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Vans Inc. Printed in the UK freeskatemag. Fred was new to skateboarding. At first Fred rode his new skateboard all around the streets by his house, but the pavement was all very bumpy and crack-ridden. After a couple of weeks of searching Fred found a smooth car park with perfect ground about fifteen minutes away. This car park was perfect for skateboarding. Soon Fred met a lot of local kids from his town as they had ventured to this car park themselves to skate. Fred and his new friends met at the car park every day after school and practiced their flatground tricks until it got dark. One day a man called Dante came by and said he owned the car park. Fred and his friends were nervous that Dante might make them leave their new favourite skate spot. So a few days later the guys got together, found some old wood and built a funbox and a small jump ramp. How about that? Oli helped Fred, Alec and the other guys build some nice concrete DIY banks in the car park and a tight-transitioned quarter-pipe. Soon skaters from all over were coming to this car park. Carloads of kids were coming from miles away to skate the car park with a few DIY banks and obstacles. It was a full-on session going every weekend! Look at all these people here in my car park! Looks like we are going to need more ramps! Now the car park had a bank-to-wall, an escalating ledge, two flatbars and a driveway. The car park really became famous after that. FunSide continued on for two years like this until one harrowing day…. On a crisp, autumn afternoon Fred and his friends arrived at the car park to a terrible sight… Dante was there with three other men, they all were wearing hard hats and the men were smashing up the banks and obstacles with sledgehammers. Now they are all destroyed and gone! Why would he destroy them Alec?! He wants to make some video place now. As the weeks went by the boys skated all over town in search of the best spots to skate. One cold November day the boys went down a decrepit access road towards what looked like an abandoned factory. The factory was boarded up pretty securely, but the front parking area was open and not gated off. The car park was paved, but not as smooth as their old spot. The next day Fred, Alec and the others came back with brooms and shovels. They cleaned up the car park and collected rocks and bricks from around the area and made them into a mound. They put all their pocket money together and bought some quick-crete from the nearby DIY store. The boys built their first mini volcano to skate. We did it D. Welcome to Free skateboard magazine, a D. My plan was to travel to Bordeaux to link up with the Magenta guys and get a feel for what daily life was like in their hometown. But luckily Soy Panday was down from Paris for a visit that week. I got to stay at the Magenta HQ and soon realised that the Magenta clique was much larger than just the names you see on the Magenta pro. So although the photos shot by Sem Rubio are from four days last October I talked with Vivien recently to see what had been going on with him and Magenta in the past six months. Intro and interview by Will Harmon. Vivien Feil: Well a lot has happened actually. A big one was that Soy Panday got Cancer. When we found out this, we had to slow down a bit to deal with that and adapt. Now Soy has moved down to Bordeaux to help get things back on track and get some support. Also Tavu Olivier Ente has relocated here from Lille. So many people come by here and visit to skate. We recently had Nikola Racan come from Croatia plus loads of other friends from Japan… Just so many people stop through Bordeaux. And when I was there in October your girlfriend was pregnant… Yes I had a second kid since you were here last! How did your 5-year anniversary exhibition and pop-up shop go in Paris last week? Yeah it was awesome. Richard Hart had a photo. It was really cool; loads of people showed up. We blocked the street! The opening night the neighbours were not happy, which is always a good sign! Laughs So was there a lot of the Magenta crew there in attendance? Lui Araki, who we support, came from Japan. We had friends come from all over, but not the whole team. Jimmy Lannon is hurt right now. Liu Araki is one of them. We hook up Masaki Ui here in Bordeaux. Also Yoan Taillandier also hip. Ben Gore was a little tight with gets stuff… All the money. So we mostly kept it French. If you are Gaetan Salvignol , your sales guy, kills it skating with these at skating as can be seen in this article. Can you talk go to a shop to buy a more about the Magenta family and what that means? Yeah well basically we hook up all our friends pretty much who are not hooked up by somebody else. There is a bunch of people, not only in France, but all. When I was there last Glen Fox was working on his welcome part. The style of filming created the myth that things were sped up. But if the point of your filming is to convey the energy of skating and stuff like that well then if you film it really good it might look sped up, especially with the VX We like to hook up dudes that share a similar common view about skating rather than just a few select dudes. So many people move to places just because there is a better skate community there. I think it is superimportant to stay stoked. I mean human beings do that - they tend to try and have a community of supportive and like-minded individuals around them. Why not! The filmer has the way to carry the message and he also holds the key to how the images are going to look. He does whatever he wants to do. He thinks about the little things. So he helps us. We can see that he has this energy when he films and that in turn gives. It helps us focus. Every movement is thought out and Yoan is thinking about everything in that particular image, not just the trick. Any good photographer is trying to find the way that things align and they are very conscious. And when you work with these people you have to be conscious of what you are doing. Is he back in Bordeaux now? Yeah Leo was over there for months. I think they had a great time. Yeah Sprinkles is coming out soon, sometime this year. So is Leo living back in Bordeaux or San Francisco? He is in Bordeaux now, but I think he is moving back to SF at the end of the year. And if so, can you explain what that is? Our way or skateboarding… Basically from what I see would be to just follow what you love about skateboarding. Try to think. Try to understand why skateboarding is special to you and why you still are partaking in it after all these years. Think about your feelings and your emotions you had from the start and then try to work on your skateboarding based on this information - not from what it has become from everybody else. What did you see in skateboarding as a child, teenager, or young adult that made you change the course of your life? Usually your first instinct is the best. Well Bordeaux has a lot of marble floors that are great for powersliding! But we could tell we would not be skating long if we had to follow that mould. We wanted to create a mould that allows anybody to skateboard and really feel what it is. But well said. So what do you have planned next for Magenta? We got a lot of secret plans. We are going to take some trips though. We are thinking of heading back to the UK. We were just in Italy with the Chef Family. That video should be out in September. Soy and myself are also going to Switzerland… We are going to try and do a lot of small trips. I just want to try and skate a lot and not do too much office work. I feel ya. Gotta get out and onto the board! So five years of Magenta already! Wow, what do you think about it when you look back? There is a lot of paperwork and you make mistakes, but you learn from it all. I think after five years you just want to go back to the way you were when we started. We just want to focus on the things we have fun with and try to skate a lot. You know we want to do what we are hyped on: make more videos, skate a lot and make some cool products. Lucas Fiederling: Well I always did independent videos. And then it kind of started to die out and I was always waiting for that company to give me a call and tell me to do the next welcome video or whatever. And then you work on a project and then the usual:. Do I go and study film and get into the film business or should I do one more skate video just because I need it? I wanted to have a product that you tour around with and show it to people. So I called Willow that day straight from the tour van out of a hungover decision to just go for another video - and he said he was in straight away. Then I called Niklas and it mushroomed from there. Everyone was up for it as. But unbelievably these are all the places Lucas Fiederling and his pals went to whilst filming for the independent. Well Willow and Niklas are good friends of mine and I guess Samu Karvonen got in it pretty quickly as I had seen him often around that time and I was a big fan of his skating. And actually Mark Frolich was supposed to be in there but after we went on a few missions and after living with each other and filming together for eight years we decided to just be friends and not work on a project together as we started to freak out on each other a little bit. So Chris was down to do it. And I wanted him to have a part on that level again so I decided to try and do it with him. So we. And travelling with this crew has helped me. These guys have been my second family for the past four years. So after meeting Eniz there we realised we were like the same person when it comes to our ideas of what skating and a skate tour should be. We were the ones staying up the latest and watching footage. Basti Bastian Loewen got Phil in as he. It all just came together spontaneously. Everyone has a unique style and personality and stuff. Everyone works really well together, but they are so different. Sometimes the unplanned way is the best way…. And I had been a hater. This is how skating was when we started. This is where we are coming from. I see. So how will WWCF be released? We will definitely make a DVD with lots of bonus and extra footage and a photo booklet. I care a bit less about the online release and I will have to make some sort of deal to get at least a little bit of the money back. Well good luck editing and see you at the premiere! I need one thing that I can be proud of. So to really answer the question well… I have no idea. Maybe not the usual way to go for an independent video - but Helge Zirkl who runs the channel has been my friend for a long time. So yeah, seems fair that they get to release the feature now. Cape Town, our first stop on the tour, was just like most other cities by a beach. Sam Clark mentioned how people are surprised they have cars and buildings there when they visit. In South Africa everyone spoke English and the US dollar and euro were worth about ten times the rand. This was Africa? In Cape Town we stayed at this nice hostel attached to a bar for the first couple days of the trip. Not only that but he skated and recognised some of the crew. Every round we bought he hooked us up with a free one and we took over the bar singing all the classic skate video part songs. Everyone got laid that night. Shout out to Owen Wilson! From Cape Town we drove north to Johannesburg, about Km. The jump was at least feet tall! As soon as we got out of the van all of us went straight to the bathroom to piss. We were nervous. As tough and confident as these dudes were on the insane rails and spots they skated free of any safety equipment this became scary. We were terrified. Within minutes we had paid and were strapped up with a harness. In 30 minutes we would jump. We waited in the lobby watching a monitor with a live-feed of peoples faces before they jumped. The lady onscreen was shitting her pants and our anxiety rose as we watched. In a panic she grabbed and pulled on the two guys who helped her to the edge pleading not to jump. We watched them grab her arms count to three and throw her off. Just under the monitor you can see the actual bridge in the distance. She screamed the whole way down and dangled at the bottom of the cord motionless. There was silence. Sam agreed and they chilled. Our time had come. We embraced him as part of the crew because not one person he came with had the balls to join him. The guide led us out of the parking lot, through a small forest, and onto the entrance of the bridge. Right there, the fear hit us hard. The jump was from the middle of the bridge, and the only way to get there was in this small mesh walkway that looked like it would detach from the bridge at. Before we got into the van for the next drive someone mentioned this insane bungee jump. I fell asleep. An hour later, I wake up and we are in some weird parking lot. There were barely any cars. Instead there were a bunch of squatters selling souvenirs. Everyone else was excited, sitting up in their seats. Before I could ask I saw a huge sign that read:. Every time you took a step it would creek and sway. Of course we all did immediately regretting it. The trees and stream below the bridge were microscopic. We slowly made our way to the middle of the bridge gripping the handrails tightly every step of the way. Finally we got to the jumping point and saw some guides pulling on what seemed like a broken bungee cord. A couple days ago we had one break. It was bright red. Loud speakers play music that echoes in the valley below the bridge. Slowly you start talking to the guides, posing for pictures and jamming to the music. For a moment your tension eases and you forget about the jump. Then you hear them call your name. A guide sits you down and asks you if you are ready. Two men help you out of the chair and to the edge where there is a camera overhead. They tell you to look at it. Now you are in the air, weightless. Then you look down and you see the valley below. Tears stream from your eyes and the wind speeds past your head. Your body tenses up and it looks like your doing an upside down Christ Air. Not one thought crosses your mind and then the cord stretches tight and you bounce back up toward the bridge. You bounce again, upside down looking at the trees feet below. Then you just hang there. The fear goes and you feel weirdly peaceful. A man repels from the bridge to pull you up and the whole crew is there waiting to hug you. We had all escaped death. Adrenaline was winding down and our thoughts were coming back. A couple of demos and drives later came the lion park. There was a huge sign:. We drove within an arms length of massive lions. Not only that, every muscle on their body bulges out. Instagramming was about as important as being there. One lion approached the car. The windows stayed open. He got closer about a metre away and stopped at a bush to scratch his neck on it. All of the brave hands retreated with the screams of little girls. I have never seen a window close so fast in my life! Instagram was not worth it after all. Maybe it was. We opened the windows again just a couple feet down the road. Later that day we took selfies with giraffes and ostriches. We got to chill with a Cheetah. He purred and licked our hands with his tongue that felt like a sheet of Mob Grip. The essentials were the van and the playlist. The long stretches of highway made these crucial. We had the classic skate van. There was plenty of room at the beginning of the trip and no room at the end. There was no shortage of crushed beer cans, a skate shop worth of product, the remnants of gas station food, mags, dirty socks, banana peels, toenail clippings and piss bottles. The intro of either was enough to make everyone in the van die laughing. We played enough Johnny Cash for any prisoner. David was the DJ. Him and Axel were steady twerking in the back of the van that became a disco. We had all the essentials and the luxuries. We sang like drunk white girls, got wasted with Owen Wilson, jumped off bridges like James Bond and knocked out lions. Two weeks well spent. Louw Skateboards was founded by Barcelona legend Enrique Lorenzo towards the end of In the spring of the team met on the windswept island of Fuerteventura to shoot what would be the first bespoke article for Free Octavio Barrera is no stranger to the islands of Gran Canaria. Ollie at the abandoned waterpark, Caleta De Fuste. This was the first Louw trip for flow rider Juan A. Switch ollie from a strange angled wall into the street, Puerto del Rosario. When not keeping us entertained with old LA stories Enrique Lorenzo entertained us with his skateboarding. Switch crook, Puerto del Rosario. Roque is a small hamlet seemingly in the middle of nowhere; it probably has less than 50 residents. Corralejo is scattered with abandoned zones, a result of tourists having tired of seventies and eighties era entertainment and moved onto pastures new. Pol Catena, kickflip frontside at the diner. Right after Octavio Barrera landed this ollie up to frontside noseslide, a security guard for the Corralejo port enthusiastically kicked us out. The ring of cocaine surrounding his left nostril probably made this more amusing for all involved. Where do you draw the line? However, when Patrik Wallner first proposed a trip around. Not your typical package holiday! What if the embassies closed or the airport was captured? I even threw the Arabian Peninsula including out a last ditch attempt to Yemen, the home of Al Qaeda, I abandon the Middle Eastern started having second thoughts. Not the friendliest playing volleyball. By the time we arrived in Oman, the first stop on the tour, half of the crew had already dropped out and during the days building up to arrival in Yemen, the situation went from bad to worse. There were news reports of the President being shot at, his aid being kidnapped and the Yemen state news agency. Our Yemen expert changed her mind, told us not 58 to go and fled the country herself. If the situation got any worse, we were planning to stay safely in the airport. This is where everything went wrong… Our first flight was delayed, meaning we missed the connection and poor Gosha was stuck on a flight to hell alone! After several lengthy illogical connections. All of our luggage had been lost somewhere along the way, meaning we would spend the next week only with the clothes we were wearing, whatever we had in our hand. Gosha had already taken a tour of the old town with a guide, and instead of telling us about tanks, guns and chaos in the streets, he excitedly talked about a camel in a room making oil, everyone carrying daggers, some kind of drug called Khat and the best kebab ever. Maybe Yemen would be fine after all! Sure enough we spent our time peacefully in the city. The know much about cityscape was epic Yemen… Most of and a falafel wrap only cost 25 cents. There the middle of the night but were spots and the kids were Gosha would have to meet hyped on skating. We quickly our local contact alone and forgot where we were and either wait for us in the wandered around alone freely airport or brave the city. Luckily we found him waiting. The tanks and machine gun checkpoints were also a reminder that something was going on there that we had no idea about, but we were on holiday and all trying our best to push those thoughts to the back of our minds and relax. Finally we arrived in our own paradise, Socotra. The place looks like an alien planet, with upside-down trees, potato style elephant plants, metre tall sand dunes and all kinds of strange animals. This was a real holiday. Camping on the beach, swimming in rock pools, fishing, eating freshly slain halal goat, hiking, chilling with dolphins and having baths in natural hot spring water was the routine. People are cool, everywhere. Deshi is probably not caring and thinking of his next beer run. It took me 25 years, one month, four days I counted from the day I set foot on a skateboard, in June , until actually going on my first skateboard tour. Mind you, I could have before, especially after eighteen of said years writing for a vast array of skateboard magazines, from the best to the worst. It just never happened, save for a strange. Finally, nurturing the obvious Communist in every Frenchman, I was never at ease with the idea of writing about a couple weeks worth of product placement. They usually are not here to document anything that exists there before or after the tour. They came, they saw, they conquered, they left. What actual story is there to all this circus? Eager to buy the whole resort my mansion was built in, what did you think I did? Off to my first, company-funded skateboard tour I went, wondering. The hip lost. Always on the hunt, Sylvain Tognelli had in the meantime used every research tool he could get his hands on such as: getting invited to a party by a Tinder match to find a very decent riverbank while walking home at night, following said party. And so on… Revisiting very few of the spots from the first trip, besides a bank to wall that left one irate owner with enough money to repaint it ten times, the few days in UB before hitting the road to the steppes were spent between the Black market where the finest of. It took two years to get a trip organised, and for Western skateboarders to reach the structure only to find out that the skatepark had been demolished three weeks before their arrival. Ten years later, Mongolia has become one the quickest growing countries in the world, thanks to its underground treasures. Well, I was up for a big disappointment. Instead, everybody was game to bring their contribution to what was more than just a bunch of demos, for a journey that took us from Ulan Bator to Darkhan, Amarbayasgalant, Bulgan, Erdenet, Tsetserleg, Elsen Tasarkhai and Kharkhorum over the course of three weeks, searching for spots, living with a nomad family, exploring bone-chilling mining towns and sleeping in a sand dune desert. Yes, THE Forbes. When we met Misheel, as we needed to have a reliable translator for the countryside part of the trip, he showed up in a suit-and-tie. Turns out, the wolf. Our team and life now complete and blessed by the Misheel presence, we were ready to hit the road, with Rogie and several crewmembers still daydreaming about Shanz 3. Shanz what? Oh, nothing: just an all-girl band that randomly came on. No biggie. En route, then! Phil Zwijsen is going to hell, or be reincarnated into a lame animal. Part Mad Max, part Crocodile Dundee, Davaa soon become one of us, and was equally fascinated by skateboarding as we were with his ability to fix anything, or to know the Mongolian anarcho-bucolic road system like the back of his hand. Well, friends, this will be for the book. For now, all you need to know regarding our excellent Mongolian adventures can be summed up by a few highlights… Let me check a few random notes… Darkhan bears the weirdest public park, consisting of a two-mile trail to nowhere, only interrupted by giant plaster rendition of the 12 astrological signs - not sure how this will influence. And like that, the three weeks could go on and on: being awaken by kids riding camels in the dunes of Elsen Tasarkhai? Seeing Igor Fardin kill the roughest ditch, all-terrain style? Been there, done that. Witness Jerome Campbell going on a rampage, only to break his foot one hour and one mile away from the airport on the. Anything, everything worked its magic on me during these three weeks in Mongolia. So fun, it left me almost regretting not to have tried to find crack cocaine in the sketchy part of town. Arriving to Bulgan in the rain, after a depressing attempt at liking the mining town of Erdenet on the way despite its Lenin mosaic on the side of a building , sounded like bad news - on paper that is. Because what are the odds to find an. From Dirt to Dust book and Out of Steppe documentary available now! This is a quick look into the current carefree and enviable! A lifestyle. Arthur Derrien: So the first thing I was going to ask you about is the role you seem to have taken on at Sour. You are more or less in charge of the art direction right? Nisse: Yeah I guess. So you are just picking up that stuff as you go along? Yeah a little bit I usually just come up with something with the others and then send it to Isaak ex-Sweet filmer. He basically fixes what I do so that it looks properly done. That sounds like a good arrangement. You get the props for coming up with the idea but Isaak does all the hard work! Oh yeah because you live with some of the others guys from the team right? A lot of the time we just. But when you do come up with something you are into? What comes next? Right now we only have the samples First you do a trick down a small hubba, then hit two flat ledges, then turn around and do the same line the other way around. They also add stuff to the plaza every year. This time they had some new. How long have you been living in Barca now? For about three years. I moved out here the fall after I finished school. Living the dream! Was it ever the plan to stay out here for this long? Not really, me and some of the boys just came out here for a bit, stayed through the winter and ended up getting a place on a two-year contract. I was actually wondering how all you guys could afford living that lifestyle. Plus every now and then a bit of money comes in from a contest or selling some boards, shoes etc. What does getting your life together consist of? Moving back home? Going to university? Like something that could help you with the art direction side of Sour? What about the video? I heard had enough for a full part ages ago. I do have a lot of footage but I just want to do one more thing - something special, haha! And for how long have you been working. About two and a half years now. I hate watching some of the first few tricks I filmed for it Plus you went through the whole Sweet to Sour transition mid-filming Yeah but that was just a relief. It feels so much better now. Oh yeah you. Have you got anything lined up with Emerica? Last year we did two trips that were really fun. Quite different from going out filming with the boys where you are constantly getting the beers in and it feels like a vacation. Which one do you prefer? Both have their. I was actually going to ask you about that. Do you never get bored of skateboarding? Living in a skate house, in Barcelona, skating everyday etc? Not really haha. We wanted to learn more about the pleasing and. Okay so pleasecharge is going to be a twenty-minute skate video, filmed over the space of three months. Each trip was usually between seven and ten days long Where did you guys go? How is it going to be released? Will there be any full parts? Everyone smashed it though. Yeah he was. Same goes for you actually. You went on all of the trips as well right? Are you not too run down? A little bit Plus I did have James Cruickshank filming with me on all the trips. Not being the only filmer really helped. The fact that all the dudes on the team are quite responsible and relaxed was also a plus. The tensions you sometimes have on skate trips can really add to how mentally drained you feel at the end of them, but there was none of that this time. Everyone was really mellow. Definitely not. In a sense this video is the extension of these right? Would you do it directly from your phone or on your computer? It comes from a random story about my flatmate Paul Grund. It said it in quite a funny voice so he recorded it and started using it on Instagram. I guess Ches Neil Chester, who does the European marketing for Cons and Converse thought that it could work well with the idea of charging for three months to film a video. I really enjoyed making these quick paced, dynamic edits for Instagram so when they started getting a really good response it only made sense to develop the whole thing. Edits like these work really well for Instagram because you are only looking at the screen for 15 seconds. Everyone from the USA loves hamburgers. We told Aaron Herrington the only way he was allowed to get at this one in Arnhem was to jump this crusty handrail situation first. Quite a few kids even started using the pleasecharge, which means that we must be doing something right. Is that a bad thing? No not necessarily, in fact I think it was kind of always the plan. Yeah I reckon so. I like the brand and a lot of the dudes on the team have been my friends for ages Is making a skate video for a big brand like Converse any different from working on independent projects? Yeah it is a little bit. Did you have to leave any clips out because of that? Not really. I realised this early enough for that not to happen but I did have to make a conscious effort to film things differently. It was sick because the dude had no idea Jerome was about to jump. What about the music? I bet getting the rights for whatever you chose to use must have been a mission as well then. On the other hand it meant that I had even less time for the edit What do you mean? Are you still skating as much? As much as I can really. I skated a lot on the first trip to Las Palmas, then a little bit less on the next one, then a little bit less on the next one etc. I did manage to film a few clips though. He was tried, convicted and then caged; unfortunately this only encouraged him to commit further offences. I assume he came out on top because he had a bunch of impressive recent photos available to choose from, which is always a good starting point for a magazine feature. On top of that he is European, young and very focused on the. When I get Axel on Skype to do this interview it is evening in Belgium and morning in Long Beach, California, where he has just got out of the shower and looks fresh and ready to go skate. Hey Axel, what are you in Long Beach for? No, not really, they were solid brands, but I was always on the European program. What brands have you skated for so far? I used to get boards from Flip when I was really young. Right, that lasted for quite a while, right? Yes, it did. After that Alien Workshop sent me stuff for some time. That was a European deal as well. Like Eniz? Yes, I think so. You skated Antiz boards for a short period, too, and even had some tricks in their video XV years. Why did that end? I really liked Antiz a lot, and still do, but I wanted to try to get on something bigger and more serious I think. I guess, and I would have never really known what else could have happened. Are you officially on the team? That seems like a good start. I heard that Ed Templeton picked you out personally after seeing you skate. Is that how it happened? I got an e-mail from the team manager saying that they were down to send me boards. Was that after you won the Volcom Damn Am contest? No, actually it was before that. Yeah, definitely. Were you extra proud to win that contest, because of that reason? Yes, I guess it felt a little bit more special. Is it like I imagine it to be, with really impressive skaters trying and doing the hardest stuff, really going for. Haha, yes it is; it is pretty intense. During the qualifiers I skated outside more than in the park. I just went in for my run and got back out. When I got to the hospital they told me I needed an operation that night because my appendix had burst. After so they had to take three days of not scissors and cut my being able to eat or stomach open without drink and puking all anesthesia. Two An ambulance picked months after I was me up in the hotel. Is that something a younger skater like you still desires? Having a full part, to a special song in an anticipated video? Yes, definitely. I would love to spend a longer time on one project, and choose specific spots for tricks, and have the time to really make something complete. If you could go back in time and have a video part in Propeller or cherry or any other video from the past, disregarding sponsors, which one would it be? Why that one? I look up to a lot of the guys that were in that video and really looked forward to seeing it when it came out. I pre-ordered it on iTunes, I woke up from the notification e-mail from iTunes that my download was ready and jumped out of bed and got really excited about it. I guess that is a modern day version of going to the skate shop to get the new video - or actually, the modern day version of downloading it for free. I met Lucas on a Volcom trip to Malaga. He was the filmer on that trip. Are you hyped on your footage? So I went on couple trips with Lucas and the other guys in the video. In Bangkok I filmed quiet a bit so we decided that I could maybe try to film a part for the video. Have you had a choice in the song you skate to? Yeah I did. Luckily Davy Van Laere knows a lot of music. He helped me out with that. So do you think your part in WWCF will be that big part you always wanted? What have you got planned for the rest of ? I have a Toy Machine trip next month and just skating and travelling really. Cool, anyone you want to thank? Thanks to all my sponsors, my family, Liesa and my friends. They used to follow the path they had been told. At some point, they were only individuals living within it, day after day, task after task. By that time, Zaragoza still stood as one of the main broadcast points but at the same time it remained accessible. Rhythm became harder and harder and more and more of them were disconnected then deleted, one after the other. Geographic space intensified as the whole area became more deserted than ever. The point was to bring and broadcast their own features over there against the whole thing. They had to make it there. Free will was on its way; hope would be brought back. Blood was the biggest question to me. I mean, how could there be blood? Blood was too real. Blood is too real. The waiting time has been long since I started to think about this theory. I remember my first night as an insomniac minute after minute. Like every night, I find myself lying down in my capsule but not entering in to sleep mode as usual. First destabilised, I quickly felt like if I were born again. I could totally control my thoughts, my moves, my breath. Day after day, I was converting more and more tasks, mechanically — living life as a ridiculous part of the crowd. I felt like the only way out for every one of us was to focus on this whole collective energy around our secret project. I could feel anxiety in every single finger. I met them, one after the other. I knew exactly where we were going to. We suddenly became more than totalitarian. Unceasing Commitment. That was our turn. Our main weapon consisted in interpreting geographical space within an architectural logic. Free will was on its way. We were always building. I was always building. I suddenly got that I had emotions. As we were building higher and higher, I was digging my own grave. I was empty, already dead inside. I was lost but at my place at the same time. I needed more than data converting. I wanted to experience what free will would taste like. Anna and myself Jarne Verbruggen went on a skateboard expedition to Bangkok and Cambodia. Michael, Guillaume and Anna were already in Bangkok. I was going to meet up with. But luckily I met this Belgian guy on the plane, he was very nice and loaned me 20 euros around baht. I never paid this sucker back though… Joking! Then three cabs and four hours later I finally got to the right place. I actually still had enough money to survive for a week there, apparently. First thing I bought apart from cab rides was fresh pineapple and watermelon. It was crazy different from our fruits… Best shit ever actually. Before the trip started, I imagined Bangkok to have a lot of marble and girls. We found heaps of that beautiful marble, some of it untouched even! We were kinda proud and happy for that. The amount of girls was also pretty amazing. Well, actually the amount of people was. It can get pretty hectic in a lot of places. Asian people stay very young looking. Maybe because they are cramped together a lot so they receive a lot of love from each other. Jarne Verbruggen Backside grind to ollie out in Bangkok, Thailand. Siem Reap Cambodia Now this is kind of a horror story. We were searching spots on motorbikes in Siem Reap,. You just got to drive and not hesitate. Luckily the horror had nothing to do with our driving. I guess skaters fit well in this kind of traffic. Feels good. At one point we drove into this Buddhist school. I spotted a pretty perfect ledge. It was low and not too long. When I started to wax it and wax it a lot with red wax because it was pretty old a lot of people showed up to watch me front flip to my face or cheer if I would make something. After some waxing time there were at least 50 people watching already. But the ledge never did really grind. So we got back on our motorbikes and drove off. I felt so bad. Just hope nobody put a spell on us. It sure looked like they did. The first dinner we had in Phnom Penh, some kids came to us trying to sell some wristbands and other stuff. He pointed at it and clearly wanted a go. I gave him my board, and two minutes later there were ten kids on it. But literally on it! All at once they hopped up and my board just disappeared. It was nice to see these kids super amped and having fun, for 30 minutes. Then, they had to get back to work. They could speak just enough English to sell stuff to tourists. When they spotted us as obvious tourists, they came our direction and then this one kid noticed a. So Skateistan is a real good thing there. I hope they can keep doing what they do and can get more and more kids to skate! No pressure. Brady just called me up oneweek prior and asked if I would be keen to join them for a week. From then on we just found a housing solution for the guys thanks Jack and Felix! The only idea being that we should try to keep it suburbs only for a change. Some are really posh and rich, and some quite ghetto. When it comes to the most ghetto ones, people usually are scared to go there in the afternoon. So when it came to finding locals from Paris to show us around in the suburbs, some were quite reluctant to go there so late in the afternoon. Not everyone followed the rule, but I must admit it quite paid off since none of us got in trouble the whole week. Especially when there would be Champions League games the same night. They would pick whatever restaurant, no matter the food, just as long as they had a big enough screen to watch the game. That one day PSG was playing against Barca, I even suspected Brady to have focused his board on purpose in order to be on time for the game. Strange thing being, in the town we were, the only place that seemed decent to eat and watch the game was a pizzeria owned by a handball maniac. The owner could not stop switching channels between the PSG game and some apparently super important handball French championship finals. He made everyone miss two goals that night. I even went back there with some other crew weeks later, and some of the kids still had a real good memory of them. Of course, whenever vegetables were involved in the mix, we would think of supplying Guillaume Perimony with a good amount of candies so he could keep on filming. Most of the spots featured in this article are not the regular type of spots you see people skate in Paris. He even confessed that he sometimes lurks on some weird scooter Facebook groups to find new ones. You just have to get lucky with the rough ground once you show up there. Guillaume has all the knowledge and techniques. He even got us back to Paris one night in a very special manner. We were in a town far in the suburbs, and the last train was leaving then at that very moment. We were all running down the stairs to catch it when we heard the signal of the train closing its doors. When we reached the gate we saw the train was still there and Perim had his hand stuck in between the two doors waiting for us. He opened them like Schwarzenegger did in that Terminator movie so we could get back to town on time. Merci Perim! The first purpose of this tour was to gather some more footage for their upcoming collab with Bronze. I think it may be out by now. And this is again what I meant with the way those guys deal with such things. Not only did they not market the tour with a shitload of hashtags all over Instagram like most of the brands would do, but they were also not putting themselves under the pressure of shooting a shitload of photos for any article, which sometimes can destroy the mood of a trip. But then again, they proved themselves wrong and as you can see next to this text — actions speak louder than words. When I was first asked to host the Palace boys on their Parisian tour, admittedly I was a bit nervous. I could write an entire novel about that place, much more than I could write about the entire city of Berlin I guess Brady had already been in Berlin for a few days trying to party, I mean get clips. Either way, the group of roughly twenty-six males searching for all forms of intoxication was my initial introduction. I was in for a shock — not only was the potential wild card because of my having never met him Benny Fairfax one of the most gracious guests to ever step foot into my life but the loudest I heard Blondey get was while approving or disapproving of the current clips on thrashermag. Rory had been working through an ankle injury for the previous seven months and therefore had the full stretch routine every morning. It was truly a pleasure to have the crew staying at my place and I would recommend it to anyone safe out there in need of a banging session with the boys who know how to get proper mash up without turning into mentalists. Mail order: 22 29 Email: sales nativeskatestore. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder, my friend. Zoom Air! Like little fluffy clouds in your shoes to catch you! I tell you what, the way you skaters treat your feet these days is criminal! Jumping down things, scraping up against sandpaper. Having some nice pillows—a mini mattress to lay those feet down on—seems like a beautiful thing. Nobody wants to see your messed-up skater feet. This relationship is over. Treat your feet like a lady. Ladies like pillows, so get your two gnarly, hairy, smelly-looking skater feet-ladies some pillows. Well you are correct, my dude, you do see amazing skaters who are being filmed with pricey cameras. You just pointed out another advancement in the histor y of skateboarding. Congr atulations! Back in the da y, skateboar ding was long-hair cavemen, carving down the middle of the dusty road on a plank of wood with four balls of clay just to keep it rolling. You would be lucky if you could even find a picture of it. You think if the earth stopped rotating you would continue to do those moves the same way? We need the world to turn, my man, so that your wheels can turn. As the world turns, skateboarding, cameras, skaters and shoes—all of it, man, all of us—change! At least those break-dancers put a piece of cardboard on the ground to soften it up a bit. You follow me? These shoes have got Zoom Air in them, son! I see you skaters out there getting chased by the authorities! What you skaters do is you pick up your board and you run! You run from the authority! So you can thank Nike for doing you a solid and killing two birds with two shoes. Turn static files into dynamic content formats. Free Create a flipbook. Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios , online yearbooks , online catalogs , digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.

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He drove at speeds of mph in his Jaguar and filmed the episode on his phone. The year old was on his way to his home in Trondheim from Trysil Summer Ski School when he was stopped by police for driving at kph on a road with a kph speed limit. The Oslo District Court sentenced Northug to an unconditional seven months in prison and a lifetime driving ban. He won a total of 13 World Championship and 2 Winter Olympic gold medals Vancouver with 20 medals overall. Last night I was stopped by the police for speeding. I was driving way too fast and was also taken to the emergency room for blood test. In addition, the police found a small amount of drugs at my house. I am in despair and afraid of what the future will bring, and incredibly sorry for all those who I have now disappointed, again. I know it will now be a criminal case. Then I will take responsibility for what I have done. Guides Which Ski Resort? Home Videos Which Ski Resort? About Advertise. General News , Sports News. Merry Xmas One and All! Obertauern Revisited. Aosta, The Rome of The Alps. FIS Marks its Centenary. Innsbruck: A City Made for Skiing. This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Close Privacy Overview This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience. Necessary Necessary. Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information. Non-necessary Non-necessary. Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.

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