#big love to all the skaters and filmers!
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betterskatethannever · 8 days ago
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2024 best of
best parts
Joseph Campos - Shocking Moments Caught on Video / QuickStrike / Shot on Location
Tiago Lemos - City Soldier / Sure Shot / Intervals
Rowan Davis - Bin Kicker / Reckon That's Fine
Nick Matthews - QuickStrike / Turbo Island / Cross Contamination / Antihero x Nike
Ben Lawrie - HODDLE NO PLACE LIKE HOME / Real Street 2024 / Internet Birthday ep 2
Jamie Foy - BHADW2 / Honeymoon / Intervals / Charred Remains
Martino Cattaneo - Where is Tom?
Brian O'Dwyer - BHADW2 / EVERGREEN
Ville Wester - Nike
Oski Rozenberg - Red Shark
Shin Sanbongi - EVERYTHING IS NORMAL
Daan Van Der Linden - Turbo Island / Cross Contamination / QuickStrike / Nike x Antihero
Didrik Galasso - QuickStrike / Uneven / Ace / DIDRIKO
Gabriel Summers - Zero No White Flag
Nikolai Piombo - adidas XP
Antonio Durao - QuickStrike / OD
Eddie Cernicky - EVERGREEN
Tanner Burzinski - THE PROFESSIONAL
Lazer Crawford - Joslin & Lazer
Julius Rohrberg - DANCER
Fran Molina JACKER - RUSH
best full-lengths
Nike SB - QuickStrike
New Balance Numeric - Intervals
Antihero - Turbo Island / Cross Contamination x Thrasher / x Nike
GLORY: The Legend of Dime
Toy Machine - REAL LIFE SUCKS
VANS EU - Where is Tom?
BAKER HAS A DEATHWISH 2
Polar - I Don't Even Know How to F***ing Airwalk
Converse CONS - EVERGREEN
Erased - GLOW
Primitive - DAYDREAM
Dickies - Honeymoon
JACKER - RUSH
Polar - EVERYTHING IS NORMAL
Traffic - It's Completely Fine
best independents
Austin Bristow - Portiions
Paul Young - Down By Law
Ben Chadourne - I THINK ONE MORE MAYBE
Tor Strom - Hygge Abroad
Fritte Soderstrom - Jante 9:19 / Jante 8:33
Davonte Jolly - NECESSARY EVIL 003
Pedro Orsi - TEN THOUSAND DOLLAR FISHEYE
HITTOPP - "I Survived 500 Days Filming The Worst Skate Video Ever"
Grey Area - Lack of Coolness
Tomas Morrison - JUICE
best transition
Archer Braun - Doom Sayers
Kieran Woolley - OJ best of
Jesse Lindloff - PROJs
Adam Hopkins - Bacon guest board
Hugo Montezuma - Blood Wizard / Between Worlds
Elliot Sloan - Monster
best promo/squad/medium-length/tour
Internet Birthday ep 2 Ishod, Rowan, Brass & Ben / ep 3 Dunedin NZ
GX1000 - Your Favorite Things / Yabai / Japan 2024
ASICS - Week in Wooville / NEXT VIBRANT SCREENTEST / ASICSeuroHD (quadrennium) / Jenkem Asics in NYC
Atlantic Drift - Vienna to Budapest
Helas - ONE MORE MIXTAPE
PLAYER - UNLOCK THE GAME
Tyshawn SOTY trip
Limo - 8 / MONTREAL / 50 Flower
HUF Japan Tour Meltdown
Pocket - HEIMSPIEL tour 2024 / Southbound / OKINAWA
Fodas - Santa Cruz EU in Lisbon
SK8 Skates - BRAZYLAND
youtube playlists: best of 2024 (100) great vids 2024 (557)
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undermattsun-archive · 4 years ago
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hq lads as the skate rats of my dreams <3 (pt. 4)
damn another one of these? doesn’t this bitch (me i’m bitch) have something better to do?? but here we r with some highly demanded lads :) hope it doesn’t disappoint!!
tw toxic behavior!! (lmao i mean it is me miss tw toxic)
pt. 1 | pt. 2 | pt. 3
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nishinoya yuu - big proponent of skate fast, eat ass, has broken his bones so many times it’s not even funny (it’s a little funny), he skates off of rooftops, skates on ledges by the ocean (falls in) and can’t stop blowing up your phone! he professes his love to you constantly but like he did that last week to one of your friends and the week before it was one of his classmate so,, you’re not special?
tanaka ryuunuske - this man is the ramp god, i feel it in my bones do not try to contest me on this, his phone screen is always shattered but that doesn’t stop him from begging for nudes! he’s that tatted skater that makes girls froth and he’s always rippin his shirt off while skating in fact i don’t think homie ever skates w a shirt
ennoshita chikara - not rlly a hard skater but he’s the other filmer of the skate rats, his edits are cleaner than makkis but he’s also the one who would use audio from a girl suckin him off in it so,,, will 100% post your nudes if you dump him :/// (the prince of gaslighting)
sawamura daichi - throws the sickest parties, like he makes oikawas parties look like a shitshow (but that doesn’t take much) this dudes usually cruising on a penny board (and away from commitment)
shirabu kenjirou - cool as hell literally, homies so fuckin cold is he a corpse? lit leaves a trail of girls crying behind him as he rides away on his board,, actually the worst bc he does everything to make you feel like he rlly likes you and wants to be w you just so he can make out w someone else at a party and shatter your self worth :’)
kita shinsuke - this here is the king of gaslighting make you feel like you’re losing your mind,, he is The best friends older brother or older brothers best friend bc he loves the sneaking around and the way he gets to subtly crush your spirit when he tells you he doesn’t date his sibling’s friends/friend’s siblings (does this mf even skate or is he just tryna prey on the souls of the innocent)
aone takanobu - he doesn’t know you exist despite having slammed into you several times while skating, u lit had to work on a project together for class,, but like if you do catch his attention he’s a stage 5 clinger/overly possessive the type to go “why did you smile at another dude” so it’s just bad looks all around (will use your rent money for his setup)
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dippedanddripped · 5 years ago
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New York City in the mid-late 1990s was a more innocent time, and one of great excitement for a downtown subculture made up of Lower Manhattan’s skateboarders, musicians, artists, actors, designers, store owners and hustlers. The rent was still relatively cheap, the blistering hot summers felt endless, and the streets that made up the Nolita, LES, and NoHo neighborhoods were bustling with life, attitude, and creativity.
This strange period makes us nostalgic for the simple freedom of meeting up to do nothing. Summer is a season to wander, party, shop, skate, dance, eat, and talk shit. In April 1994, Supreme opened on Lafayette Street and quickly became ground zero for a tight-knit crew — it was a place to hang out, work a little bit, connect with new people, and meet up before or after skate sessions.
Supreme was a skate rat clubhouse, and the crew who worked there ran the place by their own set of non-conventional rules. The staff took pride in the store as if it was an art gallery; with meticulous detail given to the folding of the merchandise on display, they enforced a strict “no touching” policy which would lead to a severe berating or dismissal from the store if violated. The music was club-level volume, the heavy scent of Nag Champa incense would cover up the smell of weed smoke in the stockroom, and non-skaters were often treated with an aloof welcome (at best). To many it was intimidating and unapproachable, which led to the cult skate store building up a fiercely loyal underground following.
For a frequently visiting Brit abroad, this skate shop and the people who hung out there, provided a welcome spot every time I was in town, much like the old Slam City Skates store in the basement of Rough Trade Records on London’s Portobello Road back home. Pre X-Games and Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater video games, skaters were very much considered outlaws — particularly by the security guards, office drones, and pearl-clutchers in Manhattan’s business districts that made for the best skate spots with polished ledges, smooth handrails, and marble surfaces in abundance. This group of young skaters ran the streets like their own personal playground before hitting the city’s clubs en-masse.
To this group, nothing seemed off limits and everything seemed possible. Their freedom bred positivity and creativity, with many of Supreme’s OG crew branching out into starting their own brands such as SSUR-Plus, After Midnight, aNYthing, TeamWorks, and Acapulco Gold. A young Italian photographer named Giovanni Aponte relocated from Rome in 1991 to experience and capture a genre-defining decade on film. Here, Aponte shares a selection of his images for the first time and, alongside OG Supreme staff Alex Corporan and Akira Mowatt, recounts the craziness and freedom of downtown NYC in the mid-90s.
What was your personal situation back in the mid-late ‘90s?
Giovanni Aponte (Photographer): I moved to NY in 1991, I was 27 then and had just graduated in photography from IED in Rome. Quite soon I started to work in a photo studio on the Upper West Side where I was assisting the photographer and getting to know a bit of the business. At the same time, I was working, as all the immigrant Italians did at the time, as a waiter for a few days a week to make some extra money.
Alex Corporan (ex-Supreme manager): I was in my mid-20s and in the height of my skateboarding career — all I cared about was skating all day, filming with my friends and enjoying the city’s nightlife. Making money in skateboarding on the East Coast rarely even existed back then, so I subsidised my income through modelling and the club scene before I landed a spot at Supreme. My life started to turn around from there — skateboarding was my world, but then working became my focus.
Akira Mowatt (ex-Supreme store worker/AfterMidnight owner): I was a runaway 14-year-old, so skateboarding became my chosen family. I didn’t have a place to live and didn’t eat much, but towards the late ‘90s I got a job at Supreme.
The New York skate scene was so different to anywhere else in the States and felt more similar to London than Southern California. How did it feel being an inner-city skateboarder during this era?
AC: Being an inner-city skateboarder was rebellious during the ’90s, because not only we were the derelicts of the streets but we were everything people loved to hate — a bunch of talented humans that had the key to the underground world. There were no skateparks, just the Five Boroughs all day and all night. We’d go out at night to all the giant clubs, fashion scenes, art shows and be a ball of energy that caused so much attention… no one knew what to do with us!
AM: I didn’t know much about California back then as I had recently came over from Japan, but I instantly felt the entertaining and exciting vibe of New York – the city felt so alive!
Can you describe a “typical” day in the life around this time?
AC: Go to Supreme to meet up with the crew, including one of the filmers/photographers (RB, Reda, Sammy Glucksman, or whoever was in town) and warm up in front of the store before heading downtown towards the Banks and then get our groove on from there. Once it started to get crowded we would break out, skate the Seaport and Wall Street. Make our way up to Supreme to clean up in the sink by the bathroom and grab a fresh Box Logo tee or hoody, depending on the weather. Hit up Astor Place for some more skating, 40’s and Blunts. Some of us went out to the clubs and bars and some went to get more footage in midtown after midnight, then rally back at Astor at some point for a nightcap.
AM: I mean a typical day was meet up at Astor Place, Washington Square, or Union Square then we just go skate all the way downtown to the Banks, Seaport and Battery Park. In the evenings we would head back to Astor and chill for a little before skating Midtown for the rest of the night.
Union Square, Astor Place, TSP, Ziegfeld, the Banks, etc… there seemed to be so many spots back then. What were your favourite places to skate?
GA: My favorite was definitely Astor Place, followed by Union Square which was very close to my home. The Brooklyn Banks was also a great place, but you had to watch out for people trying to steal your board!
AC: My favorite spots were of course the Brooklyn Banks and all the Midtown spots because of the smooth ledges, and all the fun stuff to hit in between.
AM: I personally liked Union Square, Astor Place, Washington Square, or Tompkins Square Park because you knew sooner or later you’re going to meet up with one of your buddies. Back then there was no cellphones, only pay phones, so we often had to make plans the night before.
How important was the Supreme store as a cultural hub?
GA: Well it was definitely the place to be if you were a skater in New York. My friend Russel Carablin [owner of SSUR-Plus/OG Supreme designer] introduced me to the guys at Supreme after the store had just opened. I was so amazed by the place and the people there, everybody was so damn cool and real. That area was becoming the centre of the new upcoming street culture. You could feel the vibe in the air… I have such beautiful memories of that time.
AC: Truthfully, Supreme was the only shop you could have really hung out at the time. Blades on Broadway was very corporate, but Supreme was our private clubhouse. Not everyone was invited, or they got vibed so hard to the point people would be bummed at us.
AM: Skate shops like Supreme were super important because they created a community for skateboarders. Back then skate shops didn’t last, especially in Manhattan.
There were other opportunities arising for your crew like modelling, acting, or starting brands of your own. What was it about that scene that created so much energy?
AC: It was our energy that attracted everyone — the “fuck you” attitude, the overall looks our crew had, and the talent of skating. We were a well-rounded bunch of individuals that just hammed-up to the camera once it was pointed at us. We were just ourselves living this lifestyle that had no label at the time, because you couldn’t control the passion we all had.
AM: Manhattan was the place to be if you’re from anywhere else, especially in the skate scene. All the top dogs came out to skate the city and if you looked good on the board you might’ve got put on one of their companies. There became a lot of opportunities for decent New York skaters.
New York is seen as a party town, but hotspots change with the weather. What bars and clubs made you feel most at home back then?
GA: The New York club and bar scene in the ’90s was absolutely great — Limelight, Danceteria, Wetlands, Palladium and Club USA were the big temples of dance, but my favorites were the smallest and more crazy ones like Nell’s, Jackie 60, Peggy Sue’s, and Elements to name a few. The club scene was a real mix of different people moving between three or four places a night, but my favorite were the “Any Given Sunday” parties at the Fun, under the Manhattan bridge.
AC: It was Spoon bar, Coney Island High on St. Marks and Max Fish when it was on Ludlow. Can’t forget Cherry Tavern as it had an awesome Jukebox and one of the few places with a decent pool table. As for clubs, anywhere that Bill Spector, Bugsy, Belinda, Carlos or Duncan had their hands on!
AM: We went to all the clubs and bars in NYC, even though I was under age (haha) but the clubs and bars never really felt too much like home for me.
Who were the loudest and most outrageous characters in the crew?
GA: The whole Supreme team was outrageously cool… I remember all the kids I met, Aaron “The Don”, CPT Alex O’Corpran, Giovanni WhatEstevez, Krooked Joey, Akira, O’, Crocodile Mealy, Thin Wolf, Jason the model, Brickface, Stukko, The Spawn — everybody had a nickname!
AC: We were the live freak show of the city and hands-down Harold Hunter was the loudest! Then there were the fighters — but only to those who tried to harm us — in the crew like Pooky, Neil, Loki ,NA, Joey, Pang, Slick Rick, and a few others. FlyGuy Peter Bici would always grab your attention, Justin Pierce would always call you out, Henie would snatch something out of your hand so fast you won’t know where he came from, and the list goes on.
AM: The whole crew was loud and outrageous!
Was this the most exciting time to be living in NYC?
GA: There was an overflow of young, cool, clever, and creative people in New York during that era… and yes, it was certainly the most exciting time!
AC: The ‘90s in NYC lands as the last of the epic, raw, untouchable, unstoppable, fearless times for life. You’re unable to replicate the experience of what was happening in New York during this time. Skateboarding, music, nightlife, art, fashion… you name it! 2000-2004 held onto that energy for a bit, but from 1990-1999 you grew up real fast and experienced shit in light speed.
AM: Late ‘90s through to the early ’00s for sure, that was definitely the most exciting time to be in New York.
Any specific fond memories from this era?
GA: I remember a night at Nell’s where Mick Jagger was going for it on the dance floor but none of the people there gave a damn about this huge celebrity as we were so into the music and the vibe.
AC: Every day was different, but the shit that went down in the back of [Supreme] during the ‘90s was priceless. The neverending antics — you name it, and it happened.
How do you think times have changed in terms of the NY skate scene and everything that surrounds it?
AC: The New York skate scene grew immensely around 2004, and instead of the ‘Rat Pack’ now there were huge posses of skateboarders everywhere. It’s awesome to see skateboarding in the city so huge now, but that original rawness has really faded away. That has to do with everything around us — 9/11 happened and that alone fucked up skating midtown and most of anything past Canal Street.
The birth of skateparks in the city was something we dreamed of when we were young because all we had was janky Mullally’s park which was hard to skate, not only because the ramps were fucked up but you had a big probability of getting jumped the minute you walked out the fence! Now there are over 30 smooth skate parks all around the Five Boroughs. Having these parks definitely played a part of not having that rawness of street skating, but overall I’m stoked on everyone in the scene.
The ‘90s were the era we started blossoming and now there are now so many companies owned by skateboarders – clothing labels, shops, board brands; and people in position to call shots within the community and the parks department. It makes me proud to be one of the people that helped pave the way to see where skateboarding is in NYC, and I will continue to support and keep our wheels turning.
AM: For one thing everyone has cell phones now so can film themselves and get clips a lot easier. I don’t think too much has changed in terms of the downtown skate scene, but now it’s a new generation making it happen.
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terribleco · 5 years ago
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Skaters Who Shaped Us - Part 5
In this installment, we have Mark 'Frocker' Hewitt and Ryan Bradley. 
Mark Hewitt is, I would say, one of Coventry's skateboarding royalty. He's a dark lord of transition skating, but can tackle all terrain. Always with a welcoming attitude, he's always down to skate, hang out, or drive a few of us to go shopping at a 24hr Asda at 11 o' clock at night. Mark used to run a Coventry Scene blog long before I started The Terrible Company, and I would say he has inspired a lot of my endeavours in skateboarding. The skater who shaped him is proof that those in your local scene can be just as important as big name pro skaters when it comes to forging our path in skateboarding. 
Ryan Bradley has been a frequent contributor to this blog for almost 10 years: acting as a filmer on videos, photographer, and more recently writing blog posts sharing his knowledge of skateboard photography. His skills on a skateboard match his skills behind the camera, and his particular style is clearly fuelled by a specific era of mid-2000s skater. The person who inspired him will likely resonate with many others who began skateboarding at that time. 
Mark 'Frocker' Hewitt - Jim The Skin
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Up until around 2008, I consumed as much skateboard media as I could. I'd buy at least two magazines a month, lurked heavily on online forums and kept up with the latest footage. I've got a huge collection of VHS videos, and around five big boxes of carefully catalogued magazines to vouch for this obsession - I was a skate nerd! I still skate as much as I've always done, but my will to keep up with everything has diminished. When I think of skaters that have influenced me, I can mentally scan through sections, interviews, anecdotes, drunken antics, road trips, gigs, parties, fights, you name it. People come and go. People pass in and out of skating. 
For some the passion is inconstant, for others a constant. In the end it doesn't really matter. We've all taken a journey on this rolling toy, it's just taken some further than others. Everyone I've ever (or never) skated with has been an influence, be it at the curb down the road from me, or on a taped copy of a taped copy of an American VHS from 1997. However, it's the constants that are the landmarks we navigate by, and the one fixed point in skateboarding for me has been Jim T Skin. 
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I met him first through my friend Craig Cooper, who was one of the first guys to be sponsored by Ride. I'd tag along on lifts to various spots despite being crap at skating, and Jim was kind enough to extend an invite to whatever session was going down. As time passed, I became a regular at the Wednesday night Radlands trips, skating and making friends with people from all over the country and having the best time. I'd eventually go on to work for Ride, putting together the second shop video Humble Jumble, and working on the website whilst at University. The trips to Radlands turned into road trips to Cornwall, Livingstone and London. 
Jim has not only been an inspiration to skate with (going faster than you, pushing the best f/s smiths further than you and smashing down liens to tail louder than you) but also how he deals with people without artifice or bullshit - he's the real fucking deal. No one has a bad word to say about him, and whenever I call to have a chat or order anything I always feel better having talked with him. He's an amazing friend and I wish I got to skate with him more often. 
Ryan Bradley - Mike 'Mo' Capaldi
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At the very beginning as a kid I found constant waves of skateboarders who inspired me into infatuation, triggering my growing love for the industry from an early age. From first witnessing the stature of Tony Hawk and Rodney Mullen, to then Eric Koston, Mike Carroll, Andrew Reynolds, and so on, my adoration for researching and discovering new talents quickly began. 
It wasn’t long before I found Mike Mo Capaldi’s parts, most notably his section in the Forecast video. By this point, I new street skating was what properly grasped my adolescent mind, it was also mere months prior to the time period Fully Flared was ready to come out back in 2007, which of course then happened, resulting in countless hours of re-watching the entire video. 
I was always heavily keen on the Girl/Lakai guys back in the mid 2000’s, the blockbuster team of main eventers they had was ridiculous. At the time, Mike Mo was the new spectacle and his part in Fully Flared was his real initiation into the industry. 
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Witnessing his ambidextrous trick bag and style, followed by his conviction of tricks with utter fluidity completely captivated me and my own skateboarding. He looked like he was always having fun regardless of the hammer thrown - fun within his own attitude and style of skating. His parts and footage would always get me completely hyped to skate, even if it was only for a rainy flat ground session under a carpark in Kenilworth. 
All of this without a doubt shaped myself as a skateboarder, himself and his style opened up more doors for finding skateboarders alike, discovering different nichés and helping me see skateboarding could be taken to another level in another way. 
Honourable mention: Geoff Rowley
On another note, it would be rude of me not to mention Rowley. Growing up I had also been heavily interested in the Flip videos Sorry and Really Sorry, and watching his destruction of the US was shocking, especially while knowing he was native to the U.K. 
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I also mention his name because he was the first pro I had ever met. I vividly remember going to the Volcom Stone Age tour at Ideal skate shop back in 2009 where Rowley was the poster boy for screen printing t shirts for the first 100 kids there. I went on my own at 16 because I knew it was a chance to meet one of my favourite pros and one of the gnarliest son of a guns to have existed.
After doing mine and the rest of the kids shirts, I waited until everyone else had basically left and until they were beginning to pack up because I was way too shy to be persistent, just for the chance of having a quick chat and potential photo with him. Rowley was then alone talking with Zippy, and once they were done I chose to approach what I found to be one of the nicest guys I’ve ever met. 
They say don’t meet your heroes, but I can say that quote rendered the polar opposite to what I experienced. He was rad as fuck with me, we had a big chat and Zippy took the pleasure of shooting our photo. After that, I was totally made up and that moment will forever be cemented as another reason skateboarding inspired and shaped me by a single person.
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collisionclubcuts · 5 years ago
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FlatRailFlatGroundFlatBread
I had never actually been to a game of S-K-A-T-E before attending the Brian Eldridge Memorial Skatepark Fundraiser at Flatbread Pizza in Amesbury, MA on Wednesday August 7th, 2019. For me personally, flatground skating had honestly lost its appeal around 2001 when bowl riding started to become a more accessible thing available to east coast skaters. The advent of a hyper-media-focused-gymnastics-revue-like atmosphere, a la Street League/Dew Tour/X Games, seriously drove the nail in the coffin around 2007, when my interest in flatground skateboarding, particularly on a competitive level, became absolutely nil. (I ironically worked professionally covering skateboarding for ESPN at that time. Life’s a paradox, babe.)
However, having stated above, my general lack of interest in flatground, I must say that I have always believed and maintained that it is the burden/responsibility/joy of the aged lifer skateboarder, to at least be aware of the new trends, fashions and tricks, if not embrace them in some open-minded and progressive manner of acceptance. True, skating is all about doing your own thing in your own way, and ultimately it doesn’t matter what anyone else is up to, but when you have been immersed in an all-encompassing cultural juggernaut such as skateboarding for the entirety of your life, you can’t help but maybe take a few notes along the way. I, for one, am proud of my connection to the youth, dem, granted, you won’t likely see me doing a switch hardflip anytime soon, but kudos to the kids for keeping it going, especially when it is to raise money for a local skatepark (likely to be a tranny dog’s dream, incidentally).
So, because, for some reason I want to be a “filmer” with my iPhone 6 Plus and Skidmark gimble and fish eye, I hit up the flatbread dudes and was like, “yo, I’m hyped on this contest, I love pizza, and I want to film it. The homie Paddy was like, “cool”, Then flatbread started following me on instagram. That was that. I didn’t prepare much or reach out beyond that, and truthfully I showed up late because I took a nap and the event was postponed by thundershowers.
When I did finally groggily make my way to the Mill Yard in downtown Amesbury, I arrived to find a few friends skating a flatrail. 
Flatrail. Flatground  Flatbread…keep up, yo!
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I am appreciative of the locals at the Amesbury skatepark in a very big way. Returning back after nearly a decade in Seattle, the Amesbury cats have embraced me and made me feel welcome back home into our little pocket of New England skateboarding, and it feels really good. Which is to say why, for the most part I didn’t do a bang up job of documenting the entirety of the actual contest (on my iPhone 6Plus), because I ended up being kind of busy just kicking it with my friends and enjoying the atmosphere.
Walter killed the event as an emcee, and at one point harkened back to a mid-90’s era contest that took place in a nearby parking lot, where a young skater got knocked over in a port-a-potty, among other various nefarious goings on. I marveled at just how far this shit has come and at the fact, that we, as adults in fund-raising support of our local skatepark, were enjoying gourmet pizza, craft beer, legal cannabis, the fine sounds of Slayer and a semi-completive skate session in the Mill Yard in Amesbury. It’s 2019, I guess.
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Like I said, it was my first game of S-K-A-T-E. I truthfully have never watched a Battle of the Berrics. Whether I’m jaded, out of touch, purist or kook I just don’t know (or care). But I do know that I had a lot of fun in the baseball-game-like-atmosphere of the Mill Yard that day, just watchin’ some shredders skate some flatground for a good cause. And once Frankie Boy and the Blues Express started wailing and that flatbar came back out, I got hyped and even skated a bit myself, dusty sketchy old schralper that I am. 
 Much love and respect to all that make the Amesbury skate scene and skatepark what it is—a radical refuge of good vibes, a community of passionate friends and a wicked (hella) fun place to lurk, whether you want to slash a carve or practice flatground. Thanks for your support.
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davidcarterr · 6 years ago
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Auteurs: Jacob Harris
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Jacob Harris and Max Palmer. Photo by Alex Pires
The subject for the second in this Auteurs series was a no-brainer.
There are few filmmakers in skateboarding, (let alone UK-based ones) whose output has reached a similar sized audience whilst simultaneously receiving almost universal praise from all quarters than that of Jacob ‘Jake’ Harris.
From his early days as a very driven kid making videos with a group of his friends; through to his forays into the early era of Internet content with Blueprint; to his more recent position as the man behind the lens on classics like ‘Eleventh Hour’, Isle skateboard’s ‘Vase’ and most recently, the ‘Atlantic Drift’ series for Thrasher – Jake’s output has stayed true to the vision laid out in his first full-length, mixing a sense of place and atmosphere with banging and dynamically captured skateboarding.
Ask any skate filmer of note about their influences and chances are Jake’s name will come up at some point. Pointing a camera at people doing kickflips is one thing, creating a body of work that surrounds that simple feat with a sense of context that adds depth and character to the basic act of skateboarding is an entirely different level of achievement.
The fact that you can watch 20 seconds of any video that Jake has produced and know immediately that it’s him behind the lens says everything really. As ineffable as it may be, he has an instantly recognizable eye for spots, for angles and perhaps most uniquely, for the visual ephemera that surrounds the act of skateboarding and it is that perspective, (along with a crazy work ethic) that makes his output some of the most memorable in today’s over saturated skate video landscape.
So, without further ado, here’s the man himself breaking down some of his own back-story and giving a little insight into the process involved in doing what he does. Thanks for your time Jake!
Your route to where you are today is quite a traditional one in so far as you began by making full-length videos based around your friends that followed the convention of individual sections and were released in a physical format that predates the current distribution option offered by the Internet. Was ‘Square One’ your first project?
Strictly speaking no, as I’d been making videos that I put on like video CDs since I was like 12 on Handycams. I suppose Square One was the first project that was sold – if that’s an appropriate marker?
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That came out on DVD in 2009, at a point when the cultural landscape of skateboarding was very different, and also presumably whilst you were still at school – where did the impetus to make that video come from?
(Laughing), yeah I remember you interviewed me about it for Sidewalk at the time: I’m not entirely sure anymore what the initial impetus was to be honest.
I was so focused and serious about making things, anything, from a really young age and I think being completely obsessed with skateboarding, it was something I was always going to do.
Videos very much were the culture for me, and I really wanted to participate in that culture because I loved it and this was what excited me. Besides that, my friends were a group of very driven kids, whether that was to be sponsored or just to skate like people did in videos I don’t know, but as a group of kids we were very driven by wanting to do hard things and be recognised. I’m not sure where that comes from really.
Videos very much were the culture for me, and I really wanted to participate in that culture because I loved it and this was what excited me
That’s like Dan Clarke, Tom Knox and whoever else was in that video – from all different sides of London – very little in common but very much united at the time by wanting to make skate videos. But kids did just make full-length videos then, (they still do now I know but it was a normal thing back then): there were loads of crews around doing it.
I bought my first proper camera from Morph and definitely looked up to him and his crew when we were younger – they were a bit older and tougher and had all had sex when they were like 14 and smoked loads of weed and we were just a lot less cool basically.
You’ve said in interviews before that it was Blueprint’s ‘Lost and Found’ that first gave you an insight into what a skate video could (and by extension maybe ‘should’) be. What was it about that video that inspired you?
I think basically just seeing that a skateboard video could have a real artistic vision was a bit of a revelation to me. It seemed to connect skateboarding much more to life and moods that existed around it, rather than just keeping skating suspended in its own space.
I think that adage of ‘the best way of talking about skating is to not talk about skating’ applies pretty well in this context – like the best way of celebrating skating in a video is by showing things that aren’t skating and LAF was the first place I saw that.
The experience of skateboarding in a city is so varied and complex, in the situations and feelings that it invites, that it’s able to support and nourish so much imagery etc that may seem incidental, but is, to a lot of people, central to the act. LAF was the first place that I saw evidence of this.
Dan Magee really helped to step up the game as far as UK skate videos went – he was one of the first people to invest in ‘proper’ equipment (at a time when the industry-standard VX1000 was still very expensive), worked with production values similar to those of US-based vids and very deliberately created a sense of place and atmosphere that resonated with British skateboarding. Would you say he’s one of the most important skate video makers in terms of both your own outlook and British skate culture more generally?
For my approach he is definitely the most important. Lev (Tanju) did something probably equally as important with Palace, but it was maybe subverting something that Magee established, so without the one it’s hard to know what would have happened.
But more widely speaking, I have no idea what even is British skate culture?
Palace has definitely had a bigger cultural impact than anything else British skateboarding has ever produced – there’s no way of measuring that I know, but I’m pretty certain that it’s a fact. Strictly within skateboarding though, I have no idea how to think about it really, but they definitely did smash a lot of orthodoxies, thank god they did and they did it so well and haven’t lost their edge.
Which other UK filmers and editors informed your own approach as you developed and why?
I would say Chris Massey, just because Portraits is so good. Definitely nicked some ideas from Holdtight when I was younger too, he was such a force back then.
What about globally? I know you are a big fan of Josh Stewart’s output – what is it about his videos that you like? Anyone else?
I think a similar thing to Magee’s videos with Josh’s stuff really. Was well into Pontus Alv’s earlier stuff when I was a kid. These days the things I like would probably be pretty unsurprising.
So after making Square One, you did some work for Blueprint around the early days of the development of Internet-content. You filmed both the Tom Knox Welcome to Blueprint clip and the Smithy gets his pro board back one – how did that work? You were out collecting the footage and then you’d give it to Dan who would edit it into the finished project?
It was sort of like that. I did a lot of the editing myself and then Dan would just stick a wack ramp slow-mo on and credit himself, (laughs).
Nah not quite actually, he did the graphics too.
I remember he paid me something like £200 at one point and I felt so grateful, I was like 19 maybe. Now I see how exploitative it was!
I suppose it got me somewhere or something, though…skateboarding is so weird like that. At the time it would have been like doing a free internship for something that I could never really have gotten paid for, obviously it’s different now.
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It was kind of inevitable even at that point that the simplicity of the Internet distribution model would eventually take over – did you feel any differently about what you were making because you knew they were destined for the Internet, than when you knew you were creating something that would physically exist?
No I didn’t really care to be honest. I think I always just wanted to do things well and didn’t pay much thought to the destination.
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Following this era, you began work on what would ultimately become ‘Eleventh Hour’ which was released to global acclaim in 2013. You publically said at the time that it was going to be the last full-length video that you’d make but you then went onto make Vase only two years later – what happened?
Hmm I don’t know really. I was always saying this and I still do every so often.
I think I always felt pressure to do something ‘proper’ for work, you know – something socially justifiable or if not at least financially rewarding.
I definitely have some complexes about this that I need to get over still.
During the period of making Eleventh Hour and Vase there weren’t really many perks to my life, I had no money and was mostly stuck in London.
These days I’m constantly travelling and I’m paid better and that makes it a lot easier to appreciate, but I didn’t foresee that. In Britain it’s tough too, it’s such a judgmental place and the class system is so pernicious in its reverberations, it’s hard not to feel heat from that. In the States it’s the simplest equation for peoples’ brains – “you do what you like that’s great” – but here I have to always reassure myself by feeding myself little sentences like, ‘I travel almost exclusively with my friends and barely ever have anybody to answer to and I like doing what I do’.
I travel almost exclusively with my friends and barely ever have anybody to answer to and I like doing what I do
Eleventh Hour was received really well – the skaters in it definitely benefitted as much as your own reputation as a video-maker did – and it came out shortly after the sad dissolution of the UK institution that was Blueprint. Did it feel in any way like a passing of the baton from Magee to you – or is that purely hindsight speaking?
I mean Magee always supported me and helped me out, very specifically with getting that DVD (Eleventh Hour) made and distributed. I think he saw it that way a bit, and it does make sense when said that way. But he hasn’t bowed out so I think it’s a bit soon to talk about passing any batons!
That video certainly cemented your aesthetic – lots of rough, brick spots dotted throughout the estates of London which, at the time at least, were not really seen in other UK videos, an emphasis on follow filming and a cast of your friends who still regularly appear in your output to this day. Was there an overarching plan to the feel and atmosphere of Eleventh Hour?
I have no idea really. I remember in my head the video was really about Luka Pinto and Tom Knox so I wanted to have them bookend it. Beyond that, I don’t think there was really a plan besides – ‘use some 16mm’.
Actually no I remember: I actually had a bit of a crisis when it came to editing it because I hadn’t developed much of a vision. I think I actually got Toddy to come round to my house and watch some stuff and he was really supportive, which was cool. I had no confidence. I’d forgotten about that, thanks Toddy!
I’m actually having trouble remembering whether that did happen or not, but I think it did. I was such a pile at that point in time it’s hard to know. I’ll ask him.
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Your more recent work, (particularly Atlantic Drift which we’ll come to later) seems, at least to me, to really focus on atmosphere and a sense of place – does that kind of the ‘location is the narrative’ aspect find its genesis in your earlier videos like Eleventh Hour, do you think?
My memory is so poor but I feel like my thought process is very different now. I’m sure it all contributed. I thought a lot about how spots looked in that video but I care a lot less about that now.
Following that video and its award-winning reception, you got involved in making Vase, the first Isle Skateboards video and a project really central to the success of that brand. Was that your first foray into film making with a brand-led objective, (aside from the Blueprint clips we mentioned)?
I did a Big Push for Nike SB before that but I really blew it on that one. Aside from that, yeah pretty much. Maybe a Blueprint Kingpin thing too.
Was there any extra pressure on you because you knew the expectations for the brand, the connection with Blueprint’s legacy and the fairly quick turn around required? A first video, particularly for a new brand like Isle, can really be a make or break situation I guess…
Actually didn’t feel much pressure because I wanted to be thorough for myself anyway. Besides, I had a bit of a process going and had gained some confidence from Eleventh Hour. Nick (Jensen) and I worked pretty closely playing with ideas on that video so that probably took a lot of pressure off and made it quite fun.
Presumably, the fact that most of the team were close friends who you’d worked alongside before made it less stressful though, right?
Yeah that video wasn’t stressful at all. I was really happy to be doing it.
What about in terms of aesthetics or sense of place – context-wise Vase featured a lot of places that are closely tied into your own film making practice, rather than relying on trips abroad to gather footage. Do you prefer that method?
That was mainly because trips cost money and the budget was tiny. These days I much prefer doing things on trips away. London doesn’t give me much these days – I’ve been making videos here for like 10 years and I just haven’t got any fresh takes for it. I like being in less familiar places because all the absurdities and strangeness of the places reveal themselves so much more easily because I’m looking more, and places just are different so there’s much more to play with.
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So after Vase was released – how long was it before you were approached to make content for Thrasher?
It was a few months. I got Tom’s part put on the Thrasher site and the response was so large and Tony was so into it that he just messaged me. I had a chat with him on the phone and that was that really.
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At this point you’d already said publicly a couple of times that you wanted to move away from traditional skate video making and work on shooting narrative fiction – what made you decide to embark on a serialized project like Atlantic Drift which potentially could go on forever?
I realised I’d found myself in a position to actually enjoy some of the fruits of my effort. Going out and filming skateboarding in London every day is not a job I want or ever have wanted, but being able to be away all the time makes the whole thing make sense.
What kind of brief was there for the project? Did you come to Thrasher with a fully formed idea?
Tony (Vitello) was super patient with it. He wanted it to be based around Tom and I, like making a part and putting out things regularly with a crew. Then I just did some thinking and, partly from a trip I did with Henry Kingsford to Nicaragua where I got to be quite playful, I got some ideas – we were just going to start with 6 episodes in a year and see if it worked out.
Atlantic Drift is episodic and has a sense of narrative continuity both in terms of the sense of place forming part of the story so to speak, along with the repeated appearance of a core crew of your friends exploring various different places and certain thematic consistencies – do you approach each one as a continuation of that established idea? Or does each one feel like a separate endeavour?
It’s definitely a continuation. It’s evolving as it goes though I hope. To tell the truth, on these trips I have a lot to do – I book everything and plan the day and film everything so I don’t have too much time to think, so it has to be quite instinctive. A feeling tends to emanate from the vibe of the trip for me – peoples’ interactions and just what a specific place does to your brain. The editing is where I have the most place to play I think.
On the subject on continuity, the music and the non-skate visuals are part of the narrative too I guess – something that a series needs, to stop it feeling like a vaguely connected selection of clips. What’s the back-story on the jellyfish footage? Where did you film it originally?
I don’t really know – I just had an image in my head of jellyfish swimming slowly and some feeling that we’d been drifting through our 20’s quite heavily. My girlfriend at the time made ambient music and I was hearing a lot of it and I guess it came from that. I shot the jellyfish in the Horniman museum aquarium in South London that I took my kid brother and sister to one day.
That visual marker worked out well in another way too in the sense of giving an identity to the range of clothing that dropped a little later – again continuity seems to be key here in order to rise above the median level of Internet content.
I think that that’s probably true. I think people like a strong aesthetic really.
Music and sound (or the lack of) are central to all your work but with Atlantic Drift you seem to have really taken this in a new direction – there are a lots of cuts between music, cuts to silence, switches to ambient sound – is this an area that you’ve enjoyed experimenting with? It certainly adds a sense of atmosphere often missing from the more traditional ‘timeline with tricks in ascending order of difficulty set to music’ approach.
Yeah I enjoy it so much. It’s funny because it’s really the basics of making any other sort of video but was largely absent from skate videos. I’m not sure why it was, but it’s still such a young culture I guess.
Another aspect of the aesthetic continuity you manage to create with these is tied into your repeated use of two different camera formats: the VX1 and 16mm. Is this a conscious decision based on achieving a specific feel with colour and tones etc? Or do you just enjoy using those 2 types of camera?
Well I find it’s fun to play with the documentary/cinematic opposition.
The VX1 is a sort of documentary camera and lends a certain sort of reality or veracity to footage, which is perfect. Then to use 16mm is so dramatic, so putting them next to each other creates this space between reporting and dramatising that I find fun because skate videos really are somewhere between that.
I think it can look pretty funny. In skateboarding we’re spending a lot of time mythologising what is actually probably the most trivial part of the act of skateboarding – the tricks, but also Tom eating tagliatelle in a restaurant in France is extremely trivial – it’s somewhere between these things that the actual thing that’s interesting is happening, though I don’t know what it is. Neither could exist alone and be very interesting, but somewhere in between is the appeal of skating.
VX fetishism aside – can you see a point where you’ll have to switch to a different camera format for the skating, purely because of the age and reliability issues of using that 20+ year old piece of Sony tech?
I guess so yeah, although I just bought a new one from you! Boredom will change it first, I’m sick of looking at this kind of image now
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The first 2 Atlantic Drifts were filmed on familiar territory in London – was this always the plan in tune with the concept: to kind of start off at ‘home’ and then travel with the same crew/agenda and transplant that into a different context?
I think we needed to establish our roots in the context of the series before it made sense for us to be off to other places, so yeah I think that was the plan.
The St Paul’s episode really spoke to people I think – particularly as you deliberately juxtaposed the static use of that space by tourists etc, against the dynamic use of it by the crew. How long did you actually spend filming that one and were you surprised by the reception it received, given that it was all filmed in one space?
That one was Tom’s idea. It wasn’t that long, maybe a couple of months of going there a lot, but I can tell you it was no fun. That place sucks. We’d see the same people eating lunch there day in day out and they hated us. We were ruining their quiet. Halfway through I was regretting it so badly, I felt so guilty making people come there repeatedly.
I have no real way of measuring the reception so I have nothing of any value to say about that I don’t think, but people seem to like plaza edits as a thing so it doesn’t seem so surprising if that’s true.
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Moving forwards after the first two – Atlantic Drift slowly made its way through France and to the States, stopping in New York, SF, and Vegas before ending up in Hawaii, which is about as far removed from the crusty estates and back streets of London as possible. Despite this, the aesthetic and atmosphere of each one remained continuous – how do you go about approaching this? I guess the repeated cuts to street scenes, familiar shots of cafes, shops etc create a narrative thread regardless of where you are really, right?
Just trying to shoot 16mm in a candid way always has a strange effect I think, if people look into the lens when they weren’t expecting to, you get something very odd from them, and to make this look dramatic makes me laugh a lot.
I think it comes down to that. I just try to find something off-key wherever I am. I’m a fairly happy person but I feel that most human places have a baseline of sadness and absurdity humming away – sometimes it’s very immediate and sometimes it’s more hidden but it’s there always, and everybody knows it’s there. We do such a positive and fun thing over the top of it and I like this a lot.
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Mike Arnold and Jacob. Photo by Casper Brooker
From your own perspective as a filmmaker who has to some extent been defined by the context that you film within, (namely London), was there any conflict with going to somewhere like Las Vegas that’s so different architecturally?
Places are all very different but also the same, right? A lot of it is what you carry around in your head. If you’re happy in London it feels very much the same as being happy in Las Vegas, or at least to me. I feel the same goes for making a video. There’s a lot you can control, and if an aspect of a place doesn’t seem immediately complementary to an aesthetic then even better, it works in counterpoint or undercuts a vibe in a potentially interesting way if the viewer can feel some intentionality there.
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Where do you source the music? Are the musicians friends of yours?
I’ve had some music made by friends but mostly not. My ex-girlfriend and I made the intro song. I’ve just updated it though to purge my soul, (laughing).
I had a quick view count on Thrasher’s YouTube and just on there, all 8 episodes are up in the range of over a million views easily. If you factor Thrasher’s own player in too then we must be talking multiples of millions in terms of views – what’s your take on that?
I think when it gets over a certain number it becomes too hard to understand so I’ve never really thought about it other than as a number. You saying that now though does make me feel quite good about it!
I don’t know if it should though because obviously the view count is largely due to the platform – and doing something popular doesn’t mean you’re doing something good, but it’s definitely more gratifying! The more gratifying thing is finding out somebody that you respect is into it, that’s really cool.
It must have really helped the skaters out too – in terms of their profile and their positions as regards their value to sponsors – have you seen your friends benefit from this aspect of it?
Yeah definitely, Tom supports a family with 2 daughters, Mike, Casper and Ky are on big projects and everybody is doing alright. This feels great because we all benefit together and it energises everyone and we’re all so close.
Your most recent release through Thrasher was the first Atlantic Drift Catfish clip, which takes you back to London and back to your best friend Tom Knox in his home terrain. Are we to assume that the Atlantic Drift model that preceded this has come to an end?
Ah no, basically Catfish is a way of just putting stuff out there when we want. Just another outlet and a bit of a different format…
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You’re a really good skater yourself Jake and it’s no secret that filming is basically Kryptonite to personal skateboarding. Has filming so much had a negative effect on your own skateboarding?
I had knee problems for a bit but they seem to have gone mostly. Actually drinking has had the largest effect, if I don’t drink for a few days I can have so much fun skating, but it doesn’t happen as often as I’d like it to.
Who else is making skate video content at the moment that you like/enjoy? What is it about what they make that you like?
It’s such a cliché but I don’t watch that much stuff, but I like a lot of the stuff that’s generally well liked – I do like Strobeck’s stuff, I like Johnnie Wilson’s stuff and the Hockey videos. 917 things are great too. Backing Yardsale very hard too, those boys make me stoked. These things just have an energy to them and do something different without fawning to established formats, and make skateboarding look really good.
Is there anything else that you’d like to say?
To anybody that made it this far – well done but you really should have used your time way better.
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Interview by Ben Powell
The post Auteurs: Jacob Harris appeared first on Slam City Skates Blog.
Auteurs: Jacob Harris published first on https://medium.com/@LaderaSkateboar
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terribleco · 5 years ago
Text
Top Fives: Poisoned Pen's Top 5 Board Graphics
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A lot of you might be familiar with the amazing work of Poisoned Pen - an illustrator and graphic designer who has had an interview with The Berrics, high praise from skateboarding legends, and enjoys a huge Instagram following. What you might not know, is he is a Cov OG skateboarder called Martin Orton, who has collaborated with The Terrible Company as a filmer in the past, and more recently did a board graphic for Ride - Coventry's skater owned shop. As a respected illustrator in the skateboarding industry, I asked Martin to write about his Top 5 Board graphics, and he was happy to oblige! - Ade
5. Tom Penny’s first pro model
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Loved the simplicity, and it didn’t even have a top graphic. There was no branding on it at all! Not one for bigging up drug culture, but could there be a more fitting debut model for Tom Penny? These never show up on eBay, and in fact, it was difficult trying to even source a picture of it. This is one I had and wished I’d have kept in pristine condition for the wall. Hindsight, eh?
4. Fucked Up Blind Kids
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These all count as one. I’m not 100% sure, but I think these may have been the first ever series Blind did of these boards. I’m not aware of any that preceded this run, but I could be way off. McKee killed it with this run - A clever parody, a clever marketing ploy and an instant icon. They are highly collectible. I have the full set (not OG) and I’ll never part with them.
3. Chocolate Gabriel Rodriguez
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This was one of the first Gabriel Rodriguez pro models on Chocolate - It may even be the first? I didn’t have this one back in the day, but I did have the t-shirt. I don’t know who did the early run of graphics for Chocolate back then, but I’m guessing this was before they had Hecox and McFetridge on their books. This is my favourite Chocolate graphic of all time. I was stoked to see it get background props in Mid90s! 
2. Danny Sargent Monkey Bomber 
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The reissues of this board have been wide of the mark. The clarity on the outlines are poor and the decision to remove the vans branding from the shoe makes no sense. The OG, however really popped. There were some issues with the colours being a bit too dark on some of the early runs, but I had to have one as soon as I saw it. Graphically, this is, in my opinion, Andy Howell’s finest work. Glad to see it reissued but they shouldn’t have messed with it.
Before I get to number one, there are some honourable mentions that would’ve made the cut if this were a top ten… In no order:
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Frankie Hill’s first model. Pretty sure this was a Sean Cliver graphic. It’s not particularly brilliant, but the association to good times I had on this board makes it for me. I must’ve bought this one half a dozen times.
Heath’s retirement board. This one speaks for itself.
Another Gabriel Rodriguez. Marc McKee either being culturally insensitive or redressing a cultural balance. Nowhere near as controversial as the Jovontae Turner Napping Negro board. A part of me would love to see a comic run centred around the exploits of Superhombre, the other part thinks this is nothing more than a Family Guy cutaway gag.
1. 101 Adam McNatt
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Cov OG, Steve Taylor, turned up at Safeway with this under his feet, and I was just in awe of it. I wanted one so bad, but it sold out everywhere. This is Sean Cliver at his satirical best. This never pops up on eBay so the best I can hope for is a reissue at some point. Total grail. Best 101 board. Best Adam McNatt board. Best Cliver graphic.
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