📷 Photo by Bailey Schreiner
📝 Interview by Farran Golding
We wanted to get Nicole for the QS Cup earlier this month, but unfortunately, she was recovering from an injury. (Anyone that went to the 2022 Dime Glory Challenge will remember that Nicole’s skating was one of the highlights.) The next best thing was a Five Favorite Parts.
Cara-Beth Burnside ā Mack Dawg Productions: Board Wild (1996)
Mack Dogg, as far as I know, was a famous videographer from the 90s. [Ed. note: Mack Dawg, real name Mike McIntire, made the 1988 video Sick Boys featuring Natas Kaupas, Tommy Guerrero, Jim Theibaud, Julien Stranger amongst other pioneering street skaters in San Francisco during that era.]
I wanted to showcase Cara-Beth because sheās been a mentor in my life. She was who I first moved in with when I moved to California. I’d never seen concrete skateparks ā growing up in Minnesota, it was all wood ā and I met her at this girls skate clinic in Orange County. We connected and I guess she saw me going for it. She took me under her wing, got me into my first contest when I was 15 at the Combi [Bowl]. She taught me a lot about skateboarding and being a powerful woman. I’ve known her since I was 12. She’s like family. She’s a badass. She’s fucking done it.
She was a pro snowboarder and skateboarder and I love snowboarding. Iām from Minnesota, so I grew up with it. Finding footage of her is rare. Sheās older than Tony Hawk, but was skating with him in that time period. To find footage of her is such a cool thing, and I love how there’s a lot of snowboarding and skating. Nowadays, thereās so much footage of everything and everyone. Sheās so hard to come by, so I wanted to shine a light on it.
A lot of people donāt know she was a snowboarder and skater. She was the first person to get a X-Games gold medal in skateboarding and snowboarding before Shaun White even did that. Sheās a fuckinā legend. I feel like the whole video sheās doing big airs, which is really sick. She went to the first Olympics [with] snowboarding. She got into snowboarding because there wasnāt much for women in skateboarding ā money or anything. She was at Mount Hood, started snowboarding, and became good at it. It happened randomly; she hadnāt snowboarded her whole life, she just picked it up and was good at it. She had a bunch of pro models for Burton.
During her time, I think she had to fight for her respect to skate. It was more frowned upon, like, āWhy is a girl skating, sheās going to get hurt?ā That was a lot of the stigma around it until pretty recently. I was always well-supported, my parents are cool and never told me I canāt do something. Now, itās different. Definitely because of the Olympics and definitely because people are becoming more in touch with girls liking to do shit thatās badass. Why can’t they and why shouldn’t they? Because they’re going to get hurt? You understand the risks and if you want to take them, you should be allowed to do whatever you want and not be judged for it. I feel lucky to have grown up in this time [period] because I know that for Cara-Beth, there was a completely different viewpoint.
Marisa Dal Santo ā Zero Skateboards: Strange World (2009)
I feel like this is timeless and a lot of peoplesā favorite part. Her kickflip melon down the six-block is insane and one of my favorite clips of all-time. How fast she goes, how much power she has ā itās so punk and authentic. If this came out now, it would be one of the sickest parts.
[Strange World] came out in 2009, when I was getting into skating. I was 1,1 so I didn’t come onto this until six or seven years ago when I moved to California and started focusing more on skating. I grew up in Minnesota, I didn’t really watch skate videos, so I’m kind of a late bloomer in this area. Everything I’ve watched isnāt from when I was a kid, more [from the age of] 18, 19. But I remember being mind-blown, like, āWhat? This came out when?ā It was insane to watch her rip and know that it came out so long ago, but it was like it had just come out for me in whatever year that was ā like 2016 or ā17.
It was on repeat a lot. The first place I lived in California, my homies and I would sit in my room and watch YouTube all day. Nora [Vasconcellos] probably showed it to me. Sometimes Iāll watch the whole part, love it, and I’m waiting for the kickflip melon. I can’t wait to see that again.
Her personal style solidifies the whole vibe of the part. The āgo for itā energy it makes me feel like I can try gnarlier stuff. I finally met and hung out with Marisa this year. Sheās a genuine person and such an inspiration. I fanned out: I was asking her about Wallenberg, Iām always asking her things.
I donāt have anything personal [from behind the scenes of Strange World] from her but Davey Sayles was a kid at the time and he and his homies watched her kickflip melon that stair block. He said it was insane. She snapped her board, hands were bleeding, and apparently was like, āIām gonna fuckinā do it, right here!ā and did it next try. All these teenage boys were like, āHoly shit!ā I thought that was a cute, funny story from a firsthand perspective. I was so jealous they saw that in real life. Legendary.
Grant Taylor ā Anti-Hero: āGrant Taylor Rides for Anti-Heroā (2014)
It was hard to pick a [single] Grant part, but this is the one that I’ve watched the most. I love the music [āIconā by Siouxsie and The Banshees] and the energy. Itās nonstop and straight to the point. I don’t have much patience for a build-up and I feel like this video embodies going for it and whatever happens, happens. Skating fast, going big; I love when he does the long-ass line on the mini-ramp that has vert walls and someone goes, āFuck you, man!ā
A lot of the time, fisheye can take away from how big the transition is and what’s happening. How it’s filmed feels like chaos and I love it. All of Grantās parts are so good.
His airs, his style, how big and fast he goes, the way his body moves; he can manipulate the board in such a [specific] way. I draw inspiration for my own frontside ollies, when I want to try to do a good one I feel like I try to embody him and how he does it.
Heās my favorite skater. Iāve spent time with him in the past couple of years since he moved to L.A. and I moved up too. At first, I was nervous, but now any time I’m skating with him, it hypes me up.
Raven Tershy ā Lakai: āExtra Flareā (2017)
I prefer raw footage more than [edited] footage sometimes. Raven has so much power and smoothness. Heās also one of my favorite skaters, right behind Grant. Itās special to watch them skate at the same time. He’s a daredevil and thatās cool to witness. Heās underrated.
The way he can like hold smith grinds and nosegrinds is insane; itās crazy how he’s able to grind through corners and I haven’t really seen anyone else able to do that still to this day. Itās something special how heās able to hold it like that. Also, he can make a huge frontside stinkbug air and look really sick.
I miss his skating. Heās been off the grid. Iām sure a comeback would be mind-blowing and I hope it happens.
Peter Hewitt ā Anti-Hero Skateboards: āThis is Peter Hewittā (2024)
Itās Peter Hewittās best footage compiled into one thing. Nothing to complain about there. I love bangers, so to have a part where it’s just straight, intense footage is the dream. I guess it’s a montage āpartā of all of his parts, but the video embodies Peter Hewitt and his spirit. Itās got funny clips in there, gnarly clips, slams. It’s almost like you can see his goofiness in the skating which is fun and very unique. He goes for things. He does the frontside 540 on a ramp, lands on the very edge of it and keeps going. Heās wild and and O.G.
Hewitt has a lot of vert footage where heās padded up and has a helmet on. I feel like he makes vert skating look cool, which isnāt always the easiest thing to do in this day. Compared to the ā80s and into the early 2000s, I feel like [vert] was rawer then than it is now, where it feels bit more jock-ish. Which is fine, itās a natural transition, but you canāt get back the feel and nostalgia of those 80s skaters, those ramps, and the newness of it. Now, itās more about spinning and complexity than it was back then. I really like simplistic skating ā good hand plants, nice airs ā some spinning, but I donāt really care to see a 720. Anything more than a 540 is too much; youāre just going for numbers there.
Heās fifty years old and still ripping pools. I hope I can do that on some level, but it feels pretty rare. He can skate padless in pools ā shout out to his longevity.
Previously: Matt Militano, Evan Wasser, Ryuhei Kitazumi, Sarah Meurle, VitĆ³ria MendonƧa, Andrew Wilson, Ben Kadow, Chandler Burton, Pedro Delfino, Johnny Wilson, Nick Michel, Wes Kremer, Jordan Trahan, Ariana Spencer, Elijah Odom, Greg Hunt, Zered Bassett, Neil Herrick, Trung Nguyen, Nick Boserio, Elissa Steamer, Casper Brooker, John Gardner, Bobshirt, Brandon Turner, Shari White, Nick Jensen, Tony Hawk, Naquan Rollings, Jack O’Grady, Josh Wilson, MaitĆ© Steenhoudt, Jahmir Brown, Una Farrar, Chris Jones, Mason Silva, Beatrice Domond, Mark Suciu, Justin Henry, Breana Geering, Sage Elsesser, Bobby Worrest, Nik Stain, Anthony Van Engelen, Dom Henry, Bing Liu, Andrew Reynolds, Cyrus Bennett, Jacob Harris, Jamal Smith, Paul Rodriguez, Gilbert Crockett, Ben Chadourne, Tom Knox, Louie Lopez, The Chrome Ball Incident, The Bunt, Lacey Baker, Andrew Allen, GX1000, Brian Anderson, Gino Iannucci, Josh Kalis, Sean Pablo, Wade Desarmo, Chris Milic, Chad Muska, Hjalte Halberg, Danny Brady, Bill Strobeck, Aaron Herrington, Jerry Hsu, Brad Cromer, Brandon Westgate, Jim Greco, Jake Johnson, Scott Johnston, Josh Stewart, Eric Koston, Karl Watson, Josh Friedberg, John Cardiel, Pontus Alv, Alex Olson, Jahmal Williams
Cara-Beth Burnside = Legend