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Skateboarding News

Smells like Death

Want to see something creative done on a skateboard? A harsh spot taking a thrashing? A fat bloke get his cock out..? Then save your pennies for the new Death video.

Zorlac and the boys are hard at work at digitalising their lives for your viewing pleasure and the displeasure of the Blue Rinse Brigade. Plus, in case you were sleeping under a rock, you might want to know that Richie Jackson and Patrick Melcher will be clocking in full parts as the latest Death pros!

Speaking of pros, Ricky Oyola’s guest model is very rare with only 500 models spread across the globe, so get one while stock exists! Expect a wider Melcher board to hit the shelves soon at 8.25 inches.

Finally, good minds think alike and Richie and Zorlac took the new UK Consolidated riders Ben Raemers and Ollie Tyreman for a mini Consolidated/Death tour of Northern California.

www.deathskateboards.com

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Skateboarding News

Yama droppin’ hammers

Feel free to get out the Ferrero Rocher and greet the Yama Skateboard team as they cruise around London and Southern England next week for an unofficial UK tour.

These guys- Ferit Batir, Muki Rustig, David ‘Roest’ Martelleur, Chris Pfanner… are seriously bad-ass on boards, and good beer buddies off them, so expect some serious hammers to drop with Yama!

www.yamaskateboards.com

Photo: Basile.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Jackass 2 Premieres in London

Myself and 2P just attended the Jackass premier in town and i must admit, i was invited there and was thinking it was gonna be wack, but the film had us laughing all the way to the ventolin inhalers, it’s fucking hilarious!

Bam and the boys have made another shocking movie but this one will make you wince, laugh, cry, and shit your pants all at the same time.

What spawned from Big Brother in 1999 has mutated into a worldwide freak show propelled by MTV’s stunt series over the years and Jackass 2 showcases the entire crew on point with Knoxville annihilated in a bullring, Spike Jonze dressed as a 90 year old woman with her low slung baps out on the street, Steve O as human bait for mako sharks and horse cum drinking, Erehn Gheyey completing the loop on a mini motorcycle, Preston Laceys fart chamber, We Man’s electric chair and shitloads more. You cant really explain it in words, it just rolls and rolls and even if you are over this whole thing, once it begins you cant help but laugh your ass off.

Knoxville almost gets killed on a rocket launch into a lake as the cylinder ble w a whole the size of your handand Ryan Dunn who is knocked out from a stunt buzzer also was heavily damaged from a horsebolting stunt. Rumour has it that he was allegedly jolted so harshly that he has actually suffered a bloodclot in his heart that could be life threatening, hence his absence from the premier and the big question mark over the editing of a third movie – even though there is apparently loads of footage left over from the last 6 months of filming.

The afterparty at the Sin Club on Charing Cross Road served free cocktails all night where a host of really sad c-list celebrities from Big Brother and Celebrity Love Island were seen mingling amongst London’s press brigade and hangers-on. Knoxville was spotted leaving the club gingerly at midnight with his bouncer, obviously in need of horse cum. The search continues whilst Erin Gheyey takes the mantle as the pube beard wearing armed terrorist that got served in a gag that was reversed and made the show.

Go see this film if you are bored one night as it will have you in stitches whatever you may think of their stunts and pranks these days.

Categories
Skateboarding News

Wörgl Bowl opening footy

Just to prove that the Austrian Wörgl bowl is fully functional and ready to rip, the boys from Muckefest held the Pluto comp on October 7-8th for the opening and a healthy handful of European Thrashers turned up to skate and celebrate.

Despite the weather being shit on the Saturday, it was all sunshine on the Sunday, and things went right off the Richter scale. It was a tough call, but these were the final results:

1. Anders Tellen (Photo c/o Michael Dragaschnig)
2. Stefan Atzl
3. Roman Astleitner / David Margreiter
5. David Martelleur
6. Thilo Nawrocki
7. Ferit Batir
8. Matthias Trobos

Peep the footage here or here, and pictures c/o www.skatethecradle.com

Categories
Skateboarding News

Daewon SOTY

Thrasher have announced their latest Skater of the Year and they couldn’t have hit the nail on the head any harder- Daewon Song!

How many video parts? How many spots? And how many trick combinations??? Here’s a sweet appetizer from Thrasher before a full SOTY part drops.

www.thrashermagazine.com

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Skateboarding News

Leeds bowl unveiled

Just in time for winter, a sweet bowl has been built in Leeds, at The Works skatepark to be more precise (where else..?).

It was built by handymen Snoz and Lee Rozzee mainly with help from Vince Orr, Dave Stobart and Dougie McLaughlin. The authentic pool coping was sourced from Howard at Cranbourne Stone in Hampshire and is white portland aggregate concrete on flexi adhesive and grout.

The overall measurements look approx like this:

Length 35ft
Deep end 8ft
Shallow end 7ft
Dia. deep end 18ft
Dia. Shallow end 14ft

It’s a Kidney bowl with ramp effect from deep to shallow end with a bulge in one side and a 10ft radius on the external curve.

Guys like this know how to treat the beast. Cheers to Mike at Heathen and Simon at The Works for the info.

www.theworksskatepark.com

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Skateboarding News

Send Yours

Reading this and wondering how you could become involved in it in some way? Are you a good skater who has shot some decent photo’s with friends lately? Would you want thousands of people to see them?

Send them to info@caughtinthecrossfire.com today, as we now have one spot per week to host a photo of you skating in the weekly Moves Getting the Moo’s and can also host your links as well to footage…

Send this link to your friends…or die

Categories
Features

Alex Irvine – Triple Shot

Over the years various talented skate photographers have momentarily covered the Scottish skate scene but until the tattooed frame of Alex Irvine came haring down the hillsides from Aberdeen none have stayed around for long. Alex has been leading the charge of documenting the utter carnage that comprises Scotland’s skateboard community for a good 5 years now and shows no signs of stopping, (thank God).

Aside from his work for Sidewalk and Document Magazines in the UK, Alex has contributed photos to every magazine worth its salt; from Thrasher in the States to Sugar in France. A talented skater, a great photographer and a man unafraid of the rigours of the road, the future looks bright for Aberdeen’s finest. In the words of Dirtswan themselves – Git it right up ye!

Full Name?

Alexander Irvine

How long have you been a photographer?

I’ve been “professional” since about 4 years ago I think.

How did you get into skate photography?

I was doing a photography course at college and found myself spending more time printing skate photos than anything else. Eventually I figured I’d try and turn it into more than just an obsession and thought maybe it was time to try my luck at freelancing.

What were the best and worst bits of advice anyone ever gave you in regards to your photography?

Smash (Sam Ashley) and Barton (Oliver), they’ve always put up with my numbskull questions, and usually manage to give me some well reliable knowledge, cheers dudes. My questions are less frequent these days though, somehow always seem to be learning…One my old bosses thought I was daft for quitting the studio job I had, so bad advice from him, to work my way up the company, blah blah blah. Didn’t take the advice which is good ‘cos it was shit advice, so fuck it.

Have you ever felt bad taking a photo? Is so, which one?

I shot a sequence once where Colin Kennedy smashed his head into the ground at Perth skatepark, his head swelled up like he had an testicle squeezed under the dome. I felt bad about the fact he stotted the concrete from 8 ft up but I was still more stoked than bummed about shooting it, imagine missing that quality action. Pretty grim watching it unfold before your eyes, and then sitting in Perth A and E waiting to make sure he was alright, before the nurse says “your friend’s fine do you want to speak to him?“, then whips back a curtain revealing an 80 year old man on a ventilator! Fucking comedy.

What image first inspired you to take up photography?

I don’t know if any one image helped me to make that decision outright, I remember some picture of Vinnie Ponte back fiftying a ledge down a rough triple set, I don’t know who shot it and I don’t know when or where it was from (maybe 96 ish), but it is in my mind still as clear as day available light long lens, grainy black and white 35mm, my favourite kind of shot.

The one that sealed the deal for me was a shot of John Rattray backside disastering this skinny vert quarter in a warehouse in Aberdeen. I wasn’t there when Ollie shot it, I just saw it in Skateboarder Mag, double pager and titled “the man from Aberdeen” and was blown away, I thought; I want to make a picture look like that. Ollie is my all time favourite skateboard photographer any way, and John’s just well… John, great fucking team, great fucking picture.

What were the best and worst days shooting skateboarding of your life ever and why?

Worst ever days shooting pictures were probably the ones when I was wishing they’d come out good rather than knowing they would….most of the time. I don’t mean that the actual days were bad, I mean I learned pretty fast from mistakes. It was more the feeling of massive anxiety that comes along with a lack of confidence and knowledge, it’s not a nice feeling, better to know you’ve got it than hope.

Tell us about this personal favourite skate shot of yours?

…it’s probably again one of John (Rattray) in hometown Aberdeen, Scotland: “A/deen thugs kill all visiting fans”. It was the time when he first got on Zero and was on a trip back home to sort out moving away to SD. John, Alex Craig and myself were out filming for H’min Bam day in day out. John was on a mission and everything was just happening. We ended up at this ‘spot’ one day and John wanted to wallride it. It’s a disgusting set up, down a rough road, up a curb over a rough pavement, ride up a bit of rotten wood, drop onto the bank up and then wallride.

For this picture though I don’t know if you even need to know about the trick he just did, the body posture, fl-hair and graff on the wall makes the picture. Probably the shitest thing John did the whole time he was back and it seems to be the one picture people comment on. I don’t think the wallride shot has ever been published, just the rideout. The graffiti has since been blasted off, after 15 years of it being there, shame, I thought it was hilarious.

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

Filmers are alright, usually we can come to some sort of arrangement, make the skater do it twice, or shoot a picture of a lovely well lit picture of a VX and fisheye. I do a bit of filming too, so I know that a few centimeters can make all the difference to impact of footage, I can sympathize, but you’ve gotta make sure you get what you came here to do too, it’s a tough one, sometimes you have to be more of an arsehole than you want to get the shot. It also depends whether you’re the reason they’re there doing what they’re doing or whether you’re just tagging along.

What key advice would you give to upcoming skate photographers?

To an up and coming skate photographer I would say this: You must have 100% dedication, good knowledge of relevant photography, absolute willingness to be skint as fuck, no ties, a serious love for skateboarding and a shit hot professional or two to shoot with.

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

Ads, I reckon it’s all about ads, getting in tight with a company helps. I think it is important to be very proactive; you want companies/magazines to think about you when jobs come up. It’s tough out there; all about self promotion, don’t wait for someone to suggest you, suggest yourself to them.

Is the work of a skate photographer well paid? Do you get by in life with this income alone?

Oliver Barton’s advice to me was to put every bit of profit you can back into buying better equipment, good advice. I had started doing that when I was working in Jessops, buying second hand professional stuff, sourcing out refurbished stock that was like new but with the discount was cheap as fuck, e-bay’s good too, but you can’t be trusting it’s tough to expand your kit on a budget, but not impossible. No such thing as a free lunch.

Does music ever inspire your photography? What artists can you not leave for a tour without?

Rock McCrank strumming guitar making up songs is inspiring, pure comedy, lightens the mood. I like shooting pictures with people who can have a laugh about things. Black Flag, Slayer, Dave Dudley and Brujeria all good to listen to before skating, but with photography it’s not really beneficial to be all fired up to then sit on yir arse for hours at a time.

What is your favourite photo that you snapped outside of skateboarding?

One of my favourite non skate flick is probably this one of French Fred shooting some artsy picture completely oblivious to the fact Schuster just ate serious shit 2 ft away from him.

Even If Fred had been aware I doubt it would have affected his demeanor. So fucking French it’s unreal, loves to hate! haha. Easy to wind Fred up and I enjoy testing him, but respect due to him, he’s amazing at what he does, better photographer than me too. Vive la France!

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

Got to be a Nikon FM2n, it’s the only answer to that question.

Would you recommend digital or film?

If you’re serious about photography, it’s got to be film. You’ve got to learn how to understand what you’re doing before you go ahead and do it.

What are the benefits of using film or digital?

Digital is cost effective and accepted as standard for sequences these days and it’s worth investing in one for that task alone. Although digital is becoming more common for stills these days, most of skateboarding still clings onto the medium format transparency as the normal route.

What kit do you use?

Some janky second hand raft of shit, does the job though. Hasselblad and Nikon all the way.

….and your website address?

www.alexslashdog.com

Categories
Skateboarding News

Element Europe wrap-up

Element Europe are kicking ass at the moment. Gnarly cutie, Evelien Bouillart placed second at the annual Etnies Goofy Vs. regular comp pocketing a clean $2500.

Street technician/Street architect Janne Saario and girlfriend Essi recently had a little baby boy – Congratulations!

And finally, a new recruit who goes by the name of Guillaume Moquin has just been added to the team. Zac has seen him skate in the flesh a few times and says he absolutley rips as an all rounder, expect big things.

www.elementskateboards.com

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Skateboarding News

Hubba spaced out

Ever since the infamous Shortys ads featuring Rosa, no other company has had skaters drooling like the new Hubba wheels models.

Well, apparently the contant of their advertisements was too hot to handle for the Emos that hang out on MySpace, and the wheel company saw its page censored. Suckas!

Don’t fret though, just click over to www.hubbawheels.com to witness the fitness.