Left the 7D at home, took the VHS camera out

March 28th, 2011 | 4:43 pm | Daily News | 32 Comments

The best web clip in who knows how long. While “summer in New York” clips typically embody a by-the-book-esque play-by-play usually ending off at the Courthouse Drop, the creative team over at Palace Skateboards aspired for something significantly different. The clip falls in line with the VHS nostalgia seen in projects like Gnar Gnar and Caviar, but blends it with token nuances like non-annoying instrumentals, Waka Flocka, Bun B vocal cut-ins, and other things more synonymous with the modern era. The skating is all sick, including many instances portraying the difficult pursuit of doing meandering street lines that don’t seem forced, or like, “weird, bro.”

While some asshole is probably on the internet screaming blasphemy at the re-usage of Jeff Pang’s Mixtape song, we’re supporting it wholeheartedly. Especially in light of the fact that that red bench ollie (at the spot that isn’t actually *the* Red Benches, but on the northern side of the building) is the sort of thing that would have been in a nineties skate video. On an anecdotal note, that particular song features Matthew Mooney’s favorite rap line of all time from none other than Keith Nut. Ask him what it is sometime, it’ll be a good conversation icebreaker.

(The real question is: Does Palace receive endorsement checks from Long Island University? And if so, how does it tie into the company?)

Palace also put together a Lucien Clarke compilation, featuring some of his This Time Tomorrow footage, and set to another nineties classic. Who would have thought that a British company would have cornered the more nostalgically inclined side of the skateboard media world and not come off as contrived.

Timberland hoody with the Lucky Charms on the back

March 28th, 2011 | 10:03 am | Daily News | 5 Comments

Brian Clarke – Backside Noseblunt in Battery Park. Photo by Joe Monteleone.

Holmes & Co., Jersey City’s finest skateboard and vintage menswear shop, will be hosting a one-year anniversary event on Friday, April 1st. This will coincide with a screening of A Year of Holmes, a short skate video by video-maker extraordinaire, Justin White. 8PM-10PM. Complimentary beer and Yoo-Hoo will be served. 203 Brunswick Street, between 7th and 8th Streets. Take the Path train to Grove Street, head west on Newark Avenue for about six or seven blocks until you hit Brunswick Street, and make a right. Jersey Dave is reportedly showing up in drag after losing a bet. Flyer here.

This has apparently been the case for a minute, but the Parks Department installed a fence around the back perimeter of the basketball courts at Vernon-Jackson. You can still skate most of the spot, except the ledges from the side path that drop down into the court.

Skateboarding in Philly never “died.” Skateboarding in Center City died (with a few exceptions.) Even though it has made several rounds on the internet this week, this Stop Fakin’ 2 promo is proof of that. There’s still a ton of stuff out there if you have the right people to take you around, or you don’t mind skating over planters.

Solid New Jersey and outlying area clip from Kevin Winters. Skaters love timelapses like Mexicans love Morrissey.

File under “Dude, I like, saw this already” — Joey Pepper: The Video Part That Should Have Been. Features all of the footage from Expedition’s Madness promo, a lot of extras, and a lot of high fives. Skaters love high fives like white people love Wu-Tang.

Vu Skateshop mini-ramp clip, with a lot of Daewon-channeling maneuvers. Noseblunt stall nollie front foot flip out?

If you’re into Jason Dill’s non-skateboarding related endeavors, here’s a preview of his collaboration with the Fuck This Life ‘zine.

You really have to give it up to this old video of Dipset at the Source Awards for its uncompromising artistic pursuit at bodega set design. (This is what the block actually looks like.) The absolute pinnacle of Dipset’s existence. Cam still kills it, but it makes you wish the rest of them stuck to the musical sensibilities that coincide with 5XL sweatpants.

Quote of the Week:I think it’s okay to make fun of the brown pants skaters…you have to bust their balls a little bit.” — Roctakon

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The most anticipated…

March 27th, 2011 | 3:59 pm | Daily News | 8 Comments

It has been a while since an entire post has been dedicated to a single upcoming event around here, but it only seems right, since this may very well turn out to be the best skateboarding video of 2011. Real is one of the few great skate companies left (in a video production sense, in other words, not three parts from the people you want to see and a bunch of “he’s good, but I don’t really care” to fill in the space), so the anticipation for this one has been heavy.

Since Day One will premiere at KCDC Skateshop on Monday, April 11 at 6PM. (90 N 11th Street between Wythe and Berry in Williamsburg, Brooklyn / L train to Bedford for the geographically challenged.) Hopefully, they have more than one screening because that back room and romantic balcony seating on top of the mini ramp isn’t exactly the best place to watch a video once there is an excess of maybe fifty people there. Plan to get there early otherwise. $2-5 donation at the door for entry. Proceeds go to the Johnny Kicks Cancer Foundation, which is dedicated to fighting childhood leukemia in the memory of Johnny Romano.

Full Flyer Here

Update: If you happen to be out in Jersey, NJ Skateshop in Hoboken is also premiering the video on the same day (April 11th.) 7PM at NJ Skateshop (91 Hudson Street, a few blocks from the Path train) and a 9PM, 21+ premiere at 4L’s at 208 Washington Street. Jersey Premiere Flyer Here.

Jake Johnson: Road to Recovery

March 25th, 2011 | 1:31 pm | Daily News | 12 Comments

360 flip at Spring Street Park, sometime in 2007 — Photo by Jason Lecras

Contrary to some misinformation out there, Jake Johnson did not go off the deep end and become disinterested in skateboarding. He has been hurt for about a year with a leg injury, and holed up out in Pittsburgh. Jeremy Cohan (the man responsible for Short Ends, the Chapman Skateboards video from 2007 that featured Jake’s first part, for the few who may not know) put together a mini-documentary about Jake’s recovery effort to shed some light on the situation. Even though Jake’s absence as of late had some people afraid that Mind Field may have been his last full length for a very, very long time (especially in an age of increased visibility of nearly every young pro), we’re still talking about a kid who basically spends his time on the injury list driving around and looking for skate spots. Everyone knows that as soon as he’s healthy and at 100-percent, him and Watermelon Alex will probably be cruising the Bronx looking for pole jams over double-sets.

There’s a short bit of junk spot skating towards the end, including a triumphant kickflip backside tailslide, which is definitely a milestone for any path to recovery.

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Skate Spots & Undervalued Labor Markets

March 25th, 2011 | 10:17 am | Spot Updates | 5 Comments

Throughout the Josh Kalis / Love Park Epicly Later’d episode, a recent Murk Avenue installment, and of course, a well thought-out plan to bring New York City “the romance of the handsome cab, without the guilt or the dander of the equine,” there have been hints as to why skateboarders should embrace the assistance of a largely under-employed population, one that we encounter on a day-to-day basis: crackheads. Seeing as how we both often occupy similar spaces (i.e. have you ever been to Lenox Ledges or did you know that Ziegfeld is the home of the original “Ninjas Killed My Family. Need Money For Kung Fu Lessons” cardboard sign?), it is only right that we start utilizing their low-cost services and ready-to-work attitude with a higher regard for the possibilities. An alliance must be formed in an age when street skating is getting tougher. We need help lifting heavy objects, and committing petty acts of vandalism against skate-proofing materials.

Kalis received two Love Park tiles for $1,000. I’m willing to bet that he could have gotten at least five pink planters removed from there, and thrown off the Benjamin Franklin Bridge after a bit of negotiating. If the figures presented in the aforementioned Murk Avenue episode were to be taken as fact (A box for $20, a skatepark for $200 and a case of Steel Reserves), they could easily be translated to combat some of the more discouraging measures against us recent history.

How long has that planter been sitting at CBS? Like ten years? A few $5 bills, and some 40s from the midtown Le Basket on 53rd Street could easily get the dirt dug out, have the thing lifted, and carried through the Theater District to be dumped into the Hudson River in under an hour.

What about those seven or eight planters at Ziegfield? $10 and a tall boy of Bud per planter. While skateboarders would simply move them, only to see them back at their original spot and probably fastened better upon your next visit to the spot, we need to offer these monetary / alcoholic incentives to have these things thrown into a body of water, without risking criminal mischief charges.

That entire block of knobbed ledges at Dag Park on 47th Street? Get a team of two and a thirty pack, put it in the middle of the block, give them crowbars, have them start at opposite ends of the spot and race to the middle. First one there takes all thirty.

Please include any ideas for prominent candidates in the comments. It’s time to start securing the future for New York City skateboarding. “Now that’s the first sensible idea I heard all day!”

 
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