The Vault gets completely shut down this week by Unabomber’s hammer expert Alex Hallford in this new Rollersnakes clip. Ridiculous!
Author: Zac
Enjoyed the latest Creature Skateboards full length? Watch extra footage from CSFU filmed raw from Spain today with Gravette, Partenen, Stu Graham and more. If you missed this video, get up to speed here.
Phil Parker in Perfect Blues
Phil Parker’s section from the Perfect Blues DVD has been released this weekend.

The Fifty Fifty crew hooked up for a GSD cruise from College Green to Hotwells DIY spot. Here’s the footage.

The SUPRA team celebrated Go Skateboarding Day with thousands at Hollenbeck Park in Los Angeles with friends from Baker, Deathwish, Shake Junt, KR3W members. Busy day of it!
Go Skateboarding Day 2013 With SUPRA from SUPRA Footwear on Vimeo.

The swift footed skills of Welsh Tommy grace the Five Year’s of Crayon Skateboards today in his section filled with tech ledge goodness and much more. Enjoy this.

It’s Questions turn to get Video Nasty ahead of the UK premiere’s scheduled for Manchester and London next week.
It’s days like these when you can really appreciate what skateboarding delivers to us all. That stoked feeling after an amazing session is something most others outside of skating will never understand.
We all know that feeling of fulfillment as you put the key in the door after a shred, leaning on the wall in a sweaty t-shirt and jeans, feeling knackered with hot feet, a throbbing new hipper and a grazed swelbow. That feeling knowing everyone involved in the session had the best time of their lives and pushed their shit to the next level. Whether you are skating a curb, a pool, a ledge or a manny pad, essentially we are all after the same end result: fun.
Every year Go Skateboarding Day celebrates this unique freedom on the longest day of the year. It’s a solstice gathering so strong in numbers now that the #goskateboardingday hash tag stayed trending on Twatter for the entire day. The 10th Anniversary celebration of GSD was in full force across the planet, and although it’s not for some, thousands of 140 character online tales told a global story about one of the best days out ever, and bigger than ever before.
It’s not for everyone though; those who push with glasses half empty criticise the fact that being told to skate on a certain day of the year by the International Association of Skateboard Companies (IASC) is a contradiction to the freedom that skateboarding delivers to us all. We can roll anytime, anywhere and remain autonymous outside of the ever tightening grip of an increasingly homogenised society. Free thinkers would comment on the fact that the invasion of corperations within our culture is creating an identikit scene, where fashion has brought a strangelhold on our once independent subcultural art form. Being constantly reminded by brands that we should be skateboarding every day is just a sinister smokescreen for the perpetual sale of products. Reality is, we don’t need to be told to skate on any day, and that’s the very reason we started to push decks in the first place.
Our scene is famous for being populated by unique characters, who bring much colour and charisma to the sessions that we value the most. The most mundane sessions are always electrified by the presence of local heroes. Unparalleled individuals who not only serve to blow us away with their unequalled skill, but also act as poignant roll models, alerting us to the fact that we do not have to conform to the dictats of global brands. That’s not to demean the hard graft of our independent skater owned companies, whose imagination, creativity, and commitment has made our scene what it is today. These core players, populated themselves by creative individuals, operate as a platform to springboard and promote opportunities within our collective. They deserve full acknowlegement for the goodtimes we all shared on Go Skateboarding Day and that’s why you should be out there showing loyalty to those who underpin the foundations of our shared obsession.

There is no reason why this communal celebration cannot be replicated in a week’s time, organised with your own local skater owned shop. The holidays are just starting, the summer is about to kick in, and the open road to discover some new spots, make new friends and learn new tricks in a different area is calling you. Take GSD as a catalyst for more.
I personally missed out this year. Blown ankles don’t bode well for a day of pushing across the city, so I took my bike and hit the road to take it all in. I witnessed hoardes of skaters hitting up street spots, totally stoked on meeting others on route to their chosen destinations. Then I stumbled, by total accident into the path of a veteran called Eric, a local Ladbroke Grove legend, who with skateboard in hand, demonstrates the individualities to which I refer. Eric personifies the fact that skateboarders can be: young; old; fat; thin; punks; skins; anarchists; whatever, and that skateboarding has a greater longevity than any irrelevant trend run by pompous fashionistas exploiting and profiteering from it.

Iggy And The Stooges
w/Savages
Royal Festival Hall
Thursday 20th June
Savages are boring. Po-faced, miserable, dull, trying so hard to be cool, icy stares. I don’t believe them. It’s not real. They are the exact polar opposite of the screaming into your face intensity and joyous life-affirming rock n’roll of The Stooges. Savages are too intent on posing. Their songs tease and build but never really explode or detonate. Savages mean nothing to me, but then I never really liked Joy Division either.
Iggy And The Stooges are everything that is important and essential about rock n’roll. Let’s forget about the last two studio albums that misfired dramatically. Men of their age (Black Sabbath included) should not be expected to, or even attempt, to try and recreate the magic ‘moments in time’ of music created from friendship bonds over youth, drugs, life, sex of their early years and it never works. Live, however, ever since they first got back into the saddle, The Stooges have always slayed. It started with those early tender steps in 2002 when brothers Scott and Ron Asheton started touring with J Mascis and Matt Watt performing those two essential first albums. It was only a matter of time before Iggy got back in on the action and when he did IT WENT OFF. Some of the best rock n’roll shows you could ever hope to see occurred and The Stooges proved they are the godfathers of fucking everything. And then in 2009 Ron Asheton went and died quite rightly everyone believed that was it. One last glorious run for The Stooges, a light put out by the tragic death of Ron.
No one could have predicted, however, that legendary Raw Power-era guitarist James Williamson would be waiting in the wings. Having been working for Sony since the Stooges originally imploded, the time was right for him to strap it back on and thank fuck he did. Tonight, James Williamson’s guitar playing and sound is utterly face-melting. Subdued and effortlessly cool, he leans back and peels off riff after riff, solo after solo of some of the most blistering guitar noise you could ever hope to hear and feel. And boy do you feel it. Every inch of your body vibrates and the sound in the Royal Festival Hall is incredible. It’s a seated venue but the whole crowd is on their feet, jolted into life by the glorious rush of noise crashing around the walls.
And then there’s Iggy. He really is an astounding man. Having seen him many times of the years, in some ways it’s sad watching him tonight. He is starting to creak around the edges. His hips are fucked, he limps and his body has taken a battering from years of hurling himself about but he still throws every inch of energy into his performance. He holds nothing back. It’s joyous to watch. He’s having a good time. Having obviously taken a knock from the critical mauling that the new album received, he’s mood is lifted by the enthusiastic reaction that a couple of the new songs received tonight.
That said, it’s the classics that detonate the best. ‘You’re Pretty Face Is Going To Hell’, ‘Johanna’, ‘Search And Destroy’, ‘No Fun’, ‘Cock In My Pocket’, ‘Gimmie Danger’, and an explosive run through ‘Open Up And Bleed’ make this one of the finest times I have ever seen The Stooges. How long Iggy can continue punishing his aging frame remains to be seen, but for now The Stooges are still GOD and God bless the Stooges.
James Sherry

To celebrate today’s Go Skateboarding Day, which happens to be the 10th anniversary, we have teamed up with our friends at Crailtap to bring you some amazing free stuff. All you have to do is visit our Facebook page and let us know what skateboarding means to you.
“Skateboarding is…………….”
6 people will win random prizes. A deck from Girl Skateboards, trucks from Royal Trucks, a pair of shoes from Lakai, a hoody from Fourstar Clothing, wheels from Chocolate Skateboards and a Crossfire Truckhead tee and stickers will all be sent out next week.
Also today, tag #chooseskateboarding in your instagram or tweets or tag us in your photos on Facebook and we will share them.
Don’t forget that if you are in London, from 4.30pm pro’s from Lakai will be meeting at Parlour skate shop Mile End. All details here.
