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Skateboarding => USELESS WOODEN TOY BANTER => Topic started by: Nosferatu on February 10, 2018, 11:51:59 PM
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Static 2 came out in 2004
Traffic "Via" came out in 2006
Fully Flared came out in 2007
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but his insta bio used to say "the person you'll be trying to be like 10 years from now" what does it mean??
:(
Edit* or i think it said 7 years
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Yes he's a whiny baby but that part definitely stands out in a sea of lip slide variations and still holds up. You seem to have an agenda. Did he sell you defective dining furniture?
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Yes he's a whiny baby but that part definitely stands out in a sea of lip slide variations and still holds up. You seem to have an agenda. Did he sell you defective dining furniture?
Talk slick about furniture again and I swear to god I’ll type you an email and not send it, don’t test me
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His part in fully flared is good, and so are the videos you listed beforehand. I think the reason people think it was ahead of its time is because it's memorable and it still holds up today. There's not really another part I remember from that video, or would search out to watch again. Great part, but not ahead of its time.
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The type of skating doesn't matter nor does when it got "popular". nobody else skates like Pops and that's the point. Period.
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As much as I hate giving him credit, Chris Senn (and the adrenalin dudes) really created that modern style that everyone is doing now, not that their wasn't others but when I watch his Jump Off a Building part I see the blueprint for so much of modern urban skating, down tot he loose trucks and rabid dog push.
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Expand Quote
Yes he's a whiny baby but that part definitely stands out in a sea of lip slide variations and still holds up. You seem to have an agenda. Did he sell you defective dining furniture?
Talk slick about furniture again and I swear to god I’ll type you an email and not send it, don’t test me
Ha
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Mosaic came out in 2003
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Brian Anderson Yeah Right Part came out in 2003. Papalardos part in FF seemed like he wasnt skate a lot and that was the beginning of the end.
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His part in fully flared is good, and so are the videos you listed beforehand. I think the reason people think it was ahead of its time is because it's memorable and it still holds up today. There's not really another part I remember from that video, or would search out to watch again. Great part, but not ahead of its time.
Carrols part tho?
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Yes he's a whiny baby but that part definitely stands out in a sea of lip slide variations and still holds up. You seem to have an agenda. Did he sell you defective dining furniture?
Talk slick about furniture again and I swear to god I’ll type you an email and not send it, don’t test me
(http://i62.tinypic.com/25akvba.jpg)
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Time is an illusion you goofs.
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His Mosaic part was ahead of its time and still holds up today. Dude was skating SO good at the time- power, style, trick and spot selection, and straight up gnarliness. The Fully Flared part will always be enternally disappointing to me. You can even tell by the age of the clips that something happened to him- the 360 kf on the natural pyramid and that backside flip fake 5-0 on that steep marble bank to ledge were early in the film process and look like Mosaic. Then the NY clips show the frail Pops we know today.
His dropoff is mindblowing. At least he blessed us with some gold (Photo, ie, that shop sect where he skates to Blondie) and an all timer part (Mosaic) before falling off.
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His Mosaic part was ahead of its time and still holds up today. Dude was skating SO good at the time- power, style, trick and spot selection, and straight up gnarliness. The Fully Flared part will always be enternally disappointing to me. You can even tell by the age of the clips that something happened to him- the 360 kf on the natural pyramid and that backside flip fake 5-0 on that steep marble bank to ledge were early in the film process and look like Mosaic. Then the NY clips show the frail Pops we know today.
His dropoff is mindblowing. At least he blessed us with some gold (Photo, ie, that shop sect where he skates to Blondie) and an all timer part (Mosaic) before falling off.
where your sig from
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Alternative facts
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It's a cool part because he aggressively put the least effort into it but had the most talked about moments.
Basically it's 'Yeezus' the skate part.
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this came out in 2002
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cffJwwMOWkw
pops fully flared ender always seemed ripped off from this but it was probably just a coincidence
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0GpqqRZgNo&feature=plcp (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0GpqqRZgNo&feature=plcp)
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maybe ahead of its time in terms of where the mainstream would head?
There many other videos and parts in this vein before pops, but there was yet to be the swan pablo-effect and this foreshadowed that.
Like the first kid to play 36 chambers for their friends in the burbs, it was already out there, but this was were they heard it first.
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As much as I hate giving him credit, Chris Senn (and the adrenalin dudes) really created that modern style that everyone is doing now, not that their wasn't others but when I watch his Jump Off a Building part I see the blueprint for so much of modern urban skating, down tot he loose trucks and rabid dog push.
I’m interested in knowing why you hate giving senndog credit
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0GpqqRZgNo&feature=plcp (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0GpqqRZgNo&feature=plcp)
This clip was pretty ahead of its time. Others like Gino had milked their careers but nobody this young had ever actually gotten this bad after being so good.
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Brian Wenning had a beef with Pops?
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its kind of alluded to in a couple of wenning interviews. maybe the bobshirt one? its never outright stated that there was beef but they went from being best boys / always together to not speaking to each other. today it seems more weird they were ever close with how different they end up being.
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its kind of alluded to in a couple of wenning interviews. maybe the bobshirt one? its never outright stated that there was beef but they went from being best boys / always together to not speaking to each other. today it seems more weird they were ever close with how different they end up being.
On the last nine club experience they were talking about pops with wenning and when asked if they still spoke he just said he pops liked one of his instas once with a little sigh. He seemed bummed that they don’t really talk.
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They go into slightly more detail about it in Pappalardo's Epicly Later'd, but still not much is explicitly said.
I re-watched it recently, and had forgotten that Ted Barrow is one of the main people interviewed for it.
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Is there are a milking it video for Gino Ianucci?
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Then the NY clips show the frail Pops we know today.
His dropoff is mindblowing. At least he blessed us with some gold (Photo, ie, that shop sect where he skates to Blondie) and an all timer part (Mosaic) before falling off.
Obviously he got deeper into drugs somewhere around that time. My guess is benzos, since Wenning was admittedly on them too. Not that they had any contact with each other obviously, but the effects seemed quite similar.
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Then the NY clips show the frail Pops we know today.
His dropoff is mindblowing. At least he blessed us with some gold (Photo, ie, that shop sect where he skates to Blondie) and an all timer part (Mosaic) before falling off.
Obviously he got deeper into drugs somewhere around that time. My guess is benzos, since Wenning was admittedly on them too. Not that they had any contact with each other obviously, but the effects seemed quite similar.
IDK about that. Is it widely known that Pops was/is a drug addict? I kinda suspected a little bit but never heard anything like that.
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^ I think I remember some short hbo segment covering ny skating that featured pops (maybe 2013?). At some point he acknowledges this by saying something like, "I've had periods of time where I've abused myself...done things that I shouldn't have done", and he tied it into skating as a being his salvation (I think).
- I think that FF part being ahead of its time it irrelevant to an extent. The question is whether it did or did not have any immediate impact/influence on skating as a whole, and I don't really think it did much from what I remember. It's kinda like Jason Adams Black Label era of skating: sure he was wearing high-waters, doing no-complies and wallrides before everyone else, but he failed to popularize it. Those trends cropped up years later on its own.
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Expand Quote
As much as I hate giving him credit, Chris Senn (and the adrenalin dudes) really created that modern style that everyone is doing now, not that their wasn't others but when I watch his Jump Off a Building part I see the blueprint for so much of modern urban skating, down tot he loose trucks and rabid dog push.
I’m interested in knowing why you hate giving senndog credit
Cuz I can't stand Chris Senn
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:'(
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Is there are a milking it video for Gino Ianucci?
Every instagram clip that has ever come out of him.
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Brian Wenning had a beef with Pops?
Opposite. Pretty sure there was some interview (maybe bobshirt?) where he said that Pops cut him off and he still wanted to reunite with him. He was totally piling out in that interview too, but I felt bad for him for that.
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^ I think I remember some short hbo segment covering ny skating that featured pops (maybe 2013?). At some point he acknowledges this by saying something like, "I've had periods of time where I've abused myself...done things that I shouldn't have done", and he tied it into skating as a being his salvation (I think).
The Get By
https://vimeo.com/18636392 (https://vimeo.com/18636392)
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Yes he's a whiny baby but that part definitely stands out in a sea of lip slide variations and still holds up. You seem to have an agenda. Did he sell you defective dining furniture?
Talk slick about furniture again and I swear to god I’ll type you an email and not send it, don’t test me
Oh shit.