Not Just Bikes

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A Community for the Not Just Bikes YouTube & Nebula channel run by Jason Slaughter.

Official channels:

NOTE: This is an unofficial Community in no way affiliated with NotJustBikes or Jason Slaughter.

RULES

1. Be nice. Please.

I know it's the internet, but be nice. And report trolls & spammers.

2. Stay on topic

Try to stick to posts and comments related to the themes of NJB videos, or content creation. Things like urban planning, mobility & transportation, social equity, Dutch culture, etc..

3. No Trolling

Go troll somewhere else. We don't need that shit here.

4. No comment screenshots

Please don't post screenshots of stupid comments as a post. We all know there are ignorant morons online, we don't need to bring even more attention to their stupid comments.

5. No vehicular cycling

Jason has no patience for advocates of vehicular cycling, and neither do we. You can talk about vehicular cycling, but if you promote it as an alternative to safe bike infrastructure, you may be banned. You can post that crap somewhere else.

6. No people being hit by cars/road violence

Do not show videos or pictures of people being hit by cars, or other road violence. We don't need to see that shit. We know cars are dangerous, and many people have bad memories of car crashes. Keep it out of this subreddit.

7. No tone policing

We don't need any more tone police. If you don't like the tone that Not Just Bike takes in his videos, there's a very easy solution: stop watching them.

founded 2 years ago
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What is Nebula?

Nebula is an independent creator-owned streaming service. Think of it like a cross between Patreon, YouTube, and Netflix.

Patreon, in that you get some exclusive or early-access content, but largely it's about ad-free versions of what's available on YouTube already.

YouTube, in that it's a large number of small-time creators, and the vast majority of the creators on Nebula got invited to the platform because of their success on YouTube.

And Netflix because unlike Patreon, it's a single subscription to gain access to the whole library, not a per-creator fee. It's also relatively exclusive and only available to creators who are selectively invited to join, rather than being open to anyone who wants to create an account and start sharing.

The full library can be browsed without an account, so you can use that to decide if you like what's on offer. They've got news programmes, media reviews & criticism, urbanism, science and sport discussion, cultural commentary, and more. Oh, and game shows. But as a general rule, it's all extremely high quality stuff, and most of it is either left leaning or attempts to present a neutral point of view (as TLDR does).

Why is it linked here?

Jason Slaughter is one of the creators on (and therefore one of the co-owners of) Nebula. He typically uploads his videos to Nebula between a day and a week before they go up publicly on YouTube, and the Nebula version does not include the sponsor read.

How much does it cost?

As of this writing, a Nebula subscription costs US$30 per year, or $6 per month, if you sign up through a creator's code (or slightly more if you sign up without a code).

The price was previously US$20 per year, and people on that price were grandfathered in. The Nebula CEO has stated his hope is to keep it that way, though there's no guarantees.

It also offers a Lifetime membership, currently $300. Nebula is very transparent that this is not intended to be a good deal for customers. You should only do this if you strongly dislike recurring costs, and/or if you want to support Nebula. The CEO has stated that this is their alternative to seeking venture funding. It allows them to raise large amounts of money for more expensive investments (such as Nebula Originals, including Jason Slaughter's upcoming "Day Pass"), without selling out their ownership to corporate interests.

For more information, head over to !nebula@lemmy.world. Or sign up for Nebula at Jason's creator link: https://nebula.tv/notjustbikes

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As background from the Wikipedia page, the Anaheim Transit Network (ATN) was established as a city-sponsored non-profit in 1998 to operate bus lines around the Disneyland resort in California, with private funding from the various hotels in the area to run this public bus system. These hotels are obliged to operate or pay for shuttles to Disneyland as part of their development agreements with the city, presumably to avoid untold amounts of automobile traffic.

As the linked press release says, ATN will shutter its operations on 31 March 2026. The area will still be served by Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA), the county-wide bus service, but looking at the bus lines near Disneyland, coverage seems non-optimal as a replacement to ATN's service.

Other reporting indicates that the City of Anaheim was unwilling to invest further into ATN (despite earlier indications), nor were the hotel operators.

What I find utterly inexplicable is that these stakeholders -- especially the city -- are not recognizing this fact: data from Q3 2025 shows that ATN fixed-buses moved 96,300 average daily riders. From the same document, the USA's heavy rail systems did not exceed that rate, except in the San Francisco, Washington DC, Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, and NY/NJ areas. Basically, ATN was moving metro rail levels of people on buses.

I shudder to imagine how bad this will be for Anaheim once the closure occurs, where workers, visitors, and all other former riders will need to figure out how to move around Anaheim. Ride share automobiles hardly have enough capacity to absorb even a fraction of the prior riders, let alone more automobiles, even if they all carpooled. And seeing as many visitors to Disneyland use the buses to stay at farther hotels to reduce costs, this is a negative attraction. The difficulty of car-seats on ride share made the buses particularly attractive to transport younger children safely.

Each individual hotel operator made an economic choice to not properly fund ATN, but together they will all lose out. Likewise, I don't see how the City of Anaheim is going to make up the transportation capacity around the Disneyland area. Disneyland itself isn't party to the agreement that funds ATN, but they do contract with ATN to shuttle visitors from a far-flung parking lot. But they too will be impacted if staff and guests can't afford to get to the park.

Everyone is going to be worse off, and no one is stepping up to the plate to keep the buses rolling, when it's clearly the obvious thing to do.

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Ok. So admitadely the morning show has a regular thing with the weather guy hating everything that are obviously very popular but he through bike lanes in and man. You don't even joke about that stuff especially in chicago. The bike community and active transit alliance has had to fight hard for our infrastructure and I don't think he understands the jar of bees he is opening here. Especially given the claps you hear out of camera from the other hosts. Maybe it will fly under the radar but we will see.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/39682530

A video by "Not Just Bikes".

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cross-posted from: https://feddit.nl/post/38407605

Inspired by road safety innovations widely used in the Netherlands, several US cities are installing street crossings that can better protect pedestrians and bicyclists.

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submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by federalreverse@feddit.org to c/notjustbikes@feddit.nl
 
 

cross-posted from: https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/39439575

This is not a NJB video, but I hope it fits anyway. Feel free to remove if it does not.

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