a helicopter. Or they could have shut the roads down briefly. But instead, Travis road the streets with a police escort. He was in the left lane, police in front of him, with the right lane still jammed up with regular Las Vegas traffic. And of course, at every red light, Travis was high-fiving random people, doing wheelies, and posing for selfies while riding. Anyone driving on Flamingo Road and Las Vegas Boulevard last night got to be part of the Nitro Circus for a few minutes. It seems like everyone is part of that circus at some point. Everyone is in Travis’ posse.
As the three-hour live show rolled on (again, about 30 seconds of actual jumping), social media was buzzing with all the people who can claim, “Hey, you know what, I actually kinda know Travis.” His wake is so wide. Pastrana has a way of making it seem like everyone is his best friend. If anyone else were doing these jumps, they’d just be jumps. When Travis does it, it pulls you in deeper.
Social media was all over it, with NASCAR people finding old photos as proof he was around their orbit once. Motocross people, too. I’d imagine the same for rally car. I even got sucked into it myself. Two weeks ago, I posted a podcast with Travis from an interview I did with him last year. I couldn’t help but feel a little extra important as I watched this show go on, with so much attention on him, knowing we’ve had conversations before. If you want to name-drop, Travis Pastrana is as good a name as any.
Here’s an example of Travis’ wide scope:
Well, it IS Travis right? https://t.co/2DShytomk6
— Jamie Little (@JamieLittleTV) July 9, 2018
Of course, anything on social media has to carry a bit of negativity, and some took shots saying the jumps weren’t that impressive. That’s an impossible debate to solve. I do know that Travis Pastrana has done things every crazier and more impressive than this. Jamie Little, who has covered Travis from his supercross days (she even once penned a feature story on Travis for Racer X Illustrated) to the X Games to NASCAR knows this best, and put it best.
Going to say it now, that was probably the easiest jump on the ‘big stage’ Travis has Ever done. https://t.co/epYHgicTN3
— Jamie Little (@JamieLittleTV) July 9, 2018
It wasn’t his most impressive stunt, riding-wise, but keeping everyone riveted for three hours is no easy feat. He did it because with Travis, it’s never just about the jumps.