
Enjoyed Yah Bru 2 in December? You need some offcuts then…

Enjoyed Yah Bru 2 in December? You need some offcuts then…
More rad Pirkdaddy footage from the Finnish skate scene filmed in Martinlaakso and Eira last year.
If you want more from Plaza Movie get on Eniz Fazliov’s section:

You have to give it to Harry Lintell as he gives everything, on every spot. This True To This part backs up that he’s one of the best out there. All round hammers for Skate Edit of the Week put together by Parrott.
The second installment of straight up shredding from Bristol way is up from the Rock Solid Distribution crew. This one, put together by Ed Wirgman features George Hill, Tom Gibbs, Sam Bunton, Wes Morgan, Joe Paget, Armon Dabir, Frankie Darby, Mike O’Shea and Bailey hitting the winter streets.

The lads at Blast are back with a hard drive clear out. Shaving foam, puking, burnt sausages, blades and orchestral manoeuvres in the park guaranteed.

Lovenskate’s Alex Hallford is the latest ripper on the Muckefuck Urethane team to have a pro wheel. Check out his new 54mm and order them online for £25.

This weekend marks the launch of three new Lakai Anchor series skate shoes from their Spring 2015 collection.
John Sciano is rolling Fura’s in all black, Daniel Espinoza chose the Camby in white with a red trim and lace for his and Sebo’s rocking the Parker in navy blue with an orange trim. All three shoes come with insoles featuring art chosen by each team rider and you get a free pair of socks in each box.
Ask your local skate shop to order them in for you if they don’t have them already and keep your feet skater owned.



When Ray Zimmerman posted this shot on his insta yesterday it was met with nothing other than ‘wow’ from most skaters worldwide. There was a question of why such a historically incredible skate photo was never previously released as well, but regardless, it shot through the web like a new Jereme Rogers rap video with diarrhea.
Lance Mountain had this to say last night on his instagram account: “anchorman Brian Williams says he’s temporarily stepping away from his nightly newscast amid questions about his credibility. Vintage National Geographic photo. Let the fun begin.”
You have to give it to him. 50 years of age and he still manages to dork everyone around him and have a damn good laugh! Please never change.

Here’s the original shot from the National Geographic. “Nah, pretty sure that’s Lance just checking the scene before gearing up”.
Sexy bell-bottoms mate…


You know that David Gravette doesn’t fuck about. This rips and has no backflips.
Read his interview with us from back in 2008 here.
Ph: Tim Fowler

Another piece of skateboard and music history is about to grace London’s long list this month as Slam City Skates announced last night that their Covent Garden store in Neal’s Yard is set to close after 27 years.
The previous owners set up the store back in 1988 when they were in partnership with Rough Trade Records, who were based in the basement of the building. The small space at the bottom of a tight spiral staircase hosted vinyl and CDs and one-off, jam packed gigs for classic acts such as Pavement, Jeff Buckley, Sebadoh, PJ Harvey and also the first ever Beastie Boys show in the UK. Those who managed to bundle in there to get a space were lucky.

Upstairs of course was a hang out for all who loved the smell of urethane with walls of decks, clothing racks and hardware. Still is. The space on the left of the counter to regrip your rig has been in constant use and if I were to close my eyes and think of the setting I can see Seth and Jake bagging up the goods from around the 2002 era. Many a Crossfire flyer for our monthly events was left on the counter with this lot monthly, it was a staple hang out for the many generations that have come through London’s skate scene and will always be.
We asked Descent Skateboards owner Chris Pulman who started working at Slam as retail manager (1999-2005) and then became business manager (2011-2014) to reflect on his memories there this morning:
“Slam has been a big part of the London and UK scene since it opened and so many generations of guys and talent have come through there. I was lucky enough to be the to support the growth of the UK domestic brands such as Blueprint, Heroin, Landscape and Unabomber at the start of that. It was truly inspiring seeing guys take control of part of the industry and not relying on overseas input to make the local scene grow.
That’s the serious bit. Outside of that Slam has been a youth club, a “jokeshop”, a brand-breaking store and somewhere that’s always been lucky enough to carry any product it wants, regardless of how obscure. There have been so many facets of the store that make me chuckle to this day; The quote book, Nike kickflip challenge, the emergency self-destruct button, the eccentric Rough Trade employees, the genius bookkeeper, sawing a Tiffany Dunk in half, the hoover that lasted for 20 years, taking 15 years to convince the owners to put in a new carpet, the visitors from all over the world and the celebrities that would show up from Vanilla Ice to Victoria Wood. Everything else is too ‘illegal’ to put into print…
Slam is an institution. It’ll be great to see where it goes next.
Support your local. No amount of HTML can knock out a broken kingpin or re-thread your axle…”
16 Neal’s Yard may be history soon but the good news is that Slam are moving only a minute away around the corner to a new building on Endell Street and will be open on the first week of April.
A new era, a bigger space and a fresh start is imminent. Good luck to all involved and thanks for the memories.
Find words from Slam staff on the move here.
