Chops and Corpsey go out for a smoke.
Thanks
for doing this, Dan. We’ll start out with an easy one... do you still not skate
in socks? When did you first notice that wearing socks while skating meant
guaranteed slamming for you and when was the last time you actually tried wearing them during a
session?
(laughs) I started wearing socks again about
15 years ago. I used to feel like I couldn't get the same boardfeel while
wearing them but I just wear thinner shoes now. I'm pretty sure I started
wearing socks when I left Emerica to skate for Vans. Now I just wear Chucks.
So how long did you go without skating in socks?
I mean, that can't smell too good, right? Was it just some kinda weird mental
block in your head that got planted somehow?
I’m going to say that I went a solid 5 years without skating
in socks. I would get swamp foot really bad, to where a film would form on the inside of my shoes… and yeah, the smell was horrendous.
I remember on this one trip, Duffy and I went on to
Australia and I'd been skating sockless for a few weeks in the heat. I tried
to dry out my shoes using a hotel hair dryer and the stench just permeated through the room for days. Pat was not stoked.
It was definitely just a mental block I had. Honestly, I
believe just about everything with skating is mental. If you think you can do
something, then all you have to do is do it… to a certain degree, anyway.
Another one I've heard, and although all
evidence has been seemingly destroyed, word has it that you pushed mongo well
into being a sponsored amateur? Any truth to that? And if so, what was the
pivotal moment that made you change to regular? Was mongo just more accepted in
Maine or something?
I grew up pushing mongo in Maine and continued
doing so throughout the 6 months or so that I rode for Foundation in Southern California and then for probably about another year into living in SF, riding for Think. There's
footage of me ollieing Wallenberg and skating around EMB while pushing mongo... though, I do
remember seeing myself in that footage and thinking that it looked fucked.
It was right around this same time that people
were beginning to push switch so I just started messing around with pushing differently. It kinda helped because I could push switch really fast
after that. I guess it all worked out. (laughs)
Maybe it was more accepted in Maine but
nobody ever really gave me shit about it anywhere else either.
I know
you and Rob Welsh would skate together back in Maine. Did the two of you ever
talk about moving out to California with dreams of “making it” in
skateboarding? I know you were already on a few smaller companies around this time.
I did know Rob back then but he was only 14-years-old. I
was 18 so I kind of looked at him as a little kid. I didn't really hang
out with him much.
I do remember one time when he asked my friend Jamie and I to
give him a ride home from the skatepark. We told him that we would but only if he smoked pot on the ride there. I remember dropping him off at his
house just super stoned. I could be kind of a dick back then. Sorry, Rob.
I just wanted to get out of Maine and
see more of the world. I mean, I wanted to get picked up by someone, too, but
really, I just wanted to get out and skate. I would see sunny California in
videos and the mags and just wanted to ride all of the
awesome shit I was seeing.
But
I gotta say that when it comes to you and Welsh, you are two of tobacco’s
finest in all of skateboarding. Is there some kind of unspoken thing with skaters from Maine and smoking?
Yeah, I don't know. I just picked that shit up
at a young age and haven't been able to shake it.
I'm pretty sure Rob quit, though. I hope he
has.
For the
record: Is smoking cool? And how tired are you of getting asked about
it?
I get short of breath and constantly have a
shitty taste in my mouth. So no, smoking isn't cool. It sucks, really. It's a
shitty bad habit.
You gotta admit though, it’s lent itself to some pretty cool ads and
photos of you skating. But seeing stuff like
that and being so closely associated with smoking, does it kinda bum you out
since it is such a bad habit? Did you have any hand in the decision to use
smoking almost as a marketing tool for you?
No, it’s
never bummed me out. The way I look at it is that’s just me. I smoke and
sometimes I smoke when I skate, so whatever. I’ve never really worried about it
influencing younger skaters. The way I feel about it is that it's your own personal
choice whether or not to smoke. And as far as using it for marketing, I’ve never
really had any hand in that but I don’t really care one way or the other.
But you have had more than your fair share of classic photos with tricks
done while smoking… everything from frontside inverts in pools to nosegrinds
down Hubba Hideout. Does smoking while skating help you on some level? Is it a
slight enough distraction with having a smoke in your mouth to make your trick?
Ever been burnt while doing it?
I will say that sometimes
smoking has helped me land tricks. If for nothing else, it has allowed me to
stop and take a break before giving it another go. If I’m smoking in any
particular photo then that trick probably took me a little while to land
because I usually don’t light up a smoke right when I first start trying a
trick.
But no, I’ve never seen it
as a distraction and I’ve never burnt myself.
Getting
kicked off Foundation via an ad in your amateur days… I asked Swank about it myself and he blames Beagle and possibly Jason Masse. Did those guys have it out for you or
something? Have you ever talked to Tod about
any of this and do you accept his apology?
I've talked to Tod about it and we're cool. I
like Tod. I don't hold a grudge over some dumb shit that happened 25 years
ago. I think I met Josh once when I was on the team but I really can't even
remember now so I can't really hold it against him either. We didn't really
know each other.
It all worked out in the end, though. We're
all good.
Rumor
has it that you got on Think by trying to 360 ollie the Gonz Gap… is that true?
Did you ever make that? And did you skate the Gonz Gap often back then?
The 360 attempt might have helped but really
what happened was that I met Bryce Kanights at his ramp, Studio 43. We started skating
and shooting photos together and he started to tell people about me. One day, I
was skating his ramp and I had flat spots. Greg Carroll just came up and gave
me a set of wheels, asking me to ride for Think. That was it. I'm sure you've skated with
flatspots before and know how bad it sucks so I really didn't have a choice.
Amazing.
I wouldn't say I skated the Gonz gap often but
I would jump down it every now and then. I did get to skate it with Gonz back when he
kickflipped it. That was insane. Definitely a good one to have in the old
memory bank.
I never made the 360 though. My foot slipped off my
tail and I tore my MCL so I never wanted to try it again. Then, once my knee
got better, I tried to switch ollie it. I landed on one but zipped out and hit
my head. That was pretty much it for me and that gap.
Were you
down with all the rave-stuff that Think had going at the time? Were you hitting
up a lot of raves with the crew back then and getting weird? Kinda hard to picture, honestly.
I fucking hated that shit!
I was actually going out with this girl at the
time and she had moved out to SF before me. When I finally got out to SF, she
had made this total transformation. She looked fucking crazy! She had all this
pink shit weaved into her hair and was dressing all weird with those goofy boy
pants. I did go to a few raves with her and tried ecstasy and all that but it just wasn't my
scene. I thought it was lame. But once I found out that she had cheated on me, I
was completely over that shit. I broke up with her, never went to another
rave again and started telling Think that they needed to chill out with the rave
graphics. (laughs)
Nobody on the team was into that stuff at the
time anyway.
What’s
the story behind that photo of you with the Think stickers on your head at EMB?
Dude, there's no story to that. I'm just a
fucking idiot and had a shaved head so I put stickers on it.
How were you treated by the “fresh” EMB kids
back then? Already deemed “not progressive enough” by Swank, were you just
another transplant t-dog at first?
I really don't know. I would see other people
get vibed out but it never really happened to me. I guess I just got lucky. Maybe I picked out the right pair of goofy boy pants and was able to blend in.
As an
all-terrain skater in the 90’s, did you ever feel boxed in-by trends and
politics? Did you ever feel pressure to put out more street footage over tranny
stuff for sheer marketability?
When I first got on Think and turned pro,
I definitely felt this pressure in my head that I needed to start skating and
dressing a certain way. You can watch my part in Think's Another Day on the Range video and see that I’m going through all that
shit.
After a few months of that kinda pressure, I just started
losing it. I would go skating, freak out and focus my
board pretty much every day. It just got to the point where I had to make the decision, “Fuck this, I'm just
going to skate how I want.”
There were definitely other skaters that
influenced me in that direction, too. Sean Young and Matt Pailes come to mind. I
also remember reading a Donger interview where he talked about not being into
skating super tech, that he just wanted to skate fast and ollie over the world.
That was good to see.
The thing about putting out street footage
over tranny footage, it wasn't really like that back then because there wasn't
much tranny around to put out footage on. I was living in SF and just
skating the city. If there was tranny around, I'd skate it but there just wasn’t any.
You talked about wanting to move out to sunny California to skate awesome shit, San Francisco was mecca back then. How did the spots measure up
in real life versus your perceptions from those magazines? Were there any spots,
in particular, that you looked forward to skating, only to find that you hated
them in reality? And how did the hills treat you as a Maine native?
San Francisco
turned out to be even better than I'd ever imagined. I love that city.
I remember always wanting to skate China Banks and Ft. Miley and ended up loving those spots. And honestly, I didn’t even know about spots like EMB until I got out there, which made it all even better.
The hills treated me great, man. I loved skating those things. I definitely got my share of road rashes but that’s just part of it all. I wish I could still live there and skate all that shit but life moves on.
I remember always wanting to skate China Banks and Ft. Miley and ended up loving those spots. And honestly, I didn’t even know about spots like EMB until I got out there, which made it all even better.
The hills treated me great, man. I loved skating those things. I definitely got my share of road rashes but that’s just part of it all. I wish I could still live there and skate all that shit but life moves on.
I brought it up earlier but how’d that frontside nosegrind down Hubba happen? That’s definitely a spot that seems way easier to skate in-theory than
in-person. I remember that nosegrind being a particularly heavy
trick at the time... And there’s two angles of that photo too, right?
Honestly, I barely even
remember doing that nosegrind down Hubba. (laughs)
The photos look amazing, though!
I actually just found out
about Theo’s angle the other day on Instagram, I never even knew he shot a photo. It
does look good, though.
Bryce's Angle |
Where’d the name Spiderman Dan come from?
When I first came out to California, I ended
up staying with Dave Bergthold for a little while and got to skate the
Blockhead ramp. One night, we were all hanging out and someone bet
me $40 to eat this huge spider… so I ate it. It was actually in the
credits of one of the Blockhead videos.
A couple years later, the Back to the City
contest was going on and everyone was skating EMB. I'm pretty sure it was the
same time that I tried to 360 the Gonz. But Oscar Jordan was there and he knew
the story so he started yelling "Spiderman Dan". I guess it just caught
on.
I always hated that nickname.
But how does that compare to Corpsey or Cancer Dan? Is there one you
actually prefer? I always liked Corpsey… but I guess just regular “Dan” also
works.
I just really hated “Spiderman Dan” for some reason. I don't even really know why. “Cancer Dan” was pretty good at first but after having a friend die from cancer, it just wasn’t funny anymore. I’ve
always been fine with Corpsey but I’d rather just be Dan.
Fair
enough. So for future generations, what’s the Dan Drehobl secret to skating
tight transitions? You always make it look so easy! Is it a weight distribution
thing or just saying “fuck it” and plowing through or what?
That’s confidential information. I’m sorry but
I can’t tell you the secret.
(laughs) Well, how’d that Ft. Miley feeble
grind on the middle bar go down then? You weren't really seeing many tricks like that at the time. Was that a battle to pull off? Such a classic ad.
I would skate Miley a couple times per week back
then and was just learning a bunch of shit at the time. As well as I can remember, I’m pretty sure
that it took a few sessions to figure out to how to skate the tight hip. You
have to kinda jam into it and then ollie late. China Banks is a similar
feeling.
Fort Miley is actually where I learned how to lock onto a round bar. I don't really remember who shot it or how long it took. I probably thought it was cool that I did a new trick but it wasn't really a big deal.
Fort Miley is actually where I learned how to lock onto a round bar. I don't really remember who shot it or how long it took. I probably thought it was cool that I did a new trick but it wasn't really a big deal.
I remember Cardiel had already ollied over the corner of it by then. I was also trying to frontside 180 over it when I started hitting my nose so I did a little noseslide to fakie on it, too, which was cool. But within a year after that, Phil ollied over it to frontside grind and that was it. He took the cake with that one.
What
about the boardslide to fakie over the bench at China Banks for your Damaged
ender? That was mind-blowing at the time.
That one took a while, like several hours. Then I had to go back again to shoot a photo of it with
Bryce. But soon after that, I started riding a shorter wheelbase so I couldn't
jam it back in anymore. Then Tim McKinney somehow lipslid the top of it with a short wheelbase anyways... I still don't know how the hell he managed to do that.
Of all the stuff you’ve thrown out at China, what are you’re most proud of? Some of those blindside
grabs over the bench had to be gruesome, right? And is there anything you’ve tried over the years but weren’t able to get?
I would have to say that boardslide fakie over the bench would probably be it for me. Because after a while, I figured out how to get those blindside tricks to where they really weren't that hard to do anymore.
I will say that there were were a bunch of other tricks that I've almost done there over the years. I've gone back to try them several times but I don't even want to say what they are because I never landed them. I don't want it to seem like I'm talking out of my ass.
I would have to say that boardslide fakie over the bench would probably be it for me. Because after a while, I figured out how to get those blindside tricks to where they really weren't that hard to do anymore.
I will say that there were were a bunch of other tricks that I've almost done there over the years. I've gone back to try them several times but I don't even want to say what they are because I never landed them. I don't want it to seem like I'm talking out of my ass.
(laughs) But talk a little more about that Damaged part. Was that part specifically like your first “serious”
video project? Because there seemed to be much more of a conscious effort with that project to really showcase your skating there.
Well, Think had put out that video Another
Day on the Range a few years before that and everyone on the team just hated it. Nobody on the team
had any input with it and we all talked so much shit about it that the guys
basically said, “Fine, make the next one on your own then.”
So we did. We filmed for about a year on Damaged. We mostly just used each other’s shitty Hi-8 cameras and then Phil Shao,
Paul Zuanich and I edited it all together. I like it. I think it's probably a little long but I can say that
I'm proud of what we did there. The quality looks like shit now but we could only work with
what we had at the time.
How much
importance have you placed on video parts throughout your career? Do you enjoy
filming and all that comes with it? Like, do you ever make trick lists or sit in on editing?
I've always looked at video parts like they're
pretty much everything to being a pro skater. Most of the time, I do like filming.
Sometimes it sucks but that's usually when I tell them just to cut it if I can't do it that day.
I've written down lists before, on occasion,
but they never seem to work out. And I do like taking part in the editing but haven't
really had an opportunity to since Krooked
Kronicles.
If you
had to choose one of your video parts as a personal favorite, which one would it be?
I'll say I'm most proud of my Transworld
part, Free Your Mind. That was a good time in my life. I was having a lot of fun and it was
good working with Jason Hernandez and Jon Holland.
Did working on a Transworld video represent a bit of a change for you compared to prior Think projects?
Yeah, it felt a lot more official because
you’re filming with these guys who are known for putting out the best videos.
I had just gotten on Krooked at the time and I already knew that we were going to be working on a video soon when those guys asked me to film for the Transworld video. I honestly wasn’t sure if I even had two parts in me within that short of a timeframe but I pulled it off... which probably has a little to do with why I was so blown out by the time I was done with Kronicles.
I had just gotten on Krooked at the time and I already knew that we were going to be working on a video soon when those guys asked me to film for the Transworld video. I honestly wasn’t sure if I even had two parts in me within that short of a timeframe but I pulled it off... which probably has a little to do with why I was so blown out by the time I was done with Kronicles.
But at least you got to show off your acting chops. How did you like making
your thespian debut with TNT in the cab? Classic shit, man. Was that just an
hour or so, screwing around in the car?
Yeah, we did all that in a day or two, I’ve always hated
having to do any type of acting stuff but I gotta admit that it turned out
pretty good.
For
sure. One thing I noticed during my research for this is a curious running
theme throughout your career of always having slam clips in your parts? Why is that?
Slamming is just a part of skating. If skating were
really easy, then it wouldn't be as much fun.
Right, but that can be said by everyone who skates, yet most people
choose not to have slam footage in there. You’ve had slam clips in all of your parts
since the Think days! Do editors just like watching you hurt yourself or something? Do you
get a kick out of watching yourself eat shit and personally like putting those clips in there?
I’ve actually made a conscious choice to include them in
some videos. I’ve also chosen sketchier landings over clean ones before, too. That
kinda stuff just seems more real to me. Like that clip where Sheffey lands the
double kink boardslide one-footed in the Life video? That shit is better than a
clean make in my book any day. You’ll always remember that clip.
Very
true. So how do you go about choosing songs for parts then? Wesley Willis, GG, Billy
Joel… always amazing.
I just like a lot of different music and have
occasionally put some thought into what song to use, which helps.
(laughs) What is your favorite Phil Shao memory?
I'm not even going to go there.
There's really nothing I could say that would even
begin to explain or describe him to someone who never met him. If you ever got
the privilege to meet or skate with him then you know. You got to witness his
light. If you didn't then you missed it. That's it.
But do you think Phil ever got the proper due for his skating? I feel
like, had he come up in skating at any other time, he’d have SOTY honors and
million dollar endorsement deals. The grind at Miley is just one of his many legendary
feats but unfortunately, the trends favored slow flatground and
50-50s on little flatbars at the time.
Yeah, it would’ve been great if he’d made more
money for all that he did but if he hadn’t died, he would have had
all that shit. As far as the little world that I was living in, myself and everyone I knew… we all knew he was the best.
The thing about Phil was that he was just
starting to hit his stride when he passed away.
Was
there ever talk of you being on his company at some point, Dump Truck?
No, I was helping him with it a little but
that was his thing. I was going to continue riding for Think… I might have
even suggested that name but I'm not sure. I remember telling him to just call
it whatever, that it didn't really matter. Whatever he called it was going to work out
once he built the image around it.
Talk a
little bit about the filming of Dedication?
When during the filming of this video did we lose Phil and when was it decided
that the video would be in his honor? How did that affect what looked
to be an already intense project?
I forget exactly how far along we were but I'm
pretty sure that we were done filming when he died. I don't think we even had a
choice but to dedicate it to him. It was our lives and that last part of his
was his life and that was that.
Well said. Moving on, what
inspired your tail stall-to-handrail phase? How did you even get started doing that?
I was living in this house that had a stoop and I'd always try to drop in from higher and higher on the steps until I could do it
from the top.
There was a house just down the street and while the steps were the same, it also had this perfect little low handrail. So I started fucking around a little, trying to tail ollie up onto it and it just kinda went from there. It was always fun to do.
There was a house just down the street and while the steps were the same, it also had this perfect little low handrail. So I started fucking around a little, trying to tail ollie up onto it and it just kinda went from there. It was always fun to do.
Later on, my friend Isaac randomly moved
into that house and it became a full-on skate house for years. It might still
be a skate house… I have no idea.
How did
Krooked enter the picture? And was there
ever any talk of you riding for any other Deluxe companies before that, like Anti-Hero possibly?
Mark asked me about Krooked early on and it really ended
up happening. I couldn't be happier.
But no, there has never been any talk of me
riding for Anti-Hero.
But in riding for Krooked, you did "cross 3rd Street" from Think to Deluxe, two of the biggest things going in the SF skate scene at the time. I know this move was contemplated by many but you were the first... which had to be gnarly, right? How difficult was that, politically speaking?
Well, when Mark asked me to ride for what would become Krooked, I didn't think that it was really even an option. But after Phil died, Think just wasn't the same anymore. I'd gotten quite frustrated with them after 10 years of butting heads. I'd gone to too many team meetings so I quit. I was honestly about to go do something else when the Illuminati pulled some strings and that was that. I'd crossed 3rd Street.
What was the "something else"?
Sorry, I can't talk about that.
Well, when Mark asked me to ride for what would become Krooked, I didn't think that it was really even an option. But after Phil died, Think just wasn't the same anymore. I'd gotten quite frustrated with them after 10 years of butting heads. I'd gone to too many team meetings so I quit. I was honestly about to go do something else when the Illuminati pulled some strings and that was that. I'd crossed 3rd Street.
What was the "something else"?
Sorry, I can't talk about that.
But how do
you go about projects like Gnar Gnar, Naughty and Krook3d? What are the
expectations of you and the rest of the team for these videos? Obviously
ripping footage but is it more a fun/art piece for you guys versus a “serious”
video? Or am I full of shit?
Those are all just the products of Mark’s
brain. Mark's the music maker and we're just the dreamer of the dreams. We just go along with it and try to have some fun.
What
about Krooked Kronicles? That had to
be a bit of a different undertaking for you guys, right? I do love your part in
that one, though. You brought up being a little burnt towards the end of that one, having followed your Transworld part so closely. Were you pleased with the part? It's honestly one of my favorites.
Yeah, Krooked
Kronicles was definitely more of a project where it was like, “You guys
have a year to film, we're going on these trips, yada yada yada”.
I like that part but I was going through some
shit at the time and that’s all I see when I watch it. I put a lot of
pressure on myself with that video and I was drinking way too much. You can
watch that part and see the alcohol taking its toll on me. I gain like 20 pounds
from beginning to end.
Who’s
idea was it to skate to Forever in Blue Jeans? Incredible!
That was all me. I went through a heavy Neil
Diamond phase that year.
What’s
your best Mark Gonzales story?
Mark’s amazing. He’s just one of those truly
gifted people. He was always my favorite skater growing up so maybe I’ve always
been a little reserved around him? I don’t know. But everything that dude does,
it’s just Mark.
I’ll tell you this story…. Back when I was
skating the Gonz gap with him the day he kickflipped it, everyone else would
climb up the ledge to get back up to the top of it but he would run and jump,
putting his foot on the edge of a trash can and then jump off that up to the
top of the ledge. I remember one time, his foot slipped and went into the can.
Anyone else would’ve just eaten shit but he pulled his foot back up and put it
back on the edge again before jumping up to the top, like it was nothing. My
friend Greg and I just looked each other, like, “Holy shit, did you just see
that?”
He’s just an enigma. Skateboarding would not be the
same without him, to say the least.
Corpsey
definitely went through quite a transformation around this time… what were the
series of events that led to your diagnosis of having Type 1 Diabetes? Crazy
shit, man.
Back about 5 years ago, I quit drinking. I
started losing a lot of weight but I just attributed it to the not drinking. I lost
30 pounds within a few months and towards the end, I started weighing myself
and I was losing a pound every day. I was also pissing about 20 or 30 times a day, too. And I was constantly thirsty.
I went to Hawaii to get married and while
talking to a friend about my symptoms, she insisted that I go see a
doctor. So the day before our wedding, I go to see a doctor and was diagnosed
with Type 1 "Juvenile Diabetes" at the age of 40. I'm pretty sure I
had it for about 8 years prior… but that's a whole other story.
Basically, I had been feeling like crap and just never had any energy for years. The symptoms and timeline all work out. When
kids get Type 1 Diabetes, it’s like bam! They’re completely diabetic. But for
adults, it’s much more gradual. They go through a period called the
“honeymoon phase” where they’re just slightly diabetic, which tends to last
about 10 years or so. My “honeymoon phase” lasted about 2 years after my diagnosis
and about 8 years before my diagnosis. I was just always really sick... never feeling quite right until I was finally diagnosed and put on insulin.
Were you
affected at all by Lewis Marnell’s diabetes-related passing? That had to be startling to you on
some level. Did you know he also suffered from your same affliction?
I didn't really know Lewis that well but it
really sucks that he passed away. From what I know, he passed away as a result
of having low blood sugar. I had another friend of mine who died after years
of neglecting his diabetes from having elevated blood sugar....
Having diabetes is like trying to hold a
manual through life. Too much either way will take you out. So yeah, it affects
me. It's actually scary as shit. But I just tell myself that it could be worse
and manage my shit from day-to-day.
When did the "air-to-rafter hang" turn into a serious component in your trick repertoire and have you ever bummed any ramp owners out with potential roof damage?
When did the "air-to-rafter hang" turn into a serious component in your trick repertoire and have you ever bummed any ramp owners out with potential roof damage?
Dude, I seriously don't know where that one
came from. But no, I don't think I've ever bummed anyone out with that... other
then maybe people just thinking that trick is lame.
(laughs) What's your favorite trick? And what’s one trick that you wish you do better?
Just a good ollie.
For both
answers?
When someone scoops it just right and makes it
look so effortless…
Magic. I gotta say one clip that always stands out for me is your Go For Broke switch heel over the 3rd and Army Pipe. I think that's the only clip of you ever even doing that trick. How did that happen?
Magic. I gotta say one clip that always stands out for me is your Go For Broke switch heel over the 3rd and Army Pipe. I think that's the only clip of you ever even doing that trick. How did that happen?
I've always been able to do those but I just don't really have the patience to learn any other flip tricks, let alone film
them. Whenever I try to film anything with flips, I always end up saying, “Fuck this!”
after 2 or 3 tries. That one just happened to work out.
I know it was a “wacky board”
challenge but how did you come up with the idea of using an assault rifle for KOTR 2003? Was
that an actual working gun or what? How’d you go about building it and how impossible was
that thing to skate? Super sick photo though…
That
was all Jason Pharis' idea. It was just a plastic toy gun.
A
crazy story about that one is when we were leaving the store where we'd bought
the toy gun at, we were playing around with it in the parking lot and ended up
getting surrounded by cops with their guns drawn! There are people who argue
that white privilege doesn't exist but I gotta think that if we weren't white,
there’s a good chance that we'd all gotten shot.
But
back to the board, we ended up cutting the plastic gun in half and then cutting
a skateboard to where it would fit inside it on top before taping and gluing it
all back together and mounting trucks to it. It was really long and skinny… and
felt pretty heavy, actually. It took me a couple of tries to land that air, though. I
remember the first time that I landed on one, it cracked the tail so we had to try taping it all back together again. I ended up landing it with the tail scraping on
the ground for the final photo.
That
King of the Road trip was really fun but I don't think I'd want to do it
again. You gotta go non-stop on that thing. It was fun once, though.
So Is
Freedumb Airlines officially laid to rest? What happened with the resurrection?
Nothing's official. It just kinda ran out of
gas..
I've always wondered if Freedumb was always supposed to be the name or if there were any potential other names? Because you always had the best taglines for that project: Assholes of High Society, Shit Sandwich… I have to imagine the contenders for the brand name being just as excellent.
I really wanted to call it Loathing. I wrote
down a list of names and showed it to Fausto and he picked Freedumb. I even remember
asking him specifically, “Are you sure you don’t like Loathing?”
“No, it’s going to be Freedumb.”
What are
typical sources of inspiration for your artwork? Like, where do the ideas for things like “asshead”
and “pisscat” even come from?
Just go outside and watch some people and you
should be able to see where Asshead came from.
Pisscat came from a cat that I had with undiagnosed diabetes. He would just moan all the time so I drew a picture of myself pissing on him instead of actually doing it. Poor Bubba.
Pisscat came from a cat that I had with undiagnosed diabetes. He would just moan all the time so I drew a picture of myself pissing on him instead of actually doing it. Poor Bubba.
I was always a fan of “Angel Love”
Yeah, we didn’t sell too many of those.
Any thoughts on taking your art a little more
seriously? I’ve always enjoyed it more than a lot of other stuff I see making the rounds. Ever thought about doing a show or possibly a book?
I’d personally love to see it. Why not?
I try not to take anything
too seriously. I’ve been in a few group shows here and there. The last one I
was in, I just drew a bunch of skateboarding dicks.
I love it. Just like the Enjoi series you
did!
Right. But I was working on a children’s book a few years ago... it was an alphabet of animals having
sex. I only had like four animals to go and I set it aside. Maybe I’ll try to
get back to finishing that soon.
Sounds like just what the world needs! Alright Dan, so as we start to wrap this up… what’s next? Anything in the
works for you coming up, skating or otherwise?
Actually I've been working on
changing my bowl around. It used to have 8 1/4 and 5 1/2 feet walls and I'm
changing it so that it’s almost all 7 feet tall with one 8 1/2 foot extension
corner. The way it's been set up doesn't really skate like a bowl as much
as just two two criss-crossing ramps and I’ve just started to feel like I've
done all I can do on it as it is. Hopefully this way will feel more like a big
mini ramp... where as before, it felt like a little vert ramp, if that makes sense.
Hopefully I like the way it
turns out and if so, I'll probably film another edit on it over the next year
or so. We'll see.
Sounds rad. In addition to that, I’ve actually heard there is possibly a
new Krooked video in the works? Any truth to that?
Yeah, it actually should be
out any day now. I didn’t have a lot of luck filming for it. Deluxe’s filmer
lives in LA and after a few failed attempts at having him come film me, I just stopped
bugging him. But I got some tricks in there that I’m pretty happy with.
It’ll be
good to see some new footage, for sure. Anything you’d like to add to this? Any
thank you’s that you want to throw out there or possibly some words of wisdom
from the man we call Corpsey?
Just thanks a million to anyone who has ever
helped me out… and also thanks to anyone who's ever been a dick to me, too.
We're all just humans. It's amazing we've made it this far.
Thanks to Whiteley, Rattray and Dan for taking the time.
I always liked the 'Angel Love',too...Seemed like a tough interview subject,but a great one,too.
ReplyDeleteKeep 'em coming,man!
There's a switch heel in a downhill line somewhere in Dedication, I remember being surprised by that one too.
ReplyDelete"It's the time of the season"
ReplyDeletePhil Shao. Best ever... maybe. RIP. Think Damage video is on my top 3 best skate videos of all time! Drehobl keep on rolling strong! Krooked is rad.
ReplyDeleteThank you both. Legends.
ReplyDeletePlease never stop doing these! Always a nice surprise to see whos up next.
ReplyDeleteDrehobl has his own way. an example is when you watch footage of him skate at a spot where other people are skating too; his trick selection is always a bit different, its creative and mix of tech and flow.
ReplyDeletefor sure,
not every interview can be full disclosure. I'm a self proclaimed dunce, but I do know some details of topics are best left alone, until one has time to really figure out how they might speak on it. but it makes it really intriguing too; man I fucking love skateboarding.
Dan's the best. Thanks for doing this. I also liked the Andy Stone interview from a little bit ago.
ReplyDelete