swisher and bird sit down for some conversation.
photo: niko |
So
tell me about growing up in Houston as a skateboarder in the mid-80s? Were you
always focused on street, even back then?
Yeah, Houston definitely was not a hotbed for
street skating back then, I can tell you that much.
But the way it all started for me is basically
how it went for a lot of kids back then, the quintessential story of a friend
coming back from his California vacation with a skateboard. This new thing that
all the kids in our apartment complex had to try for themselves. Bombing down
the hill at the football stadium across the street, that sorta thing. And shortly
after that, a shop opened up nearby called California Dreamin’… which, how
amazing is that? But that became our hangout, right around the time those first
Powell videos were coming out. I just found myself there all the time, becoming
more and more immersed in it.
Cut to figuring out that the Skatepark of
Houston exists. It was on the total opposite side of town but things really
seemed to be happening over there. Obviously, the whole Texas scene was based
around vert… and I tried that for a minute but figured out pretty quickly that I
was never going to cut it on the Kahuna. And that crew of dudes at SPOH was so
gnarly anyway. I couldn’t mess with Texas. I’ll just stick to launch ramps. (laughs)
Street skating was still so new at the time,
it felt like I could evolve as it evolved, in addition to being way more
accessible.
Did
you have a lot of contact with that Texans vert crew back then?
It’s not like I was hanging out with them or
anything, but I’d always see them at the park. There were the O.G. dudes, like
Todd Prince, Craig Johnson, Ken Fillion and those guys. But the guy that always
stood out to me was Brian Pennington, who was a bit after those guys, closer to
my age. To this day, he’s one of the most naturally-gifted skaters I’ve ever
seen. If he would’ve skated street,
he’d be legendary… not that he isn’t already, but you know, we’d be romancing
him a lot more. But every time he showed up at the park, he was unbelievable. It
was my first experience watching someone completely invent skateboarding as
they went along.
Was
it weird being a street skater at such a vert-heavy park?
I remember when the Skatepark of Houston
finally got a “street section”… it consisted of a 10-foot roll-in going
straight to a launch ramp. A couple of parking blocks, that was it. And this was
at a park that had literally every size mini-ramp imaginable, not to mention
the little bowl and that infamous vert ramp. All of this stuff to skate and here
I am, driving all the way across town to roll into a launch ramp.
I’m sure it was confusing to people. We
definitely got fucked with, but it was all in good fun. Believe me, I would’ve
much rather been doing the shit those vert dudes were doing. (laughs)
So
piecing together a timeline… you started riding for Circle-A and move to Laguna
Beach with Bob Schmelzer? How does that even happen?
Yeah, I got on Circle-A through this kid named
Jamar from Phoenix. His mom lived in Houston and he started coming out for
summers. He was friends with Gavin, Schnurr and Colvin. That whole crew. So when
he’d come in, I’d always link up with him because he seemed up on all the
newest shit that was happening. He was getting Circle-A boards through
Schmelzer… and I can’t remember if I put together a sponsor-me tape or if he just
put in a word for me, but somehow the connection was made.
The dude who backed Circle-A had a shop in
Laguna and Bob had moved down there from San Jose to be more in the mix. I
think that I’d just finished my second year at University and was talking to
Bob on the phone one day when he threw it out there one day for me to come out.
“Fuck it, I’ll go down and hang out for the
summer.”
So I’m skating for Circle-A, but they’re not
really paying me anything. Getting paid as a sponsored am wasn’t even a thing
back then, so I got a job at the Ralph’s next to our apartment and that became
my thing: skating at night and whenever I wasn’t working. Because Schmelzer
and I were dead broke, man. There wasn’t a piece of furniture in that whole
place. But I didn’t care, I was just happy to be in California.
That’s also when I started skating a lot with
Ronnie Bertino and Adam McNatt.
Yeah,
I was about to bring them up as this is where I get tripped up on things.
Because it seems like, all of a sudden, you’re pro for New School?
Yeah, I can’t really keep track of it all
either.
I know things got kinda weird with the
Schmelzer apartment. I lost my job at Ralph’s after the manager told me to
spit out my gum… I just walked out the door and never came back. So I ended up going
back to Texas for a bit and whatever happened between me and Circle-A went down,
which I honestly can’t even remember what but I think it was amicable. (laughs)
Like I said, I was down with Ronnie and Adam,
who at this time, were just incredible. Again, skateboarding being invented
right in-front of me every day. But they were on Alva and through those guys, I
meet TA and John Fallahee. Alva started sending me packages while I was back in
Texas until I eventually came back out to California and worked in their
warehouse.
Shortly afterwards, Alva becomes New School,
but Adam and Ronnie both leave at the same time. I stuck around and we made
that “No Pools In This One” video and another promo for them… next thing I
know, I’m talking to Fallahee about board graphics. I’m not even sure how it happened.
He must’ve just thought it up one day, like, “Hey, let’s give you a board!”
“Uhhh… cool!”
That’s seriously how it went. No Ronnie, no
Adam, no Pat Brennan… making me the only “new” dude left that was in the
streets for “New School”, I guess. But I was hyped.
And
Fat Albert? I always heard you inherited that graphic…
No way, that was definitely my deal! That wasn’t
inherited at all, I actually asked for that. Because I was super into that
cartoon as a kid. Fat Albert was my go-to Saturday morning back then… even
though, Bill Cosby ended up kinda fucking that one up now.
One
of the industry’s most infamous darkmen, how were your dealings with Fallahee?
To me, he’s just the ultimate hustler. Even to
this day, he’s still making it work. Nothing stands in his way. I mean, he’s
definitely a funny dude. I realize he’s done his fair share of slick shit, but
he looks after his people, too. He had dudes in that warehouse who’d been in
and out of trouble, dealing with all kinds of substance abuse issues. He always
gave them another chance.
Funny story: Thomas
Morgan, Bokma, Weiss and I all stayed at his house one time on a trip out to
California. Four dirts showing up in the middle of the night, but he hooked it
up. Here he had a wife and kids, living in a nice place in San Clemente. He
could’ve easily told us to beat it, but testimony to his character, he was cool
about it. He let us stay for a while… until Bokma and Weiss passed out in his
van one night and freaked out his kid the next morning on the way to school!
(laughs)
But that trip
was crazy. We eventually ended up at that famous Powell contest when Mark did
all that stuff on the wall and Plan B had just started. This is when I had a
chance encounter with Salman that led to my getting on Real.
Yeah,
you ran into him, right?
Yeah, we slammed into each other during
practice.
I still remember walking into that contest and
Sheffey has on one of my Fat Albert shirts. Honestly, that could’ve been the
pinnacle of my entire “career” and I would’ve been completely happy. It’s still
so surreal to me.
But yeah, I was skating around and ended up
colliding with Salman. I might’ve weighed 135-140 pounds at the time… and he
was already a pretty big dude. He was coming back down from the vert wall and
totally leveled me. I thought he was gonna snap on me, too, but he was super
cool about it. We even ended up exchanging info afterwards, staying in touch.
But
how did that translate into riding for Real?
So the Salman connection was made. And because
I had gone on that California journey with Bokma, Weiss and Thomas Morgan, I’m
talking to them all the time as well. Not too long after that trip, Salman ends
up going to Toronto for a demo, and even though I was back in Texas, I still figured
out a way to drive up there to check it all out. That’s when the Real
conversation with Salman really picked up.
Funny sidebar to that, prior to Toronto, I
actually drove to New Jersey first and met up with Freddy Gall, who was
12-years-old at the time and also riding for New School. A friend and I
actually stayed with Freddy and his Mom at Freddy’s Grandmother’s house for a
bit. Taking the train into New York City for the first time with Freddy and his
Mom, another extremely surreal experience. Freddy’s Mom is legendary. She
obviously wasn’t going to let him go into the city by himself at age 12, so she
grabbed a 6-pack and rolled with us. It was incredible.
But yeah, I ended up staying in Toronto for a
while afterwards in a friend’s basement because the skatepark up there was so
sick, which is really when I filmed my “Get on Real” tape… even though I
already had a board out on New School at the time. My tape was almost all
skatepark shit but I sent it to Deluxe anyway. They were into it and wanted me
to come out for a bit. That was the process at that time, you had to go do the
whole road show with the team. So yeah, it took a while.
I still remember calling Fallahee before I
went out there, thanking him for everything, which is kinda crazy as I literally
had no guarantee from Real whatsoever. If Real hadn’t worked out, that would’ve
probably been it for me.
So I go out and stay with Salman at his parents’
house in San Jose for a few weeks before we head up to SF. This is when the whole
Embarcadero thing was starting to go crazy. That whole crew was already down
there… and even though most of them were only, like, 12-years-old, I was still
definitely nervous. (laughs)
Although it was intimidating, but I feel like
being with Salman helped me a get pass on shit. I connected with James pretty
quickly, too, which clearly had its advantages. But I’ve always been able to
get along with people, for the most part, so that helped. I just wasn’t down
there being a kook.
To
your credit, you’ve bounced around through almost every scene over the years.
Well, I don’t want to big up this at all, but
something that also comes into play here is that I wanted to have fun off my board, too. I was never just skate, skate, skate. Yeah, I’d skate but I also wanted
to get into other things as well, which made me a part of more things whenever
we weren’t skating. But that can go both ways, too, because as much as social drinking
can break down barriers, it also doesn’t help your skating much when you’re up
against dudes who only skate 24-7.
The
classic downfall. But it seemed like once you hit SF, you were getting a ton of
coverage.
Yeah, once they made the decision to give me a
shot, I had to step up. And being in San Francisco anyway, there was no shortage
of motivation back then.
One thing that played into this as well was
that we’d started moving towards making the first Real Video. There was a tour that Salman, Tony Fergusson and I went
on with Dave Metty filming, which was really the precursor for that video. One
of those early trips that would go-on to become the quintessential Real set-up.
Just a bunch of dudes in the van, going cross-country for 30 days. Do a demo
for a little gas money, pizza, some Cokes and hopefully a place to crash for
the night before heading off to the next stop. It was phenomenal. Just call
ahead to the next shop, let them know who all was coming through and give them
the spiel. Figure it out as you go. All bets are off.
Salman was in another world at this point,
skating-wise. So good to the point where you just felt the need to sit down and
watch at times. I think this tour is also when he started dabbling more into
religion. I remember him getting a tattoo in Chicago that had some religious
stuff going on. He was also super into the Rollins Band, too, which is kind of
an ironic juxtaposition, if you think about it. But he played that fucking
album nonstop. If he was in shotgun, it was Rollins Band. If not that, then
Metty was playing the first Pearl Jam album. Tony and I were all hip-hop back
then, so we were losing our minds in the backseat.
But yeah, we filmed that whole tour, which
kicked everything off for the video. There were a few more trips after that,
but that was my main one for the part. I filmed for maybe a year on that video,
if that.
Did
you choose the Steppenwolf song?
No, that was either Tommy or Jim, but they blessed me with that one. I could’ve got stuck with some crazy disco shit for the rest of my life. (laughs)
No, that was either Tommy or Jim, but they blessed me with that one. I could’ve got stuck with some crazy disco shit for the rest of my life. (laughs)
I remember Andrew Reynolds once telling me
that he almost used the same song for one of his parts. He said it in a way which
made it seem like he really heavily considered it, but then called it off at
the last minute because of the Real Video… Dude, you should’ve used it! That
would’ve been one of the greatest things to ever happen to me! (laughs)
Did
you know all that extra stuff was going to be in there, too? Like the Oaktown
slap and the 360s?
That Oaktown bit came from us fucking around
in some tradeshow booth. Jordan Richter was messing around on the carpet with a
deck and ended up winging it into my face. We just happened to be filming.
But no, we didn’t get to see our parts at all
during editing. I had no idea how it was gonna look until I saw the finished
product. That was Jim, Tommy and Metty doing their thing in Abracadabra Studios.
Where’d
the idea for your recently reissued Screaming for Vengeance graphic come from?
That was mine. Not that I was super into Judas
Priest, though I did listen to them at times. I just remember seeing that cover
one day and thinking it would be an awesome graphic.
Graphics back then were always so random
because the turnover was psycho. It felt like every week, you had to come up
with a new idea. After a while, everybody started going to book stores and
picking up books just to rip off ideas from.
But do you remember my bong graphic? They only
made hats and stickers out of it, just a bong that said “Bird”. I’ve never been
much of a weed guy but people still ask about that one to this day… and the boards
never even came out! It actually goes back to the Rollins album we were just
talking about. I had an idea based off its title “Part Animal, Part Machine”…
mine was going to be a 2-board graphic called “Party Animal, Party Machine”.
One board being a bong and the other being a keg.
Kickflip Noseslide, Mini Hubba... blame the paper. |
That’s
amazing!
Yeah, I shouldn’t have backed out of that one.
They actually mocked it up and everything, I just got all nervous about people interpreting
it as me being some party shitbag. But the hats and stickers were already made
so those got out. I remember going to Sacto around that time and people were repping
that stuff pretty hard. I blew it on that one. But I might’ve had to start
smoking weed, which I’ve always sucked at, so it’s definitely for the better.
How
was life as a successful pro in 1993, with skateboarding being so small?
It’s not like I was balling but I had a few
good royalty checks over the years that got me through. I was essentially
living the gypsy life until the Alien House. Before that, I just stayed at
Klindt’s house, so it’s not like I was paying any rent.
You didn’t really need much money to make it
seem like you were living back then. You don’t need a car in SF. You’re going
to Copeland’s for shoes, Macy’s for Tommy Hilfiger or Nautica shit. That and
some shitty fast food was pretty much it. In hindsight, it seems pretty harsh
but at the time, I was living the dream. I remember opening up my Wells Fargo
checking account at the end of Market Street by Embarcadero with a $3,000
check, like, “I’m here! Let’s fucking do this!”
Well,
a local Portland business owner likes to tell the story of a young Kelly Bird
rabbit-punching Matt Field while on tour…
(laughs) Micke’s favorite story. I swear to
God, every time someone new rolls into Cat’s Paw and I’m there, he has to tell
that story.
Is
that your best tour story?
(laughs) I don’t even think it’s all that good,
but Micke sure loves it!
So the tour was me, Joey Bast, Drake, Coco,
Matt Rodriguez and obviously Micke. It was one of those tours where a few of us
were on the whole trip with other guys flying in and out. I was one of the guys
on the whole thing and you know how it is, everyone likes to establish their
own little space in the van for all your bullshit. It becomes your home, you
know?
What happened was that Field came onto the
tour and sits right in my space that I’d been calling home for the past few
weeks.
“Hey man, that’s my spot.”
I still remember him looking at me and saying,
“Nope. Not moving.”
And he wasn’t gonna move. So I don’t exactly
remember how the rest of it went down, Micke clearly remembers this way better
than I do. But to hear him tell it, there were words and I definitely put a
pillow over Field’s head and rabbit-punched him a few times. (laughs)
It wasn’t a big deal. More comical than
anything, just being young. Matt’s a great dude and still out there doing his
thing. Nothing but respect to him.
What’s
the story behind that Venture ad with you, Carroll, Jovontae and Kelch?
That was total happenstance. Greg Carroll just
happened to have a Venture ad due that day and needed something. So he rolls on
down to Embarcadero to see who’s there. Oh, and James has his hot rod there,
too! Great!
“Hey, stand in front of James’ car and hold these
trucks.”
That’s really how it went down. We all rode
for Venture and just happened to be there that day. I look like I’m 12 years
old in that photo.
I always loved that Droors ad of yours… the
Best Way To Prevent Aids.
You know how I
talked earlier about us going into the bookstore for graphics? Ken was doing
that same thing for ads. Just flipping through different art books and
recreating the photos he liked but with skateboarding in them. That’s basically
how Ken and Niko came up with most of their shit.
When it came
time to do mine, there wasn’t really any concept attached to it up front like
that. So we literally just walked around downtown San Diego one night, trying
to figure something out. Ken happened to see that sign and threw it out there.
“Hey, why
don’t you just go up there and stand on that sign?”
That was
pretty much it. I was always stoked to have a Droors ad but that one kinda felt
like an outlier compared to the other ones.
I thought it was cool.
Thanks, but I
think people just thought it was weird. Everybody
would always ask me what it meant… I just started making up shit after a while.
It really just came down to needing an ad again.
“Go stand on
that thing and try to look cool!”
We didn’t
even set up lights, just firing off from the street!
So in your never-ending travels, you go up to
Vancouver for a sec before heading down to San Diego and the Alien house? Is
that right?
Vancouver was
a quick one, actually. I couldn’t live there for longer than 6 months at a time
because of visa stuff, which ended up becoming too much of a problem. But yeah,
that scene was amazing. I’ve always loved Canada, too, so I went up and stayed
with Colin and Moses to be part of it. It was a lot of fun, but honestly, it
didn’t end up being that great for my skating. That was an era of my life where
I actually did smoke a lot of weed, which as I previously mentioned, I suck at.
Easily the most unproductive 8 months of my life. (laughs)
The Alien
thing came about through Droors. Rob, John Drake and I all got along really
well and it became one of those things where I just had to get down to San
Diego for some reason. That became the Alien House.
You were in the basement?
No, Rob and I
actually had the rooms upstairs, it was Drake and Pitre who shared the
basement. Jamie Thomas lived down the street. And by that point, Jamie had discovered
Kalis on an Invisible trip and he was out staying with Jamie… which, again,
coming down to us being the ones doing fun shit at night, Kalis soon found
himself over at our house all the time. The Alien House was definitely the
party magnet back then. Lots of good stories in those walls.
Describe
an average day at the Alien House.
The typical day was waking up around 11
o’clock or so. Sit around for a bit before skating down to Pacific Drive. Mess
around with some flatground in-front of the shop for a while and then hit the
boardwalk. Head over to Garnett and eat something there. If we’re feeling good,
get in Rob’s car and head over to Serra or somewhere Downtown. Mostly Serra.
Try to film a few things… maybe. After that, head on over to PB Bar and Grill
or some other terrible bar. Play some pool and drink. End up back at our house until
2 or 3 in the morning and crash. That’s pretty much how it went.
If we left PB, we were having a great day. We
mostly just skated around our little zone… a lot of Ingraham Bump, a lot of PB
Middle School…
Wendy’s?
… a lot of Wendy’s.
That era was probably the most I ever weighed,
because we ate that shit at least once every day. But we thought we were
killing it because we got the chicken sandwich instead of the cheeseburger. We
got baked potatoes and salads… nevermind the fact that we’re drowning the shit
in butter and ranch dressing. And all the beer on top of that? It was, for
sure, the most unhealthy I’ve ever been.
Did
the opportunity of riding for Alien ever come up?
It never really did. For one, I was way down
for Real because of the opportunity they’d given me and I think the guys
respected that. When a brand like Real gives you the nod, you want to honor
that. I know how it is where dudes get around their friends and want to be part
of whatever they’re doing, but that was never my deal.
Plus, you gotta remember that I was probably
considered pretty old by then. I was 23 or 24… they’re looking at guys like
Lennie and Kalis. They’re still teenagers. And it’s not like I was some
big-time pro. My jumping to Alien would’ve hardly been some major acquisition
for them.
I always loved Carter, though. I remember Rob
and Chris sitting on the phone for hours, almost every day. The banter that
would come out of those conversations was incredible. Pekins and hip-kits… the
lingo was amazing. And I always thought it was rad that Rob could have that close
of a relationship with the head of a brand like that.
But no, there was never really any heavy
consideration. Honestly, I felt close enough to it anyway, I didn’t need an
Alien board with my name on it. I basically had the best of both worlds in that
I could be in the Alien mix but still ride for Real, too.
Give
us your best Alien House story.
Okay, so all four of us are heading home for
Christmas, right? And it’s not like it ever really gets cold in PB… low
60s/high 50s at most. Well, Pitre and Drake had their own shower in the
basement and something must’ve happened as they were heading out to the
airport. Because, for whatever reason, the hot water didn’t get turned off all
the way before we left. So for two weeks, we had hot water running in the
basement. No ventilation. All the doors and windows closed. And don’t ask me how we didn’t run out of hot water for those two
weeks, we must’ve had the best water heater in all of Pacific Beach. But yeah,
hot water running the entire time we were gone.
So when we all get back and go to open the
door, our basement is a giant steam room. The entire carpet is completely
covered in mold. Fucking stalactites of mold growing off the ceiling. It’s all
over the walls, the furniture, everything. Easily the most bizarre Twilight
Zone experience I’ve ever seen.
But we just rode it out, man! Wipe everything
down, all good. Don’t worry about it, we’ll live here for another year. No
problem. I mean, the mold in those walls had to be psycho. God only knows what
we were breathing in.
What was your experience like with one Lennie
Kirk?
We always got
along okay, for the most part. He was obviously just a kid who had a lot of
angst. And being around Weiss couldn’t
have helped his situation at all… he’d discovered Lennie on a Change trip in
North Carolina and brought him to San Diego, but Bill was one of the gnarliest
dudes back then. He fucked with people constantly. So adding that to Lennie’s
mindset couldn’t have been very beneficial. Because it was pretty obvious to
everyone that Lennie had been through a lot already… and this was before his
experience with religion. There was always a feeling that he could snap at any
moment.
But Lennie
and Josh were always in the middle of something sketchy. That’s part of the
reason why they had to leave San Diego when they did, because of some shit at a
house party. Afterwards, someone told Dyrdek that the kids had to go, something
along those lines. That if they didn’t leave San Diego, something bad was going
to happen. It was serious.
What happened at the party?
I honestly
can’t remember exactly... I want to say someone got shot with a BB gun? Some
sketchy shit like that which never leads to anything good. (laughs)
Not that I ever
felt sketched out by Lennie, I just knew that there was always potential for
shit to get weird whenever he was around. He was only 16, which is pretty normal. You just had to stay
on your toes.
Pitre wasn’t skating much by this point, was
he?
No, the Alien
House is basically where he started his music career. He bought a bass guitar
and just sat in the basement, playing it all day. It was obvious that his passion
had transferred over to music, and that’s what he did. Smoking, eating Wendy’s
and playing bass.
How was Nonfiction
for you?
It was definitely
short and sweet but I liked what was in there. I wasn’t mad at it.
I just feel
like I’d gotten to a point where I kinda stalled out on skating. Plus, being
down in San Diego, I felt a little detached from everything going on back in San
Francisco. I mean, if you look at my footage in that video, it’s almost all in San
Diego with maybe a handful of tours.
I just wasn’t
applying myself at the level I should’ve been. And the level of turnaround for
pros back then was insane anyway, so it wasn’t a big surprise. A company can
only push out so many boards per month and Real had a whole new crop of dudes
coming onto the scene.
I was back living
in SF and actually at Deluxe when I got the “retirement” talk. Jim and Jeff
called me into the office.
“Okay, we
want to do your last board.”
“You know
what? No last board. I don’t want that. Let’s just call it for what it is and
keep it moving.”
Totally
amicable. I was already thinking about life after being a pro anyway. I
realized that I didn’t have what it took to hang around and juice it... and I
wasn’t about to go ride for some whatevs company for $500 a month.
So
how did you fall into the team manager role at DC?
So I was obviously friends with Ken and Damon
through Droors. Back when DC first started out through Etnies, they were
sending Scott Johnston, Huf and I shoes to test up in SF. They were smart about
that because they didn’t want to be perceived as just a San Diego brand. They
wanted a bigger presence.
Cut to the end of ’95 with the doors on my
professional skating career closing, I was doing some writing for Slap. I got
some money through that but it was obviously going to be a grind long-term. Coincidentally,
the girl I was dating at the time, she had lived in SD and was also friends
with Ken and Damon. At some point, Ken hit her up about me possibly wanting to
move back down to San Diego for a role at DC, since it was growing so quickly.
Honestly, that was one of the most pivotal
moments in my life. What I was able to pick up and learn from those guys at that
time of absolute exponential growth at Droors/DC was incredible.
Bird standing-in for Carl Shipman and his necklace. '98 Photoshop styles. |
Loosely based on the Gumball 3000, the DC
Supertours revolutionized modern skate demos. What was the thinking there?
A large part
of DC was taking inspiration from what the bigger brands were doing in other
sports. How they approached product and events, how they built their team. Love
it or hate it, DC was Ken borrowing a lot of different aspects from traditional
sports and brands, putting it through the skateboarding lens. Clearly, DC had
the best team, let’s approach it the way these other organizations utilize
their superstars.
Obviously,
the way that Powell had done tours with the Bones Brigade was always very
buttoned-up and professional, but that had fallen by the wayside a bit. Tours
had become the complete opposite of that. Demos had devolved into a pretty
questionable scenario with maybe 1 or 2 guys out of 10 actually skating, so the
Supertour was sort of revisiting that old model. A more polished presentation
that cut through everything, basically to where all the other brands started going
back toward that buttoned-up approach as well. It was gangbusters, though, and
honestly, skateboarding needed that at the time.
So what happened with you and DC? And how
does Lakai figure into all this?
So I remember
going to a contest in Switzerland with Dyrdek and literally every single kid was
wearing DCs. I’m talking thousands and thousands of kids. It was so definitive.
I feel like that was the key moment where everyone realized just how insane DC
had gotten… and I also think seeing that was, at least, part of the reason why
guys like Rick and Mike started to consider riding for them.
Cut to Rick getting
on DC, his first shoe comes out and does really well. And Rick does really well
off that first shoe, too. That was, for sure, a motivator for Mike, who gets on
the team shortly after that. His first shoe comes out, and while it does well,
it doesn’t quite sell the way Rick’s first one does.
At this time,
there was no minimum salary for riders with footwear. You could kill it if you
had a successful shoe, but you could also go a whole year and barely make
anything if your shoe didn’t do well.
Around this
time, there was also an attempt to get Koston on DC. He obviously didn’t do it,
but what happened as a result of the talks was SoleTech giving Eric a minimum
salary guarantee, which was a first. All of a sudden, a light goes off, because
dudes now realize that they could actually have a stable income. No more leaving
it to chance every month, there was now precedent for garnering a sizeable,
steady paycheck.
So while Eric
didn’t go to DC, what it did do was put the minimum salary idea in the rest of
the dudes’ heads. It got around and guys like Danny and Colin were into it.
“That’s
exactly what we’ve been asking for all this time, and now you can’t say that
it’s unprecedented anymore.”
The argument was
always that while their specific shoe might not have been selling, the line as
a whole was selling because of equity the team brought to the brand. So even if
the Boxer, the Clocker and the Plug didn’t have their names on them, the team
was a big reason why those shoes were selling. Totally valid argument.
It got really
tense, because there was a lot of money floating around. Those dudes were a lot
of the brand equity but there was still that pay rift. Finally, we all had this
big meeting at Ken’s house with pay being one of the big subjects… but dudes
still weren’t ready to budge on guaranteed salaries. And to me, that’s when the
seed was planted for Rick and Mike to start their own shoe brand. Not that they
left that meeting wanting to quit, but they were no longer closed off to the
idea anymore.
Through the
Girl connection, Tim eventually floats the idea of starting something, just
hypothetically. But as it became more apparent that the guarantee conversation
wasn’t going anywhere, I think those guys started talking more, which
inevitably became, “Alright, let’s do it.”
So for the
last year or so leading up to this, I’d been staying up to LA almost every
weekend, hanging out with the dudes up there more. Obviously, I was a big fan
of Mike and Rick’s, but when they reached out to Ken and Damon about officially
leaving, my assumption has always been that DC thought I was privy to more
information than I was actually letting on. I think my expiry clock sorta
started ticking at that point. I was down to ride it out at DC, but in
hindsight, my attitude was such that it wouldn’t have lasted regardless. I was
bummed about Rick and Mike leaving and that was that.
My official
departure from DC came as a result of Ken asking me to write a weekly team
update for the CFO and the rest of the employees. Basically, I was supposed to
let everyone know about everything going on with the team on a regular basis. A
totally reasonable ask, in retrospect, but at the time, I felt like, “Fuck
that. This is a skateboard brand. Everyone should know what’s going on with
this team without me having to tell them every week.”
So stupid,
but that was my attitude. A total dipshit, way too harsh with my opinion. And
that was it for me. Ken hit me up the next day, like, “Hey dude, we gotta talk.
This is your last check. You’re out.”
Since they probably
thought that I was going to follow Mike and Rick anyway, I doubt they saw it being
as harsh as it really was. And while I did eventually find my way over there, that
was never the original plan… Although, I did make it easy for DC to show me the
door.
What’s
the difference between building a brand vs building a team?
Well, it used to be that a skateboarding brand
always started with the team. Because you used to be able to get away with subpar
product a bit more if you had the right guys in place. The right team gave you
a longer learning curve for getting the product right. But that’s not the case anymore.
You can’t slow roll your product at all these days, no matter how good your team
is.
Because,
let’s face it, those first couple rounds of Lakai were pretty bad.
Yeah, there was clearly a lot to learn. Hardly
any of that early stuff was actually skateable in hindsight, but dudes somehow made
it work. Our thinking was to get the right team together first and then figure
out the product as we went along. That was “Skate Brand 101” up until the mid
2000s.
Orion
Trucks.
Exactly.
Anyone
almost on Lakai?
You have to remember that Lakai had already
started before I was hired. So I was picking up a lot of these conversations after
coming onboard.
They were definitely hot on Stevie Williams.
Ironically, before I left DC, I specifically remember showing Robbie McKinley’s
Listen part and Stevie’s Creedo part to Ken and Damon in an effort
to get them both on the official team, but there was some hesitation. The
Stevie story is well-chronicled... Josh and Rob both wanted him on the Workshop
but there was uncertainty, which was also floating around DC at the time. Ken
was into the idea, but it wasn’t something that was on a fast-track.
The whole DC thing was sparked after Stevie
came to hang out with us at the Kalis commercial shoot in New York. We’d already
been flowing him stuff and he just looked so sick in that shit, man. The problem
was that the team was already so stacked. They just wanted to wait and see how
everything played out. But when the Workshop thing didn’t happen, Stevie was seen
hanging out in LA, wearing DVS a lot. So because of that, I thought DC was
gonna lose him, which is why I was doing what I could to keep him around.
Cut to Lakai, with us being part of DVS,
Stevie on Lakai seemed like a lock… but then, as chess matches go, DC flipped
the switch on him. They knew Lakai was going to go after him so that’s when
they finally decided to make it nice for both him and Robbie. Lakai was the
conduit for all that, no question. Whatever, it worked out great for Stevie,
and that’s what really matters. We weren’t in any position to do all that for
him back then anyway.
Colin was an early conversation, too. Because,
like I said, there was some turmoil there over that lack of a guarantee. But again,
right as Lakai started, DC decided to figure out the minimum payment thing.
AVE was even part of the Lakai conversation at
first, too. Because he was in the DC mix but, again, not on any fast-track for
a shoe. I remember going to Highland Grounds to talk to him about Lakai, which
was one of the first meetings I ever had in a team-building capacity. I’m
fairly certain DC saw our interest there as well.
I definitely called Jamie Thomas, too. He was
an early conversation but it never really went anywhere.
So yeah, it is what it is. Everything happens
for a reason, and it all worked out well for those dudes anyway. But I can say
this with a fair amount of certainty, if Lakai had never happened, all those
trajectories would have looked pretty different.
What
was your reaction to finding out the title of Yeah Right?
(laughs) That was Dimitry. It came about
during that whole campus-era, so it’s a little hazy. There was a trip to Vegas
and shortly after that is when I feel like it kinda became a thing. I can still
hear Dimitry imitating me say it to this day. But to be totally honest with
you, it took me a minute to connect all the dots. Because there is something about
in the credits but I don’t think that was in there at the premiere. I didn’t
see it anyway. I mean, the fact that I have some kind of association with one
of the most iconic Girl videos by virtue of being annoying, it’s another one of
those surreal things for me. It still trips me out.
As
brand manager, describe your personal Fully
Flared experience. What was the hardest part of making that for you on the
inside?
Well, I was the one managing the budget. Ty
and Rick were the guys out there, keeping dudes engaged and making sure that
the project was going to be the best it could be. I was only trying to make it work from a financial standpoint,
which was hard for me because I also understood what we had to put out. It wasn’t
like I could just crunch some numbers and call it, you know? Especially by the
time that it was supposed to come out, with the expectation that had built up.
I understood why we needed to wait and try to meet that expectation… but it was
still my job to try keeping things on some kind of timeline and budget.
Having to keep going back to the guys running
Podium from 2005 to 2007 about a video that we started in 2003, that was never
fun. I mean, the first year was a slow roll, as is typically the case. We went
on some trips that second year. The third year was when we were trying to turn
the corner and get it all ready to come out, but this whole confluence of
factors happened. With Guy and Koston getting on the team, not only did they
need parts but now because of them, the expectation skyrocketed to another
level.
When Yeah
Right! came out in 2003, it was a huge success for Girl. Accordingly, I
think the owners of DVS thought that Skate
More would do similar numbers and help them recoup that investment with
profit. Unfortunately, around that time was when filesharing was starting to affect
skate videos. So because of that, I believe they thought Skate More underperformed. It still did well, it just didn’t
generate a bunch of revenue in itself, which then began to affect their spending
outlook on Fully Flared.
Those last two years were stressful for
everyone. Personally, I knew why we were prolonging the video but I also had to
deal with all the questions from the inside, all the people wondering what the
fuck we were even doing. After a while, it was basically just trying to keep
the Podium dudes from pulling the plug on it. And to be totally honest, Girl
funded most of the travel for that last year because the Podium guys were done
with it.
We all worked so hard, man. Shooting that
intro together was cool, that was the start of everything easing back, but I
still had to put together the majority of the premiere on my own. And even
then, at the premiere, the culmination of everything where it should’ve been
this big release, I still didn’t really enjoy it the way I should’ve. I was just
so drained by everything. I think I might’ve had one drink at the afterparty
and bailed. It wasn’t until we did all the premieres in Europe, Canada and
Japan that it all sorta sunk in and felt good.
Would
you go on those filming trips? How gnarly were those things from the
perspective of someone outside the “tricks” pressure cooker?
I went on a few… but those Motel 6 trips? Where
dudes would be out until 3 in the morning, sleeping until checkout and then
drive a bunch? No way. I knew I couldn’t hang with that shit.
The gnarliest I ever saw it get was on a
Europe trip in Spain. It’s that footage where Marc is wearing the pink Rick
James shirt with the glove on? That stuff jogs some of the darker memories. Because
Marc was such a workhorse. He had been all-in from the beginning, which, by
that point, was 5 years. He was just in tatters, man. Running on fumes. He was
not at his best on a personal level and it was hard to see. He was clearly not
happy but he was there, doing it, because that’s who he is. That’s what he
does. But it sucked to see someone you respect seem so unhappy doing the thing
they’ve always loved. And he was doing things you typically turn to in order to
get through not being happy, which doesn’t help anything either. It was just a
dark period. Maybe I took it harder than I should’ve, maybe I felt somewhat
responsible in a way… that I should’ve done more. I don’t know.
It was difficult for me because I had to play
it both ways with the position I was in. You always have a certain level of
responsibility to those who are signing your checks. I always wanted to be
responsible and keep everything on the rails… but this is skateboarding. Nobody
wants Dad. Skateboarding hates Dad. Unfortunately, that leads to a lot of riffs
for someone in the position I was in.
Who’s
idea was it to have that countdown on the site?
That was my doing. When we made the decision
that November 17th was our date, I went in the next morning and hit
up the guy doing our web stuff.
“Alright, dude. Let’s do a clock. Countdown to
November 17th. Let’s get it up there.”
I was just hyped to finally have a date, that
this whole thing was going to be done. I didn’t realize what a thing that it ended
up becoming with the dudes until later.
What happened with DGar and Lakai?
Fuck, man, I wish that we could’ve had Garcia
in there. But I think he was able to figure out early on what Fully Flared was about to become and didn’t
want anything to do with it. He was already broadening his horizons outside of
skateboarding with music anyway. The last thing he needed was some insane video
project.
The other thing was that old cart-and-horse
conversation that seemingly everyone has to have with getting a shoe. He wanted
a shoe but we wanted to see how his video part turned out first... but he didn’t
want to film a part to maybe get a shoe, he wants a shoe in order to film a
video part. It’s a very common conversation and never an easy one because both
sides make sense. And to his point, if he had to cut through everything that
was swirling around that video to potentially get a shoe, that’s a pretty
difficult proposition. If that’s what it took to maybe get a shoe on Lakai, why not do something with SoleTech that
feels good enough and call it a day? Good for him.
Could you see the rider exodus coming after the
video?
I’ll be
honest, that stuff hurt. Because it’s hard not to personalize things after
you’ve been through a journey like that. You want to reap the benefits
collectively, not just as people but as a brand as well.
In hindsight,
that video probably came out at the most inopportune time, with the financial
market tanking and everything. But moments are fleeting and you have to
capitalize on things where you can, so I don’t blame dudes. But I knew that
there would never be another moment like that for Lakai. If that video would’ve
come out in 2002, we would’ve been in a completely different position. Unfortunately,
the biggest opportunity to catapult the brand came right as the biggest global financial
crisis of our lifetime was starting to happen. The cracks at Podium were growing
into fissures.
At the end of
the day, we were never going to be big enough to do right by all our riders.
Our payroll was already lopsided as shit, and to keep adding more and more
salaries? We would’ve been able to do nothing more than pay our skaters, and
even that would’ve been a stretch. I wish Lakai was in more of a position to
reap the rewards of all the hard work that was put into Fully Flared, but it just wasn’t going to happen in that moment.
As much as
money was the reason for people leaving, it also came down to the fact that
everybody on that team should’ve had a pro shoe, by industry standards. Our
product line just wasn’t big enough. There wasn’t enough capacity in shops. So,
by that measure, I understood why people left for an immediate opportunity
elsewhere. And if that’s part of Fully
Flared’s legacy, that it facilitated opportunities for those dudes, I’m
okay with that.
What role did Podium’s business woes play into
all this? It seemed like they basically fell apart right after the video came
out.
Obviously,
that probably didn’t help matters much either.
The thing is
that there was never a down quarter prior to the financial collapse. And not just
at Podium, but skateboarding, in general. The graph only went up. Active shops
were opening everywhere… a lot of brands didn’t know what a rainy day looked
like. They weren’t prepared for any bumps in the road and set up their
infrastructure accordingly, entirely dependent on another quarter of growth. So
when shit goes exponentially backwards that quickly, there was too much weight
at the top. You can’t pivot quickly enough because there are too many pieces
entirely dependent on a number that just isn’t there anymore. In come the
banks, stressing you on the loan covenants, and at that point, it all becomes a
house of cards. Another victim of the infinite growth paradigm.
But you’d gone on record a few times about
Nike in the Lakai days, and not in the most favorable light. How much flack did
you catch for making the switch and how do you look at those previous
statements now?
I did. It
just got to a point where I was taking things way too personally… which is
pretty silly, in hindsight, because Lakai was never even my brand. I just had
these emotional attachments to everything that definitely became unhealthy over
the years. But when you hear enough times that “big time” is the best move for
another dude to make, in the back of your head, you start to wonder why it’s
not the best move for you to make as well.
So when the
opportunity did present itself to me, I looked at it through the same lens.
What’s the best thing for me at this point in my life? And that was it. Of
course, I took flack for it and I understand why, but I’m still doing fun
stuff for skateboarding with so many of the best skaters in the game. That’s
really all that matters to me. The rest is just noise.
How do you react when people try to throw those
previous statements in your face?
To be honest,
that barely ever happens. Most people were congratulative.
Look, when
Nike got into skateboarding this third time, they clearly figured out the right
way to go about it. Obviously, their product is incredible, but also the level
of service that they were bringing to their riders, compared to any other skate
brand, was undeniable. For those who want to knock Nike, skateboarding had 30
years to figure out how to treat these dudes like professionals. But we didn’t
do it. So you can’t be mad at a brand that comes in with an elevated sense of
how professional skateboarders should be treated.
The other
thing is this, and it’s comparable to what drives politics in a lot of the
world right now, but I don’t want to be part of that cranky group of people who
think skateboarding was only great during a certain time period that they, themselves,
say was “the greatest”. Because that’s bullshit. Everything evolves, and I want
to keep evolving with it. Of course, I think that the 90’s were awesome, but I
don’t believe things have to be run as such in 2018, based on that belief. Because
I would’ve much rather walked into that Wells Fargo with a check bigger than
$3,000. And I think it’s a good thing that most skateboarders can do that now.
As long as
kids are attracted to skateboarding for the same reasons we were, which is
being represented by these brands and the kids want to associate with them as a
result, I’m okay with being part of that.
So after a lifetime of paying dues in making it all work for yourself, what would you say is your proudest
accomplishment and biggest regret?
I’ve had so
many situations where I’ve traveled the world with dudes for years, talking to
them on a weekly basis as I watch them accomplish so many of their dreams… and
then the checks and boxes stop rolling in and suddenly, the relationship falls
apart. It sucks. And that’s always been the most regrettable part of my
experience.
On the other
hand, I am proud that I’m still involved in skateboarding at such a high-level,
25 years later. I’ve been in the front row for so many iconic moments in
skateboarding and most of them were not as a professional skateboarder. That’s
pretty insane. I’m very fortunate, without a doubt, but I also put in the work,
so hopefully there’s something to that in our world as well. The prodigy
stories are the ones that get romanced, and for good reason, but the fact that
you can have this kind of run in skateboarding without being the most talented
skateboarder is less chronicled. So thanks for taking the time to sprinkle in a
story like mine. There should be more of them.
Thanks to
Salman, Jim, Tommy, Mickey, Jeff, James, Fausto, Swenson, Ken, Damon, Tim,
Rick, Mike, Meg, Rob, Drake, Pitre, Carter, Schmelzer, Fallahee, Mel, Pip, Hunter,
Gabe, Lance, Luke, Skin, Swift, Mom and Meg B.
Thanks, Bird!
Amazing. Favourite one of late for sure
ReplyDeleteWow, thank you for this. I grew up in the area where Bird went to high school. Skaters from Dulles High and Clements would meet at this Target in Sugarland, Tx. That's where I first saw Bird and this dude he was with named Jason DeYoung. This was such a good time for skating, we had this spot and there would skaters everywhere. They were the sickest skaters, ever. And they were so cool, always laughing and cracking jokes. Bird soon went off to college and when he would come back for holidays I would skate with him sometimes. I knew he was going somewhere with his skating, and to see him being so humble about it was awesome. I remember when his New School board came out, it was terrible. The flattest board ever with a felt 8ball on it if I remember correctly. Bird was not happy about it.
ReplyDeleteAw man, such a good dude. I hope he's doing well.
One of the best ones so far, and I've read them all. Keeps me going at work. Cheers.
ReplyDeleteLoved this one.
ReplyDeleteSuit guy under water slick board and graphic still is amazing. Nice interview. Different perspectives is always interesting.
ReplyDeleteGenius interview. So many things I'd never heard before.
ReplyDeleteMet him in 95 when I worked at SLAP. Such a funny and amazing person and a total ripper. So stoked he's still involved with skateboarding because he's exactly what skateboarding needs. Dirts forever.
ReplyDeleteSuch a great read! Thanks Eric and Bird!!
ReplyDeleteBringing that deep insight/insider knowledge as ever, great interview. We live in blessed times as far as getting the inside scoop on skate history, between you, Epicly Laterd and the various podcrews. Ever consider doing a pod? You've clearly got the, ahem, chops.
ReplyDeleteWow, that was the best read I've seen in a long time. Thank you. I didn't know all that information, great stuff overall. Thank you for posting. Great stuff here.
ReplyDeletereally, really great.
ReplyDeleteThe Toronto Real tour/demo he referenced was at Rudy's...the amount of fat-striped polo shirts bought in the Toronto/Mississauga area after watching Salman kill it was crazy. Kelch made an appearance as well and I remember thinking "this guy can't land much"...until someone said he's only skating switch today and he's incredibly hungover from drinking with Weiss,Kelly and Bokma. Fun (ancient) times
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteplease keep them coming. i love these backstories!
This was a really cool interview, spanning the early dirt days to pro rider to TM and brand manager. What a great ride. Keep it rolling!
ReplyDelete“...but the fact that you can have this kind of run in skateboarding without being the most talented skateboarder is less chronicled. So thanks for taking the time to sprinkle in a story like mine. There should be more of them.”
ReplyDeleteThis sums it up perfectly. Great interview. Thanks for this one.
To bad you cant interview Jay Adams. That would be dope, but we still got Shogo Kubo, TA, 'Mad Dog' Mike Muir. Those would be dope interviews to read. Js. These are all dope as well though. Keep kickin ass and takin license plate covers.
ReplyDeleteCrazy but awesome story! Went to school with him and bought my first total skateboard setup from California Dreamin two weeks after they opened. We always knew he was going to do big things!
ReplyDelete