Chops and Ronnie sit down for conversation.
So going back, was all that footage
from your What If intro really you?
Pretty rad to have so much footage of yourself growing up, even down to
skating the big ramp at McGill’s!
(laughs)
Nice eye on that being McGill’s.
Yeah, that
was all stuff my Dad shot. He had a couple tapes laying around of me just being a kid. As I was always skating... I actually started skateboarding when I was 3 years-old, it just so
happened that he ended up filming a lot of stuff on my skateboard growing up.
But yeah, it really is cool to have all that.
It’s funny
because you can see on those tapes that I’m basically forcing him to film me.
“Hey Dad,
watch this! Wait, one more try! Film this one!”
So you’ve been filming clips from
the very beginning. And all that would eventually lead to Foundation, right?
Was that your first board sponsor?
Yeah, I was
on a flow program through Powell prior to that. They’d send me a board or two
every month and I also got to skate the Skate Zone for free, but that was about
it. Foundation was my first real sponsor.
Josh Beagle
and I both rode for Hot Skates in Orange. We skated together a lot back then
and Foundation kinda happened through that.
What was your take on Foundation at
the time? Because while they’d just rebranded themselves with Beagle at this
point, Glam Boys wasn’t that long ago
and I remember that video being kind of a goof. Just vert stuff and
partying.
I got on actually right after they'd just put out their second video...
I got on actually right after they'd just put out their second video...
The Magic F.
Right, and
that was all street stuff. Totally different. That one was actually really
good. Bobby Ferry was in that video, too. He rode for Hot Skates along with
Josh and I. So I think knowing that those two guys were in the mix and getting
their perspectives on everything, I was down. I thought Foundation was cool.
I remember
Josh taking me down to meet Tod at the warehouse and I picked out a couple of
boards… Tod kept on putting more and more stuff in my hands because I was
nervous. I didn’t want to grab too much stuff and bum him out. But I ended up
leaving that day with a stack of 10 boards and a ton of shirts and wheels. I
was stoked.
Poot: Finally, Clothes Big Enough.
Wasn’t that your first ad in a giant pair of pants with some girls?
It was also
my last ad in a giant pair of pants with some girls.
(laughs) Good point.
(laughs)
That was Tod’s idea. It seemed like everything he was doing back then was
working out and Foundation was really on a roll, I guess he figured that he
might as well start a clothing brand, too. That was Poot.
But yeah,
we were all in there… just an enormous pair of specially-made pants with a big
seam going up the back. Those were all Tod and Kendra’s friends in there with
me, I had no idea who they were.
“Let’s just
stick Ronnie inside a giant pair of pants with a bunch of chicks looking down at
his whatever and call it a day.”
So good. You also had an ad in the
short-lived Rocco-Swank battle. What were your thoughts on being thrown into
that mix? Did you know your sequence was going to be used for that?
Yeah, it
was a backside tail with a kickflip out on a curb that was 6 feet tall…. Wait,
6 centimeters.
(laughs) But you could get away with
that in 1993.
Dude, I was
stoked on that. That ledge is actually by my house so I still see it a lot. But
it’s literally only 3 inches tall, pretty pathetic.
I think
Chris Ortiz shot that. Josh was pretty big in the industry by that point so he
always had photographers around. He was the dude in the
spotlight, I was just a team rider out there with him, but I was able to get
some photos, too.
But again,
that ad was all Tod. I had no idea about what the photos were going to be used
for but I was into whatever Tod wanted to do. I was pretty out-of-touch with
all that industry stuff, but I didn’t care about the concept. I thought it was
cool to get thrown into the mix like that. People probably paid a little more
attention to it because of that.
There’s a theory that the
Rocco-Swank beef was all a publicity stunt? Thoughts?
Planned?
Probably. I never heard that but it wouldn’t surprise me.
If I had to
guess, I imagine it being more of Swank’s idea, Rocco probably just told him to
go for it. Rocco was so big at the time that I doubt he would’ve cared too much
about what Tod did, as long as he went about it the right way. I mean, there
have been ads where people have taken shots at Steve and he had them kicked out
of skateboarding. But Swank and Rocco were always friends. They were probably
laughing about it the whole time. Rocco knew enough that any attack ads on his
companies would only make him stronger.
But they
were on tour together for Barbarians
and that wasn’t too long afterwards. Everything between those two seemed just
fine to me.
I
always loved how random Foundation ads felt back then. Everything felt like a
series of one-offs from Tod’s imagination.
Yeah, an ad I always liked from back then was the satanic
one Tod did about the Everlasting Church of Foundation. I thought that one was
funny.
Backside double nollie heel, right?
Yeah, it
was a little black-and-white ad with videograbs of me going down the three at
the Santa Ana Courthouse but I always thought that one was cool… even though I
have the most horrible landing in that thing. It’s like I landed in the grossest switch noseslide or something.
It could’ve never been used in a video but it worked for the ad because we just
cut out the frames where I slide a u-turn out of it. But whatever, it made for
a good ad. (laughs)
How long did that even take?
(laughs) I
don’t know, shit just happened back in the day. Even if it didn’t happen fast,
I was at that age where I could try something for a month and it still only
felt like 5 minutes.
As an early rider, did you have much
say as the team started to expand? Some pretty high profile names came aboard, how much
influence did you have with the different direction Foundation was starting to
take?
I had no
say in anything but I didn’t care. I don’t even think I knew to want a say in
anything, I was just along for the ride. But I was liking everything they were
doing. I was stoked to have Frank, Heath and Steve, as the mystery rider,
getting on the team. It was fun, man. More people to go skate with!
The Super Conductor intro was reportedly done on ‘shrooms at Disneyland
for Frank’s birthday. Was there a lot of that kinda stuff happening at
Foundation back then?
I was actually on that Disneyland trip but I don’t
remember there being ‘shrooms involved… most likely not that day. But drugs
were a thing back then.
They actually might have something to do with how I was
first able to get on Foundation. I remember we were all planning a trip out to Santa Barbara
for a contest and I was asked to get some acid for the ride up there. I ended
up getting some at school that day but I didn’t know that you’re not supposed
to handle it.
Oh no!
Yeah, so
after school, I head over to the skateshop where we’re all supposed to meet and
I have no idea what is going on. I knew that we were going up to Powell for a
contest but handling that acid with my bare hands had me tweaked! There I was,
in the back of the shop, trying to take care of all my typical job duties…
stacking rollerblades or whatever, and I am tripping out, man. It was intense.
Luckily, the contest wasn’t until the next day so I had a chance to sleep it
off. But it was really pretty scary, man… the not knowing of what all was going
on with me. I wouldn’t recommend that to anybody. (laughs)
Talk a little about your Super Conductor part and what all went
into the making of that one. I feel like that was kind of your breakthrough
part, were you really trying to go for it there?
Jeez, I
honestly don’t think that I’ve really ever tried to go for it in any video part.
I wish I had! (laughs)
We were
just skating and filming back then, man. That’s all we did and we loved it,
too. It was fun! Because I don’t think you ever really feel pressure at that
age. There were never any struggles... I don’t even think we knew that we were
filming for a video at that point. Super
Conductor basically came from the realization of everyone having all this
footage. We’d all been filming so much that we had all this stuff, might as
well throw it in an edit and put it out.
If I
remember correctly, Super Conductor
was the first video that we actually made at Foundation, when Tod set up an
editing bay and handled it. Cocktails,
the video prior to that, we edited at Tony Hawk’s house on his machine.
That’s right! Because you had that
weird little bit on his ramp in that one. Would you actually skate Tony’s ramp?
(laughs) It
was more of a drop-in and kickturn situation... I don’t even know if I dropped
in. But he had that bowl connected to it, that was fun. I could skate that. But
the vert ramp was a different story. I’d just have fun skating down that
roll-in on the side. That’s actually what I was doing in that clip when I saw Josh standing at the bottom of the ramp, trying to shove a fucking camera in my face.
“Get outta
my way, man! I’m going 100mph here!”
But that
was awesome. It was just one day but that was such a cool experience to have.
For
sure. But going back to Super Conductor,
there are a few tricks in there at spots that had been done prior to your part,
like the switch 360 flip at Beryl. What was your thinking behind having those
in your part, too?
I definitely didn’t mean anything negative by it. I was
just skating, man. I wasn’t really thinking about who did what. That wasn’t
such a big deal back then. I don’t think I knew that it could even be
taken that way. Rick definitely did the switch 360 flip there first, which
probably inspired me on some level. He’s always been one of my favorite skaters
ever but I didn’t mean anything by that at all.
For sure. Another thing I’ve always
wondered, why the rap intro? And did you realize that was Justin Girard’s beat
from 1281?
No! Really?
Wow, I did not know that! That’s amazing! And I loved 1281! I guess I just never realized it. Both 1281 and Useless Wooden Toys rule!
Yeah, I
forget who filmed that little intro but it was actually kind of a tense
situation there. I’d completely messed up my room and my parents were really
pissed off at me at the time. I was just being a shithead kid, writing my name
on the wall. I can’t remember where I’d gotten that little Casio keyboard from,
but I started messing around with it to try easing the tension. My buddy
happened to have a camera with him so he started filming it. But by no means
was I expecting that to become the intro to my part.
Why the running theme of Trix in
your graphics? What was the thinking there? Just a big fan of Trix?
Actually,
no! But we were trying to figure out something to do for my first pro board…
which, Josh Beagle is the one who actually turned me pro. Tod asked me if I
wanted to turn pro and I didn’t even know what to say so Josh said yes for me.
(laughs)
But yeah,
we were trying to figure out what to do for my board and those Trix commercials
were on TV all the time back then.
“Why don’t
we just have the Trix rabbit killing all the kids so he can finally eat the
cereal? He’ll be happy for once.”
So that’s
how it came about. And, of course, I ended up facing the same problem after I’d
switched over to Blind. Returning to the Trix theme felt like the best option.
“Let’s just
cut the feet off the rabbit.”
I’m sure Rocco and McKee had something to do with that as
well. McKee was the reason for pretty much all of my Blind graphics.
So what was your experience like
with Barbarians at the Gate? How was
that project pitched to you and what was it that ultimately made you leave?
Because you do look pretty miserable in that thing.
(laughs)
Well, I kinda was miserable.
I’d just
got kicked off Foundation prior to that trip.
Oh… you got kicked off Foundation!?!
I thought you quit for Blind!
No, I got
kicked off Foundation, got on Blind and then was forced to go back on a tour
with Foundation again!
That’s gotta be awkward.
Yeah, it
was like hanging out with your ex-girlfriend right after she dumped you. It was
a bad situation. Getting kicked off Foundation was very painful for me. It
really did feel like a first love-kinda thing. And now I was stuck on the road
with them.
Not that
everything was bad on that trip. Some parts were kinda cool, but there was this
cameraman following us around, 24/7. They were constantly trying to get us to
do all this stupid stuff, putting us in the “craziest” situations. It was
miserable, man. I had to get outta there. Bring Heath in.
If I could
go back in time, I’d tough it out and do the whole thing. But I was just so
bummed that they’d kicked me off Foundation. I didn’t understand why.
But why did you get kicked off?
I still
don’t really know for sure. Tod just kicked me off one day, out of the blue. I
called him up to get some boards and he tells me that he doesn’t want me to ride
for Foundation anymore.
Just like that? Not even a warning?
But they’d just turned you pro! And you were killing it!
Yeah, just
like that. No warning or anything.
He didn’t give you a reason?
Not really.
I’ve actually had some opportunities to ask Tod about it over the years but I
never have. We usually just end up joking around about other stuff.
But I do
have a theory about all of this… wanna hear it?
Of course!
(laughs) So I think Tod bought Foundation from
Rocco for some kind of deal early on... I may be wrong about that, but I have a
theory that somewhere in the deal, Steve made the stipulation that if
Foundation ever had a rider he wanted, Tod had to let him go.
I say this
because while I was still riding for Foundation, Rodney contacted me.
“Hey, if
you ever need anything, we’re here for you.”
This is
completely out of left field. I don’t think there were any rumors about me leaving
Foundation for the World camp... not that I know of, anyway. But at the time, I
didn’t really think too much about it. I just thought it was cool that Rodney
reached out to me like that.
But
a little bit after that is when I got kicked off. I can’t help but think that
maybe Steve contacted Tod, saying that it was time to let me go because
Rocco wanted me instead.
It was
either that or unbeknownst to me, I was acting like an obnoxious idiot. Maybe I
just didn’t realize that Tod thought I sucked, but I truly don’t think that was
the case.
This is shocking, man!
(laughs)
Yeah, it was kinda weird. But all of a sudden, I had no idea what was going on
with me. I had a board out and was making some money, that came to a grinding
halt. I was living on my own! I still had to pay rent! What am I going to
do? It was scary!
I’d still
be riding for Foundation to this day if Tod had never kicked me off. Maybe… who knows.
Did you look around at all or did
you just call Rodney?
No, I
called Rodney the same day.
“Uh… I just
got kicked off. I don’t know what to do.”
“Well, who
do you want to ride for at World?”
“Blind?”
“Done.”
Obviously,
he had to run it by the riders first but he was going to make it happen.
So yeah,
after all that, I’m back on the road with not only my new boss, but my old boss
and Beagle as well. That’s why I left. It’s funny, though, because I’ll watch
that video now and think it’s pretty awesome. I just wanted nothing to do with
it at the time.
I can’t help but think of what it
said on your first Blind ad… “Easily Manipulated”.
Yeah, I
don’t know, man… Ronnie’s easily manipulated because we just stole him from
Foundation? I tried not to read too much into it. That was just Rocco being
Rocco… or whoever it was in charge of the ads back then. But I thought it was cool.
You were brought in as part of the
Blind rebuild, post-Girl, with Paulo, Keenan and Lavar. What was the feeling
like there? And did you know a few of those guys were about to bounce as
well?
Yeah, I heard Blind was almost done
after those guys went to Girl. Rodney was very clear that I was being brought
on to help revive the brand, but I was hyped. It was a bit of a change coming
from Foundation, my first sponsor that I’d grown up with, but Blind was just so awesome.
I had no
idea those guys were about to leave for Chocolate. That was hard, too. I
remember being pulled aside at the World Park and asked if I wanted to ride for
one of the other brands that seemed a little stronger.
“Nope, I’m
fine. I’ll stay here.”
I mean,
Blind has almost died a few times over the years, but that time was hard.
Suddenly, it was just down to Lavar and I. That was the whole team, with nobody
left from those earlier years. But I wanted to make it work. I wanted to go
down with it.
You always killed the World Park.
What are some of the more memorable events, either on or off-board, that you
saw go down there?
I wasn’t
there for any of the wilder stuff you always hear about, but it was a fun place
to skate. It always felt like a big deal to be there, even when I was on Blind.
Just walking into that place and being around all these guys that I looked up
to, it was insane. There was always something some going down there. You could
easily see these windows of opportunity opening up, in terms of progression.
Someone would do something to prove that it was possible and then everyone else
would jump in, taking it further. Everyone just fed off each other. Like, I
know for a fact that I wouldn’t have gotten the tricks I filmed there if it wasn’t
for all who I was skating with at the session.
It was such
an amazing park, too. A little hip, a manual, some little ledges and a bump.
That stuff was fun! It’s probably more of a little kid park by today’s
standards but who cares? That place was great.
Another one from this time, what
would you say is your all-time favorite Courthouse line?
Hopefully
the next line I do there will be my favorite. (laughs)
I actually
went there recently. Es Footwear was promoting a shoe and I got to skate with
Tom Asta for something a few months ago. We filmed a little thing but I was
super under the weather and kinda hurt. I had a day-and-a-half for it but nothing was really working for me. I got a few things but I
had much higher expectations for what I wanted to do. So yeah, hopefully next
time.
A favorite line there from back in the day is probably
the backside flip - switch back heel down in the fountain. That was fun. And to
be honest, the blue jeans and white shirt I have on there always reminds me of
Ronnie Bertino, which is awesome. He was always so good.
I also
remember doing a nollie tre flip into the fountain there one time. I still have
no idea how that happened… totally pulled that one out of my ass at the time. But yeah, that
place was always fun.
So would you post up there for weeks
at a time to film all that stuff?
Not really,
it was always kinda tough for me to get out there actually. It was hard driving
all the way there, skating all day and then having to come back home. So no, I
wasn’t able to get over there very often, I just tried to make the most of it
every time I did.
Another knit-picky one but the stuff
of legend, what about all that benihana fingerflip stuff you were doing at
Slam City that year?
I honestly
have no idea how that all came about. I was just fucking around on the course.
But you had variations!
I remember
cutting out this little thing from a magazine that talked about Christian Hosoi
and Lester Kasai…
I’ll be
honest, I actually think Benihanas are a pretty cool trick, especially if you
do them the right way. I know they’re kind of illegal, like rollerblading or
something. Razor scooters. That you’re supposed to stay away from them. But I
always thought they were awesome whenever someone did it right, down something
big.
I don’t
know where the fingerflip came in. I was screwing around with the regular ones
on the course that day when I got the idea to add that in and it worked
out. They were fun to do so I started seeing what else I could come up with…
varial flips, backside flips. I liked them but I don’t think people really knew
what to think of them.
Trilogy remains one of skating’s most beloved videos, but wasn’t that more of a
footage dump than actual filming missions at the time?
Which one
is Trilogy?
That’s where you skate to the
Eurythmics.
Yeah, both of the ones with everybody in there were like
that, 20-Shot and Trilogy. Those came together pretty
quickly. You’d hear that there was gonna be a video so you’d go check what
footage you had to work with and go from there. Typically, most of the main riders would already be
sitting on a bit whenever the video decisions were made, everything else just
kinda figured itself out.
Socrates
was always so easy to work with, too. He always just did his thing. Whenever I gave him footage, he’d listen to
whatever I had to say and come up with something that always pretty spot-on.
Everything he did, I was always hyped on and whatever changes I did want, he’d
make real quick. It was always super easy.
Was “Sweet Dreams” your choice?
Yeah, I’ve
only not picked a couple of my songs for parts. There’s the TSA Life in the Fast Lane video where I
didn’t pick the song and didn’t really like it. And then there’s a Dandy
Warhols song in one of my Blind parts, too. Nothing bad against them, I just
didn’t want to skate to that song.
But I was
hyped on “Sweet Dreams”. I always liked that song and it made me think about what all was going on in my life
at the time. I was traveling a lot back then.
Have to ask about that rumor of you
being on ‘shrooms for those switch frontside tailslides. Any truth to that?
I wasn’t
tripping out on ‘shrooms but we had taken some. We were just having some fun
that day and I ate a little bit. You can’t really eat much of that kinda stuff
and expect to go jumping down things. It’s not like I was flying high or
anything.
But four switch talislides in a row
down that thing is insane.
It’s just
real long. If you skate from the top where we were at, it’s not that tall.
Anyone with some pretty decent pop would have no trouble getting on there. And
it slides really well. A lot of people bring that spot up to me and I’m always
a little confused as to why. It’s nothing gnarly. Maybe doing a few in a row,
yeah, but I just got lucky. I don’t think it’s that gnarly of a trick or
anything.
Well, Kareem seemed impressed.
(laughs)
That was just a fun day, man. Everybody was out skating together, having a good
time, rolling joints. Those guys were always loud and flamboyant like that
anyway.
What were your impression of Josh
Kaspermania and the rise of the Kasperholics?
Shit…
that’s a good one because it’s tough to say. Josh is awesome and I actually
like what he did. I think everyone does, on some level. He just got so wild at
times. Being on the road with him all those years, I learned to get a kick out
of watching different people deal with his shenanigans.
Josh just
had his own thing going, man. He had fun with it. I never got to see him fly in
on a helicopter or any of that stuff, but he was funny like that. It’s hard to
explain.
For
instance, I’ve been going through old footage recently and I found a clip of
Josh walking out of a shitty-ass motel… somehow, he managed to have someone who
worked there push his bags out for him on one of those carts, with Josh walking
two feet behind him. It’s so funny to see because this is literally at a Motel
6. Not to mention that Josh is a pretty fit dude anyway. It’s not like he’s
some 90-year-old man. He could’ve easily gotten his own bags, the rest of us
did. But not Josh, only he would’ve done that sort of thing.
I also remember
him telling me once that what he was doing weren’t “Benihanas”, those were
“Kasparhanas” instead. (laughs)
But he was
sick, man. He definitely shredded on a skateboard. All he’d do back then was
skate, drink and play ping-pong. He could just be a lot. Being in the van with
that dude for long periods of time, he’d be doing his thing. It was almost
unbelievable at times. We’d all be looking at him like he was nuts. So funny,
man.
The kickflip into the bank for your Round 2 ender, how hurt were you and how
did the driver react?
(laughs)
Those were the old Green Burrito banks in Orange, off Chapman Avenue. No longer
there.
I didn’t
get hurt but I definitely put a few dents in her car. After I fell, I knew
right away that I was okay, that it wasn’t that bad. But the lady rolled down
her back window and she was freaked out. I’m pretty sure that I just popped out
of nowhere on her and she’d obviously heard the hit.
But even
though I’m okay, I start acting like I’m hurt a little. Nothing major, just a
little bit out of it and for her to give me a second. So she goes to park the
car, wanting to make sure everything is okay… and we take off. Because I
saw the dents I put in her car, I didn’t want to have to pay for that! That was
a Mercedes! I know while she’s genuinely concerned now, like, “Oh, my god! I
hope you’re okay?” I know that as soon as she sees her car, that will quickly
turn to, “That shithead! Look at my car! Where’d he go!?!”
I lived
down the street so I skated home real quick.
I just
wanted to get the trick. I saw the car coming but I didn’t care. Fuck it. I’m
gonna do this and whatever happens, happens.
Another classic, talk about that TSA
ad in the van with you, Muska, Penny and the rest of the dudes.
(laughs)
That was such an unbelievable time, man.
We were at
some demo and evidently, it was time to get high. I remember everyone being in
there, I figured I’d just climb in and hang out for a bit, too. I don’t even
really smoke but I probably did a little that day. It was more of just wanting
to get in the van with those dudes. Every time I see that ad, I can’t help but
feel that it was a little weird that I was even in there.
How was filming Menikmati for you? Looking at it now, your part only seems like a
handful of sessions.
I basically
gave them footage for Menikmati that
I already had. I really didn’t go out filming for it all that much. I went out
a couple times with Fred but he was always so busy with the other guys. And at
the time, I really didn’t have too many other filmers around at my disposal.
Was that intro message real or
staged?
It was
staged. Things were coming down to the end and all of the other intros were
pretty crazy. It’s so different
from the rest of them that it stands out. I mean, everybody’s intros are
so amazing, obviously, but while mine is definitely the extreme opposite of
that, you still remember it. Those guys traveled around the world… I just
stayed in Orange. (laughs)
But yeah, I
think I ended up having to call back 4 or 5 times before I got it right. I kept
getting halfway through it all and messing up.
“Aw, this
sucks! Fuck you!” and hanging up.
Shit, let
me call back and try it again. Don’t answer, Fred.
How did the idea for mirror lines
come about?
Just being
a skate nerd, I guess. Trying to come up with ideas for different lines, you
know? I thought that it could be something new and different to see.
Basically,
if you can’t come up with a really hard technical line, you have to come up
with other ways in order to make it interesting. I’m sure that played into it a
little. If I wasn’t doing some super gnarly trick then maybe something like
this will make it cool. And switching those tricks around was a lot of fun to
do.
So what happened with eS and you? I
heard they just didn’t renew your contract?
No, I quit
eS. They were going to renew my contract but I was going to take a
pay cut.
Things just
got strange for me there. You
have to remember that I was with that brand from the beginning. They chose me
and I always felt like they did because they liked the way I skated. But the
brand marketing and the ad campaigns were heading in a different
direction and I didn’t exactly fit where they were wanting to go… but I wasn’t
going to change the way I skated, either. I didn’t want to suddenly start
jumping on handrails, I don’t like skating handrails and hubbas. Unfortunately for me, all of the other riders were murdering that type of
stuff. I guess eS felt that handrails were what really sold shoes at the time.
I was
feeling a lot of pressure to start skating differently, which bummed me out. I
wanted them to use me for what I’ve always done. So I started getting more and
more scared and ended up sitting down with Don Brown to talk about everything. That
was the decision I came to.
I’m just bringing it up because when
I interviewed Koston, he seemed to think that your contract wasn’t renewed and
he actually cited that as a big reason for his leaving to Lakai a few years
later.
Wow… that’s
amazing. I never knew that.
But no,
they wanted me to stay with the brand. They were still going to pay me but
there was no talk of a Creager 2… not that this was a deal breaker but you
obviously would like to have a shoe.
What about the short-lived Nadia
project? How’d that come about and what ultimately happened there?
I was hit
up to start a shoe company. There were some people in place that had a factory
to get the shoes made and there was some money to get it going. Nadia was my
first venture into being more than just a skateboarder-for-hire, I was actually
going to have 10% of the company. I’d gotten to the point where I knew that I
had to start looking out for my future. I needed to have a piece in something
for whenever I can’t skate anymore and Nadia just happened to come along at the
right time.
I honestly
never cared for the name but was willing to go with it. We did have a couple of
meetings about it and I think I got talked into Nadia a little.
It turned
out to be a huge mistake. Not that it was all bad; I got to live in China for a
while and learn how to make shoes. But ultimately, it failed.
What happened?
It’s a bit
tough to say what all went down. Basically, the guy who was in charge of the
factory turned out to be
sketchy. I had paid for the production of shoes to be made and he ended up
taking off. He completely disappeared. So we
all just split after that. It sucked.
Terrible, man. Well, moving from
shoes back to more video stuff, what would you say are your personal favorite
and least favorite Ronnie Creager parts?
I’d say my
least favorite video part has to be Barbarians
at the Gate. (laughs)
It’s not
really a skate video, though, but I am glad to have a tiny role in there. But
that’s definitely my least favorite. I don’t really consider my TSA part a
“real” one either. That was just some thrown together footage.
As far as a
favorite goes, my next one! If I can get it done, I’ll be hyped. (laughs)
That’s a tough one but I’ll go with What If... even though I didn’t pick the song. I actually hated
using that for a skate part, just the original song I chose was denied. But I am happy with the skating in
that one and I like the “Happy Skateboarding” at the end. I was pretty happy about
the intro, too. I liked having that footage from my parents in there. They were
stoked on that, for sure.
Your parts have always seemed to
stack on top of each other, further progressing on riffs from the previous. How
much planning is there, with mirror lines and all that? Do you write this stuff
out or just wing while you’re out there?
I do have
trick lists a lot of times. Because your brain is always going with things you
want to film… but sometimes you’ll get to a spot and forget everything.
So yeah,
I’ll write down tricks or whatever I want to do at different spots. I feel like
whenever it moves to me actually wanting to set something up with a filmer,
that must mean that I really want to do it. But it kinda works both ways,
actually. Sometimes I’ll got out for something specific and then other times, I
just go out skating and see what happens. Maybe I’ll get lucky. (laughs)
My lines
are definitely planned, for sure. I’ll go to a spot and my brain just gets
going. What’s the hardest trick I can do here, here and here? Well, let’s do
it. Give it a few tries and if something isn’t working, bump that out for
another trick that might be working better that day. Nothing too simple because
then there’s no point to any of it, but you also gotta be able to get it all,
too.
What’s the longest you’ve ever spent
on a manual clip? And what’s your overall process when it comes to that stuff?
I don’t
really know. I’m sure I’ve tried to battle a manual trick for hours but it’s one
of those things where once you get it, all that struggle washes away. It’s safe
to say that every manual clip I’ve ever had in a video probably came from sitting there, trying something
over and over again for hours on end. Full days probably. But that’s skating. It’s still fun… not that I ever did anything so technical that I
had to go back for three days to get it.
But even in Trilogy, that line with the switch flip nose manual and then switch
tre nose manual. You don’t see too many manual lines, especially with something
like that.
The switch
flip nose manual has always been there for me somehow. I’ve always been able to
jump on the nose and hold it. The switch tre nose manual was kinda lucky for
me. I knew that I could switch tre up that little curb, hopefully I’ll land on
the nose and can hold it… It just
worked out. And my friend John Sirmon even made it into the background, too, which
is my favorite thing about that clip actually.
But I was
hyped on that one. I love switch tres and thought I had the skills to do it, I’d just never done it
before. So I threw it out there. Honestly, if I hadn’t made that one, I
doubt I would’ve kept trying it.
Favorite ledge trick? And which one
gives you trouble?
Trouble for
me would be the frontside crooked grind because I can’t stand on them. I can’t
do that “das pinch” thing people talk about. Never. I’m more of a slide, blunt,
tailslide guy. Never too many grinds.
As far as a
favorite goes, I’ll probably just say flipping out of stuff. That’s what feels
the best.
But, to be
honest, my brain is automatically set to look for ledges and I kind of hate it.
It sucks. My brain never fails to pick up on ledges over things and bumps over
hydrants. Always. Every time I go to the skatepark, I always have to force
myself away from the ledge and skate something else. It’s like I’m drawn to it,
like a curse.
So what happened between you and
Blind after almost 20 years?
(laughs) I
was kinda hoping you weren’t going to ask that.
It’s whatever you can get into but I
have to ask.
No, it’s
fine.
I mean,
there’s a part of me that wants to put the blame on other people. It’s tough
but it kinda boils down to the fact that after 20 years… well, really the last
10 years, the decade prior with Rodney and Steve was awesome. But I had to come
to the realization that with the new owners and management, there was no future
for me there.
I don’t
know exactly what my future was supposed to be there, but I was told several
times that when I was done skateboarding, I would have a place to do things. I
wanted to believe that I had a home there. But in the end, all they wanted from
me was the physical activity of skateboarding. And I’m not going to be able to
skate forever.
There was a
span of about 4 years where new guys were coming in and the company was
changing. We were all getting pay cuts and that’s fine. Skateboarding is
definitely slowing down for me. But I would’ve liked to have done stuff within
Dwindle. Maybe a company of my own or possibly a bigger part of Blind… a team
manager or something else along those lines.
At one
point, I tried running my company Etcetera out of Dwindle as an attempt to get
something going but it ended up lingering for about a year or so. I was really
serious about it but they didn’t seem to be too interested.
It’s
obviously hard to talk about. There’s so much shit in all of this, all balled
into one. I know that I can’t keep up with these younger guys, I just can’t.
But they weren’t allowing me to pursue anything else there. So I had to look
out for myself and leave.
Realistically,
it was getting increasingly difficult to be part of the operation. I almost
quit three times before, but I stuck with it. I knew that I was getting phased
out, but at the same time, I was told I had a home there. So I stayed, until it
became obvious that this wasn’t going to be the case. I mean, hell, make me a
janitor. That’s fine. Let me learn something and work my way up. Just give me a
chance.
It hurt,
man. I spent 20 years riding for a company and all of a sudden, I’m worthless.
Hopefully I can figure something out.
Looking back on it, do you think you
stayed on Blind for too long? Did you ever have any other offers to ride
elsewhere?
No, I don’t think I stayed at Blind too long. It was a
good ride, I just wish it would’ve lasted longer… but who knows what the future
holds. Strange things happen and cycles repeat… don’t they? (laughs)
Back in the day when skate times were low and riders had
left, I had some opportunities to do other things but Blind flat-out told me
that they needed my help, that they needed me to stay. I have no idea what they
expected of me but I was told that if I left, they were going to ditch the
company. That they weren’t going to do it anymore. I didn’t want the brand to
die.
Where did you almost go?
I never had
any full-on offers on the table
from anybody because I’d never let it get that far. I got hit up all the time
by people who “wanted to talk” but I always tried to be loyal. I wanted Blind
to work. It was always my #1 priority, even though they weren’t always my
highest-paying sponsor. I don’t like bringing up the money because Blind was
always more of a family and a home for me. The money didn’t matter.
So what’s going on with you now? You
brought up Etcetera and I know you had High School Dropout going…
Honestly,
I’m trying to figure all that out right now.
I started Etcetera with a buddy of mine, which is a brand
aimed at the well-being of skaters. Cool products, like insoles and ankle
braces, that actually work. That’s been going for well over 5 years now. I
decided to start my own board company, too. I haven’t had any real offers to
ride for anybody since I left Blind… a few smaller companies hit me up but they
just didn’t quite feel right, so I started my own called High School Dropout.
I’ve reached out to a few friends to help with
distribution... I want to keep everything going. But the thing I’ve found is that making quality boards and shapes is actually the easy part. My problem is that
I suck at sales. I mean, if anyone out there reading this would be interested in helping me out with this stuff or possibly distribution, hit me up.
I just
don’t know how to market myself
or my brand. I’ve always had other companies in the past helping me in
that regard. It’s scary. And it’s changed so much from when I first started
skateboarding, I haven’t been able to morph into this new role of whatever I’m
supposed to be. All I really want to be doing is skating, filming tricks and
having fun. Time to grow up,
right?
You mentioned a new video part
earlier, is that happening? I know we’d all love to see something new from you.
I’m always
filming. That never stops.
I do have some footage, I'm just figuring out the best way to put something out so I can get a little more mileage out of everything. We'll see how it goes.
I do have some footage, I'm just figuring out the best way to put something out so I can get a little more mileage out of everything. We'll see how it goes.
Well, I wish you the best of luck,
Ronnie. I know it’s a gnarly situation and you definitely deserve better than
this.
Thanks,
Eric. Don’t get me wrong, the entire experience that skateboarding has brought
to my life has been incredible. The people I’ve got to meet and the trips I’ve
got to go on. The places I’ve been able to see. I couldn’t be more thankful. I
just wish that it could last forever. I probably should’ve been a little
smarter with finances in the past, I guess.
But I always try to have a positive attitude about things, that's something I've always tried to represent. And most of all, I still have an awesome time riding my skateboard. I don't skate for anybody but myself right now, which is pretty awesome in a way. I can literally do whatever I want and enjoy it. Just sit back, enjoy cruising down the sidewalk, hit a crack and land on my face. It's all mine. (laughs)
But I always try to have a positive attitude about things, that's something I've always tried to represent. And most of all, I still have an awesome time riding my skateboard. I don't skate for anybody but myself right now, which is pretty awesome in a way. I can literally do whatever I want and enjoy it. Just sit back, enjoy cruising down the sidewalk, hit a crack and land on my face. It's all mine. (laughs)
special thanks to Ronnie for taking the time.
Absolute ledgend!
ReplyDeleteBlind currently has a sick team.. but the way Sean Sheffey didnt have a model, they disrespected Ronnie Creager, these guys are legends and STILL kill it...
ReplyDeletedefinitely deserving of having their names on a skateboard.
Fuck those Globe guys then if this is what Dwindle business is like..
Looking forward to that footage Ronnie, everytime I see you skate its super inspiring and smooth like a butter yes.
Like a butter yes.
You should do a board brand with chris haslam. Seems like you both got screwed by the same corp.
ReplyDeletei'm not sure creager realizes how good he is/was. it doesn't seem like he's just being humble or something, but like he just doesn't know. dude is creme de la creme.
ReplyDeleteHell yeah Ronnie youre a legend!
ReplyDeleteRonnie is ridiculously good on a skate By far my fave chromeball. Dig his smooth skating more than back to back handrails,zzzzzzz
ReplyDeleteAmazing interview. Thank you, both!
ReplyDeleteGreat reading ! Thank you so much for your skating Ronnie, and good luck for your next move.
ReplyDeleteThe caption on that behi hana finger flip is way too good. Sucks that he got led on by dwindle like that. Verbal promises are basically meaningless in many circumstances. The older I get, the more I lean toward getting shit in writing.
ReplyDeleteCreager, Daewon, and Ishod are the only people I’ve ever seen in person whose lines end when they feel like taking a break.
ReplyDeleteRonnie is a pioneer in street skateboarding. The time period between '93-'98 were such formative years in this arena, and Ronnie was one of the dudes who lead the charge. It's saddening to see the top pros from, in my opinion, the best, most influential era of skateboarding get done so dirty by companies that they were so loyal to for so long. Had it not been for Ronnie, Blind would've been gone in '94. Truly sorry that you were treated in manner that you were treated by Blind. Very low class on their part.
ReplyDeleteShri Ram Packaging Industries helps clients significantly in realizing the benefit of better packaging materials, and allows them to improve the appearance of the products.
ReplyDeletePaper Angle Board Manufacturer in Neemrana
Thanku..
What is this dating advice company crap???
ReplyDeleteRonnie is one of the best in the world. I would place him in the top five to have ever skateboarded in history. He does deserve the world! I hope his company works out. He’s one of those guys that deserves his name on a board forever even after he can’t even skate.
ReplyDeleteCreager, penny, koston, danny way, mariano, daewon, and mullen are the greatest street skaters of all time!
DeleteI've been a fan of dude ever since his nose Manny around the corners of the c block at E.M.B in super collider. And his switch tre to steezy avoidance of the pole in Trilogy solidified my admiration for Ronnie. Hell even his fashion sense is on point.
ReplyDelete