Mark Whiteley remembers Phil Shao
There’s a spot on Highway 101 way up in northern California, just south of Humboldt State,
that might be my least favorite place on Earth, to the point that I try to
forget it’s even there. Last week I was driving with my wife and kids down the
coast from Portland to the Bay Area on a vacation roll and only a few minutes
beforehand did I realize I was about to come upon it once again. It’s the spot
where one of my best friends died in a car crash 16 years ago. His name was
Phil Shao. Some of you might remember him.
Wait, wait, wait-- way too much of a bummer way to start
this out! Phil would not approve. But it’s a heavy location for me and driving
past it made me want to write this so I had to acknowledge it. Phil would also
not approve that I started the last sentence with “But.” More on that later.
Let’s take it back a bit further. Sorry in advance, this is gonna
be a long one.
In 1990, I started using my parents’ video camera to film
the homies skating now and then. We were just like all the kids from that
generation who were inspired by the H-Street videos, Rubbish Heap, etc. to pick
up a camera and make our own video because it looked like we could. So I did.
Dumb little edits from around our little town, but it was rad. In the early
summer of ’92, I invested $99 into a screw-on fisheye lens that would fit the
family video camera and it turned out to be the purchase that most changed the
direction of my life. I put the lens on, called up my friend Nate and we filmed a whole
new video part in a couple days (edited to Cypress Hill, a sure sign of the
times). With that fisheye, I was suddenly an official filmer. I showed the edit
of Nate to a few friends and people started to know I was into it.
Later that summer I was introduced to William Nguyen, who
was a local am on Santa Cruz
and trying to finish filming a part for their next video. This was the first
time I was introduced as “a filmer” to anybody. He asked if I could help him
finish his part and over the next few months he would come and pick me up to go filming around the Bay Area (I
didn’t even have a license yet). In October
of 1992, the video BPSW (aka Big Pants Small Wheels) came out, William had
the last part and my footage of him was all over it, including first and last
tricks. My name was in the credits. Having that under my belt gave me the
confidence that I could really pursue being a filmer and so a couple weeks
later, I was at my local shop with friends when I saw a guy I had seen around a
couple times-- a guy who had been in the mags, a guy I knew was sponsored, “a
guy named Phil” as Transworld had captioned him in a photo—and I introduced myself
and said that if he ever needed to go film anything that I was around and would
be happy to do it. He was stoked and
wrote his name and number in the October ’92 issue of SLAP and gave it to me. A
couple days later, we went out skating and filming for the first time. From that
day on for the next almost six years, I don’t think more than a couple weeks
ever went by without us doing that same thing. We became fast friends and a new
chapter of my life was up and running.
Soon after, it was decided that Think was going to do a new
video and so it worked out that we had a project to work on. We went after it.
It was late ’92 into early ’93 and the prime time for flippity-floppity skating
that we were all guilty of, but prior to my knowing him, Phil had been a tranny
gnar dog, complete with long hair and tricks that were not in style in the
early ‘90s (like laybacks; he had a mean one). Watching him meld those skills
with more modern street skating was always a joy. He was so smooth on all-terrain and pretty untouchable at a mini ramp session. We went all over
the Bay Area and skated with tons of new people, he got better and better, picked
up a shoe sponsor, and come September ’93, Phil turned pro at the Back to the
City contest (the one where Girl was unveiled). He killed it and took 3rd,
right alongside Matt Beach who also turned pro at that contest and won it.
Christian Hosoi congratulated Phil after the contest, telling him that he liked
Phil’s style. I don't think I ever saw a bigger smile on anybody’s face then
right there.
We filmed on through the fall and towards the end of ’93,
Think released Just Another Day on the Range featuring parts that I had
helped film for with Dan Drehobl, Matt Pailes, Paul Zuanich, and the debut
part for Phil. I had also started contributing footage to Thrasher and been
asked to join the fledgling 411 earlier that year, so we had other
outlets to keep being productive with after the Think project was done. We
started in on his “Rookies” 411 part that would come out in October of ’94. It
was during this time that Phil really started to come into his own. The early
‘90s switch-double-late-varial stuff was gone and Phil started putting his
power, grace and speed to proper use. Faster, further, cleaner. The coping
dancing was done, replaced with chest-high f/s flips and nosegrind pop-ins up
the extension. And Greer. Nobody even came close at Greer. He did transfers in
the bowls that have never been repeated to this day. Not a
lot of guys could do tailslide kickflip out on a ledge at one session and then
go down the road and blast 10’ channel transfers at the next. Definitely not in
the early ‘90s.
Towards the end of summer ’94, I moved 45 minutes
south to Santa Cruz
to go to college but that just expanded our range. We started filming towards
what would become his Damage part and that period is when he really hit his
stride and started doing the things that he would become remembered for,
trick-wise and also stylistically. Fast and loose ATV, pure style. The b/s 180
over the entire pyramid at Santa Rosa,
stuff like that. I moved back home for the summer in ’95 and I remember those
summer days that year so well. I was working part-time moving furniture, he was
doing junior college summer school. We would all hang out at Paul and Phil’s
place on sweltering days, hand-rolling cigarettes and blasting Stereolab until
it cooled down so we could skate. He was just crushing it everywhere we
went. We skated at night a lot that summer and it was so fun. The line that
starts off his part in Damage was filmed at the San Jose Sharks stadium in
the middle of the night. Those were the purest skate days, out in the streets
doing it every day. One of my favorite
days from that summer was the one where he slammed on a bump to bar, which ended
up in the opening to Damage. The footage looks terrible, like he hit
his face on the rail, but in reality he was laughing before he hit the ground
and lay there chuckling about such a stupid slam for quite some time. That’s
just exactly how he was.
The summer passed, I went back to Santa Cruz, and the year ended. 1995 had been
great-- but 1996 was about to become probably my favorite skate year of all-time, and I gotta say that it was Phil’s best year. It was his peak. Damage
came out and we went right into filming for Emerica’s Yellow video. Phil and
Drehobl had been good friends for years but filming with both of them for that
video at that time was unreal. They were so gnarly together, just the rawest
twin destroyers crushing SF. McKenney,
too. Murder at China
Banks. Dan and Phil had back-to-back parts in that video, sharing a song (“Kids
From the Black Hole” and I gotta say sorry AVE but they had you beat by a
solid decade with that one). I think it was his best part while he was alive
and we filmed it all in a pretty short period—just shows you where his skating was
at during that time. Effortless and gnarly. So relaxed, so casual—you can see
it in the arms, the hands, the knees, his swerve, his push. Nobody like him. I
filmed my favorite line of him that summer—it’s in the Yellow part, as well
as his Dedication part after he passed. Kickflip up the curb straight into a
wall ride, ollie a little bump, feeble grind pop-out on a ledge with wall at
the end of it, 360 flip while riding away down the hill. That was my number
one. We watched the footage of it right after and I remember him saying all goofy to me,
“You’re the best filmer in town!” I’m always stoked when I
remember that day.
One quick note here: I wasn’t there when he grinded the top
bar at Miley unfortunately, but here’s a good one. I’ve written about it
before, but it’s worth mentioning again. A week or two after he grinded it, we
were out filming for Yellow in SF and he said he wanted to go back. That day,
he got into and slid several tailslides on the top bar, same place where he
grinded it. We lost the daylight and the camera batteries were cooked after a
long day but he was real close. In the final minutes of the fading grey light, with no documentation possible and just a few of us to witness it, he made one. He did it for himself, simply because he wanted it that much. Not for fame, not for a cover or a check, but just for him. And of course, even though he could barely see, it was perfect.
Right after we wrapped filming for Yellow, as I had hoped
and dreamed for years, I was invited on a summer tour. Phil told me it was
happening and I quit my summer job at Whole Foods on the spot so I could get
ready to go. To this day, of all the many trips around the world I have been on
for skateboarding, that tour was the craziest of all. No team manager, 15 dudes
in their own cars, a weird mash-up of companies involved, no photographer and
just me filming, driving cross-country for weeks on end. We had some
demo dates lined up but that was it. Each guy got $20 a day to live on. Hotels
or people’s houses were whatever we found when we got there. It ruled. Phil,
Paul, Drehobl, Pailes, Jesse Paez, Joe Sierro, Don Carey, Chad Fernandez and Joel Price from Think; Justin Strubing
and Hanzy Driscoll from Adrenaline; Brian Childers from Santa Cruz; and Chet
Childress and Bob Reynolds from Creature. It came together like that because
Bob Reynolds worked in the shipping warehouse of Think and Adrenaline while
also riding for Creature out of NHS, which was in Santa Cruz where I knew all the SC guys, too.
The kind of thing that would probably never happen today. Within minutes of
leaving SF, it went off. A side window in Bob’s van shattered on the freeway
and for the rest of the trip, it was covered with various pages out of porn mags
taped together. We would skate the demo in Reno or wherever until late and
then drive all night blasting Black Sabbath, trying to stay awake until we
couldn’t anymore. We'd crash wherever we could find a place then get up
and drive the rest of the way to Salt Lake, or Ft Collins, or Lincoln, or
Cleveland, or upstate New York or New Hampshire or Boston or whatever was next
on the list. So many crazy stories. Having to leave town fast because of
somebody and an underage girl. The family of the kid who invited the whole lot
of us to stay at their house, feed us and do our laundry... we promptly
shaved their son’s head in a double Mohawk and several of the guys ran through
the older sister. Breaking down in the middle of nowhere and relying on Paul to
fix the engine. Watching insane sunrises after all-nighters in Phil’s car,
blasting “Hole In The Sky” or the Morrissey tape that Gonz had made him.
Impromptu gas station sessions. Endless hours, endless miles. And just incredible
skating. Everybody skated and killed it at every stop. Fun, fun,
fun. I turned 20 during the trip, somewhere in Massachusetts, and the journey became a 411
article in issue 20.
The trip ended, summer ended, we both went back to our respective
colleges and just went about our business for awhile, skating together one
place or another every couple weeks. I started working on a Skateworks shop
video for the Strubing family that would
bridge the gap between Santa Cruz
and Bay Area and Phil had a part in that. I gave some rad SF stuff
to Thrasher for another video (when it came time to get paid for it, I went in
to Thrasher to collect a check. Jake said, “Who are you and why should we pay
you anything? What did you film?” I told him it was footage of Phil, and he
said immediately, “Alright, pay the kid”) but that summer of ’96 ended up being
the last time we were really filming regularly for a project or two. But darn,
it was a good one.
Phil continued to kill it into ’97 but wasn’t working
towards anything part-wise so there isn’t a lot of my footage from around
then—but there are a few good ones, like him crushing the bank to barrier down
on the Embarcadero in SF and his f/s pivot on the tight tranny wall we called
"Trash Banks" in Palo Alto (18” of tranny, three feet of vert, just impossible).
Then, at some point in ’97, he was down in So Cal and shooting photos when he
really messed up his knee. He did his ACL and maybe his MCL, too... I’m not
positive. But it really set him back. He had to get surgery and was on crutches
for a long time. It was during this down time that he started spending more
time at High Speed—home of Thrasher and SLAP. He’d obviously always been tight
with the crew via friendships and sponsorships but it was mutually agreed upon
that while he was hurt, he should be around Thrasher and help with writing and
editing, given his education and knowledge in general. So Phil would go in most
days, ride the exercise bike in Jake’s office to rehab his knee and work at the
mag. I remember how stoked he was when he went to pick up Daewon at the airport
to bring him to the photo shoot that would become the “Hesh vs Fresh” cover
with Wade. After a while of this, it was decided that after he
recovered, he would do another strong video part or two and then transition into
being the new editor at Thrasher. Jake had been wanting to pass the torch at
the time and there was nobody better than Phil to take it. So, in some
alternate future that never happened, Phil would have been the editor at
Thrasher at the same time I would become the editor at SLAP.
Another thing that came up around then and never got to
happen was that Phil was going to have a company of his own through Think. It
got pretty far along, narrowed down to a couple potential names and a list of
guys who were either going to ride for it or Phil talked to about riding for
it. The name was either going to be Dump Truck or TNT. There were even some
graphic ideas getting put down on paper. The names I remember being involved
were Phil, Paul Zuanich, Tim Upson, Tim McKenney and Mike Matilainen. Some
other folks that were interested or talked to about it were Karma Tsocheff,
Jerry Hsu and Colt Cannon. Anyhow, it’s too bad that never came to life, it
could have been a good one with Phil at the helm.
So anyhow, Phil continued going to school, working at the
mag and rehabbing for awhile. In early ’98, he started skating again, getting
back into the groove. He was skating pools and ledges and building his strength
back up, but I seem to recall he got slightly hurt again somewhere in there and
it was slow going for a while. But it was coming. I was just about to graduate
from college and Phil told me that there had been some talks about bringing in
an assistant editor at SLAP to help Dawes run it and that he and Paul, who was
also working at High Speed, had brought my name up. With all the friends and
connections I had made in the NorCal industry over the years, it sounded like
a lot of people were backing it. Paul and Phil started pushing hard for it but
it was slow getting anything going until one day, Phil and I were out skating at
a local park when a very young Tony Vitello needed a ride home. Phil and I dropped him off and went around
the back to say hello to Fausto, who was sitting poolside. Phil introduced me,
saying “This is the guy I’ve been telling you about for SLAP.” Fausto told me I
should come by the office the next day to talk, so I did. My “interview” was
about three minutes long (including Fausto asking me if I was a hippie) and then I
was offered the job as Managing Editor at SLAP, which had long been my
favorite magazine and even played a part in Phil and I becoming friends with
him passing his number to me in the back of an issue. I kinda couldn’t believe
it. We decided I would start in a couple weeks as I was just about to go on a
road trip with friends, so I did that and then started working at High Speed on
Monday, August 10th, 1998. I was 21 and just six weeks out of
college. Phil pretty much got me the job.
11 days later, on a Friday evening after work, Phil and Diego
Bucchieri (who had been staying with Paul and Phil, skating and learning to
speak English at their house) met up with me on a hill bomb session for a couple of
hours. Those two were just about to leave on a road trip up to Oregon with some of the
Thrasher guys, so we decided to have a session before they hit the road. We
mashed all over Potrero Hill, flying around and stopping for a beer. I was
riding a big cruiser board and going faster than them half the time... I
remember really distinctly coming down the east side of 18th near De
Haro and passing Phil mid-block, looking back and him having this huge smile on his
face, stoked that I was going faster than him. Makes me smile every time I
think of it.
Our session ended and I went to drop them off at Greg
Carroll’s place to get ready to leave. We said our goodbyes, see you in a
couple days, and parted ways. For some unknown reason, I stopped and watched
Phil and Diego walk down the block away from me, west on 23rd
towards the Mission.
The sun was setting behind them and it was a pretty summer evening in SF. It
was the last time I ever saw Phil.
They headed out on the road and the next day made it as far
north as Arcata, CA. There’s some footage of him skating that
night, on a little mini ramp in barn of some sort. He was still on the mend
but skating well. Arcata is home to Humboldt
State University,
and there was some local party they were invited to. As I understand it, they stayed
at the party pretty late, past midnight, and Phil decided to catch a ride back
to where they were staying with a girl at the party, a student who was moving
back to the dorms. She had been drinking. On the freeway just south of the exit
for Humboldt State, she either fell asleep or passed
out and went off the road into the ditch that ran alongside the freeway. The
crash was pretty bad. The report that I saw after the fact said that when the
police got to the scene, the girl was not badly injured but was out of it and
said that nobody else was with her in the vehicle. Because of that statement
and because she was in the process of moving and her clothing and things were
strewn all over the inside of the car, nobody knew that Phil was also
in the vehicle at first. When the police did find him, he was gone. There’s no way to
know whether or not he died instantly or if there might have been time to do
something. I like to think it was instant, and I know he would have preferred
it that way.
The girl who’d been driving did a little time in jail but
Phil’s family did not press hard charges. I believe she spent a lot more time
speaking to people about drunk driving. And I’m sure she lives with it every
day. I never learned her name or anything about her. I never wanted to.
Oh and wait-- did I mention that he passed on my birthday?
Yup. So I have that one with me forever. Tony Vitello’s, too. I believe that
word got round about what had happened that evening but nobody wanted to call
and tell me since it was my birthday. I found out the next morning at work when
all the guys who should have been on the trip with him were in the office not
looking too well. Jake told me the news. I was in a daze. I remember walking
down to leave the office when in walked Diego. He still barely spoke any
English. We just looked at each other and gave each other a big hug. (In recent
years I have had the pleasure of being employed by the same company as Diego
and we still always sign off our emails with “Un abrazo.”) Later I thought
about how insane it must have been for him: in a foreign country he barely
knew, hardly any English, staying with somebody who died. His whole world must
have seemed gone. Anyhow, I started driving home. The Beatles song “Two Of Us”
came on and I cried the entire way home. I went straight to Mike Matilainen's house. He was barely moving. He’d been through a lot the
last couple years. He was the one who told me nobody had wanted to call me
about it on my birthday, and that he was sorry I found out like I did. I don’t
remember anything else from that day. The next day I went back to work and it
was deadline. I had to write his obituary that day to get it done in time for
the issue. Hadn’t I just been skating with him a couple days before? It didn’t
seem real.
Phil had been doing a lot of story writing for Thrasher
around that time and he was working on one about skating pools right before
he passed. I don’t have a lot of regrets in my life but I have one from the
first week I was working at SLAP, just before he passed. I was pretty tired
from the mental stress of figuring out a new job and working full time in an
office for the first time, when Phil told me he had a nearby pool lined up
for an evening session... just me and him, I didn’t go because I was tired. It’s the only time I ever said no to going
skating with him. The article had gone to press before he passed and right
after he passed, it came out. In it he wrote about the fact that I didn’t go
with him and he skated the pool alone. He referred to the character of Little
Fidel in the story, but it was me (I was into wearing this little black beanie
and I had a crappy beard going). In the light of him being gone and there being
nothing I could do to change missing that session with him, I was devastated
reading that. That feeling, and having to write the obituary for him in my
first issue, knowing that he had lined the job up for me—it was almost too much
and I thought about not going back to the mag. I quickly came to the realization
that there was probably nothing that would disappoint him more than me walking
away from what we had set up, walking away from the opportunity to do something
great. So I went back and put my heart and soul into SLAP for almost 13 years
after that. I put his initials (PAS) first in the staff “thanks” section every
single month. I owed him a lot. I loved him a lot. I missed him a lot. Still
do. Thinking back on it, he was the older guy in our crew and he seemed so
grown up—but he was only 24 when he died. 24. He was still a kid. He packed
tons into those years, living more fully than many who live much longer, but
there was a lot he never had the chance to experience. I get bummed when I
think about all the great things that have happened in my life since then that
he didn’t get to be part of and that’s when I miss him the most. But that’s
rare. Mostly I just think of the best times together.
What I remember most fondly about Phil wasn’t the skating,
it was his personality. He was so funny, and nice, and a dick, and sarcastic,
and smart, and an idiot and the raddest to hang out with. He was brutally
honest. No ego, ever. But mainly, he was so fun. Looking at his footage for the
subtleties of him as a person, you can see it come through. Big goofy smiles in
the middle of lines or after slams, weird little comments you can barely hear
under the music (“Hey, I made it!,” “Whoa, around the world!,” “I’m, like, the
gnarler!”, etc.). He loved Mozart as much as he loved ACDC. He skated to Weird Al
in a contest and laughed so hard at the lyrics that he couldn’t land anything.
He graduated from UC Berkeley (English Lit major; you don’t start a sentence
with “But” from above) at the peak of his skating career and hardly anybody
knew he was even going to college at the same time because he was crushing it
so hard. He was the total package that a skater could ever dream to be, and he
was as great a person as I have ever known. I think he sent me a postcard from
just about every trip he ever went on. That kind of guy.
But the skating… well, that speaks for itself. Like Gonz
before him, like Cardiel with him, like Grant after him, he slayed everything
with power, creativity and unique style. It says a lot when Julien Stranger
puts you in an ad for a company you didn’t even ride for and says “The straight up best skater I knew” out of respect. But he deserved it, for damn sure.
All hail Phil Shao! One of the best to ever do it. More
importantly, my friend.
Never Forget.
31 comments:
Wow, so heartfelt. Thanks Mark. Phil Shao Forever.
Straight up teary over here. Thanks Mark.
Mark, thanks for sharing this with us.
Great piece Mark!
This was super well done, thanks for it. I always think of Phil in that Eastern Exposure 0 video, that clip from Tampa Pro, vault up the quarterpipe to smith on that weird kinked vert wall. Might have won best trick. The Phil rode away was all confidence and fun and casual. Perfect, really.
Wow, this brought me back. Thank you. I remember skating the San Jose warehouse with Phil and watching him just crush everything. This was when he was sponsored by some weird, now-defunct board company called "Confusion." He never failed to blow minds and turn heads even then, but he always did so with pure style and an easy grace and humility. Street or vert, it didn't matter. He was the best and there will never be another like him. I often think of him and mourn his loss.
Phil forever
Thanks Mark
KT
don't get to cry too often..... tears are rolling....
so good, Mark... thankful you wrote it all down!
I didn't pick up a skate mag until sometime after Phil passed, so for a long time his was just one of those names in Thrasher under the 'R.I.P.' heading. It took me quite awhile to piece together who he was, to put a face to the name, and skating too. But it was well worth the wait.
What an incredible skater and human being. I am always grateful for those with a hunger for higher learning (I know college is not for everyone, and often doesn't feel like it's for anyone), but I am grateful that skateboarding welcomes and houses such a diverse group of people.
One of my favorite ads that I rather recently stumbled upon thanks to a fat-stack of old mags, courtesy of eBay, happens to be of Phil at Fort Miley. It's an Emerica ad and all it says is 'a life of skateboarding.'
We should all be so lucky.
Many thanks, Mark and Chops. It's my Mom's birthday to, so Happy Birthday!
Mahalo!
Thanks Mark, both you and Phil have given me some of my favourite moments in skateboarding. It makes sense that you were good friends.
I skated with him in 8th grade right when I first got obsessed with skating in San Jose by my house, I was pushing mongo(lol) and he was reel cool and gave me and my friends boards and clothes, I knew who he was and thought he was a rock star the first pro I ever saw.
I talked to him briefly in Encinitas. Sometimes skateboarders can be dicks, or at the very least indifferent. What stood out to me is that he was a decent human being. I can see why his loss affected so many people. Only the good die young, eh?
Nice write up Mark. RIP Phil. So smooth.
Really good stuff, I also lost one of my best skate-friends because of a motorcycle accident and I know how it feels.
R.i.p. Phil Shao.
Mark, thank you so much for putting
such care and attention into your moving account of an important friendship and what sounds like a truly great person. One of the more beautiful and heartfelt tributes I've ever read. I don't reach for the bible with much frequency, but to paraphrase a nice passage, your young men shall see visions, your old men shall dream dreams.
Under-appreciated and ahead of his time. Great write up. Gives a new found appreciation for Phil. What a solid dude. Thanks Mark.
I loved Phil Shao's skating and still do till this day! Hands down one of the BEST skateboarders EVER!!!
I always thought it was ironic that he's skated to the No Use For A Name song called "Until Its Gone"
http://youtu.be/Q1LPi78O6z8
I started skating in the mids 90's, remember Phil in Think videos, Thrashers and early 411s. Pure skateboarding. LEGEND.
I used to love watching Phil back in the 411 days. So amazing on transitions and from what I knew of him, a good all around dude.
Thanks a lot Mark for writing this. I will never forget the day that you came over to the house and we all went skating at the wall ride school in Berkeley. I think about him a lot and I have some really good memories living with him. He was the best.
Great heartfelt piece about one of my favorite skaters.
Never met the man but your story still made me cry.
Many year later my deepest condolences.
Very well done, thanks! I really like Phil Shao as a skater and I love reading this. Thanks for sharing!
I held off reading this one for a while, just didn't wanna be sad... This made me so stoked though!!! The way he destroys Greer is to this day fucking insane!!!! Always knew of Phil's legendary status but this really helped define who he was as a person thank you so much!!!
What a difficult thing to go through. I don't believe that we ever get over those sort of loses. They remain so difficult to deal with. I have been through an experience that is quite similar. I am hoping one day it will just get easier but, I don't think it will. I try to remember the good days.
Faith Brady @ KHunterLaw
Tears... sorry for the bitterness mark.. as of today I let it all go life is precious, hope you still got that nollie..
Tim
RIP Phil. I didn't really know Phil but remember this incident up in Arcata. I owned the mini indoor barn ramp that you mentioned in your story. I can't remember if I was skating with his crew night before he passed. Such a sad tragedy.
thnks
I read this every now and again and think fondly of Phil and all he did. Absolutely amazing. I was at SLAP before you got there and left to pursue a career working in the film business in LA. I was devastated when Dawes told me about Phil passing. He was so goddamn cool. He was one of the few guys I met in my short time in the skate industry that you could sit around with and talk about literature and skating and metal and Mozart and it never felt forced. Good times. Really glad you took the reins and kept it going for as long as you did. Damn fine work. Phil would have been stoked.
fantastic website It appears to be quite professional! Keep up the wonderful job!
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