Author Topic: R.I.P. Marc Johnson  (Read 74482 times)

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Jort250

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #600 on: May 29, 2026, 05:09:47 PM »
My two cents based on the Shane Cross and Ali situation is that blaming goes nowhere

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #601 on: May 29, 2026, 05:38:30 PM »
earlier i was like man if my gf catches me crying again today....and then i keep seeing all of the posts. i think a lot of us can relate (although we hate it) to how he felt despite being the best skater

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #602 on: May 29, 2026, 06:23:33 PM »
So many people giving shout outs to Marc in the comments sections of these videos






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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #603 on: May 29, 2026, 06:59:15 PM »
Coolest tricks, coolest music, coolest spots, coolest fits. Coolest skater

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #604 on: May 29, 2026, 07:02:09 PM »
I grew up watching Marc’s video parts, and he always picked the best songs as many have stated.  I will always remember his nollie frontside tail slide to shove it down the handrail in his 411 part to the Promise Ring.

Also, his nollie big heel down the stair set in Fully Flared to She Wants Revenge.  It’s edited so good when he stomps it with that song.  My favorite trick of that amazing part.

My sincerest condolences to his family and friends.

RIP

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #605 on: May 29, 2026, 07:43:07 PM »
Did anyone see the local news interview that interviewed Louie and he spoke about Marc? Reallly sad hearing his voice, Marc is such a legend and always will be, praying for Louie and Avery.

gub

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #606 on: May 29, 2026, 08:43:05 PM »
Expand Quote
Dude, please have some humility and perspective. Marc never joined another board company, but you have no idea whether that was due to his own decision or not. It beggars belief to think that no other brand would have readily, happily, enthusiastically welcomed him. I'm not saying he necessarily had his pick - surely some people would have been wary of his apparent instability - but it's simply not correct to claim that he was forced out of the industry.

Further, claiming that Adidas should "share the shame" is straight up insane. They did not "lure" him away from Lakai - they offered him financial stability that Lakai was failing to deliver. MJ's tenure at Adidas ended because he had disappeared from public life.

Do you not understand what it means for a person to be mentally ill? Do you not understand that a person can lose their ability to think clearly, to manage their own actions, to deal with responsibilities and maintain relationships? By every indication from those close to Marc, this is what happened to him. No outside observer is qualified to literally diagnose him, but you'd have to be a fool to deny that he became consumed by some form of mental health disorder that prevented him from leading the kind of life he lead before. Obviously the turmoil and public backlash of the Lakai exit accelerated this process, but that awful situation was itself caused by Marc's apparent and worsening mental health crisis at the time.
Adidas eventually "dumped" Marc because things continued to get worse for him. The skate industry did not conspire against him; his mind turned against him. If you don't have any idea what that feels like, count yourself lucky.

I personally wish that Carroll had never done that Jenkem interview. I wish that at least one person at Girl-Chocolate had recognized that their friend was exhibiting troubling, altered behavior and that they had intervened instead of allowing things to blow up so spectacularly. I'm sure that Carroll is beside himself with regret and guilt right now. But the demand to assign blame - especially if you're an outsider, a member of the public who never knew Marc or anyone else involved in these disputes - is genuinely shameful and selfish. It makes you feel fleetingly righteous, gives you a frisson of anger, but it ultimately does nothing but perpetuate pain, rancor, and negativity.

I'm not trying to tell you how to feel or grieve, but just reflect on what you're hoping to accomplish with your statements in this thread, what do you want to contribute to the discourse that memorializes Marc Johnson.
[close]

Well fucking said.

snowballz

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #607 on: May 29, 2026, 09:03:33 PM »
So many people giving shout outs to Marc in the comments sections of these videos












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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #608 on: May 29, 2026, 09:55:36 PM »
@Atiba Applebum  where did you hear that Chris Avery passed away far too early ?? insane thing to just throw out there. the only google result about it brings it to your post

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #609 on: May 29, 2026, 10:18:05 PM »
@Atiba Applebum  where did you hear that  passed away far too early ?? insane thing to just throw out there. the only google result about it brings it to your post

I deleted the comment.  My bad for spreading unintentional falsehoods, I honestly thought that happened like a decade ago.   Should definitely have been more careful

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #610 on: May 29, 2026, 10:26:20 PM »

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #611 on: May 29, 2026, 11:24:22 PM »
The Times published an obituary today:

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/29/sports/marc-johnson-skateboarder-dead.html

Happy he could be memorialized in the paper of record. 

Isn’t Cory Weincheque a Rick Howard alias?   (Im taking everything I thought I remembered with a grain of salt atm)

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #612 on: May 30, 2026, 01:12:35 AM »



1:10:00 mark.

If my employers kept skimping my monthly paychecks, and expect me to wait for 5-6 months, i'd be pissed too.

excitableboy

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #613 on: May 30, 2026, 01:29:08 AM »


Tribute from tulumize

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #614 on: May 30, 2026, 01:56:20 AM »
The Times published an obituary today:

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/29/sports/marc-johnson-skateboarder-dead.html

I'm usually unimpressed with what the NYTimes publishes on skateboarding, but I think they did a good job here. It feels factual, shows engagement with his previous interviews, and is respectful. The authors don't feel like skaters, but--since they didn't pretend to be--it makes the acknowledgement of his legacy all the more respectful.

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #615 on: May 30, 2026, 03:02:25 AM »
Expand Quote

I'm usually unimpressed with what the NYTimes publishes on skateboarding, but I think they did a good job here. It feels factual, shows engagement with his previous interviews, and is respectful. The authors don't feel like skaters, but--since they didn't pretend to be--it makes the acknowledgement of his legacy all the more respectful.

Any chance of posting it here?



Been thinking about Marc’s trick selection. It’s so hard to pin down a small list of tricks he was known for ‘cause he would just do anything and everything.

He had a crazy good heelflip but isn’t known for them. In Seven Steps you can see him messing with nollie bs flips and nollie hard flips a lot. I would’ve loved to see more nollie hardflips later on, he had the next best one after Kareem. He definitely kept running nollie bs flips, in and out of everything, too. One of the best bs flips, always folded, high and fast. He would always throw out boosted nollie flips out of banks or kickers, too. I could just keep going, it’s endless. Definitely think of him for fakie 5-0s.

I love that he would return to spots a lot, especially manny pads. So many pier 7 tricks. The block to block pad someone posted earlier. He definitely owned those round colourful pads (360 flip nose manny in Yeah Right).
« Last Edit: May 30, 2026, 03:13:44 AM by fur lined sea »
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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #616 on: May 30, 2026, 04:06:46 AM »
Marc Johnson, an influential professional skateboarder who helped define modern street skating with a creative approach that made formidable tricks look effortless, died on Tuesday. He was 49.

His death was reported on Wednesday by Thrasher Magazine, which published a tribute from Louie Barletta, a fellow professional skateboarder. Johnson’s son, Avery, posted a tribute to his father on Instagram on Thursday. A family member, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity to discuss a private matter, confirmed the death by phone, without specifying a cause or saying where Johnson died.

“Everything he did was art,” Barletta wrote on Thrasher’s website. “He was endlessly creative and always tried to elevate his friends and everyone around him.”

Johnson played a leading role in shaping the San Jose and Bay Area skateboarding scenes and had a hand in some of the most recognizable developments in street skating in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Johnson’s graceful style involved complicated combinations of tricks, often linked together in flowing lines at crusty skate spots on city streets. His innovative approach wowed casual fans and veterans alike.

“If you think of something, you can do it, you know?” Johnson said in the skate video “Hot Chocolate” (2004). “Skateboarding is ideas put into action.”

His nonchalant look in skate videos belied the grit it took to roll away from his daunting stunts, which could involve hours of slamming into the pavement before he landed them cleanly.

“When I was younger I would compulsively work on tricks,” Johnson told Thrasher in 2020. “I would rarely start working on a trick and just stop.”

Johnson had memorable parts in skate videos that helped define the genre, including “Fully Flared,” a 2007 feature-length film produced by the skate shoe brand Lakai. His performance helped earn him Thrasher’s skater of the year award, an honor many skateboarders regard as more prestigious than an Olympic gold medal.
With Rodney Mullen, he also founded Enjoi, one of the most recognizable skate brands of the early 2000s.

Marc Charles Johnson was born on Jan. 6, 1977, in Burke County, N.C., according to public records, and grew up in North Carolina and Virginia. He started skating in 1990, when he was 13, he said on the podcast “The Nine Club” in 2017.

As a teenager, he headed to California with $80 in his pocket and no clear plan, he said in the podcast, explaining that the move followed a period of instability at home. He told “The Nine Club” that he was homeless for a time in California, “just living on people’s floors.”

Eventually, Johnson settled in San Jose, Calif., where he became involved with the Tiltmode Army (sometimes rendered as Tilt Mode), a collection of skateboarders and filmmakers whose videos blended skating technique, humor and personality.

In 2003, he started filming “Fully Flared,” a 1.5-hour video directed by Ty Evans, Spike Jonze and Cory Weincheque, who captured notable skateboarders performing tricks, often using high-definition cameras. Johnson’s grand finale, which lasted nearly a quarter-hour, was one of its defining moments.
In the 2020 Thrasher interview, Johnson described the four years of filming as intense and grueling. The crew traveled to cities and countries around the world, attempting tricks for hours, sometimes through the night and into the next morning, he said.

Johnson recalled landing a complicated trick on an Atlanta rooftop: “I went to the wall at the very end of the parking lot and I got on my hands and knees and I put my head into the wall. It was just like endorphins and gratitude and relief and all that stuff.”

“The obsessive-compulsive need to always get a new trick, that kept us going till the very end,” he said, adding that he turned to alcohol to cope with the high-pressure environment.

Johnson’s marathon performance in “Fully Flared” was just one of his indelible appearances in skate films. He told “The Nine Club” that he thought he had released at least 18 segments, including a memorable section in “Yeah Right!,” a 2003 skate film directed by Evans and Jonze.

Johnson spoke openly about dark periods in his life: a struggle with alcohol in the 2000s, and losing custody of his son in 2012.
His survivors include his son, Avery, also a skateboarder. Full information on Johnson’s survivors was not immediately available.

In the Thrasher interview, Johnson described the period after his custody battle as a reset. “I lost everything that I worked so hard for and for the first time I just had to stop and look at the person I had become little by little,” he said.

“My intention is to serve others,” he added. “My life can and will be an inspiration to other people who may come from hardship and abuse. I will inspire people to follow their dreams.”

Susan C. Beachy and Cole Louison contributed research.

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #617 on: May 30, 2026, 05:55:46 AM »


This would be the last time I saw Marc Johnson. 

RIP to one of the greatest, and realist skateboarders of all time. 

😔 🕯️ 🕊️
« Last Edit: May 30, 2026, 08:11:40 AM by politics as usual »
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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #618 on: May 30, 2026, 06:56:51 AM »
Expand Quote
Expand Quote

I'm usually unimpressed with what the NYTimes publishes on skateboarding, but I think they did a good job here. It feels factual, shows engagement with his previous interviews, and is respectful. The authors don't feel like skaters, but--since they didn't pretend to be--it makes the acknowledgement of his legacy all the more respectful.
[close]

Any chance of posting it here?



Been thinking about Marc’s trick selection. It’s so hard to pin down a small list of tricks he was known for ‘cause he would just do anything and everything.

He had a crazy good heelflip but isn’t known for them. In Seven Steps you can see him messing with nollie bs flips and nollie hard flips a lot. I would’ve loved to see more nollie hardflips later on, he had the next best one after Kareem. He definitely kept running nollie bs flips, in and out of everything, too. One of the best bs flips, always folded, high and fast. He would always throw out boosted nollie flips out of banks or kickers, too. I could just keep going, it’s endless. Definitely think of him for fakie 5-0s.

I love that he would return to spots a lot, especially manny pads. So many pier 7 tricks. The block to block pad someone posted earlier. He definitely owned those round colourful pads (360 flip nose manny in Yeah Right).
No signature trick for sure, but nollie bs flips and heels, nollie flips, fakie 5-0’s, cab flips, bs noseblunts, backside flips, dudes bag was endless.
I quess if something feels like a ”Marc Johnson trick” it would be something in, out or between a bs nosegrind.

Censored

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #619 on: May 30, 2026, 08:39:37 AM »
He was the only skater that could make varial heels look good

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #620 on: May 30, 2026, 09:05:44 AM »

Noble Experiment

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #621 on: May 30, 2026, 09:53:15 AM »
He was the only skater that could make varial heels look good
I mean, that's a trick that a good amount of skaters can make look good imo, so to me that's a hot take.
You know what he had really good that I don't see get brought up that much? Rick flips. He had a damn good one.

BluffsideTank

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #622 on: May 30, 2026, 09:58:16 AM »
I really didn't start appreciating skating until post-Pretty Sweet (not saying it's Fully Flared or Yeah Right; just adding for point of reference). Even off the board, there was something about Marc that was just relatable in a way that I still can't put my finger on. The best are like that. You gravitate toward them for some reason and really don't know why. The confidence, the charisma, and the ability to somehow make you feel involved, or that you really mattered more than you thought you did.

Reading all these posts makes me feel like we all thought of Marc that way, while also understanding how addiction and the industry shaped his life. In a way that's comforting. If there's anything that really troubles me about all of this is that he didn't know how much he was appreciated. I wish he could have read all these comments, maybe even responded. I don't know if that would have changed things for him, but I think that he would have given that wry little smirk, and honestly, that's what would have made the world.

RIP Marc

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #623 on: May 30, 2026, 10:23:56 AM »
Expand Quote
Crail had every right to kick Marc off Chocolate, but MC made Marc persona non grata. No other board brand picked him up after the Jenkem article.

What about Adidas? Why don’t they get any shit? They lured him away and dumped him when his stock went down. Plenty of shame to go around.
[close]

Dude, please have some humility and perspective. Marc never joined another board company, but you have no idea whether that was due to his own decision or not. It beggars belief to think that no other brand would have readily, happily, enthusiastically welcomed him. I'm not saying he necessarily had his pick - surely some people would have been wary of his apparent instability - but it's simply not correct to claim that he was forced out of the industry.

Further, claiming that Adidas should "share the shame" is straight up insane. They did not "lure" him away from Lakai - they offered him financial stability that Lakai was failing to deliver. MJ's tenure at Adidas ended because he had disappeared from public life.

Do you not understand what it means for a person to be mentally ill? Do you not understand that a person can lose their ability to think clearly, to manage their own actions, to deal with responsibilities and maintain relationships? By every indication from those close to Marc, this is what happened to him. No outside observer is qualified to literally diagnose him, but you'd have to be a fool to deny that he became consumed by some form of mental health disorder that prevented him from leading the kind of life he lead before. Obviously the turmoil and public backlash of the Lakai exit accelerated this process, but that awful situation was itself caused by Marc's apparent and worsening mental health crisis at the time.
Adidas eventually "dumped" Marc because things continued to get worse for him. The skate industry did not conspire against him; his mind turned against him. If you don't have any idea what that feels like, count yourself lucky.

I personally wish that Carroll had never done that Jenkem interview. I wish that at least one person at Girl-Chocolate had recognized that their friend was exhibiting troubling, altered behavior and that they had intervened instead of allowing things to blow up so spectacularly. I'm sure that Carroll is beside himself with regret and guilt right now. But the demand to assign blame - especially if you're an outsider, a member of the public who never knew Marc or anyone else involved in these disputes - is genuinely shameful and selfish. It makes you feel fleetingly righteous, gives you a frisson of anger, but it ultimately does nothing but perpetuate pain, rancor, and negativity.

I'm not trying to tell you how to feel or grieve, but just reflect on what you're hoping to accomplish with your statements in this thread, what do you want to contribute to the discourse that memorializes Marc Johnson.
pretty weird to throw these so close together. it’s not okay for others to diagnose him sure, but it’s okay for you to say that him getting kicked off of his board sponsor was technically his doing due to his failing mental health? he seemed like he was doing pretty well in the 9 club interview he did almost a full year later? strange how a lot of people were leaving the crail camp at the same time for the same reasons… i mean yeah, i agree that now is not the time to point a finger any which way, but in doing so it sure feels like gaslighting a recently deceased person to sit there and say that situation was caused by his own health condition. especially after listening to him explain the entire thing a year later, in such detail that an obvious cut was made with a sudden change in the conversation mind you… if you want to try and say his mind was failing him already at that point, i recommend you go rewatch that episode.

imagine fucking the dog shit outta chris roberts

TreBombMartin

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #624 on: May 30, 2026, 10:25:07 AM »
Hopefully someone will create a video like this for Marc. Remixed footage with a few of his classic part songs.


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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #625 on: May 30, 2026, 10:29:27 AM »
Expand Quote
Crail had every right to kick Marc off Chocolate, but MC made Marc persona non grata. No other board brand picked him up after the Jenkem article.

What about Adidas? Why don’t they get any shit? They lured him away and dumped him when his stock went down. Plenty of shame to go around.
[close]

Dude, please have some humility and perspective. Marc never joined another board company, but you have no idea whether that was due to his own decision or not. It beggars belief to think that no other brand would have readily, happily, enthusiastically welcomed him. I'm not saying he necessarily had his pick - surely some people would have been wary of his apparent instability - but it's simply not correct to claim that he was forced out of the industry.

Further, claiming that Adidas should "share the shame" is straight up insane. They did not "lure" him away from Lakai - they offered him financial stability that Lakai was failing to deliver. MJ's tenure at Adidas ended because he had disappeared from public life.

Do you not understand what it means for a person to be mentally ill? Do you not understand that a person can lose their ability to think clearly, to manage their own actions, to deal with responsibilities and maintain relationships? By every indication from those close to Marc, this is what happened to him. No outside observer is qualified to literally diagnose him, but you'd have to be a fool to deny that he became consumed by some form of mental health disorder that prevented him from leading the kind of life he lead before. Obviously the turmoil and public backlash of the Lakai exit accelerated this process, but that awful situation was itself caused by Marc's apparent and worsening mental health crisis at the time.
Adidas eventually "dumped" Marc because things continued to get worse for him. The skate industry did not conspire against him; his mind turned against him. If you don't have any idea what that feels like, count yourself lucky.

I personally wish that Carroll had never done that Jenkem interview. I wish that at least one person at Girl-Chocolate had recognized that their friend was exhibiting troubling, altered behavior and that they had intervened instead of allowing things to blow up so spectacularly. I'm sure that Carroll is beside himself with regret and guilt right now. But the demand to assign blame - especially if you're an outsider, a member of the public who never knew Marc or anyone else involved in these disputes - is genuinely shameful and selfish. It makes you feel fleetingly righteous, gives you a frisson of anger, but it ultimately does nothing but perpetuate pain, rancor, and negativity.

I'm not trying to tell you how to feel or grieve, but just reflect on what you're hoping to accomplish with your statements in this thread, what do you want to contribute to the discourse that memorializes Marc Johnson.

damn you said this so well that i almost started to cry

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #626 on: May 30, 2026, 10:30:31 AM »
Expand Quote
Expand Quote
Expand Quote

I'm usually unimpressed with what the NYTimes publishes on skateboarding, but I think they did a good job here. It feels factual, shows engagement with his previous interviews, and is respectful. The authors don't feel like skaters, but--since they didn't pretend to be--it makes the acknowledgement of his legacy all the more respectful.
[close]

Any chance of posting it here?



Been thinking about Marc’s trick selection. It’s so hard to pin down a small list of tricks he was known for ‘cause he would just do anything and everything.

He had a crazy good heelflip but isn’t known for them. In Seven Steps you can see him messing with nollie bs flips and nollie hard flips a lot. I would’ve loved to see more nollie hardflips later on, he had the next best one after Kareem. He definitely kept running nollie bs flips, in and out of everything, too. One of the best bs flips, always folded, high and fast. He would always throw out boosted nollie flips out of banks or kickers, too. I could just keep going, it’s endless. Definitely think of him for fakie 5-0s.

I love that he would return to spots a lot, especially manny pads. So many pier 7 tricks. The block to block pad someone posted earlier. He definitely owned those round colourful pads (360 flip nose manny in Yeah Right).
[close]
No signature trick for sure, but nollie bs flips and heels, nollie flips, fakie 5-0’s, cab flips, bs noseblunts, backside flips, dudes bag was endless.
I quess if something feels like a ”Marc Johnson trick” it would be something in, out or between a bs nosegrind.
A bs nosegrind nollie bs flip out
Sir, I'm going to politely, but firmly, ask you and your common sense to leave this establishment.

kookdusoleil

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #627 on: May 30, 2026, 10:31:21 AM »
I’m still pretty broken up about this. I’ve already posted in this thread, and there’s nothing really to say that hasn’t already been said quite eloquently by the folks here on slap.

Just like everybody else, I’ve gone and re-watched all his parts, but one thing I’ve sort of rediscovered is how good Avery is, and how enjoyable his footage is to watch. I don’t know how committed he is to skateboarding or how much this tragedy will affect that going forward, but I really think Avery Johnson is a special skateboarder and I hope we get to see more from him in the future.

Alexactly

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #628 on: May 30, 2026, 11:23:20 AM »
if you want to try and say his mind was failing him already at that point, i recommend you go rewatch that episode.

I'm not going to claim that I have a better insight than anyone else about Marc's internal life, but you're evincing a fairly simplistic view of how mental illness and addiction work. It's not just a binary of Having an Episode vs. Thinking Rationally - it can be much more subtle, often totally undetectable by others. It isn't a matter of his mind failing him at any single point in time, but cumulative evidence of disordered thinking/behavior.

If anything, the fact that he's so cogent in that Nine Club interview (but I be hard pressed to say that he doesn't seem altered in a pretty apparent way) strengthens the point that laying blame on others isn't fair. You're really just saying that you missed the signs like everyone else did.

skatebruh

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Re: R.I.P. Marc Johnson
« Reply #629 on: May 30, 2026, 11:26:33 AM »
RIP Marc. Your skating was inspiring for all of us.

Hopefully someone will create a video like this for Marc. Remixed footage with a few of his classic part songs.