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Features Skateboarding

Battle of Hastings 2010

On September 4th Wheelscape summoned up 944 year-old vibes for the opening jam of their amazing new concrete park that has made its own history in the historic town of Hastings by having the first proper cradle in the UK. Boasting both a €1066 purse to be taken by the ‘Conquerer of All’ and a £300 best trick comp courtesy of The Source skateboarders travelled from all over the UK to attend this exciting day in the history of concrete parks in the UK.

Wheelscape’s Jeremy Donaldson got stuck in and wrote a round-up of the day for us to go with the official Wheelscape edit of the jam which went online this week. Read on to hear what went down and be sure to watch the fantastically put-together video for the day below. Well done to all involved, the park looks stellar. Over to you, Jeremy…

Below: Mark Munson flying frontside

I’m writing this in the middle of the night as I’m still so hyped on the Battle of Hastings I can’t sleep.

Hastings put on a beast of an opener to match their new park. An army of Scottish animals, born and raised on gnarly concrete parks battled it out with the local and not so local English knights, Welsh new blood and even some crazy fella from the Isle of Wight… Pivot Shove to Fakie in a pool? Crazy indeed – Greg Nowick.

You could tell Mark Munson’s had a few Oregon trips the way he took to the place in the Master’s comp. Along with Sean Goff, they dominated the concrete; Auntie Sean was absolutely flying round the place, smithing and lip-sliding the full length of the pool sidewall, getting right up on the ceiling in the cradle and taking first place.

In Wheelscape’s €1066 battle, Mark Murray T-Bag’d first place with relentless runs taking tricks most people would be stoked to do on a 2 foot quarter and sticking them up the gnarliest walls in the park. Jake Collins smoothed out everything in the park with big, clean airs and lip-trickery, all spiced up with a couple of huge bonlesses blasted several feet out of the vert extension. Greg Nowik just couldn’t stop, massive long runs mixing big airs and inventive tricks like blunt to melon, in the pool!

Mike McGuiness tackling the cradle

Alex Hallford and Carl Wilson killed it

Want more blunts? How about an ollie blunt flip, in the same 9 foot bowl? Call Jed Cullen with his robot knee and give him £300 from The Source for best trick.

The finals saw Daryl Nobbs and Jono Coote both smack their skin heads on the flat bottom, along with death match style scenes with 3 skaters in just the egg pool at the same time. Fortunately, before the end, Daryl was back killing the all the lines he’d wired whilst we worked on the park and Jono was miller flipping clean over loveseat.

Even a wee report like this wouldn’t be complete without mentioning Colin Adam and Trevor Johnson – these two guys killed it all day – smashed the coping to bits. Colin was kicking out huge airs inc. a sick rocket lien and smashing the blocks with the best grinds of the day. Trevor flew all over the show and reeled in Hurricanes, switch Frontrock slides and full tilt backside nosegrind reverts in the pool.

Potter absolutely slaying transition I’m too scared to even look at with this front 5-0

The standard of skating was so high it was unreal. We’ve got incredible skaters in this country now coming up off the new concrete parks and everyone in attendance were so blown away by the sickness of it all. Wheelscape were really stoked to get the opportunity to design and build a bowl on this scale, blown away by the shredding, ready for more and want to give a massive thank you to Joe Sandland, Matt Davey and all in Hastings – all their hard work made this happen.

Mark Murray claiming his €1066

And here’s why: Hurricane on that thing? You must be Teabagging mad.

Watch the Wheelscape edit below and view some photos from the Wheelscape team in the gallery below. Don’t let these good people’s work go to waste. Start booking your trains, start pestering your mates, get down to Hastings and get shredding. You can find the park at Falaise Rd, White Rock Gardens, Hastings, TN34 1ES or check the map.

Hastings Skatepark: The Battle of Hastings €1066 from Wheelscape Skateparks on Vimeo.

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Features Skateboarding

Searching For The Miraculous with Pontus Alv

As I’m sure anyone who has seen his films will agree, Pontus Alv is undoubtedly one of the most fascinating individuals in this strange web of culture, expression and creativity we like to call ‘skateboarding’. Never before has watching a video documenting the lives of others in skating granted the viewer with such personal insights into the filmmakers life and soul.

In his latest film, In Search Of The Miraculous, we see someone more than willing to bare all in the hope to inspire us to make the most of our temporary encounters with all things miraculous. In just a few questions, we learnt more about skating, filmmaking and life than most people ever share with others.

We begin our own search for the miraculous with an interview with Alv himself. How else were we meant to start?

Interview: Stanley
Images:
Alv

Some people have noted that In Search Of The Miraculous seems like a consciously straighter and more accessible production than Strongest Of The Strange. Did you have this idea in mind when editing it or is it a coincidence?

It is not easy to make a film, but the main thing about my new film is that I wanted it to be as different as possible from my first film but for there still to be a link between them. In my first film I went into the darkness and I wanted define myself and what skateboarding is to me. In this film I am searching for the light in life, trying to see the beauty and the big picture. I want it to be light, colourful and inspiring. I find it harder to work with classic beautiful elements like a rainbow, a sunset and so on… but I also enjoy the challenge. I don’t like to talk and explain my work cause sometimes I don’t even know, I just go for a feeling and a spirit. If I can feel it perhaps others can too.

My inspiration and motivation is to inspire you to inspire yourself.

Alv at The Barrier Spot in 2004. Photo: Tobias Henriksson

I’d argue that the film simply tells a new story from a filmmaker who’s experienced more than in his past production.  Indeed, experience and what we pass onto others struck me as a key theme in the film. What new things did you yourself learn about skateboarding in the process of making ISOTM?

Well like I said I am searching for the light in life, even if we go through hard times there will always be light. For example, some of my social sculptures in the past has been destroyed for whatever reason, and I could either just give up and do nothing, or I could keep going. Beautiful things are temporary and that’s why they are so wonderful. When I start building a new social sculpture I know it will be gone but the process and all the joy involved makes me feel alive and it puts a meaning to my life. I know it will be gone but it just makes it better cause you have to enjoy every moment you have together. If it would be permanent it would just be like a public skatepark which feels pretty dead and boring in the long term. Looking back at the last 10 years it is great that we got used to being bulldozed and it made us do more which gave us different things to ride over the years. And of course it created loads of good memories.

Learn about skateboarding? Well, it is the same rule as always… Skateboarding is a freeform and it is up to you to do whatever you like with it. It is just an instrument and there are no rules what so ever. It’s all up to you to do whatever you like with it. That is the beauty. No matter what direction the industry and world is going you can still do whatever you like. The same rule goes in life.

The Holma ramp on its way to heaven. Photo: Pontus Alv

The way in which skateboarding can give us an escape from the dark corners of our lives is at the forefront of ISOTM and SOTS, I think it’s uplifting and motivational to everyone watching, even for non-skateboarders. How do you begin the process of instilling something so personal (particularly the things connected with your  father and family) to you into something that’s to be watched worldwide by people who don’t necessarily know much about you, if anything at all?

Yes my videos are personal and I like to mix in personal elements in my films. For me skateboarding is more than just tricks and I try to define the bigger picture. Everything we go through in life matters, our history and our present, our dreams, our future thoughts, our lovelife, work, friends and so on.  How do I feel today? Well, when I step on my board I will know. If my heart is broken or my mind is messed up or my soul is stressed out my board will tell me and together we will express whatever feelings we are going through. That, for me, is one of the greatest things about skateboarding. It is always there for you, faithful and loving almost like a dog. We can always run away together and vent about life, whatever it may be, we can talk about sex, friends, history we can talk about everything and most of the time we will find a solution to almost everything or at least feel better about it. Talking things over with a really good friend helps, and this is why I love my skateboard so much. It’s my best friend and I hope we can grow old together somehow.

So what I am trying to say is that everything in life is linked, skateboarding is linked to everything else and vice versa. Most videos focus on the things within skateboarding… what happens at the spot and around the spot perhaps a coffee break inbetween, but most videos never deal with life itself or talk about. Don’t skateboarders have a life outside of skateboarding?

Move on and start again…

The video, like your last is dedicated to your father. His words of inspiration that you pick up on are reflected in how independent and influential your direction is. What do you think his reaction would be if he could see the film?

Who says he is not watching my films? They are here, I see signs and they guide me. I personally think they did most of the editing by controlling my thoughts and soul.

Torsten and Märta Alv

Your films regularly shun the typical conventions of skate videos by selling a narrative instead of a product or team. The skaters in are connected to you in a way that transcends sponsorship deals and stuff like that.  In your editing technique you tend to stray away from standard time lapses and montages and instead borrow influence from cinematographers and magicians of the past like George Méliès. Who, or what in particular inspires you when making your films, and what does each skateboarder bring to the finished piece of work?

I find inspirations everywhere in life. My inspiration can come from anything and from nothing, from small little things you pick up here and there. I have a huge inspiration from the Alv family archive. It is a huge film and photo archive that starts around 1900. I grew up with it and I think this influenced me a lot. I also like everything from the beginning of photography and filmmaking, especially during the years 1900-1930. I am a big fan of Hans Richter.

And yes you are very right I am not trying to sell a product, I just want to show wonderful skateboarding of all types young old tech street pools ramps etc. I love it all and I want to give back as much as possible to skateboarding as possible because skateboarding gave me everything. I think it is the least I can do after all the things skateboarding gave me.

Pontus on the wall again. Photo: Jean Feil

As you’ve pointed out in the past, skateboarding has an inherent feeling of joy, freedom and creativity that’s almost inexplicable, but these feelings we associate with skating can often be crushed by the skate industry, sponsors, deadlines and the like. Sadly, I find it hard to imagine a world where skateboarding can exist independently of those factors for countless reasons, economical and otherwise. But your films still capture that freedom even in 2010. How can we, as skateboarders who love what the pastime has given our lives work together to make skateboarding better?

One thing that we all have to remember is that skateboard industry and business is not skateboarding, it is business. Skateboarding is really simple. It is what you do when you and your friends go skateboarding and have a wonderful or horrible time. The people that are involved with the industry or belonging to the elite skateboarding is just a very small percentage of the world’s skateboarders. We can be controlled by them or we can control ourselves. Like I said earlier, skateboarding is a freeform and it is up to you to do whatever you like with.

Briefly, where is the miraculous?

Right in front of you.

Watch the film in full here:

For a full review of In Search Of The Miraculous then head here. And stay tuned as we continue searching for the miraculous with Mr. Danijel Stankovich in an interview coming soon…

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Features

Emerica – Stay Gold Premiere

We got stuck in at the London premiere of Emerica’s Stay Gold on the 26th August to get the opinions of those fresh from their first viewing.

Check out the edit below to see how miserable the weather was on one particularly rainy night in London town and to see how stoked everyone was on the banging, bonkers and bluesy video.

“Kids going wild!”

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Features Skateboarding

Benjamin Deberdt Pause Mag Interview

Benjamin Deberdt has done a great deal within the realms of skateboarding both in Europe and America in the last 15 years: founder of Sugar magazine, founder of Kingpin magazine, and now founder of Pause, the new French word on the street complete with English online editions. Here is the skinny from the man himself.

Portrait Right: Benjamin outside his favourite café in Paris, shot by Éric Antoine.

So tell us about Pause then…

Ehhrrr, it’s a magazine? About what makes skateboarding something worth sacrificing a lot for?

The idea is to speak about the characters, the builders, the behind-the-scene guys, the unsung heroes alongside the rich and famous. If you have a story that is worth telling, we’ll try to find you!

Can France support another magazine?

This seems to be the main question I get these days! And I have no answer to it, to be frank. But, maybe that is not the point of Pause…

Pause also produce top shelf postcards!

Your naturalistic style of photography wins plaudits and criticism in equal measure- can you tell us a bit about why you shoot in the style you do and what you think its merits and shortcomings are?

For people to either hate or give mad props, they should know I even exist! I doubt there are that many people that are aware of me… but I can appreciate the “naturalistic” comment. When we started Sugar with my cousin Seb Caldas, back in the days, I was still learning what the hell I was doing, and also experimenting quite a bit to get different kinds of results and not have the magazine filled with only one type of photography. Which I sometimes regret… but, yep, I’d say I have always been interested in showing what I would see, in the most natural way. This is probably coming from Tobin Yelland’s work, back then. He was shooting the whole San Francisco scene during the EMB days, but in a super gritty way. Everything was super crafted and perfectly printed, but what you saw as a reader was the real deal. Glimpses of those people’s everyday life… the glamour was there, but it wasn’t posed. It was real. And this is what I really go for, more and more: just showing the people for who they are and what they do. Which probably clashes sometimes with the manufactured image skateboarding is aiming for, these days. I understand the need for commercial images, and I certainly don’t judge it, but this is not what I find interesting doing, so I’m going my own way. And there are a whole lot of people out there still documenting skateboarding for what it is. Man, we are part of this world that doesn’t need fantasy; it is already fascinating for what it is. Look at all the characters out there, who needs sunsets in the background!?

Another major influence for me has been, obviously, Thomas Campbell, to this day. His photographic style could be described as more thought through, to make the most visually striking image possible, but in a very organic way. As in to use whatever is lying around to enhance reality and make it a bit more magical, which clashed a lot with my French way of looking at life, then. Thomas taught me everything, really: “Benjamin, you’re going to go to New-York, buy a FM2 and a fish-eye, and then, you’ll be professional…” Haha!

So, yeah, apart from countless other influences, I could say that these two had a great impact on me, then, and still do to this day. Oh, and Ari Marcopoulos, for the genuine feeling of his photos, whatever times and scenes he documented. Another great inspiration, there.

What is your single all-time favourite photo that you’ve shot?

A skate photo might be the Lucas Puig water gap kickflip… Or Javier Mendizabal nosegrinding up a ledge in Casablanca, for all the stories that are told in that one image. I don’t know, really. I don’t think much about my own photos…

As for a “non-skate” photo, I have even less of an answer! I have been pretending that I’m consolidating my archives (I believe this is how you’re supposed to explain you’re opening plastic bags to discover they are full of sequences printed in 1998!), lately, and I have found some images which, then, did not mean much to me, as in: “Oh, I can’t use that in next issue of the mag…” but have grown very fond to me, as they now tell a lot about a time long gone. This tells me how much a photo ages a bit like wine. Some turn to vinegar really quick, and should be consumed right away. Others bloom with time.

When I was digging through for Résumé, the Cliché book, I found some gems, that’s for sure! Sometimes I wake up in the middle of the night, thinking “Did I throw away those pictures of Ricky Oyola rolling a blunt at his house in Philly in 1996!!!???? Because they were a bit blurry!!!!!!????”, haha! Actually, I want to start to work on some book projects, I think. The time has come.

Lucas Puig’s Watergap flip shot by Benjamin Deberdt in Cliché Résumé

The Lucas Puig water gap photo from Greece put you onto a lot of people’s radars outside of France, can you tell us a bit about the context of that shot?

I’ll be frank, it’s all Fred Mortagne’s fault! I would have probably shot a boring picture, but he was already knee-deep in the water, all up in what I thought would be my frame. It was the end of a long day, and the spot looked great, so I was probably cursing him under my breath, when I looked up and realized there were two more stories to that unfinished abandoned mall. I ran up, made sure there was an angle, ran back to put up flashes, screaming for everybody to wait for me, ran back up and shot probably a couple frames of Lucas’s flip and a couple more of Cale Nuske’s backside flip. This being before digital, so it’s only a week later, back in London, that I realized that the reflection showed everything you couldn’t get directly, like the board, Lucas’s face, etc. I also realized that my fish-eye was damaged and that all the pics shot with that lens on the trip were out of focus! But, yep, Lucas’s photo was a total accident. Thanks Fred, let’s get on the road again, sometime soon!

The Kenny Reed Kingpin cover was described by Steve Caballero as one of the best he’d seen in 25 years of skating; what were the circumstances surrounding it?

Really? That’s very kind of Steve! Where do I start with that one? Let’s say this was the end of another long day spent on the border of the Black Sea, for what must have been the first skateboard trip to Bulgaria, from what I believe, unless Rodney Mullen did a Swatch demo there in the 80’s! So, yep, we had a great crew from all over the world, including Kenny. You and him came back from behind some bushes to tell me about some possible spot back there. We went and Kenny told me about the trick he wanted to try. I looked around and told him that by the time I’d be set up it’d be getting dark, he said “let’s do it!”, so I started rushing around… sure enough, he did land it in almost total darkness after being fully blinded by my flashes. Jedi mind trick on that one, and another great surprise at the lab a week later!

You remain the only person to have shot a legit Belfast article for a magazine- what are your memories or impressions of the city and the skaters?

It was a very interesting trip, for sure. We were in town for a few days only, and it was quite filled with action, to say the least. Us getting attacked by about fifty children on glue was a highlight, in a way. I was so convinced that this type of behaviour is not rationally possible, that it just did not register for me. I was just standing there as people were running all over the place… Then, I saw you open the door of a van and scream for me to jump in and I did. Full A-Team style!

In many ways, these four days were very surreal for me. As a French man, religion is not part of my way of thinking, and being confronted with a place where it was all other the place was strange. Just like we were in Jerusalem… But to get back to Belfast, what really stood for me was the kindness of all the people I met, skaters or not. It did have a small town feeling, in many ways, where everybody knows each other, which did not compute with my memories of growing up and seeing Belfast on fire during the news on TV. This was very interesting for me: how can you even have a war going on in such a small town? I understand the roots of it all were centuries old and very deep, of course.

Now, what I want to see is some young Belfast photographer to step up and shoot a sick report on his scene. Let’s see it! Oh, and I want Conhuir to make a comeback! Come on, son!

Pause will have an online dimension in English, what is the deal there?

We just posted issue 01 almost entirely translated on our site. The idea is to give people outside of France the option to also read about the people we think are interesting in skateboarding right now. That, and since nobody really reads English in my slightly autistic country, it can’t really hurt our sales, ha!

What advice would you give to an aspiring photographer?

There was a great portfolio of Ari Marcopoulos in Transworld, in 1998, I believe, mixing pictures of Jean-Michel Basquiat, Julien Stranger or Ryan Hickey with some advice he was giving to young photographers. I’ve had that one taped on a wall everywhere I’ve lived. Try to find it! Because, what the hell do I know, really?

Click above image for the full-size image of Ari Marcopoulos’ article…

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Features Skateboarding

Spot Check: Cardiff Barrage Plaza

Words: Stanley
Photography: Mike Ridout

Right: Gareth Leak – Front 5-0 Fakie

The story of Cardiff getting its first proper outdoor skatepark is a long, tiresome one that has its roots in the first days people would get kicked out of the Welsh Offices. The idea would be knocked around and years would pass and there would still be essentially no where for skateboarders living in capital city to skate. Of course, the skateboarders of Cardiff were lucky to exist in a growing city that blossomed into a notorious street skaters haven. In a way, this in fact brought the skateboarding community of Wales even closer together, eventually spawning the hugely tight and unsurprisingly seminal Cardiff Skateboard Club that’s gained unofficial ‘members’ from across the UK. But with more street spots come more security guards, more angry pedestrians and a plethora of students getting in everyone’s way. Sessions would too frequently be cut short and it wasn’t until 2009 that the unanimous decision was to go to the council with years worth of evidence and support and demand a skatepark be built in this city.

In July of 2009, Nick Richards (of Nick The Bastard fame) organised a protest outside county hall that attracted local and regional newspapers and more importantly, the attention of Cardiff Council. In a well-planned protest, the skateboarders of Cardiff demonstrated the need for a skatepark in the way that anyone in a skate scene living in a currently neglected town can do. Patience (Cardiff had enough of that…) and genuine desire goes a long way. The Cardiff Barrage Plaza was swiftly becoming a realistic idea and the typical poorly designed council parks will likely be skated for the last time in the months that followed.

Just six months later and the skatepark was confirmed, with £140,000 in the pot for the beginning round of development. The CSC then liased with various skatepark designers so that the plans for the park followed something that the skaters of Cardiff actually wanted. Marc Churchill’s Gravity team got the contract with a design that not only made everyone wet their pants a little (and launch the CSC blog into the stratosphere of comment section tomfoolery) but made full use of the budget and space available. From having to rely on an increasingly cracked area of flatland with a flatbank that only five people in Wales can actually skate properly, the CSC and extended CSC fam would have one of the UK’s most innovative parks in one of the sexiest locations imaginable. Apparently we do like to be beside the seaside.

Below: Caradog Emanuel – F/S Bigspin Heel

After 8-10 weeks of solid graft from Gravity, the park was made and fences were to be hopped! Ahead of schedule, when the Ipath crew turned up expecting somewhere to skate, the fences came down and everyone could officially skate the park. Needless to say – you’ve seen the plans, the pictures and by now some videos too – from this point on, the collective CSC facebook wall-to-wall read nothing more than “plaza?”, “skating the plaza?”, “when are you getting to the plaza?” and “plaza today?” I can’t imagine this will change any time soon. Well… not until it rains at least. And it will rain. It’s Wales.

But for when its dry, the Cardiff Barrage Plaza is genuinely the most fun thing I’ve skated since I can remember. The design is lightyears ahead of its competitors in regards to both how well it flows and the sheer amount of people you can shove into the place without it turning into a game of human pinball. Even on the opening jam, where at least 200 attended in another one of UK skateboarding’s most infamous sausage fests, I didn’t collide with anyone. Not even a kid. It’s almost magic. Though, judging by how universally friendly Porno Paul’s lexical choices were when MCing the event, there must have been something in the atmosphere to make everything so…nice?

Rather than read superfluous descriptions on how rad the park is – see for yourself. Nick Richards has worked his arse off putting the building of the park in motion, but filming an absolutely banging edit, exclusively for Crossfire, of all the sessions that went down in the first month. LSP local Harry Deane also jumped in with his VX and shot another edit for us focussing on the locals and younger crew, you can see his edit here. Let this story be part of the motivation for you to get something similar done in your town. It CAN be done. And just look at the results…

Big up to Gravity, CSC, Crayon Skateboards and City Surf for working hard to make this happen for the capital of Wales. Dai iawn! If you’re stoked on this park and the edit then share it on Facebook and get your mates and plan a trip to Wales because great parks should be skated and not just talked about.

The plaza is located next to The Cardiff Bay Visitor Centre, Harbour Drive, Cardiff, CF10 4PA – or you can check the map.

Categories
Features Skateboarding

Rick McCrank Interview

Rick McCrank is one of the few universally safe names in skateboarding’s frequently self-destructive, attention-deficit and elitist world. No matter what sub-culture of skateboarding you happen to dwell in, the respect for Crankers will always be there. No action he makes requires justification because whatever he turns his creative talents to expose nothing but a loud declaration of his love for skateboarding.

We had the pleasure of hearing from one of skateboarding’s most diverse characters whose most recent jaunt led him to play the character of Blair Stanley, a role supposedly based around the man himself. He gave us a little insight into his part in Machotaildrop, the Anti-Social store, Daft Punk’s Tron soundtrack, a little dietary advice, why company loyalty is important and plenty more droplets of knowledge from someone with a particularly impressive and off-beat skateboarding acumen.

Interview: Stanley
Portrait: French Fred

Tell us how you first got involved with directors Corey and Alex for ‘Machotaildrop‘ and how the character of Blair Stanley was born…

I’ve known Corey for a long time through skateboarding in Vancouver, he was roommates with my friend Keegan. I met Alex through Corey when Alex was visiting from scotland and we all got on right away. A friend from San Francisco, Matt O’Brien, was visiting vancouver and he mentioned that his friend was submitting something to the Fuel TV Experiment and that Corey and Alex should too. Alex and Corey asked me if I’d be interested in the project, that way they’d have a pro skater to add to their submission. So that’s how Blair Stanley was created, for the film Harvey Spannos.

The writers have mentioned that Blair Stanley was essentially written as a caricature of yourself. Do you identify with your character?

I can identify with some aspects of the character, mainly his manic states but I’d say that if it were written about me it would be the dark and disturbed part of me that isn’t very present in my demeanor.

Blair does show a darker side to the character in Machotaildrop compared with how he was portrayed in Harvey Stannos and I think those that follow your skateboarding have yet to see your own dark side… how did his character’s transition reflect your own life, if at all?

I tend to look at the bright side of things but not when it comes to me, I’ve had issues with self-doubt in the past and a little in the present but I’m working hard on ending that pattern. I suffer from depression which sometimes can leave me alone in my home for days, but like I said I’m curing myself of that through therapy and self work.

For most actors, doing all their own stunts is a big plus on their resume… as a skater you kind of inherit the stunt double role by default but obviously you can act too. What made you want to act in the first place?

I never wanted to act, I’m a fan of film and I enjoyed doing little fun video things with my friends. It was a shock to me when people said that I was good at acting.

Do you think that you being in the film, alongside the likes of John Rattray and Steve Olson, help reinforce the idea that Machotaildrop is a film very much made from the minds of ‘real’ skateboarders?

I think so. I can vouch for this being a skater made film.

Photo: Alex Craig

Films about skateboarding have often suffered from two problems: one is that the regular film-watching crowd won’t relate to some of the content; the other is that skateboarders will dismiss the film as cheesy. How can these hurdles be overcome?

I don’t think those hurdles can be overcome. Skateboarding is just so broad and there are so many sub-cultures in skating. Skaters are jaded and elitist, we tend to think that we hold the secret truth about how things should be and that we are so different and free, look at how long-boarding is viewed as lame when it’s essentially the exact same thing but they are riding boards that are deemed to be too long to be cool. If a film were to try to explain to a non-skater audience what skateboarding means to the character the “real” skaters would know it and diss that. It seems that not everyone can walk away happy. I think the film ‘Kids’ was a good window into one sub-culture of skateboarding. I’d prefer to see a film about skating that completely catered to skaters and didn’t try at all to bridge the gap between skaters and non-skaters, that would be pure and that’s what I like to see on film.

We think the film looked fantastic and I’m sure it’s going to go down huge with skaters and fantasy heads alike. But how about some other skating faux-pas? Why do some skaters turn their noses up at bonelesses and benihanas? I know that you’re not afraid of getting gnarly with your foot on the ground…

Again, skaters are jaded and if the elite say something is cool then that’s what is cool. Look at the term “mall-grab”… I’ve heard grown ass men make fun of people because they dared to carry their skateboard by the truck. I don’t subscribe to those types of limitations. If you are a free skater then be free.

There’s one particular boneless you do in the Beauty And The Beast tour that’s totally off the scale, what’s the secret to being able to kill it on both park and the streets?

The secret is just this, skate street and parks. It’s all skateboarding folks, plain and simple.

There’s a ramp duel in the film with your éS teammate John Rattray, how was it filming that? Was it inspired in any way from Anti-Social’s ‘3 is the magic number’ mini ramp comp?

I think maybe it was inspired by Thrashin’s joust scene. Filming that was fun but I was feeling lousy on my board due to some ankle issues I had that needed surgery afterwards. The ramp was really narrow and our boards would sometimes fall in the river but I’d say it was a good session.

Below: Jurassic Boneless – Photo: Ben Colen

Now that the Machotaildrop ride is over are you looking forward to return filming for the Chocolate video?

I am so hyped to film for the next Girl/Choc vid. Like I said earlier though, I’m still recovering from major ankle surgery so I’m not quite at the filming stage, although I wish I were.

If your ankle heals up and you get filming do you know if you’re going to be involved in a mighty Girl montage or have a full-part or what?

If the project gets pushed longer I’ll try to film a full part when I’m healthy.

A lot has changed in the last ten years when filming for a skate film – there’s increasing demand for constantly pushing the envelope and greater production values. How has filming for skate videos changed for you in the last ten years?

I think the only thing that has changed has been that the filmers have a hell of a lot more gear to toss over fences then used to. Skating’s the same.

You’ve been on Girl and éS for over 10 years now. It’s sadly rare to see such loyalty but it seems more common with Crailtap and Sole Tech companies. What keeps you loyal to your sponsors?

Somewhere down the line I learned that loyalty pays off. I’d seen people bounce around for some quick cash and then be left with a bunch of burned bridges and a massive car payment. I’ve also been lucky enough to be sponsored by companies that I respect and they respect me.

Why do you think it’s common to see not just ams but established names constantly move from sponsor to sponsor?

I think it’s because no one takes the time to teach these kids about respect and ethics, they are taught by skateboardng to not give a shit and to be “gnarly” and to fuck the world or themselves. Skateboarding seems to be trying to self-destruct itself.

As a non-drinking vegetarian, were there any awkward moments on the Beauty And The Beast tours when the wizard’s staffs got a little too high and the barbecues got really meaty?

I wouldn’t call them awkward, maybe annoying at times but I still love all of those people and I don’t judge anyone for enjoying themselves how they know how. Meaty BBQs aren’t an issue for me either, I’ve been a vegetarian for sixteen years so I know how to take care of my nutrition needs.

Does the healthy lifestyle help a lot with your skating? I know I’m already starting to suffer…

I think I could be much more healthier but I’d say that yes, it is an advantage, especially as we get older. Our bodies need as much help as we can give them and I plan on living as healthily as I can for my entire life.

So for all of those reading out there that are keen to look after their joints a bit more, what would be your ultimate daily diet to get the energy flowing and the grinds grinding?

I think any well balanced diet will do it, lots of leafy greens and a ton of water.

Are you really good at salad grinds?

Actually, no I’m not!

Below: Beanplant – Photo: Ben Colen

Tell us a little about your shop, Anti-Social…do kids steal stuff?

Sometimes they steal; Michelle, who runs everything, usually catches them and scolds them appropriately. The shop is going great. Michelle is deeply connected with the community and if you help your community then they will help you.

You have some serious heads ripping for the store too, Keegan Saunders kills it constantly and Mike McDermott and Wade Fyfe are always a pleasure to watch. Who’s repping the store hardest right now?

Keegan’s doing a pretty good job I’d say.

The Japan tour video that dropped a couple of years ago with your wheel company Momentum was sick. There’s a huge difference in the way the Japanese approach skateboarding compared with the West, are you feeling it?

I love any approach to skateboarding. The Osaka Daggers seem to be having the most fun.

There’s something unique about Canadian skateboarders too, what is it about growing up skating in Canada that’s noticeably different from, let’s say the States?

I guess the spots are more harsh here, kind of like England, and the winters can be pretty brutal in some places as well so when you can skate you really appreciate it.

Who’s your favourite Canadian skateboarder of all time?

Quinn Starr

How about the best concrete park you’ve ever skated?

Burnside in Portland Oregon.

Photo: French Fred

What are you currently dividing your time into doing?

Latley it’s been physical therapy, parenting, skating and helping my fiancee with her immigration paperwork (she’s from the U.S), other than that I’m trying to enjoy the summer and have some fun.

Who got you playing the guitar?

Jonny Olsin

Do you ever jam with Danny Garcia?

Once or twice on trips, he is super good at all things music and he can sing.

What music are you feeling right now?

Daft Punk’s Tron Soundtrack and a sampling of just about every other genre including world music, an ethiopian guy named Mahmoud Ahmed makes me very happy.

What was the highlight of your trip to the UK?

My daughter had her twelfth birthday in Edinburgh, we dressed up and went out to eat. She loved it over there.

Get a chance to skate?

I skated a few ramps, that was the first time I skated in six months because of the surgery so I was nervous.

So what’s next for you after you recover and the Chocolate video is done with?

I”m very excitedly working on a skate project with Thomas Campbell and a bunch of epic rippers.

And any further words of wisdom you’d like to share?

It’s all skateboarding and take care of your body or it won’t take care of you.

Monster F/S Air – Photo: Ben Colen


Categories
Features Skateboarding

French – Down Under

On Friday 13th French gave us the lowdown on his series of exhibitions that started off over the weekend in Brisbane and Sydney. Read words with him to hear about the shows he’s putting on in between skating with the Passport crew and to have a look at those awesome Withcraft beer koozees.

You down under then sport?

Yeah man, Brisbane. Just hung the show, chillin’ now because no one’s skating tonight so I’m going to the pub later.

It’s winter there right?

Yeah, so cold. Well it’s 18°C so not cold! Hahaha!

So what’s cooking out there?

One show in Brisbane and another in Sydney last Saturday with The Gonz, Ed Templeton and so on: check it. I had one at Nine Lives on Friday with Murdoch Stafford too.

How much stuff did you ship over there?

I had thirteen pieces for the Friday 13th show, five screen prints and twelve for the Sydney show.

How did this all hook up and were the organisers aware of exactly what was being taken over to be hung?

Joe, the curator of Disorder Disorder paid for my flight to Brisbane and also hooked up the two other shows. He asked me to make eight new horror and gore works for his show, including new Creature graphics, so he saw all of those beforehand.  The theme for Nine Lives was anything with skulls, so I just kept making work for it. The one in Sydney is a mix of new and recent drawings, they know what they are getting.

New Creature graphics?

Yeah. It’s just decks but it’s super new. Not allowed to show the finished stuff though but the drawing is in the show. One’s a Hitz pro model.

Monster Gallery present Draw with French, Stefan Marx and Marcus Oakley

What’s the main difference in the Australian art scene compared to Europe?

Aussies seem switch on to bullshit and don’t take any. People seem to like what they like, it’s rad. Because the scenes are smaller, people are more stoked to have art shows and meet people. It’s really a close-knit thing.

What about the homegrown artists out there?

The metal and record sleeve stuff is great, like Glen Smith and Murdoch Stafford who lives in Brisbane, he’s rad.

So, I take it you are hooked up and shredding too?

Yeah, I have a good crew of friends in both cities. We skate all day around putting up shows and drink all night.

What are the local spots like?

Brisbane’s epic for parks and street and so is Sydney. Skated a pool under this guy Rob’s house, he makes all the parks and this pool is insane, pool coping and super tight. Apparently it’s super rare to get to skate it.

What’s your involvement with the Midsomer Norton park?

I did the boards and shirts for the opening this weekend. Rad, huh?

Yeah, the park needs a session and soon. So you been hanging with the Passport crew?

Yeah the Panthers. They rule and are really good guys, the riders are amazing, it’s like Aussie Cliché but better. So, I’ve been hanging with those guys and my friend Sonny Day in Sydney. He and his Mrs do this. He’s down for beers and BBQs, so good.

I take it you are leaving a trail of Witchcraft on your travels?

Hahahaah! Yeah stickers, shirts and beer koozee’s… the new boards are being made in America right now.

New series?

Yeah, all new, four boards at 8.75″.

Do you only make decks for people with massive feet?

8.125” is small though right?!

You should make chariot slaying wheels that can cut people up. I would buy them…

Hahaha! I’ll speak to the factory…

Keep up to date with French at www.funeralfrench.blogspot.com

Categories
Features Skateboarding

A-Team Comp – The Finalists!

So our video edit competition in association with The A-Team brought in some fantastic little edits from scenes, crews, skateparks and some other things we’re not so sure of. Some were funny, some were rad and others were just very odd. We had a great time watching through all of them.

Here’s our six finalists that were been sent to Geoff Rowley to decide who the winner is. One of the crews below got their hands on the mammoth prize package and the winner has now been announced here.

Big props to all those that entered. Keep it real and keep having fun skating.

CHRIS BROMLEY

MAX KING

SWILL POSSEE

REVOLUTION SKATEPARK

K-TOWN LURKERS

BEN CORNISH AND PRIME SKATEPARK

Categories
Features Skateboarding

Spot Check: Midsomer Norton

The last decade has seen the landscape of British skateboarding undergo a radical seismic shift. Though the small-town spots, blindbumps and cobbles that helped craft the UK’s idiosyncratic approach to skating still pepper our streets, the rapid increase in smooth concrete and innovative skater-made terrain has done so much to encourage younger skaters to roll and get creative. Maverick Industries‘ latest construction in Midsomer Norton is another creation that has continued to push the boundaries for what a skateboarder in Britain can do.

Christened the ‘Kate’ park by the Maverick team because of the invaluable input that began in the mid-90s from the BA3 skate store owners and friends, it’s a live physical manifestation of what the collective skate scene in Norton could ever want to skate. Maverick Designer, Ian Jennings, lived and skated in Norton for 14 years prior to the completiton of the concrete dream that stemmed from a simple petition from the man himself. The petition swiftly became a concept which soon become a real, flowing park through a little graft and a lot of passion from Maverick, the locals and the Manic Skaterz crew. Are you sick of living in a small town with no spots? It’s been proven time and time again that we can make it happen. It just takes a little effort, some patience and the motivation that comes from a real desire to get some banging terrain on your turf.

In just the first few weeks the unanimous reaction has been glowing. Ben Nordberg has already described it as the best park he’s ever skated, as have countless others. Such claims would often be dismissed as hyperbole but this really is the real deal because just look at it! It’s a tremendous looking park, but we wanted the full low-down from someone who’s got down and dirty with the park and left some of his skin on the concrete. We got in touch with one of Bristol’s finest and one big hoppa, Owen Hopkins. Fresh from skating the place he gave us his insight into Midsomer Norton…

“It is one of the best concrete parks I have ever skated, it has something that caters for everyone’s needs and has a very nice flow about it. I’ve skated many concrete parks and a common flaw is that you can only hit one obstacle and then your line is over. This is not the case at Norton; you can cruise around the whole park from the top, it’s really fun.

It offers you everything you need to be able to take stuff to the streets – it has handrails/stairs/ledges/manual blocks/flat bars etc as well as all the other stuff that is usually in a skatepark – hips/driveways/quarters/bowls etc. I really enjoy the driveway with astro turf in the middle and also the flat bar rail across the astro turf – they both make you go the full distance! The pump bumps which lead to a bank and then into the bowl are really fun to cruise around and get some speed together. I’m not really a bowl skater but have been told it has some really nice lines, I just can’t hit them!

It probably has everything I have skated before in one park which is what makes it so fun. I’ve done some things there that I have never done before, so I can imagine the youth of Midsomer Norton being in the X Games in a few years time!”


So if the words from Hoppa and Nordberg haven’t caused you to book train tickets to Norton already then have a look at this clip from James Harris featuring the Redlight and 5050 crew below. Skate everywhere and everything kids, if you aren’t satisfied then do something about it. Big props to everyone involved in the making of this fantastic park.

You can find Midsomer Norton Skatepark at Gullock Tyning, Midsomer Norton, BA3 2UH. Or check the map

The first big event to hit Norton is the medieval themed Grand Skate Jam on August 14th. Further information is available here. For a teaser shot by Tim Crawley just watch the video below.

Midsomer Norton Teaser for Maverick Jam from TCTV on Vimeo.

Categories
Features Skateboarding

Bryce Kanights Interview

Bryce Kanights not only has one of the most memorable names in the history of the entire world, but he has also captured some of the most memorable moments in skateboarding’s history. Anyone who has rolled on board will have felt his vibes, because despite its length being comparatively brief with most pasttimes, the history of skateboarding has had Bryce’s input throughout.

Hailing from San Francisco, Kanights captured cultural movements of all kinds as they shook not just the naturally shakey West Coast but the entire world. And as technology grew, so did the legend of the photos he had taken. Gonz skating Alcatraz in a prisoner’s outfit?  Chris Senn flying through San Fran? The Chief’s barefoot ollie over the Gonz gap at EMB? All are photos that have in their own way helped shape the very big stamp San Francisco has made on skate culture.

In his time shooting Bryce has contributed and worked for the likes of Adidas, ESPN, EA Sports, Fuel, Konami, Nike, Oakley, Volcom, Kingpin Mag, Skateboarder Mag, Thrasher Mag, TWS Mag and more. Currently, he’s doing his part to keep the world updated on Skate Daily while still regularly laying on dirty floors and pushing a viewfinder into his eyes to document skateboarding in the way only he can. We caught up with him to get the full scoop on his own personal history, who he shot, what he shot with, who he shot for and what he listened to while doing it all.

Where you at right now Bryce?

I’m on a completely packed airplane flying across America on my way to New York City. Just took off out of Denver, three and a half hours of no frills air travel with barely enough room to move.

Look around you and name three random things you see…

Well, there’s the older guy seated next to me in the middle seat, he’s passed out with his reading glasses on and his book folded open in his lap, outside of my window there are over a dozen crop circles spread across the ground: the heartland of America. And this laptop computer with approximately 45% of the power remaining on its battery has a bit of a job to do while remaining confined in this situation.

Aaron Daily – Frontboard

How long have you been a photographer?

I got into photography and began to shoot photos when I was a kid, but I didn’t really step it up until 1980 or so. I’d say I’ve spent just under 30 years of my life sitting, standing and laying in gutters on the streets while behind the lens.

What is the best and worst advice anyone gave you in regards to photography?

Well, the best advice was to look through the camera’s viewfinder to compose my photographs and to understand the rule of thirds. The worst advice was from my own teenage brain when the punk rock movement first hit San Francisco in the late 70s and early 80s. I was too caught up in the punk rock scene I guess to bother to carry around my camera to document the emergence of the Dead Kennedys, Black Flag, The Lewd, DOA, The Adolescents and many, many other bands that rolled through town at the time. Those historic and monumental moments during my days of youth were priceless.

Cab and Hosoi – Dual Rockets (1986)

What artists have shaped you over the years and what music can you not leave for a tour without?

Music has always been a big part of my life and it inspires a great deal of what I do. At an early age I grew up with the Beatles, The Doors, Bob Dylan and Otis Redding playing on the stereo at home. Then as a teen, my friends and I would go to house parties and dance to soul and funk with The Jackson Five, Marvin Gaye, Brick, Stevie Wonder, Earth, Wind and Fire, James Brown, the Dazz Band and Parliament. Soon thereafter, through skateboarding, I discovered the power of rock through Van Valen, AC DC, Led Zeppelin, Kiss, and Thin Lizzy; then came along the late 70s and early 80s new wave and punk outfits like Devo, Joe Jackson, Bill Nelson’s Red Noise, Joy Division, XTC, Echo and The Bunnymen, The Buzzcocks, The Clash, Generation X, 999, Stiff Little Fingers, The Avengers, Toxic Reasons, The Ruts, Code of Honor, Los Olvidados, DOA, and so many, many more. On tour I’ve got to have various mixes to include reggae, jazz, 70s soul, 60s and 70s rock, 80s punk, 90s grunge, jazz and alternative artists as well.

That’s some classic shit right there, what’s the playlist for right now though in terms of favourites?

Some of my favorites today include, Radiohead, Miles Davis, Soundgarden, Deer Tick, The Clash, Sizzla, Editors, The Beatles, Gallows, Fugazi, The Jam, Tommy Guerrero, Three Inches of Blood, Pearl Jam, and Bad Brains.

Overall, music becomes a very influential and personal soundtrack to our individual lives. You can listen to a particular song and it can take you back to time where that song had a profound effect on you. Music is magical like that and I truly couldn’t live without it.

Corey Duffel

How many great bands have you met along the way that actually ripped on a skateboard though?

Well, back in the 80s, many of the so-called ‘skate rock’ bands held it down on four wheels. Brian Brannon of JFA rips, Dave Chavez of Code of Honor kills it on the bass and the skateboard, Germany’s Claus Grabke is equally talented on the guitar as he is on his skateboard, and last, but certainly not least, Pearl Jam co-founder and bassist, Jeff Ament tears on a skateboard. He has two concrete bowls on his property and has one of the most impressive skateboard collections that I personally know of. Despite his stardom as a rock and roll musician, Jeff is a tried and true skateboarder for life.

How did you get into skate photography?

I was 12 years old during the summer of 1975 when I first discovered skateboarding. Shortly afterward, I began to analyze the action images of Tony Alva, Jay Adams, Wally Inouye, Brad Bowman. Jerry Valdez, Eddie Elguera, Steve Alba, Rick Blackhart, Duane Peters, Steve Olson and other top pros printed in the pages of Skateboarder magazine.

With each successive month and every new issue that I purchased, I would read the magazine cover to cover and study and stare at the photos shot by their key staff photographers, James Cassimus, Craig Stecyk III, Warren Bolster and Ted Terrebonne. Their collective iconic images heavily influenced me; and drawing upon that groundswell of inspiration, I attempted to shoot action photos of my friends skating with a cheap Kodak instamatic camera. As you can imagine, it wasn’t a very suitable piece of equipment to capture action photos, but I tried anyhow. Nonetheless, I managed to capture a few worthwhile exposures and my interest in photography was sparked and continued to grow.

My father was a proficient photographer and as a gift for my 6th grade graduation that next summer, he provided me with a used, albeit very good, Nikon F 35mm SLR camera. From that point forward, I learned about shutter and film speeds, aperture, depth of field and more, and wherever my skateboarding would take me (and my friends), that camera would be along to document the sessions and good times.

Joel Chavez – Tip-toeing Joe Lopes’ Backyard Ramp (1984)

Your skateboard knowledge and experience from these sessions bagged you a gig at Adidas a while back, what was your experience of working with a brand as big as this?

This subject is a tough one for me. Going into it after my hire with the company, I was quite stoked as I had skated in several adidas shoes as a youngster and I had a lot of respect for the brand with their heritage of producing great lines of footwear. I was brought on to recruit and build a talented team of riders for their renewed skateboarding program and to assist with the marketing efforts overall. Over the three years of time that I put in as Team Marketing Manager, I worked with some very great, talented people and delivered a respectable team and skate program. To this day, I’m very proud of the team of riders that I put together for adidas.

Unfortunately for me, the marketing genius that originally hired me, that I reported to, and with whom I was supposed to work with for the benefit of Adidas’ skateboarding effort, opted (along with his associates) to deliberately keep me out of the loop on several key marketing initiatives –  including the skate team riders! Long story short, frustration grew, and sadly the trust and forward movement and opportunities within the skateboarding group began to collapse on several levels. It soon became apparent to me that the skate marketing group was locked in a climate of fear and mistrust, and my voice, my input, and years of experience in skateboarding was no longer of value.

Despite all that I did to build up the skate program and give it proper traction, my boss played a corporate card to throw me under the bus and keep his job and my contract was not renewed. Just a few weeks later, he was canned as well.

What was the worst era shooting skateboarding over the years?

Well, the worst days are thankfully behind us all. Imagine street skating’s progression during the early 90s when new tricks and possibilities were being landed at a very low percentage; truthfully, like one make out of every 50 or so attempts. And to shoot a photo sequence of say, a switch kickflip backside tailslide sometimes became a bit of a ridiculous experiment, and waste of film (and time). Unfortunately, this was several years before digital photography emerged. I recall burning through 20-30 rolls of film just to get certain groundbreaking tricks into the magazine. Eventually and thankfully, video capture software emerged and footage shot in Hi8 format was captured and made into sequences to be printed on the pages of the magazines. And as horrible as they looked, these crudely captured frames saved us (photographers) a lot of grief, money and time. This photographic nightmare paired with overly baggy trousers and small wheels, proved to be regarded as some of the darkest days in skateboarding’s relatively short history, but it was progression all the same.

Dan Drehobl

Have you ever felt bad about taking a photo?

Yes, usually the images of my friends taking a gnarly slam are ones that hurt everyone involved.

You must have to deal with a lot of injuries on the road from people setting standards at the many spots that have world-renowned status, what is the most impressive trick you have shot to date that got away clean when you knew deep down that the skater fronting it could have seriously hurt himself?

Every single frame that I shoot of the Mega Ramp/Big Air event at the X Games each summer is truly exhilarating. I mean, if those guys miscalculate just a couple of inches, they can die! Look at what happened to Jake Brown in 2007. He narrowly escaped death. Seriously, those guys should be rewarded much, much more for the risk involved in that display of balls-out skateboarding.

Below: Chewy Cannon

Is the younger generation more fearless?

As a general rule, the younger you are the more fearless you will be. If you think about it, this opinion completely makes sense. Your bones are more flexible as a younger skater and repeatedly jumping down big sets of stairs, or bailing and running out from a lofty air above a transition doesn’t beat you up so much as a teenager. That soon begins to change when you reach your late 20s. Sure, the skate equipment is better from what we had as kids years ago, but all the same, the progression, benchmarked expectations, and the level of gnarliness has far surpassed any sense of real fear.

Thankfully, my generation learned to knee slide on transitions when we were teenagers, but then again, the jump ramp era of the 80s hammered our knees and destroyed our ankles years later. But we never jumped down huge flights of stairs, long railings or massive gaps repeatedly! While I ache with pains from time to time, I sometimes wonder just how much more physically damaged the current generation of skaters will be when they reach their forties. I feel it’s becoming a safe bet to invest in stock with artificial joint replacements in the coming years.

Which new ams are blowing your mind with their skateboarding right now?

Well, the number one young gun in my mind is Grant Taylor although he is no longer an amateur. He absolutely kills it on all terrain. The skaters that can slay a rail, destroy a ledge, kickflip a massive gap or drop, and take on all transitions are the ones that will rise up in the future. Ben Raybourn, Raven Tershy, Taylor Bingaman, Kevin Kowalski, Evan Smith, Curren Caples, Davis Torgerson, and Ben Hatchell. But then again, there are several street skaters that are absolutely amazing too! Cory Kennedy, Ishod Wair, Vincent Alvarez, Luis Tolentino, Felipe Gustavo, Clint Walker, Aaron Hamoki, Tony Karr, Mark Suicu all come to mind.

The internet plays a roll in pushing skateboarding forward at a faster rate than print magazines and DVDs could ever, how has the web changed the way you work in your profession as a photographer?

When I’m shooting in a public area such as a skatepark or in the streets, I tend to take notice of others on location with cameras. I’m more aware these days of other people willing to poach photos or video footage of the shoot that I’ve arranged. Once those images and video clips shot by others make it onto the web before yours do, it diminishes the published value for print media and commercial use. Fortunately, the poaching thing is not too common, but it does happen, so we tend to protect our shoots more.

Below: Gunes Ozdogan – Crooks

Do new forms of media and cheaper cameras breed more hungry skate photographers than ever before? What’s it like out there in the US in terms of people pushing photography to different levels?

Well, with digital photography and digital media in general, just about anybody with the proper cameras and equipment, a connection to the web, and the gumption, can shoot and deliver visual content these days. The publishing paradigm has taken on a revolutionary shift and we’ve reached a point of oversaturation with the amount of digital content that is published on a regular basis. Blogs and websites churn out images and video content constantly. Add smart phones and mobile media to the mix, and everything, everywhere, at all times becomes digital and disposable content in an instant, for better or worse.

The ease of use with digital photo and video equipment has greatly improved the quality of images that we see from pros and amateurs alike. With software like Photoshop and Final Cut Pro the learning curve has opened up greatly for enthusiasts and has helped to push the progression at a faster rate. For aspiring skate photographers and videographers, the tools of the trade are much more user-friendly and can yield much more professional looking results quickly.

You have been running the www.SKATEDAILY.net website now for over 6 years which has grown into one of the best news feeds in the USA, how addictive does it actually become to feed your own desire to keep people in the know?

It’s not so much of an addiction as it is a regular means to share skateboarding-related info and content over a few minutes each day. I admit it’s a bit tough to juggle the workload between our regular day jobs and travel schedules, but we continue to carry on and update the site regularly.

How far can the site go, knowing that video online is becoming king?

Well, much has changed with digital media and online content in the past six years hasn’t it? We continue to strive to deliver our news and info as best possible with unbiased, factual reports without any political standpoint. We’re moving closer to delivering exclusive content with photo features, interviews and reports with video in the coming months.

Below: Dave Bachinsky – Frontside Flip

What’s the relationship like between a photographer and filmer?

At times it’s a tough battle in regards to working with one another. I come from the old school of skate photography, several years before video parts were paramount and video clips were pumped out on the web every day. Today, you have to balance your craft and the desired look and feel of your images with the democratic process of asking the filmer to back out of your shot, etc. In all honesty, it’s a bit of give and take. I always prefer to pair up with filmer that opts to shoot creative angles and not to employ the fisheye angle for the entire session.

Are there ways of getting better/free equipment as you continue to grow or do you have to fund everything yourself?

As you grow in your field of work, opportunities arise and present themselves in very humbling and surprising ways. I’ve been fortunate to receive some free gear bags and a couple of cameras free of charge. As much as I enjoy new gear as the other guys, I usually purchase my gear at retail prices. I prefer to work with my regular and familiar kit of cameras, lenses and lighting so I don’t upgrade all that often. A sponsorship for this pricy stuff would be cool though. With that said, does anyone have a spare Hassleblad H4 that they’d like to part with? I’m game.

Is the work of a skate photographer well paid?

I’m certain that it pays better than that of a skate videographer, but it’s not a profession that is going to lead to an early retirement. Besides the photography end of the job, there is plenty of downtime and waiting, broken boards and equipment, security guards, cops, irate civilians, and long hours to it, but in the end it’s completely gratifying.

Would you recommend digital for beginners?

Absolutely. The ease of use, learning curve, instant results is much more favorable. Film has become a more specialized medium and it makes absolutely no economic or fundamental sense for a beginning photographer to learn from their mistakes through the regular use of film.

If you were to buy a pocket snapper for capturing skating on a budget to get going, which camera would you suggest?

Canon’s line of PowerShot “point and shoot” cameras including the G9, G10 and G11 models have always been great for the most part. Despite their inherent shutter delays, I’ve used both the G9 and SD 780IS models over the past several years and they’re very intuitive by design and produce great photos and video. But if you’re looking to capture the action with more precision, the step up to a proper DSLR is inevitable.

Skate Daily

What are the benefits of using digital?

For beginners, and amatuers and professionals shooting high-end commercial work, digital is definitely the more efficient way to go. The image sensors of today’s top end DLSRs and medium format digital backs now yield a wider range of tonality and latitude than that of film. I look at cameras as imaging tools for the most part, and all of them have their strengths and weaknesses. Depending on the job or desired look of a particular photo, the choice of camera becomes quite clear.

…and film?

The use of film definitely slows down the process of photography. And that can be a great thing! You shoot fewer shots than you would with digital capture and you take more time to think through your exposures. Film is becoming more of a medium for fine art and personal images. I still prefer the grain and aesthetic feel of black and white negative film. For color, digital images can easily match the look of traditional E6 and C41 development processes in post-production.

Bryce Kanights – Wallride

What kit do you use?

I’ve relied upon Canon equipment and lenses for the past 25 years. I currently shoot the majority of my 35mm photos digitally with EOS 1D Mark II and 1Ds Mark II DSLRs although I still enjoy the use of my Hasselblad X Pan II for panoramic photographs. For medium format and film photography I use a Hasselblad 503CW. For lighting I rely upon Pocket Wizard radio slaves for wireless triggering of my Quantum Q Flash, and Lumedyne strobes.

Overall, what main advice would you give to upcoming skate photographers?

Look through your lens, study the light, and absorb the experience, examples and teachings of others. Learn from your mistakes and follow your heart. Oh yeah, don’t reply on the auto exposure mode of your camera…and purchase a good light meter too!

Web links?

My photo site is www.brycekanights.com, my personal blog is www.nostalgianow.blogspot.com and my video blog is www.vimeo.com/user859346