The Life and Times of Steven Cales.
SC: Hey man, before we get started: Do you know anything about that "Police Informer" site that's also posted some old skate stuff of me?
CBI: I think he lives in Canada but I don’t really know him.
Because that site kinda got
me into some shit before. When you’ve been in as much trouble as I have, having
your name on a site called “Police Informer” isn’t a good look. I’ve had to
explain that one a couple of times actually. I don’t really like being on
there.
I never thought of it that way but you have a point. Maybe
he’ll see this. So let’s start this off with a little background if we could, growing
up as a young skateboarder in New York back in the 1980’s.
Aw man, growing up in New
York… Sunset Park, Brooklyn to be exact. It was rough. I mean, to be honest,
I’ve probably had a much different experience than most people in
skateboarding. Both my mother and later my father died when I was still very young.
Combine that with where I grew up and the people I grew up around, it made me a
much harder person. I grew up with an attitude.
I had an older brother who
used to run around in the streets, doing bad shit. He liked to be tough but
people respected him. He was known throughout the hood, which honestly helped
me because I became known as “Ref’s little brother.” I got love from that. People
knew who I was. New York was a lot rougher back then but that made things a
little easier for me.
My brother would force me to
fight when I was young because he felt that I needed to learn. I remember him
pushing this kid into a ditch one time and making me jump on top of him. He
made me punch this kid in the face. Literally holding my hands, showing me how
to punch. This is when I’m like 10 or 11 years old. That’s how it was.
Yeah, didn’t he steal your first board or something?
Not quite like that. There
was a kid skating down my street one day and I thought it was cool. My brother ends
up walking over to the kid to ask if I can try it. The kid hands over his board
and it becomes obvious that my brother isn’t gonna give it back.
“Alright, kid. Go on home.
Just keep walking.”
“But my skateboard!?!”
“Nah, its my little brother’s
now.”
It was mad craze… bully-ass
motherfucker. But it was on after that.
This was during that OG Shut era and I know some of those
guys used to skate around your neighborhood back then. I imagine that having a
big influence on you as a young skater, right?
Oh yeah, I’d see guys like
Obed Rios all the time. Brian Blake, that dude was my favorite back then. So
sick. Richie Rojas was ill, too. I got names.
I’d see them on 51st
Street in Brooklyn. There was a crew called Team Trouble that had a few of
those guys in there. They were really good. I remember seeing them blasting so
high off launch ramps. That shit’s amazing when you’re little. You want to do
that, too.
I was actually on Shut for a
little while but that was later on, after most of those dudes had split. It was
towards the end of Shut, before they came back out with Zoo. I’m pretty sure I
was a pain in the ass back then because out of the blue, Rodney comes up and
tells me that he’d gotten me on Think somehow. That’s not how that shit usually
goes. I still don’t really know how that happened but I was on some random shit
back then anyway.
Yeah, weren’t you on Alva at one point as well? Was
that through a sponsor-me tape?
Yeah, I basically only sent
sponsor-me videos out to companies that I thought I could probably get on. I knew
I wasn’t getting on H-Street or nothing like that yet… let me try Alva.
(laughs)
The first time I ever heard of you was during the Blue
days. Although a short-lived company, the team was legendary. How’d that
happen?
Blue had a demo in Manhattan
right when they first came out. I remember hearing about the demo beforehand
and deciding right then and there that I was gonna go all-out crazy. I thought
they were so sick. That’s how I thought it all worked back then: if dudes were
around, you skated your ass off and hopefully they liked what they saw.
I was lucky because it
actually worked out that way for me. Jason Lee straight up asks me if I want to
join the team for the rest of the tour, right there at the demo.
“Oh yeah!
Fuck it. Let’s go!”
I was hyped, man. I’m only 14-years
old but it’s not like I have a stable situation at home. Whatever I wanted to
do… fuck it, I did it. They start hooking me up with boards and by the end of
the tour, I’m officially on the team. Dope.
Dune flew me back out to Cali
after the tour was over and found me a place to stay in South Gate. It was
Blue’s secretary’s house. I can’t even remember her name but her boyfriend was
Mark Gonzales’ brother, Mike. Mark actually came over a few times and I was
tripping. I’m in Cali, mad young, skating everyday and falling into the scene.
It was all lovely, man. I thought that I’d made it.
How serious were you taking all of this back then? Getting a
heavy sponsor and moving out west are some serious moves for anybody, regardless of
age.
Nah, at that point, I was really
just trying to be good at skating. To skate my best. I figured that if I was
good enough, there was no way I could be ignored. And once again, I got lucky.
The industry stuff just worked itself out for me on its own. That doesn’t
happen for a lot of people.
How was it coming straight out of Brooklyn and being
plopped right in the middle of the California scene like that?
Aw man, I was so hyped. It
was like a dream come true. I’m out in California skating with Jason Lee! And
the thing is, Jason Lee knows everyone. It’s all connected. So you might just be
going out to skate and run into dudes like Paulo and Guy! Next thing you know,
you’re out skating with legends on the regular! You start feeding off that
shit. It’s like a switch that turns on in your head or something. You start
skating extra good because you’re hyped on who’s around.
Did you find that a lot of your new West Coast peeps
were tripping on your style of dress and slang? It did seem like you had a
particular influence on the scene in that regard, introducing some East Coast
flavor.
The ese’s used to always trip
out on the way I dressed. I’d go over by Fabian’s house and sometimes dudes would be looking
at me like I was crazy. But I was chilling in all baggy Polo gear, looking at
them like they fucking crazy in their dusty shoes. (laughs)
I was always dressing in Polo
back then… I’m from Brooklyn, that’s how it goes, ya know? Everything Polo to
the socks and drawers. I always thought that stuff was cool and it wasn’t long
before I started seeing others sporting that stuff as well. My gold fronts,
too. All gold with little diamonds in ‘em.
Joey and Cheeks ran those for a bit.
Same thing with the slang. I’d
be saying “stuups” a lot and everybody started to say that shit as well. “Butters”,
“buttery”, “craze”… that was all me.
You coined “stuups”, right?
Yeah, that was me and my boy
Rick buggin’ out one day, making crazy faces at each other like you do when
you’re young. Calling each other stupid. It just came out like that.
I think people got it all
wrong though. We used it as something crazy to say with your boys around people
you didn’t know. You could say it all crazy long and drawn-out while somebody
was talking and they wouldn’t know what was going on.
“Stuuuuuuuuuuuuuups.”
“Wait. What do you mean? What
are you talking about?”
Those guys out in Cali were
always tripping off me but it’s cool. That’s how it goes. If you’re around a
person a lot, you pick up stuff naturally. I feel like after I got out there, I
had everybody dressing and talking like me. I didn’t think about it like that at
the time. We were all so little and they were my bros. It was all just having
fun.
You are known for a love of mischief, often at the
expense of your sponsors. Was this something that could be seen all the way
back in these early Blue days?
Yeah, but again, it was more
about having fun back then. More innocent.
Probably what stands out the most
from back then was stealing the Blue van. It was me, Billy Valdes, Fabian
Alomar and Matt Naylor. We somehow got it in our heads that we had to skate
the Powell park that day. Kevin, the Blue team manager, was with us and he had
the van… but we didn’t want him to go. So I ended up stealing the keys while he
wasn’t looking and bounced.
Here we are, a van full of
dudes rolling down Hollywood on our way out to Santa Barbara. I’m only fifteen
years old and I’m driving. No license, smoking weed… I don’t even know how we
found our way out there but we did. It was craze.
Kevin was so mad at me, man.
He was going crazy… but somehow, they let me slide. I mean, I only borrowed it.
I’m on Blue, I was gonna give it back. I just decided to take it for a little
bit. (laughs)
Nowadays, you’d get kicked
off for doing that type of crazy shit and honestly, I probably should’ve been,
too. But Blue was cool like that. A team manager ain’t nothing but a babysitter
anyway and they knew I was hardheaded and crazy, even back then. It was all
good.
How’d World enter the picture?
World basically came about
from hanging out with Shiloh, Soc and Guy so much. Skating Los Feliz together,
doing our thing. I guess it was only a matter of time before Shiloh got me on
World. I think Guy had a hand in it, too. I wasn’t actively trying but those
guys talked to the team anyway and they were down. I was already cool with most
of those guys already and Rodney hooked it up… even though I think I made him
mad by bringing out the weed and shit. Most of those dudes didn’t smoke weed
like that back then. They’d definitely never rolled blunts or anything like
that before. Once again, I came out here with the New York stuff and they
started going crazy. (laughs)
I wasn’t about to pass up the
opportunity to skate for World. Kareem ended up quitting to go back to those
guys, too. Blue was bummed.
Was there any talk of Stereo yet?
Nah, it wasn’t to that point
yet. I could tell there were some problems but I was still so little…
Honestly, I don’t like how I
left Blue. I didn’t know how to go about showing the respect to people who
helped me in my career and in life. I just broke out without even telling them.
“I want to skate for this
shit. I don’t give a fuck about these other guys anymore.”
I realize now that there is a
proper way to do things. You can’t go around burning bridges. You gotta honor
the people who try to help you. I’ve had kids break out on me like that with
Fifth Avenue and I wanted to ring their fucking necks. But I can’t get too mad
because I’m guilty of that same shit. People trying to help me and I just
ran ‘em over. It’s stupid. I realize now how it feels to be on the other side.
I definitely burned the
bridge with Blue at the time but we squashed it years later. I wanted them to
know that I do appreciate all they did for me.
It’s funny… there was a
minute there where Fabian got me into some shit and all of a sudden, I thought
I was an actor. I’d be out there saying maybe one line, if that… sometimes I’d
just be out there staring at people and I thought I was acting. So stupid. But
yeah, I remember calling up Jason Lee like, “Yo, I’m an actor now. Wanna run
through some lines and shit?”
He just laughed at me.
“You gotta go by these places
and learn how to act first!”
Didn’t you film a full part for Love Child back then and it never came out?
Yeah, I had a full part. Most
of the footage is out there now. There’s more to that as well but I’m not sure
where it is. Soc said he’s seen it around. I’d love to collect all that old
shit.
A back heel and an inward heel down the Embarcadero 7
in 1992? That shit would’ve catapulted your career. How come that footage never
saw the light of day back then?
I ended up quitting World to
ride for ATM before it ever came out.
I didn’t even care about that
footage back then. I think if I would’ve tried, I probably could’ve gotten it
back. But, to be honest, it didn’t even cross my mind. It’s dumb but I kinda
felt like fuck it, I’ll just go out and film some more shit. I think that had a
lot to do with being young.
Mike Ternasky filmed one of
those down the 7. Ternasky and Mike Carroll asked me to ride for Plan B back
then, saying they’d pay me more than what World was at the time. Rocco upped my
pay because of that. Plan B was dope but I just figured I’d chill on World.
Looking back on it, I might’ve done things differently.
What was your attitude towards filming and photos?
Filming and photos were fun
at first but after a while, I stated to feel like I couldn’t breathe. Too many
camera guys always around. It started to drive me crazy.
Skaters weren’t really tight
with photographers or filmers back then. Those guys were more about being
“work” for us. Obviously we were tight with Soc and a few others but for the
most part… nah.
Some of it was on me, though.
Sometimes I wouldn’t even feel like filming but instead of just saying that,
I’d waste people’s time. Make them drive me out to some far away spot and not
even skate when we got there… like a dick. Retarded.
I didn’t have respect for
anybody back then and I definitely didn’t respect people’s time. I just didn’t
know. I feel like I never had anybody teach me that shit. I brought it up
earlier, I didn’t really have a mother or a father. I grew up in foster care. Different
relatives and cousins. It was never a solid situation.
But didn’t you see skateboarding as a possible way
out?
I did but honestly, $500 a
month wasn’t gonna do much. That’s all I was getting from World. I’d been
getting $800 a month ever since my mother passed away when I was 7. I was used
to blowing that money on whatever I wanted, as soon as I got it. So with that
mindset, skateboarding didn’t seem like it could be this big life-changing
thing, ya know?
I grew up with a chip on my
shoulder. I was nice to people but I realize now that there is a rebellious
side to me deep down. There is something inside of me where I reach a certain
point and just say, “Fuck it.”
I have to imagine this coming into play with a few
unofficial shopping sprees in the World warehouse back then as well, right?
Oh man, are you crazy!?! Hell
yeah! Henry and I used to go crazy back there taking all types of shit… and we
didn’t even have to! We were on the team! We were basically stealing because we
wanted to steal! Even after I wasn’t on World anymore, I remember walking back
there with Shiloh and taking shit. I had my boy film it and everything… he’s
probably still got the footage. I grabbed 2 20 boxes of boards and nobody saw
shit. I walked right out and sold them all!
That’s just how we were. Back
in New York. Rick and I used to go boostin’ all the time. We’d steal Moet
Bottles and sell them to drug dealers so we’d have money for the clubs. Dom
Perignon. We were going out everynight. 15-year-olds walking into the club. Craze.
A lot of that stuff came up
in Kids later but those guys got in
on it late. We were doing that shit for a long time. Honestly, we were probably
the ones who showed those guys that stuff.
Why leave World for ATM? Rocco was unstoppable at that
point.
If Gonz wants me on his new
company, I’m going. Hell yeah. I’d already connected with
him earlier, like I was saying. We were skating a good bit together back then,
too. It just made sense.
I remember Hosoi wanted me to
ride for Milk and Justin Girard hit me up about Mad Circle, too. But I always
felt like the team you’re on says a lot about you as a skater and I knew ATM
was gonna be tight.
There’s something to be said for Gonz turning you pro.
Did you feel like you were ready? You were still pretty underground at that
point…
I mean, I’m not trying to
polish myself up here but I was really good. I thought I was ready.
Unfortunately, it mainly came
about because I got into trouble with the law. I was about to go to jail for 2
years and it was Gonz’s idea to turn me pro before I went. I guess he was
working on turning me pro already, it’s just the whole jail thing made it
happen a little quicker.
I remember him saying right
before I got sentenced, “Well, I was gonna give you a board anyway but here’s a
board now. Hopefully this will help out with the judge and he’ll change his
mind.”
The judge didn’t give a shit.
Skateboarding wasn’t shit back then.
Gonz wanted me to have money
when I got out, which sounded good to me. He saved all of my checks while I was
in there so when I finally got out, I had a nice chunk of money… 5 or 6 grand. It
wasn’t my guarantee, which was like $2,000 back then. Just my board sales: 3
dollars a board.
Why’d you get locked up?
At the time, I was really
into jewelry. But back in Brooklyn during those days, kids were getting killed
for necklaces on the train. Lots of people were getting robbed. So I
started carrying around a meat cleaver.
A meat cleaver?
Yeah, I was wearing baggy
gear anyways. No one could even tell. It was for protection.
I mentioned earlier that we
used to boost a lot, right? Well, this one time, my boy and I were in this boot
store. These boots were like $300 but they was the ill shit. So my boy just put
some on and walked right out. No problem. So I figure I might as well give it a
shot, too. But as I’m walking towards the door, this security guard starts
coming at me. He tries closing the door on me so I pull out the meat cleaver.
Another security guard comes and when he sees the knife, he pulls out a gun.
That’s the end of that. They charge me for armed robbery and I do 2 years.
You missed Kids
because of that, right?
Exactly, I was in jail and
missed out on all that. Harmony had written me into the script! The character
“Steven” in there… that was supposed to me! I had a script and everything. But somebody else had to end up
playing me… my boy, Johnny.
The day we went to pick up
the script from Larry Clark, that’s the same day I ended up getting busted with
the boots. I got caught slippin’. And again, the stupid thing was that I didn’t
even have to be stealing that shit. With my ATM checks and what I was getting
from my mother, I was actually doing alright. I could’ve just bought them… but
that part of me was trying to get over again.
Would you get a lot of support from other skaters
while you were in jail?
Definitely. I remember Shiloh
used to send me shoes. Huf and Keenan would send me money. Tim Gavin, the Gonz…
Hell, Guy even paid for a lawyer for me one time.
Ron Chatman flew all the way
out to New York City from California and took a 10-hour bus ride to see me up
in Buffalo. That meant so much to me. Everyone’s generosity and support meant
the world to me.
How’d you get on Menace once you got out?
Again, I burnt the bridge
with Mark Gonzales. That whole 2 years I was in jail, he was paying me and I
owe him so much for that… but being young and retarded, I leave for Menace as
soon as I get out. I didn’t even say shit to him, either. I just got my last check
and left. It was horrible. I can’t blame him for being mad.
But yeah, Menace was just
starting when I got out and that was my crew. They were asking about riding for
them but I wanted to prove beforehand that I could still skate after being
locked up. It just so happened that they were all about to go on a big World
tour together: Maurice Key, Reem, Joey… everybody. The problem is that I wasn’t
supposed to leave the state. I’d just got outta jail!
I started thinking and the
tour was supposed to last two weeks… I only had to check in with my parole
officer every two weeks! It was the perfect window! Fuck it, I’m buying a
ticket!
I bumrushed my way onto the
tour because I was still technically on 60/40 at the time. Rodney was kinda
tripping on me at first but once I started skating, he was definitely cool with
me being there. That’s when I officially got on Menace.
I remember after the tour was
over, I flew back to New York from Raleigh. I stop by to see my parole officer
and he’d just gotten back from a two-week trip as well.
“Hey man, how was your
vacation? Where were you at?”
“I was in Raleigh, North
Carolina. It was great.”
I got all paranoid and shit.
I just flew out of there… did he see me? Is he fucking with me? It was so
crazy. Of all the places, right? Luckily, he didn’t know.
courtesy of Bobshirt |
You got lucky, man. That’s a pretty small place to go unnoticed in.
Yeah, but I fucked up. Not
too long after that, I went out to Cali and I didn’t even worry about reporting
to my parole officer. Not only did I violate my parole, I also got arrested for
drinking vodka out on the beach by the DVS House. They threw me on a plane back
to New York in handcuffs. It was terrible… and another year gone for that one.
I was just starting to get things
rolling again. Menace was working out but once Rodney found out about me
breaking my parole, he didn’t want to get involved and kicked me off.
How was your relationship with Rocco? Did you feel
like there was any funny business going on there that some of the other heads
have talked about?
Rocco was cool. I’d hit him
up for money and it was never a problem. He was rich so he didn’t care. Riding
around in his Porsche back in the day. I remember he’d take us out to the Gap
all the time and let us spend $500 each. It’s funny to look back on, the rich
guy conning a bunch of skateboarders with clothes from the Gap. That shit is
garbage. (laughs)
As far as any funny business,
the only thing I remember like that was Joey Alvarez actually scamming Rocco. Joey
was skating for Cream at the time but he called up World Industries anyway and
talked to some secretary, pretending to be me to get boxes! He even got me on
Bitch with Sal Rocco! Just so he could have them send shit to his house! Even
my checks! I had no idea! I was in jail! And he did this the whole time! They
even sent him out a plane ticket to California! This is before you had to use
I.D. to get on a plane... so yeah, Joey’s first time to California was all on my
shit!
I would’ve never got on
Bitch… the Girl guys were my boys. So I looked extra crazy there for a while and
it wasn’t even my fault. But I couldn’t get mad at him. Joey doing that was so
ill, so crazy. You can’t get mad at that.
Amazing. What about that Venture ad where you’re
ollieing that rail in Jordans with that kid standing there? Classic shit.
I was pretty serious into
sneakers back then. I never wanted to be in some bum-ass busted skate shoes. I
always wanted my gear to be dope, even when I was skating. I remember picking
up those Jordans and couldn’t help thinking how they looked so good to probably
skate in. Some fat soles… fuck it, let me skate in these.
I ended up going out with
Mike O’Meally to get some photos that day. The spot was on Vermont, right
across from my friend’s skateshop, Warning. I’d been seeing that rail for a
minute. That kid just happened to be passing by at the right time. Completely
natural. No set-up or nothing. Crazy, right? That kid made the picture!
I almost nollie 180’d it, too…
I landed that shit but couldn’t roll away.
I had it like that back then.
Was it crazy seeing kids you grew up around, like Gino
and Huf, out in Cali skating and doing so well? Did they serve as any type of
inspiration career-wise for you to stay out of trouble?
Oh, it was dope seeing those
guys come out and make it in Cali. Honestly, I felt like I had a hand in paving
the way for kids like them from New York to make it. It also meant I was able
to skate with them again out in Cali, too.
But career-wise, I was
basically leading a double life. I felt like I was always being pulled in
different directions. I’d be out West on some skate shit but once I’d go back
to New York, I wasn’t even thinking about it. I was chilling with my brother
and cousins, gang dudes and drug dealers. I was getting money… let’s go shopping.
Let’s go get some clothes. I don’t feel like skateboarding, looking all fucked
up out there. I just wanted to look fly because I was always out going to clubs, which was never any good for me.
Skateboarding was always such
a positive thing for me but, again, I also had a side of me that wanted to hang
out with my homeboys and get into trouble. You can’t do both, man. I learned
that the hard way.
You moved out West early on but what about the scene
back home that was gaining traction around this time? Like Zoo York? Were any
East Coast companies ever an option for you?
I always thought New York
companies were cool but California companies seemed more legit.
I used to get shit from
people saying that I was switching sides… that I should’ve been on an East
Coast company or that I wasn’t keeping it real or whatever. Fuck that. I was
trying to be on the best teams. The best teams were out in Cali so that’s what
I wanted.
Fuck keeping it real.
You did have some Tunnel footage in Zoo York Mixtape though…
Did I? I was in a Zoo York
video? I didn’t know I was in that…
Yeah, a big backside 180 and some mini-ramp footage in
the Tunnel Club.
Oh, okay... Zoo York? Okay.
Honestly, I’m not sure if you
were even allowed to film in the Tunnel… maybe someone snuck in a camera on the
low. I don’t remember that at all but I’m hyped that shit is out there. That
place is legendary.
Speaking of legends, what is your fondest Keenan
Milton memory?
I remember him taking me to
the Beverly Center one time right after I’d gotten out of jail. He’d just got his
quarterly check from DVS and was looking at these earrings that were like $600
each. I started looking around at shit, too, just to pass the time while he was
over there doing his thing. I saw this chain that was so dope but I just got outta
jail. I couldn’t afford the shit. It was like $3000! That was a lot of money
back then.
Keenan looks over.
“Yo, try on that chain real
fast. You like it? Alright, keep it.”
I couldn’t believe it.
“Are you serious?”
“Yeah, it’s yours. Just stay
outta jail.”
That meant so much to me,
man. He bought me that chain right there on the spot. Keenan was the best.
Not sure if a lot of people even realize that was your
guest clip in his Chocolate Tour part.
Yeah, I’ve caught a few
sleeping on that one, not knowing that was me. Nollie kickflip over the grate
at Flushing. I liked that one because I felt like I caught it pretty high. That
was a rough grate, too. That thing would fuck you up.
Keenan wanted to hook me up
in his part. We grew up together skating in New York and like I said,
reconnected out in California. We were close, man. The Girl and Menace crews
were always real close. Not sure if a lot of people realize that.
courtesy of Dawes |
Being so close, were you able to recognize when the party lifestyle began to bleed over to more serious problems for certain members of the crew? Were you starting to see problems develop and possibly recognizing them in yourself as well?
Yeah, I could see some of it.
But that’s the thing: everybody was partying. It’s something as skateboarders
that’s part of the deal. It seems like it’s cool but it’s not. It’s all good
for a while, going out drinking and doing whatever, because you can handle it. You
don’t even realize when it starts to turn into this whole ‘nother thing… when
the shit catches up to you.
It caught up to a lot of us. I’ve
had my troubles. I was in self-destruct mode for a while there, killing myself.
I’d taken it too far. It was embarrassing. I hated for anybody from
skateboarding to see me like that. I’m alright now though.
Were you ever concerned about an accident like Keenan’s
being a possibility?
I was staying with Keenan at
the time when the accident happened. He had already been in the hospital four
times in the last year because his pancreas was swollen. He was drinkin’ too
damn much. Too much Jack. Waking up in the morning and literally pulling it out
from his pillow. Not even brushing his teeth yet. He was wylin’.
It got to the point where Rick
Howard told me not to let him drink. I started keeping an eye on him after
that, trying to keep him away from that liquor. But I have to admit that I’m
guilty of letting him do it. I’m guilty of partying with him. I don’t think I
knew how serious it really was.
“Nah, beer’s okay. I just
can’t drink liquor.”
I thought he'd be okay. I actually remember him asking if I
wanted to go out to that party with him.
“Nah, I’ll meet up with you
later.”
But I never made it.
Something came up and I didn’t end up going out there. I was supposed to but I
didn’t… and that’s the day he passed away.
There’s footage that my
friend filmed at that party of Keenan walking around, asking, “Where’s Steven?”
I couldn’t handle Keenan’s
accident. I didn’t know how to deal with it and basically went out of control.
I know you unfortunately got into some more trouble
not too long after that. I imagine the guilt being pretty severe after he
bought you that chain.
Yeah, the guilt when I got
sent back was just terrible. And it was the police who actually stole my chain
when they arrested me.
What happened?
This was back in New York. I
was all fucked up and got into a fight at this club. They kicked me out and I
ended up jumping into a cab, telling the driver to take me to Brooklyn. We take
off and I’m trying to tell him the fastest way there but he’s not listening. He
wants to do it his way.
“Nah, man… I’m paying. Go the
way I’m telling you.”
I’m already mad after fighting
in the club and now this dude won’t listen to me? So you know those plastic dividers
between the driver and the backseat? Well, we’re at a red light and I just
start punching that thing. The driver gets scared and jumps out the car,
running away. So I jump in the driver’s seat and take off. But I’m still fucked
up from the club so I end up crashing the car. That’s the last thing I
remember.
I wake up handcuffed and my
chain is gone. I still have my Gucci watch but it’s in my pocket for some
reason. I never took it off. Why would I take off my watch?
So when you get out, you got on Lucky?
Well, I went in for a while
again and once I finally got out, Greg Carroll hit me up out of the blue to
ride for this company. I gotta say, Greg’s been my boy through a lot of stuff
over the years. I was already skating again when he called and once I knew he
was putting me on, I really started going for it. Greg let me stay at his place
up in SF for 7 months or so and everything was starting to fall back into place.
I even started filming some. Lucky had a promo video and I had a lot of good
stuff for that. I think they only used one trick for whatever reason but I had
some stuff.
What was the story behind that overcrooks in
Gino’s Yeah Right part?
Gino asked me. I think he
wanted it to be just like how it was in Keenan’s Chocolate Tour part. I only had a week to film something
for it. I was stressing.
I randomly started trying those
overcrooks at the Thrasher park one day and they were coming together. Someone
mentioned that they had the perfect rail for me somewhere in Marin County so we
went out there. I didn’t get it at first. I felt like I had all this pressure
on me and I was bummed. I started praying and shit. Anything to make it work.
But I got it, yo. Hell yeah.
I got two tricks on that rail
that night. The backside overcrooks and a backside smith…. the photo ran of the
backside smith but the clip never came out. I don’t even know where the hell
that is.
With all due respect, a promising resurgence followed
by further legal trouble seems to be the running theme here…
Like I said, I was always
trying to hustle as well as do skateboarding. The problem was, by this point,
the hustling was overtaking the skateboarding half of it and I got lost. I got
lost in that world.
You really didn’t see me much
after Lucky because things were going so bad. I was big into robberies back
then. I did 32 months in 2004 for 7 robberies, got out and 20 days later, I
went back in for 16 months. Resisting arrest with violence and stolen property.
I’m lucky to even be out right now, they wanted to give me 14 years!
The thing is: if you go to
jail too many times, you basically become another person. The way you are in
jail starts to become who you are on the outside. It’s all about respect. I was
so used to having to react to everything, I could no longer let shit slide. I even
started hitting my friends! In jail, you have to react or people will just run
you over. I couldn’t get out of that state of mind.
But didn’t you get shot in the face? Wouldn’t that
serve as a wake-up call?
Yeah, you’d think. At point
blank range, too. He tried to take my head off with a bullet, man… lost some
teeth and shit.
How’d that go down?
South Central. I was out
hanging out on the porch with these girls who were Rolling 20 Outlaw Bloods. I
had an ounce of cocaine on me and this dude came up and shot me in the face. He
was gonna rob me but must’ve gotten scared and ran. He didn’t even take anything.
Just jumped in a white car and sped off. They never got him.
It took 5 hours to get me
into the hospital. I was actually putting cocaine in the hole the whole time to
numb my face.
Jesus, man. But after a few more bumps in the road, you’ve
been able to stay on the outside for a while now and seem to be making some real
positive strides. Looking back on everything, are you the type of person with
regret, wishing things had turned out differently or do you try to focus on the
present and the future?
I regret things but I realize
that the past is the past. There’s nothing you can do to change any of that.
You just have to live and learn. Hopefully you can help somebody else out so
they don’t make the same mistakes you did.
I see talented kids on the
come up all the time. I can tell when they’re starting to go down that same
road I did. I’ll straight-up tell ‘em. I’m not gonna sit back and watch when I
can hopefully change it for the better.
That’s part of what’s good
with Fifth Avenue. It helps me make sense of a lot of this and hopefully some
good can come of it. I love skateboarding, man. It’s just good to be around it.
Talk some more about Fifth Avenue Skateboards. Is that
your company?
Yeah, Fifth Avenue is me and
my partner, Jae Pryce. It’s our company. Jae’s the founder and he set it off a
few years ago. I caught wind of it, we worked some things out and now I’m a
partner. We’re just trying to do something good with it. Hook up some kids and
put out some dope product. The team is doing well, too. I got a couple of kids
out of San Diego: Mike Berdis and Brandon Lefever. They rip.
I’m trying to pass on
everything that I’ve learned over the years. Skateboarding is so crazy right
now but if I can help these kids out in anyway, I will. It feels good.
As we wrap this up, what are some words of wisdom that
you’d like to throw out there to the universe?
Just be yourself. If you love
skateboarding, stick to it. Don’t get into all that other shit. You can’t mix
positive with negative. You can’t live a double life. It might work out for a
second… you start thinking you got away with something but it’s gonna come back
and bite you in the ass. It doesn’t work in the long-run.
I’d like people to realize
that I was able to do a 180 with my life. I’m a person who struggled all of his
life but I’m trying to move past that. I’ve changed. I’m trying to do something
meaningful now. I care about these kids, man. I can see myself in so many of
them... so many Little Stevens walking around. I just want to help.
Real quick, I'd like to thank all the
people that have been there for me one way or another: Mark Gonzales, Jason
Lee, Kareem Campbell, Dune, Ron Chatman, Jake Brown, Filthee Martin Maldonado,
Fabian Alomar, my brother Albert aka Ref aka Sharky… Javier Nunez, OG Menace
team, Rodney Mullen, Harold Hunter RIP, Keenan Milton RIP, Justin Pierce RIP,
Pepe Martinez RIP, Guy Mariano, Shiloh Greathouse, Soc, Mike T, Grizzly,
Adidas, Eva Marie aka Eva the Vandal. Shout out to Nayomi aka Omi.
Too many to name throughout
my life. Thanks, though… @stevencales1.
Last but not least, the Fifth
Avenue Skateboards team, my partner Jae Pryce, team riders Mike Berdis and
Brandon Lefever, the Berdis Family.
One love. One life... so learn
it.
damn, Police Informer needs to FBI (Fall Back Immediately)
ReplyDeleteHad the privilege of meeting this man not too long ago he is one of the most humble dudes ever and so freaking cool had a lil skate session with him for a few minutes after we skated he blessed me with a ton of shirts and a few boards he even autographed one of them for me which will never ever be skated it's my holy grail frfr Steven cales is definitely a living legend I'm truly blessed to have met this man
Deletegreat interview
ReplyDeleteThe back 180 venture ad hung on my door as a kid at eye level so i saw it walking into my room everyday
ReplyDeleteThat was excellent!
ReplyDeleteamazing
ReplyDeleteInteresting to get some of the background on his career. He always seemed to be in and out regarding coverage. One of those guys you were always heard about how good he was, especially around 92, but no footage. I envision his life like the Mobb Deep Infamous album but with skateboarding.
ReplyDeleteHow you doing Eric!
holy shit,unexpected but i enjoyed it so much!
ReplyDeleteamazing interviews as you can expect around here.congratulations once more!
Great interview - always wanted to know why you never saw much outta him eventhough he ripped so hard and was always around the menace/girl dudes in the 90s
ReplyDeleteOnce again such a good read. Thx so much man for everything you do with this interviews. Can't wait for the next one
ReplyDeleteSkating on your board is a real solid way to make huge Fun. This outdoor activity have some especial benefits as they also required some space for riding. No matter if you decide to ride your board on the backyard of your house or the near neighbor area. you may feel a smile from the young neighbor girls from her from doors. Never think she fall in lovce with you she just enjoying your riding.
ReplyDelete