
More solid skating from Paul Hart, this time wrecking Chinese spots.

More solid skating from Paul Hart, this time wrecking Chinese spots.

From the guy who brought us Coast to Coast in 2015, Adam Todhunter, now showcases North-East talent with a new bi-annual zine called Domesday. You can pick it up here and sift your way through the array of still shots and interviews with fellow film makers and skateboarders.
Alongside the zine comes this 20 minutes of solid skateboarding to keep you cramping at the toes, itching to ride your board.
No doubt you will remember Michał Juraś from this image on that bridge. He is back with a guest part for Youth, all done at top speed.
Straight from the source:
“Daniel “Snowy” Kinlock was the reason Fos started this small British skateboard company some 13 years ago. He didn’t really fit the Heroin vibe at the time so Fos came up with Landscape. Since then Snowy has smashed it all over the world traveling far and wide logging moves for Portraits, Horizons and a number of other projects. So it’s a real shame but Snowy is moving on as he continues to smash it with his photography, he decided he wanted to call it a day. Everyone here at Lanners would like to say thanks to Snowy for his work over the years, some classic boards, parts and nights out to be remembered! Wish you all the best our kid, I guess we need a new pro?”
Well done Snowy, we wish you the very best.

Max Geronzi has one of the best bag of rad tricks out there. Stoked for him.

If you admire style on a skateboard then look no further than Jesse Martinez. The Venice Beach local made his name by being the raddest on a rig ever. Enjoy this short web documentary by Mike Pagan on his life and his overwhelming passion for skateboarding. It’s also a reminder that growing up sucks.
Ph: Ben DeSoto / 1980

Austin’s legendary skate-funk-punk pioneers the Big Boys disbanded in 1984 but they are fondly remembered for one fundamental reason; there were no limits to what they could do musically. No shackles, no boundaries. Their punk rock was in their heads, not restricted to their music. Trouble Funk collided with the scratchy post-punk of Wire and Gang Of Four, smashing head on with the energy and spirit of that first wave of hardcore punk.
“I’m a punk and I like Sham, Cockney Rejects are the world’s greatest band. But I like Joy Division, Public Image too, even though that’s not what I’m supposed to do,” sang frontman Randy ‘Biscuit’ Turner in the song Fun Fun Fun, perfectly summing up what the band was all about. Their gigs were a chaotic celebration, their lifestyle pushed as hard against the boundaries as their music did. In short, the Big Boys ruled and they deserve their own movie.
Enter Austin director Joe Salinas, whose forthcoming doc You Can Color Outside the Lines: The Big Boys is aiming for a Sundance 2016 premiere. The trailer for the film has just hit the web and features an impressive cast of talking heads from the era. Ian and Alec MacKaye, and Jeff Nelson from Minor Threat, Dave Grohl (obviously), Glenn Danzig, J Mascis, Steve Caballero, Steve Albini, HR, Kevin Seconds, David Yow, Keith Morris, Steve Alba, Lance Mountain, Exene Cervenka, John Doe and Tony Alva are among the many individuals telling the story of this incredible band.
Here’s the trailer. Go skate, make noise, start your own band. No restrictions.
Davis Torgerson with a VX and a mission to shred. Get on this new Real edit.
Dinosaur Jr
‘Tiny’
Jagjaguwar
As if anything with the words Dinosaur Jr attached to it isn’t exciting enough, how about J taking his dog for a cruise in his new VW, then hitting the bowl for a sesh?
Watch the hilarious and endearing new video below and pre-order a copy of their new album, Give A Glimpse Of What Yer Not here, out August 5th via Jagjaguwar.

We’re beyond stoked to announce that permission has finally been secured for the build of a new skatepark on the grounds of the old mini ramp at Victoria Park in Leamington Spa. After helping secure funding with the SOS Community Group, through a £60k grant from Sita Trust and negotiating £50k match funding from Warwick District Council, we were responsible along with Canvas Skateparks for the design of the park.
“We’re stoked to soon be working with the locals of Leamington, Ripride Skateshop and Warwick District Council, on their new project,” adds John Flood from Canvas. “This is gonna be a good one!”
Building work is due to start in August of this year and is expected to take between 6-8 weeks. We’ve worked really hard on these and hope you’re as stoked as we are on them. Check out the plans and get ready for the opening jam.
– Morbid

