The Story 2022: City Of Stairs Comment Count

Brian August 29th, 2022 at 11:20 AM

Previously: The Story 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008.

4/31/2022 – Independiente De Medellin 0, Atletico National 0

He introduces himself as "Davey." He's wearing a hat that says DO IT IN A VAN, mysteriously, and the first thing he says is that he is very sorry but he is still drunk from last night because it was an American friend's last night in the country. Then he says his girlfriend is going to drive us, and that his girlfriend is not very happy with him. Then he apologizes again because he does not know that these are the three best facts I can learn about the guide of a food tour I'm going on. Tranquilo.

It is immediately apparent that Davey doesn't know anything about food, but this is fine. He says he speaks three languages, "Spanish, English, and bullshit." He takes us to Medellin's main market, where men you must avoid arm-wresting at all costs lug a seemingly infinite variety of products, mostly fruits. Many of these fruits are strange to gringo eyes, and Davey wanders through the market asking for various items and a knife so he can cut them and hand them to us.

These fruits are… unrefined. When you go to an American megamart the things that line the shelves have been relentlessly iterated to strip out things which interfere with the flavor. The Colombian oddities have not gone through this process and can be eye-wateringly tart or mostly seeds or one giant pit with a thin layer of fruit-type substance around it. The usual thing to do is to rhapsodize about the pure untrammeled authenticity of such things, but they're not actually better. We're sampling a smoothie-type thing made from a hard, luridly orangish fruit; Davey's girlfriend questions us about whether we like it, in the way of people who are almost but not quite mutually unintelligible. She makes a face and a sort of money gesture with her hands—she doesn't like the texture. She has a point.

Davey suggests that about half the things he hands to me are aphrodisiacs. He uses his arm to demonstrate their purported effects. He flops his forearm down from the elbow and looks at me, cocking an eyebrow. I nod. There doesn't seem to be anything else I can do.

[After THE JUMP: a fun little guy who's confused]

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I never catch the name of the guide for the Pablo Escobar tour, but she does not wear a hat that says DO IT IN A VAN. She went to college in the US and has hung her own shingle out as the person who takes you on a tour that is not really a Pablo Escobar tour but a tour about the kind of things that have to happen to give rise to a Pablo Escobar.

The first place she takes us is a local sports complex. The city has stuck these things all over. There's a soccer field ringed by high fences and a faintly ludicrous gym setup—at one point I will actually see some buff dudes use one of these, lifting the concrete blocks attached to the bar over and over. She sits us down and starts talking about Colombia, how it was, how it is now. She comes from money so her family was a target. An uncle of hers refused to pay and was killed. She points out a tiny little baggie sitting at our feet, and says that never used to happen. Drugs were for export. Like coffee.

I am paying attention, mostly, but my eyes are drawn to the soccer practice that's ongoing. Kids go to school in shifts, it turns out, and a chunk of them just play soccer the rest of their day.

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This is not pickup. There are coaches, and drills, and it is immediately clear that this rag-tag assemblage of preteens would give that work to anyone who doesn't do this all day. They're all skilled, but my eye is drawn to one kid in particular wearing #25. He's tall, gangly, and possessed of a near supernatural grace. I think about Stanley Okumu.

Stanley Okumu is Kenyan. He is currently playing for KAA Gent in Belgium. For the privilege of employing him, Gent paid a Swedish club 3.5 million Euros last year. He has nine caps for his national team. He played for AFC Ann Arbor in 2018, when it was in the NPSL.

Here is a lengthy aside about the NPSL for the 99.9% of readers who have no idea what the hell that is. The NPSL is nominally the fourth tier of American soccer. It is mostly an amateur summer league for college players who want to remain sharp in the lengthy offseason. There are a hundred and twenty-some NPSL clubs, divided into local regions where it's feasible to drive.  NPSL clubs are almost without exception podunk enterprises; with a minimal entry fee teams come and go willy-nilly. For a brief and glorious period of time the Michigan-centric division had both AFC Ann Arbor and Detroit City FC.

When a guy who will go on to start Africa Cup of Nations matches for his country strides onto the field at an NPSL game, your first thought is "who is that?" and your second thought is "why is he here?"

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The guide who takes us on the hike clearly knows everything about hiking. He can hike anyone under the table, especially Americans from flat, low-altitude parts of the country.

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Medellin is sick of talking about Pablo Escobar, who is merely the most grandiose aspect of a 70-year conflict that will bear no descriptor less generic than that. Is it a war? Not really. Is it a rebellion? Not anymore. Is it complicated? God, yes. Folks have given up tracing the particular letters that any group adopts after FARC dissolved some ten years ago and have given the successor groups a generic term (PDOs). While we are in the country a high-ranking member of the military admits at a tribunal that the Colombian army killed random teenagers in the countryside and then planted guns on them, so it would look like they were doing something about the other criminals.

So it is annoying for people to come in and ask about the drug lord that created a reign of terror that touched everyone in this city. Medellin is so many other things. Occasionally—very occasionally—one of the merchants that spring up anywhere a tourist might wander will be selling an Escobar t-shirt, and I cannot imagine the levels of 1) chutzpah and 2) sociopathy that could cause someone to actually purchase one under the watchful eye of everyone on the street.

Medellin also cannot stop talking about Pablo Escobar. There is of course the woman we hired to talk about Pablo Escobar.

Davey brings him up apropos of nothing. First he gives him a Bronx cheer and a thumbs down, indicating that he disapproves of the guy who turned Medellin into the most dangerous city in the world for a hot minute. Later he expresses some admiration for Escobar's business sense, since he is a paisa and Escobar was a paisa and one thing paisas believe about paisas is that they could "sell ice to an Eskimo," in Davey's formulation.

We ask the hiking guide to take us to Comuna 13, a formerly notorious area of the city that has been transformed into a sort of tourist trap. Murals line the walls, and the world's longest series of outdoor escalators eases passage to and from the city. Our guide is perfectly happy to take us there because that's where he lives, and as he's showing us around he talks about a gun battle that happened right where we are standing. In 2018. It seems unbelievable. This is the only portion of the city I've been in that feels crafted for outsiders. Four years ago it was briefly a warzone again.

Part of an excursion to a big rock nearby is a boat ride on an artificial lake. Our tour guide points out various houses. That one's owned by a reggaeton star. That one is James Rodriguez's. Have you seen Narcos? That one used to be owned by the guy who got blown up by a bazooka. That one was Pablo Escobar's lieutenant. And then you round a bend and there's a burned-out husk.

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A guarded burned-out husk. A guarded burned-out husk that three people are currently leaving, because they bribed the guard to check it out. We're asked if we want to bribe the guard and politely demur. The inside of Pablo Escobar's former residence is probably just as burned as the outside. This guide is weirdly excited by all of it. She's almost a little bloodthirsty.

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The only guide who does not bring up Escobar is the one taking us to the soccer game. There is a Medellin Clasico while we are in town between Atletico Nacional and Independiente De Medellin, but of course Pablo Escobar bankrolled Nacional in the 80s and 90s. So Escobar looms here, inevitably.

They've moved the game from Medellin's main stadium, which seats 40,000 and the clubs share, because of a reggaeton concert. I find this boggling—move the date! do something!—and am initially disappointed that the replacement option is a 10k band-box in the south of the city that only Medellin fans are allowed at. Arriving at the stadium is a literally incredible thing, because the concrete edifice with stands only on one side and in the endzones is reminiscent of nothing so much as watching an NPSL match. I cannot believe Rene Higuita's club is playing here.

Ok, though, I can get on board with this. When AFCAA and DCFC were briefly rivals both teams were good, and I had occasion to go to Keyworth Stadium for some playoff games. Keyworth Stadium is 100 years old and still extravagantly dilapidated even after Detroit City refurbished the place. One game is aborted because it rains and the grounds crew cannot squeegee enough of it off the astroturf to make it playable. It hosts about 6000 people and has a bunch of industrial wasteland as a backdrop. And it is more or less a dead ringer for this Colombian stadium (built in the 1990s!)  that's hosting the Clasico, give or take the background scenery.

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We're cutting it somewhat close because some folks had issues getting to the staging area a short walk from the stadium, and the line is not moving. People are getting antsy. Their signing develops a harder edge, and then suddenly we surge forward. The ticket-takers withdraw. We walk by cops who aren't getting paid enough to deal with this, and lurch into the stadium. It turns out we're in with the ultras.

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Giant banners hang down from the top of the stadium, allowing the folks in the front row to use them as support while they climb the railing and stand atop it. For 45 minutes I wonder if these people are all mountain goats, and then someone falls 15 feet to the concrete below just before halftime. He walks off after the medics attend to him, holding his arm as if it's broken.

The rest of the ultras mount the railing again as if nothing has happened. It rains a bit. They don't care. Also they are absurdly loud.

You cannot believe how loud they are. The video doesn't even begin to assert how loud they are. It feels like there are 2000 people screaming at the top of their lungs for 90 minutes. DCFC does some cosplay of this, but that's what it is: cosplay.

I am here, and they are loud, and I am happy. I do not understand why but I am filled with a profound gratitude.

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Atletico has a gameplan to haul down anyone who looks like they might be off on a dangerous counter, racking up four yellow cards by halftime. They score in the first half but it's called back by VAR. They endure a rain of abuse and garbage as they go back to the locker room, flanked by an honor guard of riot cops in Judge Dredd uniforms with riot shields that mostly protect themselves from whatever's being hurled.

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Nothing makes contact and nothing looks like it would do much even if it did. This is more ritual than threat.

The first half is strange. There's the ultras screaming—one song constantly repeats a line that starts "vamos a matar". There's the overall level of play, which I know cannot be NPSL level but really feels like it, probably because of the environs. And then there's the backdrop. I'm having a hard time processing it. What is going on with the backdrop? I'm at the NPSL game. But something is… off. I am also somewhere else.

Fifteen minutes into the game the pieces fall into place: the mountains in the background. I am also at the Rose Bowl. I'm at the combination NPSL game-Rose Bowl. The whole damn United States has one place where the mountains perfectly frame the background in a legendary stadium. Medellin can't build a concrete box without incidentally making it also the Rose Bowl.

Atletico begins to come undone in the second half due to the liberal card accumulation in the first. A bad tackle is a second yellow ten minutes into the second half, and if the halftime hooting and throwing of items was a merry middle finger the sent off player's reception is a little more menacing. Ten minutes later another Nacional player is sent off for a violent foul that sees the victim substituted, and now here it is: an opponent down to nine men, VAR keeping you level in the first half, twenty-five minutes to put one past the opposition and vault yourself into contention for the title.

Medellin just cannot.

Atletico has decided to let the right back do whatever he wants. Because this is "cross ineffectually" it is working out great for them. Five minutes tick by, and then ten. The ultras start turning sour. Whistling increases. The songs get sporadic. It is no quieter. Eventually the right back does a couple things right, and one of the strikers gets on the end of a cross just outside the six yard box, but he puts it directly off the keeper. Whistling. Crosses. Time ticks up. At some point a switch flips and the red cards are more burden than opportunity. Medellin is desperate, rushing through patterns of play too fast to generate anything. Whistling. Crosses.

Eventually, the ref's whistle goes. 0-0. Medellin didn't even get to lose.

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NOW YOU MAY BE ASKING YOURSELF, what does any of this have to do with Michigan football's 2022 season? The most truthful answer is not much at all. I went to a place and did some things and came back and now here's my slide show.

The second most truthful answer is that I loved Medellin in ways I did not expect to and maybe that means a little something. I went to Miami for the playoff game; we stayed in the Wynwood neighborhood. There's a bunch of graffiti around that feels like corporate cooptation of something real. Meanwhile I found this guy in Medellin, interspersed around the art on the walls:

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Medellin feels like a real place. A place to grab onto. I couldn't wait to get out of Miami. I miss Medellin. Everyone in Medellin is trying so hard their skin wobbles. It radiates off of them.

The Escobar guide took us on one of the city's gondolas, which have sprouted like mushrooms over the last 15 years. She shows up a map of the public transportation system and somewhat sheepishly calls it "our baby metro." I'm stunned. In the amount of time it takes an American city to revise its comprehensive plan, Medellin has installed two tram lines running the length of the city and several different gondolas that have given the people in the hills the ability to get to and from their jobs in wealthier environs without spending several hours a day trudging up and down a mountain.

This is a twisted sort of privilege that comes from murdered uncles and gun battles you hide from and moments when you don't know if you're going to continue existing. Davey drops his bravura façade once and only once, to tell us about the time where he wandered into the wrong place at the wrong time when he was 12 and had a gun pointed at his head.

Nobody in Medellin has any illusions about the good old days. Nobody wants to preserve a sainted past. That is power. What they have now is hard-earned, and so much better, and never enough. So they do a thing. You do a thing. You recover from the nadir, and plant a flag in the ground. Then you have to keep going. Every day. Now is the time to build.

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As we're leaving the sports complex I get one last glimpse of 25 taking a shot from outside the box with his left foot. It curls beautifully, headed for the upper 90, until it slams off the crossbar and ricochets away. 25 raises his despairing hands as he must, and then disappears over the horizon.

Comments

Bo Harbaugh

August 29th, 2022 at 2:06 PM ^

In.... one of the sex tourism capitals of the world, nonetheless.  And I don't judge at all and support any choices made...but to leave out this reality is a bit inauthentic to say the least.

Also, the same Escobar drug $ that helped build Medellin, built Miami in the 70 and 80's. Sometimes, cool things come out of really horrible realities...ie, American advances in exploring the cosmos due to necessity of nuclear and scientific innovation during and post WW2.  Nasa's leading scientists were ex-Nazi rocket scientists after all.

Medellin is an amazing place, but fútbol is hardly the interest of its gringo visitors.

TrueBlue2003

August 29th, 2022 at 2:22 PM ^

Seems like pointing it out says more about you than anything.  I'm also not really sure where you get that.  Certainly less frequented as a sex tourism destination than Las Vegas, Amsterdam, Bangkok, etc.

I would think a high number of tourists have to actually visit a place for it to be considered a "capital" of anything.  People aren't exactly rushing to go to Medellin.

And it's anecdotal, but I went to Medellin with buddies in 2012 and we went to a soccer game at this exact stadium.  Fun to experience a sport that the locals are mad about when traveling.  Good cultural experience.

Bo Harbaugh

August 29th, 2022 at 5:36 PM ^

Yes indeed, it says that I have family from Colombia, in Medellin specifically, and have visited over 30 times.  And Medellin is a gorgeous city, but has also become a gringo sex destination.

Anybody that visits will tell you how beautiful the women are but also how prevalent prostitution is, working girls even hang out at regular bars and clubs. It would be like going to the beaches of Rio and not noticing/mentioning how incredibly fit the locals are. 
 

I am not judging the culture at all, as I am in many ways a part of it, but it is not a soccer destination city. I’m not implying anything about Brian’s activities there, but not mentioning the sex tourism in Medellin at this point is the equivalent of not mentioning the cartel/Escobar history. 
 

 

 

TrueBlue2003

August 30th, 2022 at 1:41 PM ^

Oh I've been there.  The women aren't generally any more beautiful than anywhere else, especially in the barrios, downtown, etc where you're around the "gen pop".

Do a relatively small number of gringos (but sure, a relatively high proportion of total visitors) go there for sex and do working girls go to the small number of bars and clubs where the gringos hang out because it's easy money? Sure, absolutely. So yeah, if that's where you're hanging out, you'll see that.  And the women seem disproportionately beautiful in those limited places.

Incidentally the real draw for most of them is cheap, abundant cocaine.  "When in Rome" applies to cocaine in Medellin.  The women then follow because people that are doing a lot of partying and blow are gonna then want hookers.  If it's the capital of anything, it's the capital of cocaine tourism.

BUT, I don't think it's the highest on the list for most of those who partake in sex tourism.  For far more people it's still Las Vegas, Amsterdam, Bangkok even Canada and other places.

And people are increasingly going there for legit tourism even if some of it is "dark" tourism, marked by a fascination with Escobar and the drug...conflict...glorified in Narcos and other shows.  It's a nice place that plenty of people visit without intention of engaging in the sex trade so suggesting Brian should mention that is ridiculous.  If he wasn't out late in the Poblado (which seems reasonable for a 40 year old dad), he probably wouldn't have even noticed any hookers at all.  Even he was, he might not have realized they were working (I was naive to that when I went there until friends pointed, oh those are probably hookers).

Bo Harbaugh

August 30th, 2022 at 2:00 PM ^

I'm glad you've been there and enjoyed it. Not sure how many times or when, but I was last there just 3 months ago, and once again, I am talking from the perspective of a local, having family there and visiting over 30 times in the past decade.  

The amount of plastic surgery and appeal of the narco-aesthetic (lips, boobs, butts) has led to a culture of fantasy and playground for foreign men.  We don't look down on it and have essentially accepted it as part of the culture and economy.  However, you can visit a ton of cafes and bars with signs that say "No To Sex Tourism" in English. To not see this going on would mean you weren't there long enough or didn't hang out at all in Poblado or other areas with bars and clubs.

By all accounts it has become one of the top 5 sex tourism cities in the world, and the govt of Colombia and local govt of Medellin is aware of this and looking for ways to curb or at least make the activities safer.

I'm not judging, but again, not being aware or intellectually honest about this reality is the equivalent of going to Rome and not mentioning the amazing food or incredible ancient architecture and ruins.

Gulogulo37

August 30th, 2022 at 2:52 PM ^

Not knowing that going to a sports event in other countries IS actually a touristy thing to do seems just as intellectually dishonest. I had an outing with my language school. You may not be aware Brian is a big soccer fan. There was a derby on when he was there. Of course he went. I'm sorry you have such a low opinion of the place you're apparently from.

I went to Rome, saw the architecture, ate Italian food, AND saw an AS Roma match. They even had a thing set up in town obviously for tourists to buy tickets and go to the game. BECAUSE THAT'S A THING TOURISTS WHO LIKE SPORTS DO.

Bo Harbaugh

August 30th, 2022 at 8:17 PM ^

1) Fuck off - I don't have a low opinion of where I'm from so don't presume. I'm very proud of my heritage.

2) I was sharing an issue that is currently getting worse in a city where I have a ton of family.  

But your last line in ALL CAPS! definitely suggests you know what you're are talking about regarding Medellin.  

TrueBlue2003

August 30th, 2022 at 3:01 PM ^

Yes, again it's prevalent in the bars and clubs in the Poblado.  That's a tiny slice of life in a small slice of the city.  And yes, that's where most of the still small number of gringos go.  Like I said, a high proportion of the small number of tourists that go there, go for hookers and blow.

I'd be curious to see raw numbers on your top 5 assertion but I would bet it's well below Las Vegas, Amsterdam, Bangkok in terms of volume.  It does indeed show up on a lot of top 10 lists, but so does Germany.  So I'll grant that it is "one of" the sex tourism capitals of the world depending on how far down the list you go.

But the main point, if Brian visited Amsterdam or Las Vegas or Germany, I don't think it should be expected that he'd talk about the sex trade in those places. I'm sure that Brian was aware and intellectually honest about there being a sex trade in Medellin but it's totally irrelevant to the story and was almost certainly not part of his trip. There are plenty of other things to do and plenty of other reasons for people to go to Medellin. 

It is absolutely NOT close to equivalent with the cartel/Escobar notoriety, or the ruins in Rome.  It is not what the city is most known for, in general. It's well behind 1) Escobar and 2) cocaine as the first thing people would say if asked what Medellin is known for.

Very few people that aren't the types to pay for sex would know Medellin is a place where people specifically go to do that, and it's not what Brian was doing, there so there's no reason it should be part of the story just like a visit to Amsterdam does not require a mention of the red light district.

I just googled "What is Medellin known for" and top result was a Telegraph.uk article titled "How Medellin went from Murder Capital to Hipster Holiday Destination."  Lots of mentions of Pablo Escobar.  Zero mentions of prostitution or the sex trade.  Not one.  This is an article talking about Medellin tourism in general, not ones own experience about it. Hmmmm.  People are going there for a lot of reasons, man!

agrude

August 31st, 2022 at 9:41 AM ^

I spent time in Medellin recently, stayed in Poblado, and saw nothing of sex tourism other than a bunch of stickers on the windows of restaurants and shops expressing disapproval. If it weren't for the prominently displayed stickers I would have had no awareness of sex tourism. 

I personally visited Medellin for the beautiful scenery, culture, and fascinating/evolving history of the country. 

Suggesting that Brian went to Colombia for sex tourism is just gross. He wrote about his own experience and is not required to provide some a history or current status of the entire country.

NFG

August 29th, 2022 at 12:43 PM ^

2021: Article about a depressing anime movie about death and starvation, sprinkled in with a divorce

2022: Brian goes to Colombia and enjoys it

Winning cures all problems.

1989 UM GRAD

August 29th, 2022 at 12:45 PM ^

Amazing piece, Brian.

Really enjoyed it.

Wynwood used to be a real place.  My son and I discovered it 10-12 years ago when it was just some walls, some obscure art galleries, one restaurant, and one coffee place. You could park on the main road anywhere and at anytime.

Now it's like gentrified Disney World.  

harmon40

August 29th, 2022 at 1:07 PM ^

Nice piece. I lived in Bogotá for a few years in the 90’s and never got to Medellín. I’ve been there a couple times for work but it’s been several years.

Medellín is beautiful and the people are great. You are correct that Colombia is…complicated. Its history is unique, and very, very tragic

Reader71

August 29th, 2022 at 1:11 PM ^

Never been to Medellin, but I have been to a couple of AS Roma matches with/near the Ultras. There are very few things I like less. The fact that Brian liked it is very interesting, but I don’t know quite why or what it suggests.

TrueBlue2003

August 29th, 2022 at 2:33 PM ^

Is "ultras" just a general term for the most die hard supporters of any team?  I hadn't heard that term before.

I live in LA and love sitting relatively close to, but certainly not in (there aren't even seats), the supporters section for LAFC games.  Very lively and loud.  That group does a really good job for an MLS supporters group.  Just makes for a great, contagiously energetic atmosphere.  A fun score for the action on the field, IMO.

Reader71

August 29th, 2022 at 3:46 PM ^

Yeah, ultras are the hardcore. Usually a membership organization. Usually full of insane hooligans who think they own the club. American soccer doesn't have the hooligan culture of South American or European soccer, so I would imagine the LAFC fans are fantastic.

Every now and again, you read a headline about some European ultra stabbing a visiting fan, or a South American ultra assaulting a referee for a red card.

TrueBlue2003

August 29th, 2022 at 3:58 PM ^

Got it, thanks. Just hadn't heard that term before.  But agree about the hooligan culture.  I went to a Rotterdam derby between Feyenoord and Sparta and it was pretty insane.  Feyenoord has notoriously rough hooligans so the opposing team section has 20ish foot high plexiglass surrounding it to keep things from being thrown in or out.  Lot of beer and stuff being thrown and tossed around that section.  Wouldn't have wanted to be near them for that reason.

No alcohol was sold in the stadium to try to keep things calmer.  There was also a concrete "moat" around the field to keep any "wandering" fans away from it.  Pretty wild.

Gulogulo37

August 30th, 2022 at 3:33 PM ^

I went to an Atlético Nacional match in Medellin. It's not the national team, it's just their name for some reason. We also went in the ultra section. And yes, many people were just jumping around on the ledge. It was crazy. Security is tight so it's slow getting in. We had the same problem with people pushing and there were almost fights. I got pretty annoyed so once I was in i didn't really want to root for the team anymore lol.

Blue Vet

August 29th, 2022 at 1:13 PM ^

Come for the Michigan sports, stay for the deep pleasure in whatever Brian chooses to write about.

Which is usually also about Michigan sports but that doesn't matter.

kehnonymous

August 29th, 2022 at 1:32 PM ^

I was also fortunate enough to visit Colombia (was exploring Cartagena the day of [redacted]-39 but I digress), and it's a staggeringly beautiful country.  I also went to most of the places Brian did, except for the futbol stadium and Escobar tour.

Occasionally—very occasionally—one of the merchants that spring up anywhere a tourist might wander will be selling an Escobar t-shirt, and I cannot imagine the levels of 1) chutzpah and 2) sociopathy... 

Can definitely confirm this, but it was more than occasional for me.  The one time all week our lovely and charming tour guide wasn't smiling was when she warned us in no uncertain terms to not buy an Escobar T-shirt.

Lastly, for anyone else here who's going to Colombia, yes you should see Medellin, but if at all possible definitely find time to see the Salento Valley (it's where Encanto is set, for all you MGoParents), as well as the Caribbean coast and Minca/Tayrona National Park.

Hanlon's Razor

August 29th, 2022 at 1:49 PM ^

I second visiting Tayrona. It is spectacular and largely unspoiled. Cartagena is also a really cool place to visit. 

As for vendors (usually 12-15 year olds) in Medellin, I was taken aback when they loudly stated their offerings of "chicle, cigarettes" and in a soft voice that made you question if you'd heard them correctly "cocaine?"

And the people I met were very friendly and full of gratitude. 

SanDiegoWolverine

August 29th, 2022 at 1:35 PM ^

I've been to Medellin quite a few times but have not been to a Classico, very jealous. I think you had bad luck with fruit from street vendors. Colombia has some of the best fruit in the world. That nasty orange drink you had was most likely chontaduro. Colombians love to sell it to gringos and laugh about it.

treetown

August 29th, 2022 at 1:48 PM ^

Nice narrative. Appreciate the travel insights and the part with the ultras. The passion is understandable since we have that here but I hope we don't go to the other extremes.

Sounds like you had a great time. Keep it up.

TrueBlue2003

August 29th, 2022 at 1:54 PM ^

Wow, brings back memories.  Went to Medellin about 10 years ago with friends and we went to what I'm 99% sure was this exact stadium for a soccer game.  It was not a Classico and it was sparsely attended but that was nice because we could lean back and kick our legs up onto the seats in front of us.

Had the same general feeling about the place and the people.  They showed a ton of pride in their city/country and were generally really hospitable and eager to show their city is much more (and better) than what the perception is.

bronxblue

August 29th, 2022 at 1:55 PM ^

Great stuff.

I'm excited for 2022 and beyond, and for once it feels like the "old" days when I wasn't dreading playing OSU to end the year.  Even if UM loses, this feels like a team that will be good and fun and that's all you can ask for.

Minent Domain

August 29th, 2022 at 2:06 PM ^

This is why the blog is special to me... for the moments that recontextualize sport as more than just escapist admiration for physical talents, but rather an enriching part of presence, place, and the human experience.

LFG. Beat Ohio.

gte896u

August 29th, 2022 at 2:08 PM ^

I fucking love Medellin.  There are apparently hippos that have gone feral in that waterway you took on the way to La Piedra after Escobar's captive hippos were left to roam.

Michael Scarn

August 29th, 2022 at 3:08 PM ^

Went to Cartagena and Medellin by myself a few years ago.  

When in Cartagena, I met a family who was from Medellin.  They found out I would be traveling to their hometown a few days later and insisted on showing me around.  A working class family of four picked up this loner gringo and drove me around for 14 hours to see and eat our way through Medellin.  When we went to eat Bandeja Paisa at their favorite place an hour outside the city, they insisted they would pay for the gigantic meal that I tried to finish.  By the end of the day I was known as "Cigarillo" -- everyone in Medellin has a nickname.  We finished the day by eating hot chocolate with melted cheese in it on a freeway overlooking the city then going to a club and drinking an entire bottle of Aguardiente between 3 of us.

Apropos of nothing football wise, this is just to give my 2 cents that everyone should visit Colombia.  Some of the nicest people on the planet.

 

AlbanyBlue

August 29th, 2022 at 3:29 PM ^

Awesome....I didn't get nearly all the parallels, so I appreciate the more astute among us pointing them out.

Good to have you back and in fine form, Brian!!

Caesar

August 29th, 2022 at 3:45 PM ^

Brian, I haven't read a word of this thing, but I just wanted to welcome you back. Thanks a bunch for the hard work and the sacrifices that culminated in this awesome blog. I hope things go well for you. 

907_UM Nanook

August 29th, 2022 at 4:27 PM ^

I love everything about your experience Brian. And I can see the parallels in the celebration of culture more than anything between Medellin and Ann Arbor - even though they're probably complete opposites in many ways. Hoping to someday visit South America on my motorcycle, this reminds me of the Anthony Bourdain early episodes he did on the food & cultures across the continent.

Other Andrew

August 29th, 2022 at 5:12 PM ^

Such a shame you didn't like the fruit, Brian. It was, in my opinion, the best thing about being in Medellin. I couldn't believe the amazing array of "exotic" fruit, many like nothing I had ever tasted before.

I was there to play in an ultimate frisbee tournament played at a level way above my abilities and especially above my athleticism. I was wrecked after each and every point, even the ones that lasted just a few minutes. My body was consistently saved by a fresh salpicón de frutas between each and every game.

But there were also many other lovely things about the place. It's been 13 years... I can't wait to go back.