So, of course, we have to talk about Elijah Berle.
(laughs) It’s funny, I just
called him. He’s probably gonna call me back while we’re doing this.
So, yeah… Elijah. What about
Elijah? (laughs)
Well, all signs are pointing to FA.
When does this come out?
Whenever you want it to come out.
Well, if this comes out in
November, then yes, Elijah rides for FA. I mean, it’s pretty obvious. He’s on
Instagram with the shirt on, riding a board. It’s been in the works for a while
now.
But yes, Elijah rides for
FA.
How’d that go down?
Dill and I skated a lot with
Elijah right when he got on Vans and Chocolate, right before he started filming
for Pretty Sweet. I think he was only
16 years old at the time, but it felt like he was 26. We loved the guy. He had
a fucking mustache, smoked cigarettes and skated like a man.
So we always loved him, but
he was on Chocolate and that was cool. Those are our friends. But over the last
year or so, I noticed that whenever the kids on our team would all be
out together and run into Elijah, they’d start jamming him up.
“Ride for FA, Elijah!”
They were honestly the ones
who’d always put it out there. Dill and I never pursued it. But somewhere along
the lines, it started to gain momentum. I just kept hearing about it, so I called
Dill.
“Have you talked to Elijah?
What’s going on with this?”
“I don’t know. I’ll run into
him and talk shop but I was never putting it out there to come ride for us.”
So I call Elijah, just to
clear the air.
“What’s up, man? I’m hearing
all this stuff. We’re not trying to steal you but you’re a grown man. If you’re
ever feeling that you want to do something different, know that you have a
place here.”
That’s basically it. The
kids really wanted him on and it’s their team.
I can’t imagine the Crailtap camp was too thrilled
about this.
Nobody likes to lose a
rider, especially an Elijah. But I talked to Carroll, they were as cool as you
can be about it. Everyone realizes that at the end of the day, its Elijah’s decision.
Our team is already so epic
right now anyways. The only addition that I can really see is Elijah…
So no Jerry on Hockey?
No, Jerry is not on Hockey. You're actually the first one to ask me about that.
Well, there's a new FA/Hockey rumor about every 5 minutes or so, just trying to round them all up. There’s also been a lot of talk around Rowan
lately... and you have admitted to trying to steal him once before.
Yeah, but that was early on.
He was only getting flow by Baker at that point. This was early on in Propeller and I sent him a box. I was
actually hoping to get him on Hockey but he got officially on Baker right
after that.
Gotcha. Another one I have to ask: why the sudden
departure of Jimi Britches?
…Let’s not get into this one.
Fair enough. What about Kevin Rodrigues? Is he on
Hockey? And what about all this I keep hearing about a 3rd board brand?
Yes, Kevin Rodrigues is
riding for Hockey. But no, there are no plans for a 3rd company
right now.
But I have to congratulate you on all the success
with these brands, man. These rumors are a testament to that. But why do you
think that is? What makes FA/Hockey stick out in a sea of other brands?
Most importantly, I think
it’s the team. And then the imagery that comes along with it, which for FA is
all Dill. There’s just so much authenticity to it all. It’s not a bunch of
bullshit.
When people ask me about FA,
it makes me step back and look at how it’s all gone down over the last 6 years
or so, even before we decided to do the board brand. I look at certain moments leading
up to it, it feels like the perfect storm. The right things all coming together
at the right time, like it was supposed to happen.
Dill had come back to LA and
was getting his shit together. He was staying at a friend’s house before coming
to stay with me for a year or so. We just started skating a ton. He was sparked
again and opportunities were starting to come. I feel like through that year of
living together, so much shit happened that has largely resulted in where we
are now, for sure.
How much input do you have with the look of FA? I
know it’s Dill but how does that work?
Everything gets funneled
through Dill. That’s how we typically do it. I’ll just occasionally send stuff
over. There have been a few boards with stuff I’ve found but 99.9% of it is Jason’s.
He finds, makes and executes almost all of it. It’s cool, though. The great
thing about working with Dill is that he invites ideas. If you got ‘em, fucking
send ‘em.
Benny does a ton with Hockey,
too. A lot of the artwork, the filming, the editing... even down to clothing.
He plays a huge part in all of that and I’ll occasionally help out there, too.
But Dill and Benny are the consistent creatives.
As far as imagery goes, Dill
and I have a lot of things in common with how we grew up and how we see the
world. That alone is such a big influence on everything he makes. You might see
something and maybe not necessarily understand it, but Jason has a whole story
behind everything he does. It might be something going on with him currently or
maybe something from his childhood, like “Coke Dad”. That’s something I grew up
seeing and I know Jason did, too. That shit ain’t just some cool graphic, we’ve
seen that shit. That’s why it’s on the board.
What are some boards that came from stuff you sent?
A lot of our stuff is found,
just by digging through so much random shit.
John’s first pro model, the Sniper Board, I found that. But even then, how it works is that you send the
main image to Jason and he brings it all together. That’s where you get the old
men sitting around and that Bible with the militant on it. I just sent in the
one image.
I found the photo for
Donovon’s first board, too. This guy had shot all of these riot photos during
the U.S. Open in Huntington Beach, back in the ‘80s. Dudes are setting cars on
fire, throwing surfboards. It was perfect for Donovon, especially because he
was surfing a lot at the time. So I sent it over and Dill and Benny worked on
it together, burning out the paper and putting it over the image.
I trip on Jason, man. What
he’s been able to do and how good he’s gotten at it. It’s unbelievable. I’ll go
into the warehouse when the new quarter comes in and see a lot of the stuff for
the first time. I’ll be blown away.
What made you revisit the old Henry Sanchez-style Terminator
graphic? And the Jason Jessee graphic? You say every graphic has a story, what
about these two?
Most of my friends know that the first Terminator is one of my favorite
movies ever, but also during Propeller,
I swear I must’ve watched Henry’s Blind part multiple times a day for a year
straight. Every time before going skating, I had to watch that part. It’s something
I just latched onto while filming my part. Obviously, Henry’s always been big
influence and that’s an amazing part. Even down to the song, Henry was my first
introduction to Sabbath.
But, it wasn’t like I wanted
to do a Terminator board because of Henry. I just always liked the Terminator.
I’d found this old film magazine from the 80’s with all of these sick
Terminator production photos. I sent Dill this one of the Terminator, without his
face, looking into the mirror.
“Dude, I want this to be my
graphic!”
“It’s too Sanchez, man. We
can’t do it.”
The thing is, they’d already
been planning on a Terminator board for me without my knowing it. So when that
Terminator hologram board came out a few months later, I had no idea! I was
stoked, man.
What about the Jason Jessee one? Because, let’s face
it, there is a passing resemblance there to Nugent-era AVE.
Oh, Dill has always loved
the connection of Jason Jessee and I. Looking the same at certain points,
liking similar shit. We’d skated with Jason a few times back then and he really
loves FA. He was down to do something with us so I figured we might as well do
a joint pro model together. Dill was into it, we just had to figure it out.
Jason Jessee sent us a ton
of photos, like early class photos of him back in junior high. It was super
rad. But I knew it had to be this one skatepark I.D. photo he had. I’d seen it
before and knew that was the one. So he sends it and the edges are all fucked
up and melted.
I think that was the first
plastic applique board we did. I remember Dill wanting to make it just like the
I.D., with the same Incredible Hulk green and everything. Just a photo in the
middle. Jason Jessee loved it, too. So good.
You met Dill through skating essentially the same
schoolyards back in the day, right? How did it go to where he took you under
his wing?
Yeah, just by running into
each other at different spots in Orange County during the mid-90s. This was
during his 101 years. I’d see him at Huntington High and shit like that, but we
weren’t that close.
It wasn’t until 1997 or so
that we really became friends. I hadn’t really been skating and had gone to
Russia to live for 6 months. But when I got back, I was super stoked on skating
again. I ran into Dill at the Huntington Beach Park one day and we just started
talking. I was skating well and he’d just started doing the 23 thing.
“Hit me up and let me check
out your footage.”
We started skating a lot
together after that and then he got me on 23. He’s been my boy ever since.
Did you ever feel the need to “break out of his
shadow” or anything like that?
No, not really. I looked up
to him and his skating growing up. I was just stoked he got me on 23 and always
included me in what he was doing.
But weren’t you on Channel One before all that?
Yeah, I got on Channel One
when I was on 16. All that stuff with Dill didn’t happen until I was 18 or 19,
which a couple years felt like an eternity back then.
But yeah, I’d gone to Russia
for 6 months. I wasn’t skating. I really wasn’t skating before that or even
around, really. But I come back and I’m still on the team. It was kind of a
weird sponsorship. (laughs)
Was Russia just a trip or were you planning on moving
over there for good? In your mind, was skating done at this point?
I was essentially a high
school drop-out. I wasn’t skating. I was partying whenever I could and… you
know, just hanging out. I was a mess.
My step-dad, who’s raised me
since I was 3, he ended up over in Russia right as Communism had fallen. There
was lot of money to be made at the time and he was over there trying to get in
on it.
He’d call my mom to check-in
on me periodically. I’m sure he asked how I was doing and she told him the
situation. So he calls me. He’s a cool guy but he’s tough. He’s an ex-marine
who raised himself, putting himself through Law School after Vietnam. So he’s
gnarly, but he understood.
“Hey man, I wanted to hang
out when I was your age, too. I just went to the fucking beach all the time.
But you gotta do something. Go to school, get a job, or just come over here.”
I didn’t want to go to
school or work at some grocery store, wherever you work when you’re 16. Fuck
it, I’ll go to Russia!
I was initially going to
stay for a year. My step-dad was actually trying to start the first Mexican
restaurant in St. Petersburg. He was doing a bunch of other shit, too, like
moving artwork out of the country. But the Mexican restaurant was his thing.
I could go on for hours
about how crazy it was. Because you have to remember that he wasn’t living like
an American in Russia. We lived like Russians. Sometimes the water wasn’t warm
for days. You’re standing in an hour-long line for rice before going over to
wait even longer in the meat line. Sometimes there wasn’t much money so you’re
eating eggs and bread for 2 weeks.
Not that it was all bad. We had an apartment and it was fine. But it did have a big impact on me. It was exactly what I needed at the time. Because at that age, sure, I was pissed off about stuff but I was also spoiled.
So when I finally get home,
I’m fucking stoked, man.
“Dude! Taco Bell and
skating!?!”
That’s amazing.
So I’m back and skating a lot with Shawn Mandoli at the time, because
he’d just moved nearby. Shawn was actually trying to get me on Real for a bit,
flowing me boards. That’s when I made the call to Channel One and let them know
that I gonna see where this Real thing went. So I actually parted ways with
what was left of the company right before I met Dill. But they were rad, Marty
did so much for me. I was just so young, not really thinking about things.
Just, “I’m outta here! I’m gonna do something else!”
So Dill gets you on
23 and suddenly, you have all these projects. In quick succession, you’re
in a few 411s, followed by Feedback and
then Photosynthesis right afterwards.
How did you deal with all that pressure as a relative newcomer?
Looking back on it, I was
probably lucky in that I didn’t go on a lot of those Feedback trips. Like the Muska trips and all that, I wasn’t really
on those. Because those would’ve probably freaked me out. I was already freaked
out after the Workshop Industry Section.
That was a good amount of footage. I honestly didn’t think I had anything else!
The same thing happened
again after Feedback, going into Photosynthesis, another big video. What
am I going to do? I just did all my tricks! I don’t have anymore!
All of my Feedback stuff was filmed here in LA,
which made it a little easier. But honestly, I wasn’t super into Feedback, even back then. Not that I
didn’t like what Ty was doing, I just felt I had to focus on Photosynthesis. Jason and I didn’t feel
like a Transworld video was top priority.
How did Alien Workshop enter the picture? Why not
Aesthetics?
23 was cool but the business
side of it sucked. It wasn’t Sal’s fault, it was this other guy he was doing it
with. It just wasn’t working out. We had talked to Sal about the whole thing
splitting off, which would later become Aesthetics. We were down, but he was
still trying to get it all together at that point.
Somewhere along the line,
Dill goes up to Vancouver. We’d been skating a lot together by then. He was
ripping and I was right there with him. Dyrdek and Kalis bring up the Workshop
to Dill at Slam City. Alien had always been one of Dill’s all-time favorites,
so the opportunity to ride for the Workshop was an easy decision.
It didn’t happen there, though.
He came back and talked to me about it. And I’ll admit, I did have a moment
where I wondered what the fuck I was going to do.
It was Dill’s idea to see about
possibly getting me on. To his credit, he definitely wasn’t like, “Later! I’m
on the Workshop now!”
A few days later, Carter
called up to officially ask DIll to ride for Alien. I was the one who actually
answered the phone and when I did, Carter started talking to me. Here he was,
trying to see what was going on with me, but because I knew it was Carter, I
freaked out.
“Hey man, how are you doing?
What’s going on?””
“I don’t know! Uh… Dill… Let
me get Dill for you!”
I guess I came off as a
little stand-offish, I just didn’t know what to do.
Dill gets on the phone and
Carter’s like, “What’s up with Ave? Is he not down for the Workshop?”
Actually, I wasn’t even "Ave" yet, but it was Carter who named me that.
Dill gets off the phone a
little later and comes in.
“Dude, fucking Carter was
trying to talk to you about possibly riding for the Workshop!”
“Really!?!”
So I call him right back.
“Yeah, I’ll give you $500
bucks a month.”
“Sick!”
How was it being the new guys on Alien? Because you
both got on after a great purging of the team. Any Dyrdek hazing vibes?
It was pretty cool actually.
Rob and I got along right out the gate.
I was living with Dill at
the time in West Hollywood. I was living off $800 a month and my rent was $500,
so that was gnarly. Alien had a team house down in Claremont at time with Rob
and Mike Hayes, I just barged it. Free rent, man.
So I go down there and I’m
skating with Dyrdek a lot. We’re partying together and I met some chick. I
guess he was so used to young skate nerds freaking out over everything, I
must’ve surprised him because I was an actual human being.
I just remember one night,
Dyrdek being like, “Damn, you’re getting wasted. You’re getting laid. You’re
ripping… Cool, you’re officially on the team.”
…Even though I was already
on team. (laughs)
Obviously Photosynthesis
goes on to become one of the most beloved videos ever. But at the time, the
scope of The DC Video seemed just as enormous.
You talked earlier about putting Feedback
on the backburner, to a degree. Was there such a clear preference between Photo and DC?
The DC Video
was actually supposed to overlap with the filming of Photo but it didn’t end up working out. They originally had Jamie
Mosberg on there, going out to Philly and filming Josh and Stevie at Love Park.
But he was doing it on 35mm film. At the time, DC wanted this epic video, all
shot on film like The End. That
freaked me out, to be honest. I think it freaked out a lot of people, actually.
So filming for Photo was its own thing, out with Joe
Castrucci for a lot of it. That’s all we did. Going out skating every day,
trying to get footage.
But I’ll be honest, I’ve
never really liked my Photo part. I
don’t know if I was going through something at the time, even though I’m
fucking 20, but when that video came out, I just didn’t like my part. I feel like
with basically all my parts back then, I was just doing stuff that I could do.
I wasn’t really pushing myself.
So Photo comes out and to this day, every time I finish a video part,
I go through this period of depression.
“Who am I? What am I doing with
my life? I have nothing left to give.”
I have done this, to a
degree, after every part I’ve ever put out. That’s where I was for 6 months
after Photo. Luckily for me, The DC Video really wasn’t getting off
the ground with Mosberg. People were having a hard time with the whole 35mm
filming process. So they switch to Greg Hunt, and that’s when I start getting
my shit together.
The DC Video
is where I feel like I started to challenge myself with learning new tricks for
parts. Trying to take things further. But it was still a hard one for me. It
took me a while to get into the groove. I was in a crazy slump and had a lot of doubt after not being happy with my previous part.
But it did give way to that amazing intro with the Who.
Was that just something Greg put together afterwards during editing?
Yeah, Greg came up with all
of that. I wasn’t even around for the editing of that one. But he was right. My
temper was so fucked when I was younger. Total stresser.
I will say that in reviewing your parts for this,
you’ve had a clip of throwing your board in almost every part you’ve ever had.
(laughs) Wow. I guess so! My
anger… that’s just what’s in the gas tank, man. It’s just in there. It’s a part
of me.
I can control my temper a
lot better these days, but it’s still in there. I used to psyche myself out of
so many tricks, just because I couldn’t control my anger.
“Fuck this shit!”
Break my board. Session’s
done.
It was just too much ego. You’re
not supposed to pull that trick in 10 minutes. Who do you think you are?
So yeah, now it’s cool to
try a trick for three hours. (laughs)
Wasn’t there a rumor of you heading over to Chocolate
at this point?
No. I think on some random party
night, I might’ve been talking to Carroll as the sun was coming up.
“Dude, I’m gonna ride for
Girl!”
“No! You’re gonna ride for
Chocolate!”
It was so lame, man. Just
partying... So gross.
I don’t think we ever talked
about it again. (laughs)
We are approaching a darker time in your life now. Do
you think, with your background and all of this anger, you would’ve dealt with
these chemical issues regardless of the success you were experiencing?
Oh yeah, it was always in
there, 100%. Because I was already having issues before my success in
skateboarding. A big part of my going to Russia was because of my partying. But
even in Russia, I’d go get a backpack full of beers and get drunk by myself in
a park somewhere.
I remember blacking out and
coming home at 5 in the morning… which, who knows what fucking time it was
anyway. It didn’t get dark there during the summer. The Sun was out 24 hours a
day.
But yeah, that shit was
happening long before a skateboard career.
Not to glamorize any of this but you’ve said yourself
that you’re lucky to be alive. What’s something that stands out as best
representing the extremes you were going to?
Just about everything that
comes along with that type of lifestyle, especially when you start getting into
the whole street drug thing, too. The places you go to actually get drugs.
Dude, I’ll fucking drive
down Skid Row or some of these other places I used to go… it almost feels like
a different person. How the fuck did I get out of the car at this spot at 3 in
the morning? But I would. Walk around and talk to dudes, going back behind some
electrical box in an alley to buy drugs or get high.
Let alone, smoking crack for
days on end. The paranoia, afraid to go outside. Thinking I’m gonna have a
heart attack. On my knees, praying to God that I’ll never do this again.
I got in a significant car
wreck one time. It was during the Super Bowl and I was wasted. Pulling out a
bunch of money, hoping the dude wouldn’t call the police. Then I just ran. It
was awful.
My drinking just came out so
aggressively. There was a lot of fighting with whoever, out in the streets. I’m
lucky that somebody just didn’t stab me or shoot me. That somebody didn’t beat
the shit out of me or I didn’t die in a car wreck. There’s so many things,
man.
I would drink and drive
during blackouts all the time. Waking up an hour away from where I started
with no idea how I got there.
Would this
aggression ever fall out onto teammates or other skaters?
No, nothing like that with other skaters.
I’m not a violent person. I don’t like fighting and it’s not like I grew
up fighting. But I definitely have a lot of residual anger from my childhood
and I feel that alcohol would unleash everything to where I’d just become a
fucking lunatic. I mean, I’m in my 20s at this time anyway, but I feel that
alcohol would fuel this shit even more. No fear, can’t feel anything and just
massive amounts of energy mixed in with anger.
Is it fair to say your coming out of this turbulent
time is encapsulated by Mind Field?
Yeah, I think so. The DC Video came out when I was 23 and
I started on Mind Field at 26. Those
3 years in-between is when it really got the darkest with substances. Definitely
not a lot of skating there. But at 26, I started to get big periods of sober
time and found skateboarding again. Mind
Field is really me crawling out of all that.
How do you look back on that part with so much shit
going on at the time?
I like Mind Field. Like you said, there’s obviously a lot of things going
on in there. It’s definitely different from all the ones before it, I learned a
bunch of stuff for that one and was able to push myself… partly due to just where
I was back then. Tossing myself down something for hours and just eating shit,
basically because I didn’t care anymore. That’s not the best place to be at but
I’m fucking happy that project came along and turned out the way it did.
Didn’t you lose almost 50 pounds over the course of
that thing?
Ok, I’m not a big guy. I’m
5’10” and I typically weigh around 160, 165. But I remember going to Target one
day with my friend. He pulled down a scale and stood on it, then I stood on it
real quick. 199 pounds.
“What the fuck!?! No way,
this one’s fucked up.”
So I grab another one. 199
pounds. Dude…
“Yeah, dude, you’re fat. You
didn’t know that?”
I was always a binger. I’d
party super hard and then convalesce by ordering pizzas, eating macaroni and
cheese and pints of ice cream. That’s how I filled the void when I wasn’t
drinking or doing drugs, before going back out and getting sucked up again. My
whole system was fucked.
Is there a special meaning behind the Adolescents
song?
Yeah, there’s a lot of
meaning behind that one. I’m from Orange County, I think they’re from Fullerton.
But that song, in particular, reminds me of these surfer kids I grew up with in
Newport Beach. Their home situation was fucked, man. Their parents were drug
dealers, Mom was a speed addict. So, of course, that house was where all the
kids would go to get fucked up. Saturday morning, you’d wake up with 15 kids
sleeping on the floor. The Mom’s buying us all alcohol, giving us weed from the
Dad’s stash. Looking back on it, it was gnarly, but I spent a lot of time
there.
The kids were super into
surfing and they had all those sick early Lost videos. Those videos were rad,
man. It was these guys who ripped but also partied super hard. Everybody’s
wasted, setting dudes on fire. I think they used “Kids in the Black Hole” in a
part and it always hit me, even back then. Here we are, these kids in this
crazy situation… and now as an adult, I’m still in that fucking black hole,
trying to crawl out it.
There was another song,
though. I originally wanted a live Joy Division cover for my part but we
couldn’t get the rights to it. So I went back to the Adolescents. I think it
turned out pretty good.
Talk about “the Hat”.
That was Heath, Dylan and I
on a trip towards the middle-end of Mind
Field. We were all in that zone where you’re down for the suffering, just
wanting to finish the fucking thing.
I have no idea where we
bought it. But it was a pretty sick Stetson hat with beaver skin on it or some
shit. We’d actually been talking about cowboys before we saw it, so it just
became this thing.
“Dude, let’s buy this
sick-ass hat and it will be, like, the Captain’s hat.”
If you got a clip, it got
etched on the side of the hat and you got to sit shotgun for the entire day.
You got to pick where to eat, you controlled the music. Everything.
I think it started out for
one day and then maybe changed to whenever somebody else got a clip. So you
might actually get to ride up front for a few days, depending on how the trip
goes. But yeah, it was fun. By the end, it had all these marks and buttons on
it. We bought a bunch of pins… “One Shot, One Kill” was one if you got a trick
first-try. I don’t think we ever used that one, though.
How did you see the Workshop change over the years?
And when did you and Dill basically became the defacto leaders?
That’s a good question. Because
when I got on, it always felt like it was Dyrdek and Kalis. Freddie was always
around, too, even after the Habitat split. But I think between those three, it
was always their thing. We came into that.
As time went on, Freddie
went to Habitat and Dyrdek started to be less in the mix. But there started to
be some decisions made about riders where it seemed like Rob’s say was
most important. And even though he wasn’t around as much, he would still
enforce his opinion as an O.G.
The big change came when
those dudes left to do Seek. Because we were the guys who stayed.
When those guys left to do
Seek… man, I love Dyrdek but some of the ideas he would come up were just so
fucking retarded. At one time, he seriously wanted to name the company
“Silverback”, like silverback gorillas. Because Rob thought that they were the
silverbacks of skateboarding.
“Dyrdek, I love you, bro.
But you ain’t no silverback.” (laughs)
But they went off and gave
that a shot… and it failed. So they had to come back.
It put us all in a bit of a
weird position. Because they had all of these ideas. But now, it was like, “Oh,
you guys are back. No more Silverback Skateboards and now you want to put your
Seek guys on Alien, too?”
There was a big thing about
Colin getting on the Workshop after Seek. Dyrdek was pretty adamant about it
until Dill finally stood up to him.
“This is bullshit. Just
because your guys’ shit failed, now you want to bring your team onto the
Workshop? No, that’s not fair.”
It got pretty serious, but
in the end, Dill kinda backed Dyrdek down. I feel like that’s when things started
to slowly change. Dyrdek segued out, and while Josh still had his vision of the
Workshop, he was kinda on his own with that.
We started to make things
happen. We got Dylan on the team after Rasa Libre was done. Omar Salazar, too.
We made that happen. It started to become more of our squad.
How did you factor into the Dill/Berra beef that came
about in those later Alien years?
I think it started with how Steve
and Heath got on together. For Jason and I, we were both super down for Heath getting
on. But with Steve, while I had nothing against him, we just didn’t like having
no say in it. I always felt like we should’ve. So there was that, which
probably didn’t start things off very well.
Steve and I had issues
during Mind Field. There was a long
period of time where I honestly felt like only a couple of us were the only
guys filming for it. He ended hearing that I was talking shit… and I was. It’s so
fucking stupid now but at that time, it was serious.
“Where the fuck is this guy?
Filming a fucking movie? Sick.”
To this day, I’ve never been
in a tour van with that dude. And we were out there a lot. So yeah, this all
got back to him and we talked about it. I was honest with him, though. No
reason to lie about it, because I was out there. Where the fuck are you?
Looking back on it, it
doesn’t matter. It’s just filming shit. But things did progress from there.
Dill started to have his own things with Steve, which got really bad. When we
did one of our final Workshop tours for the Cinematographer
Project, we did a little article for it and, of course, Dill starts it off
with, “We kicked the fucking Scientologist off.”
That’s when it really flared
up between those two… but you know, he was off the team by then. (laughs)
There were lots of ups-and-downs with Alien at this
point but it did seem like Cinematographer
put everything back on track. Was it just too late? When did you start to think
about leaving?
I’ll admit to being in a
lull after Mind Field, as far as
skating and being part of the team goes. Dill was, too. But as we started to
get back into everything, we voiced our opinions more, which I’m sure had to be
annoying for guys like Mike Hill.
“Great, these guys come
crawling out of a cave after all these years and now they have a bunch of
opinions.”
But we were sparked. Cinematographer was sick. We had new
guys on the team, like Donovon and Terp. And we were trying to be more in-touch
with everything, telling them to stop making flatbars and shit. But it was all
out of love. We just loved the Workshop, man.
I don’t remember how all the
business stuff timed out. I know Burton took control towards the end of Mind Field, then Dyrdek purchased it
back around Cinematographer. I can’t
remember how long that lasted until he sold it again to the La Joya Group. We
weren’t even aware when that happened.
It was just weird to be
constantly hearing about all these things. It started to feel too crazy… like,
where is this all going to end up?
So Dill calls me up one day,
like, “I need to talk to you. I want to turn FA into a board company. What do
you think?”
“That’s fucking genius!
Because I was just gonna ride for the Workshop and then maybe go work in a
warehouse or something!”
But it did take a while to go
through with it, probably over a year. And they tried to get us to stay. But
with it being bought and sold like it was, things just weren’t making sense
anymore.
Did you tell the team prior to leaving? And who came
up with that handwritten Instagram post?
The handwritten letter was
Dill.
I can’t remember if we told everyone
on the team or not. I feel like a few people knew prior and the rest, I tried
to call or text individually that day.
Were other riders looking to come along with you at
that point?
For sure, but we were in no
position to take them. FA had a little something as Dill’s t-shirt thing over
the years, but bringing it into skateboarding was a whole new thing. We were self-conscious
about everything. And I know there were enough people out there saying, “Well,
this is gonna be fun to watch. These fucking dudes.”
We were questioning everything…
even leaving Workshop. What did it mean to this brand that was already
suffering? The last thing we wanted was for it to fall apart. We’d been there
for 15 years!
Our thought was that they
still had Dylan Rieder and Grant Taylor, in addition to everybody else. That’s
fucking crazy. Alien was still in a much better place than we were. I mean, FA
was just Dill and me. We had zero money, no business mind in any of this. Dill
and Mikey, who’d always done FA together, were going through a thing at the
time. Mikey had no idea what we were even doing.
So what are you going to do?
“Yeah, guys! Let’s go! We
got this! You guys cool with not being paid anymore? It’s just me and this dude
at the helm. We don’t really know what we’re doing but we’re going to be okay!”
(laughs)
No problem. Sounds great!
Right? We weren’t about to
take anybody at this point. It was difficult not having those guys onboard but
they were still getting paid. We’d just stepped off the fucking edge. Let’s just
see what happens.
We didn’t want to do the
thing where all the riders leave and here we are, the same company but with a
new logo. We weren’t trying to burn down the Workshop.
But I think after Grant left,
that’s what opened the gate. Once Grant split, they were toast. So
fuck, we’ll grab Dylan then, he wants to come anyway. And have John and Donovon
come over, too, knowing we’re gonna start Hockey with them.
Did either of you consider taking the easy route and
just going to a different company?
Not really. I think Dill
might’ve had an offer from Palace but FA just felt like something we had to do.
I was scared but I knew it
was going to work. It was still kinda exciting for me. But so much of the
responsibility actually fell on Dill’s shoulders, to be honest. He’s the one
who had to figure out what all this shit was supposed to look like. That had to
be hard, especially with me bugging him all the time.
“Let’s go! Let’s do it! This
is gonna be sick!”
He’s just sitting there with
a bunch of fucking magazine cut-outs and shit.
“Well, I’m gonna go skating!
You make some shit! Come up with ideas! I’ll be back!”
He was finally in a place
where he had to show up, man. People were depending on him and he fucking came
through.
What was the thinking behind having a crew of
entirely unknown amateurs? And how did you know this crew was ready to explode
like they were? Looking back, it’s almost like Love Child, part 2.
It really is amazing. But a
lot of who would become our team was already under our wing, getting flow from
Alien. That was Sage and Sean Pablo. Nakel was getting flowed by Real with KB
on Cliché at the time. But they basically all grew up together. And all of them
rode for Supreme, so they were always at the shop. They’d end up at a lot of
our sessions and we knew pretty early on that these were our guys.
Dill and I met Aidan in New
York. He was Workshop flow, too. And Tyshawn was on Supreme. He’d always skate
with our kids whenever they were in town. He was just another member of the
crew.
It wasn’t guaranteed. They
were definitely still figuring it all out. It’s not like they were already the
caliber of skaters they are today. It wasn’t a given and, to be honest, we
weren’t even sure in the long-term… but fuck it, let’s go with it! They’re
ripping!
We come from that Love Child shit and that’s really how we
saw it. There’s so much personality there. Each dude is unique and himself...
and It was all right there. It’s kinda crazy how easy that part was.
How much responsibility do you feel seeing these guys
wilding out? I realize that’s what kids do but we are aware of the dangers of excess.
What’s the fine line for you, without getting all Dad on them?
The majority of them are
actually pretty mellow. Of course, they’re partying. But they’re just
different. None of them are as bad as Jason or I were at their age. They’re not
running around, smoking crack and doing a bunch of weird shit. (laughs)
There have been a few cases
where I pulled someone aside, like, “Hey man, what you’re doing, the research
has been done. I can tell you where it goes. Do not do this. You got too much
going for you.”
But overall, they’re pretty
solid. They’re holding it together.
You mentioned a lull after Mind Field. When did things start to click for what’s ultimately
your legacy part in Propeller?
It actually took me a while
to get on board with that one. Even after that year of skating with Dill and Cinematographer, I was still in a weird
place. The Vans video had already started but I was lagging. I just hit these
bumps, man. I’d go out and just not be feeling it. I was so tired of the pressure
and couldn’t wrap my head around another 3-to-5 year project. I kept looking at
it as this length of time and the finish line instead of focusing on getting
into a daily routine.
When all you’ve ever done is
skate, that’s all you know. As time goes on, you start to worry about what’s gonna
happen when it’s all over. That’s where I was at. I was actually looking at
trade schools online during the day when I should’ve been out skating. But I
was depressed, man. I thought I was old.
You get so focused on your
age that you just start to feel like you’re fucked. Oh, you’re tired? That’s
normal. Maybe it’s time to call it quits?
I have a friend from AA
who’s always been kind of a mentor figure to me. He’s a bit older but just
gnarly… running psycho marathons with weights on and shit. I called him one day
looking for advice, because I was starting to feel like I should hang it up.
“Well, if you’re over it,
that’s fine. Just make sure if you leave, you know the reasons why. If you’re not
into it anymore, there’s nothing wrong with that. But if you think that you
physically need to be done because you’re 33, that’s just not true. You should
be at your best now because you have all these years of experience behind you. Right
now, you’re probably at your peak.”
He was totally right. I just
had to start looking at skateboarding differently. I had to ask myself some
questions, like how am I taking care of myself? How am I eating? These were some
hard truths because I knew I wasn’t giving it 100%. I just wasn’t.
That’s when I realized that all
my fears were bullshit, I was just afraid of what I was going to look like at
33. So from that point on, I decided to give this part everything I had, like
I’d never done before. I figured that at the very least, I’d be able to sleep
at night knowing that I gave it my best, regardless of how the fucking thing
turns out.
So I kept that focus through
the entire duration of the video. I did a lot of crazy shit, too, outside of
skateboarding to help me along. Working out, eating a psycho anti-inflammatory
diet, taking ice baths every day… all of this shit to constantly be in the
mode. I stopped looking at the big picture and started to look at the day,
trying to get the most out of it.
The Vans video is one of the
greatest experiences of my life. To turn that kind of thinking around, defying
the myth of age. I’m so grateful for that project.
Most of my previous video
parts, I’ll admit that I probably could’ve done a little more. But Propeller was every fucking thing I had and I rest easy with that.
How long that did switch 5-0 over-ender take?
There were a lot of flights
for that one. It was a battle, but by that point, my part was done. I knew it
was going to be my last trick so that’s all I focused on.
I went to New York for
a 2-week trip and that’s when I first started trying it, a few days before we
were about to leave on a tour. I got over it and put my truck down but I was
nowhere near making it. But I knew I could do it. So I tried it for a few more
hours and got broke off.
I go on tour, fly home, and
then back to New York. I was there for a week that time and tried it on two
separate days… because you’re so broken in-between. Still didn’t get it.
So I fly over to London for
a minute and come back through New York for another week. The day after I landed,
I got it.
I really like that for Photo, which I consider to be my first
real video part, I 50’d over the back of that same rail. Now, this many years
later, I’m going over it switch. That really meant something to me.
Do you feel at peace with how everything's worked out or does part of
you lament those wasted years?
No, because that’s what it
took to get me here. Propeller eased
all that. I don’t look back with regret because I had the opportunity to make
up for all that. I was lucky enough to get through everything and have it work
out.
In a way, I’m grateful for all
the carnage because I took the opportunity to live a lot of life, good or bad.
There would’ve been no Mind Field or Propeller if it weren’t for some of that
darker shit.
So what are you working on now, Ave? Still on that
anti-inflammatory diet?
(laughs) Nah, that only
lasted a year or so into Propeller,
but I still keep it clean. I don’t have the strictness that I put myself
through to push the reset button, but I’m still pretty neurotic. I think most
skaters are.
As far as projects go, there’s
been talk about another potential Vans thing. Not a Propeller-size project, but maybe something a little smaller. We’ll
see. I’m still out skating, though.
Good to hear. So as we wrap this up, what stands out as your favorite memory of one Dylan Rieder?
I just loved that kid, man. Just
to think back on all those years with everything that went down. Getting him on
the Workshop. All of the traveling…
To be honest, while it’s
obviously not my favorite time, watching him go through everything he had to go
through truly proved what a straight-up warrior the dude was. And I’m not just
talking about when he got sick. Watching him crawl out of shit before all that
to set himself on a course to becoming one of the greatest. He was relentless,
man. One of the best ever.
It was just so gnarly with him. I’d look at the dude and feel so pathetic about myself. How he dealt with everything he had to deal with, all the way to the end. He was just an incredible human being.
It was just so gnarly with him. I’d look at the dude and feel so pathetic about myself. How he dealt with everything he had to deal with, all the way to the end. He was just an incredible human being.
Big Thanks to Ave and the FA/Hockey Massive.
incredible. fantastic interview
ReplyDeleteThank you CBI and AVE.
ReplyDeleteGreat one! We need a tim Oconnor chrome ball next
ReplyDeleteThat was great, thankyou
ReplyDeleteGreat fxxxing interview :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you AVE and CBI for this interview! Love when someone knows how to do a good interview and the interviewer is open and talk´s about everything (almost, Jimi leaving...). As a skate rat as i am, thank you again! AVE you are one off the best´s ever!
ReplyDeleteAVE's interviews are always mad inspiring, the Thrasher one before he got SOTY was epic, now this. I loved all the Alien/FA stuff & his history, but his documentation of the journey of the discipline to live it right & do it all the way is why I appreciate homeboy & voted for him to be SOTY. The Sabbath/Ozzy songs in his video parts dont hurt either..
ReplyDeletefuck yeah AVE
Oh man AVE is one of my favorites since I saw photo which was I think 02 when we first owned it on vhs of course. And Dill all those years ago. Still my idols. Thank you guys!
ReplyDeleteAVE is such an inspiration
ReplyDeletethanks so much,
ReplyDeleteyou're clearly the best interwiever, and AVE is the best
we need the same with DILL now ^^
Great interview..i still love the mags but it is so nice to read the chrome ball interviews of your favorite skaters where there is substance and its not just a veiled promo with some questions thrown in. Thanks again chrome ball and ave
ReplyDeleteAmazing stuff! Inspirational to hear his stories.
ReplyDeleteThe worst board I ever had was a Steve Berra Alien Deck. I had no idea who he was; dude is a kook.
ReplyDeleteAnother great interview. It always makes my day when when a new Chrome Ball drops.
ReplyDeleteI wish you mentioned how his last name was misspelled (as Van England) in that debut ad for Channel One.
Now to go back and watch all those AVE parts again.
Inspirational!! Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteOne of the best interviews I've read through in a while
ReplyDeletethank you for this.
ReplyDeleteGreat interview! Thank you brothers.
ReplyDeleteAw, this was an exceptionally nice post.
ReplyDeleteI’ll bookmark your blog and check again here frequently.
ReplyDelete