Movies For Your Monday
Don t have an account? Sign up Hobbs To Ponca: Riding Hobbs and Ponca. Rider/Video: Matt Slager. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Neutral-Drop: Logan and Jackson ripping some random spots in Victoria, BC. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Gone Goonie: Colton goes goonies on the corkscrew at SkyPark in Southern California. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Get Ready For 2021: Some of my favourite clips from last year. Mainly around Prince George and Kamloops BC. Getting excited for riding this year!
Apr 22, 2021
DC Shoes collection with Bob s Burgers Courtesy of DC Shoes
SPONSOR
DC Shoes hops into the kitchen with animated sitcom Bob’s Burgers mixing the authentic skateboarding flavors of DC with those of the Belcher family in a collaboration that delivers delicious new footwear and apparel.
The absolute showstopper of the DC x BB capsule is DC pro-skateboarder Josh Kalis’ namesake shoe. The DC x BB Kalis OG has been Bobsified, with a Kalis animated character applied to the shoe’s footbed, sitting alongside a neon-green glow-in-the-dark outsole.The full DC x BB menu of products can be seen below and is available from May 1,with the DC x BB Kalis OG dropping on Saturday, May 15; both are available at dcshoes.com.
@15th and jfk
Love Park’s zeitgeist-defining energy officially came to an end in 2016 when the city of Philadelphia “renovated” it. Love had first been revamped in 2002, which signaled the end of its first golden era and caused many influential Philly pro skaters to leave town. Between 2002 and 2016, however, a dedicated group of locals eschewed the star power of the departed pros and initiated a more localized heyday by reviving Love’s greatness in underground, DIY fashion. However, after another round of “renovations” in 2016, Love Park was sadly transformed from a bastion of skateboard culture to a homogenized downtown spot, one filled with tourists and office drones gawking at its signature Robert Indiana