Roadtrip redux
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Marisa O’Neil
Like many recent college graduates, Nathan Gebhard, Mike Marriner and
Brian McAllister, still didn’t know what they wanted to be when they
grew up.
Fresh out of Pepperdine University in 2001, Laguna Beach residents
Gebhard and Marriner, both 27, and 29-year-old McAllister of Newport
Beach, decided to buy a 15-year-old RV and drive across the country,
talking to people about their possible career paths. In the process,
they found out what they wanted to do -- and realized they were
already doing it.
Their uncertainty and wanderlust produced a documentary, “Roadtrip
Nation,” which aired on PBS. It also led to two books and a second
road trip with a group of three students and recent graduates. This
week, three RVs loaded with nine students selected from colleges
across the country will hit the road for three more adventures.
And the three friends will be along for the ride again.
“So many people at the beach sit there and wonder: ‘What are we
going to do with our lives?’” McAllister said. “We decided to do
something about it.”
It was 2001 when they bought their first RV, the Legend, from
McAllister’s parents for $8,000 and lined up as many interviews as
they could on a 15,000-mile, meandering coast-to-coast route. Then
they went to a local electronics store and “filled out credit card
applications like candy” to finance video cameras to film their
experience, Gebhard said.
They returned with 460 hours of raw footage of interviews with
people including the chairman of Starbucks, U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, and “Manny the Lobsterman” from Maine.
“It was such a tough thing to book interviews,” Gebhard said. “It
was kind of a self-selecting process. If they couldn’t find the time
for us, it wasn’t worth doing the interview.”
What had started as a journey of self-discovery took on a life of
its own, generating media buzz, a book deal and the PBS show.
And they were surprised to discover that many successful people,
such as Dell Computers founder Michael Dell, hadn’t always known what
they wanted to do with their lives, either.
“It’s not just us,” McAllister said. “This issue affects an entire
generation.”
Earlier this year, the three friends hit college campuses to
recruit the next generation of road trippers for this summer’s three
cross-country excursions. Each time, they brought the green-and-blue
Legend and their stories.
“I was graduating soon and not sure what I wanted to do,”
21-year-old Sacramento State student Gloria Pantoja said. “I saw
their presentation and thought: ‘They’re speaking to me.’”
Pantoja, her 19-year-old brother Bernardo and her 23-year-old
sorority sister, Cristina Barajas, worked on readying their RV on a
Laguna Beach street Wednesday, putting signature “Roadtrip Nation”
stickers on it, cleaning the kitchenette and getting driving lessons
in the behemoth vehicle.
They will leave Laguna Beach today and head up to San Francisco,
where they will officially start their five-week trip across the
center of the country, finishing in New York. Two other RVs, carrying
students from the University of Chicago and New York’s Pratt
Institute, will take southern and northern routes before meeting up
in New York.
All the students have lined up their own interviews along the way,
including ones with a pyrotechnics expert, child psychologist, Native
American leader and a ghost hunter in New Jersey.
“I may never do [ghost hunting], but obviously they found
something they like,” Bernardo Pantoja said.
Each of the three motor homes will house three students and one
cameraman. Gebhard, Marriner and McAllister, will tag along, cameras
in tow.
“As long as there’s fuel in the tanks, we’re out there,”
McAllister said.
* MARISA O’NEIL is a Times Community News reporter. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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