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Sara Cheshire

MARTA on YouTube

Ok, so I finally watched the "Crazy Girl on Train" video on YouTube the other day.  Whether or not it is bad press for MARTA I don't know, but I found it absolutely hilarious.  And the fact that someone took the time to add subtitles for what this ranting woman was raving about really put the icing on the cake.


Now, I ride MARTA all the time.  In fact, I lived without a car for 6.5 years and on average, say I rode MARTA once a day each day.  That means over 2000 rides on trains and buses.  Not once have I seen craziness like that.  Sure, I probably could count on two hands the number of more exciting incidents...the guy who got knocked out of his wheelchair at Five Points or the stand-up preacher on the East line.  But I'm averaging .005% on MARTA incidents. That's what makes the video so funny...it is out of the norm, an extreme case of MARTA gone wild.

But I wonder, how did non-MARTA riders view it?  If you live OTP (outside the perimeter), did it make you less inclined to hop on the train after watching the screaming "Soulja Girl"?  Maybe if you caught it on the news, you didn't see the funny captioning.  Humor goes a long way...even the time I saw that man get accidentally dumped out of a wheelchair (wow, did we all go silent), the man who caused the incident later made a crack about it at another station, which for good or bad made me chuckle.  Those of us regulars on the train know you might see just about anything...and learn not to take things so seriously.

Most people on the train are pretty low key and quiet, so much that MARTA actually has a sign stating that if you are going to play music with a headset, keep the volume down (believe me, that rule was needed -- but that is another story).  At night it is quieter, except if you get caught by Falcons fans or help us, another cheerleading convention. Most people are just trying to get home from the late shift, and there is the occasional business men and tourists.  You learn too, that if anything ever bothers you, change to a different train car at the next stop or page the train operator.  But, like I said, the occasion comes up rarely and as long as you go into the MARTA experience with a sense of adventure, willingness to mingle with people of all types and awareness that if anything does seem shocking, it is an abnormality, then you'll be fine.  Plus, I promise, the more you ride, the shock value wears off and you'll be just slightly annoyed and wish the crazies would be quiet so you can go back to decompressing on your carless commute.

Comments & Questions

 

sheyl said:

I think I have seen her on the train before. 2 or 3 years ago when we took the train down to Centennial park for New Year's Eve. She was entertaining but harmless.

With gas prices and the cost to park downtown my husband has been riding MARTA everyday lately and not a single entertaining story. I have been taking it recently a lot as well and have been surprised that it has not been more packed.

July 18, 2008 7:37 AM
 

andicati said:

For anyone that has ridden any large city mass transit system, I find MARTA rather dull in the the complete lack of free entertainment. Not that that is a bad thing. The last thing you need is a busker hijacking your rail car between stops, putting on an impromptu performance then  shoving a dirty hat in your face for donations. At least Soulja Girl didn't put the other riders through the indignity of having to value her performance with a handful of coins. However, it IS a pity that this poor woman suffers from  Bipolar Disorder because she could probably earn a pretty good living doing freestyle rap (on someone else's rapid transit, thank you).  

I think the people that beat up on MARTA have no sense of what a real mass transit system is like. Fortunately for us Atlantans, MARTA is not used to the extent that the NY, Chicago, Boston, London, Paris systems are used. This means that you nearly always can get a CLEAN seat even in rush hour. Unfortunately for MARTA, Atlantans still see the car as a viable form of inner city transport.

July 21, 2008 5:20 PM

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