Tag: transworld skateboarding

Antosh is on such a great run right now, from the skating, the music selection and the little house inspired graphics that go with each clip everything is on point. Transworld is doing a great job supporting guys such as Antosh in making their clips and giving them a great platform.

Ever wonder why those Supreme videos are so good? It is because the man behind them has had a long history of working for and filming with some of the best to ever do it. Bobshirt interviews are some of the best in-depth interviews and Transworld definitely made the right move by picking them up. Enjoy Fat Bill and Anthony Pappalardo shooting the shit for old times sake.

There are a lot of things that could be said about Rob Welsh, he has influenced a lot of people and to this day he is on the tip of everybody’s tongue when it comes to style, song and outfit choices but the thing that drew us to Rob is the fact that he himself is always open to change. If we would have made an announcement 10 years ago that Rob Would be skating vert people would have laughed it of and called us fools but in 2016 Wu Welsh is padding up! As you would expect, Rob is not afraid to shoot the shit talk about the old times and the new and we where psyched to ask him some questions.

People feel like your name is very connected to SF but you grew up in Maine. Around what time did you start skating and what got you into it?

I started skating in 1985. It was the usual kid down the street story, my buddy had a board and I gravitated to it. Growing up in Portland, Maine wasn’t like growing up in the woods, we had stuff to skate; it just wasn’t smooth, it’s a brick city.


How did you make the move from Portland out to SF? Did you just take a bus or did you drive out there with your stuff? we know from other interviews that you felt SF was the place to be.

I drove out to SF with 3 other guys; Nikhil Thayer, Jonah Thurell, and Mike Gower. I owned a Ford Tempo, but didn’t own too much else. So I just packed a bag and left. The total drive time was around 52 hours.

You started skating growing up in Maine. Do you feel like moving to SF changed the way you skated?

I grew up in Portland, Maine, so we had some shit to skate. Spots are what you would see in videos, just was just super beat up. The weather plays a big part in skating back there. We’d skate in abandon warehouses, parking garages, whatever we could find that was dry. As for San Francisco, fuck yeah! The place made me a way better skateboarder. I feel like that town makes you learn how to actually ride a skateboard. It’s one thing doing tricks, but skateboarding is much more than tricks. The actual act of riding is the best part, and that city is made for that. Not to mention the level of talented skaters that came through that place, it’s hard not to have it rub off.

https://youtu.be/07q5ubIyGvE


How did the Wu Welsh nickname come up and who thought that one up?

I owe that 100% to Satva Leung. It was because of this pair of Wu-tang pants I owned. I’d wear them just about everyday, and he totally caught onto that. He’d be like ah “Wu-tang, pants?” in a little condescending voice. A couple people caught on to the Wu-tang part, and basically ran with it.

I heard you started skating vert recently. How did you get into that, and do you pad up or skate padless?

I have always been into skating anything and everything. Padding up has been going on a lot lately. There’s no way my knees could take a run out on a vert ramp these days, and another knee replacement surgery isn’t on my to do list. The knee pads will save you, but I don’t wear pads on the streets. hahaha!

So can we expect a Rob Welsh vert part any time soon? Or maybe a video days type part with both vert tricks and street skating.

Ouch, just the thought of calling someone to film gives me anxiety. You know what, I think if I were to film a part it would have to be so friggin’ bro cam and I would only try something for a few tries. I think the part would have a little bit of everything, but mostly friend cameos.

How has being the brand manager for Expedition One changed your day to day life? You’ve said in interviews that you’re used to living on nothing for a long time.

You know that saying “You never work a day in your life if you love what you do.” Honestly, as long as I’m skating or doing something skate related, I’m going to be happy. I’ve been skateboarding my whole life, and love it more today than I did 30 years ago. As far as the nothing part, what do you really need in life? I have always been the richest man alive. A skateboard, good friends, roof over my head, and something to eat. What more do you need?

People still talk about your skating a lot. This year Free skateboard mag even did a retrospective part of all of your old footy. How do you feel about the fact that people like your skating so much that they make their own Rob Welsh sections.

It feels good that people were into my skating. It’s still flattering, and I’m totally blushing. You know when I was skating with my friends some years ago now, filming a trick here and there, would have never expected for someone to take the time to reedit it, and or get tagged every time someone does a nose slide in sweatpants. Haha! It definitely makes me feel good.

You where there in SF when it was the centre of the skateboarding world. Now things are more world wide than ever. Do you follow skateboarding from Europe and other places and if so how do you feel like people from different cultures influence skateboard culture?

Skateboarding has always been global, but I know what you’re saying. I’ve seen a time when skaters would have to had made a pilgrimage out to California if they even wanted to consider “getting hooked up”. Social media has definitely made it more accessible. You can rip anywhere and the community sees it. I can’t even imagine where I’d be living if that were the case back in the early 90’s.

After some switches, you found a home at Expedition. How did that go about happening? What does Expedition represent to you?

My friend Joey wasn’t getting on the brand I was riding for, and Joey was hit up by Expedition. Expedition was interested in having both of us, and I thought it was a good opportunity to get together with my buddy. I was always a fan of the brand, and it seemed like a good fit. Lastly, Expedition means different things to different people, but at the end of it all, it represents skateboarding first.

How does Expedition remain relevant in a time when skateboarding is changing?

I treat the brand in my image, and I update myself every couple of years; always remaining consistent.

I don’t think I have to tell you about Canada’s recent rise in coolness… Everything Canadian seems to be poppin – from Drake to Dime MTL. I believe we can now add Clubgear (Clothing) to that list of cool things coming out of that country north of the US.

The current style of dress seems to be on the verge of changing. I mean, at least some of us look like the skaters in this clip, but I can imagine that the next generation might be fed up with the current mischmasch of Dickie’s and tech gear – the circle of trends… You know!

Here are the latest clips from Clubgear – enjoy!

 

 

I met Torsten Frank for the first time this week and knew almost nothing about him. I had already seen his part in the Transworld Cinematographer video, so I knew he was a filmer. But that was it.

When I bicycled out to Kulturforum that day to meet up with the adidas crew, Torsten was the first person to shake my hand. Watching him film and interact with the skaters, I quickly noticed a couple of things about Torsten. One: he knows exactly how he wants his footage to look. Two: Torsten likes skaters that are motivated, and are willing to struggle a bit to get a trick or a line.

As I was sitting down I heard Torsten say something to Phil Anderson, but the weird thing was he said it in the middle of filming a line. That made me wonder, so I asked him:

Why are you talking to the skater when you are in the middle of filming a line?

Well, I’ve been filming for more then 15 years now, and about five years back I was filming this line. I believe it was a two-trick line, and I had already been filming for two hours. Normally, I’m pretty quiet when I’m filming but when the guy landed his first trick really proper I got this feeling that he was about to land the second trick as well. Now because I’ve been filming for such a long time, sometimes you just feel that this will be the one, so I accidentally yelled out: “This one!” And the guy landed the last trick as well.

At first I didn’t think anything of it. I felt it was just a coincidence but it happened again in a similar situation, the skater landed the first trick so proper and I yelled out: “This one!” And again, the skater landed his line, so I started to think, every time I do this I am giving the skater a small boost.

It has to be the right moment though… it won’t work if you do it every time. You just have to feel it out. It also really depends on the person you are filming. Also, if I know a skater doesn’t like it I won’t say a thing, but at the same time I’ve noticed a lot of people do really like it.

So now when a moment occurs where I get that same feeling, I try to give the skater just that little extra bit of motivation by yelling out: “This one!” Some skaters thought I would ruin the footage but I told them that when I edit a clip I can easily take the noise out, so it’s not like the skater ends up with a line with me talking in the background. It’s just one of those funny little things that happen to you when you’re out skating…

by Roland Hoogwater
Photos: Danny Sommerfeld

torsten-frank

Ein Amerikaner mit finnischen Wurzeln klingt nach der perfekten Mischung, um ein richtig guter Skater zu werden. Irgendwas zwischen Arto Saari und Silas Baxter-Neal. Und so ungefähr könnte man Marius Style und Können auf dem Brett auch beschreiben. Aus diesem Grund ist er nun endlich Pro auf Habitat Skateboards. Herzlichen Glückwunsch Suomi Bob.

Das Spiel mit dem Teufel, aus French Freds Augen ist Skateboarding ungefähr der Inbegriff. Du springst dutzende Male die Stufen hinunter und landest auf deinen Füßen, bis diese nachgeben und du aufs Gesäß fällst. Ach, wenn doch der Schmerz unser einziges Problem wäre. Schaut euch den Clip mit unter aderem Flo Mirtain, JB Gillet und Maxime Geronzi an. Ein weiteres Meisterwerk des französichen Filmemachers!

Sierra Kerr, Relz Murphy und Bella Kenworthy kommen aus Kalifornien, was schon mal erklären sollte wieso sie Meter hohe Bowls droppen dürfen. Diese 3 Mädels haben Eltern die wahrscheinlich den “Familie Sheckler” Weg gehen wollen – zu jung um sich zu beschweren und extrem form- und vermarktbar. Falls jedoch ein kleiner Funke Selbstbeteiligung dabei ist, kann man sich nur wünschen, dass die Mädels ihren Spaß dabei haben. Die Pink Helmet Skate Posse, so der super süße Name, wird aber mit großer Wahrscheinlichkeit in wenigen Wochen T-Shirts und eigene Boardserien auf den Markt bringen wollen.. ach die gibt es ja schon. Welcome to the land of the free.

Via Neue Elite.

In der neusten Ausgabe des Transworld Magazines gibt es einen Artikel über die 6 All-Terrain Ripper: Riley Hawk, Marius Syvanen, Dee Ostrander, Robbie Brockel, John Fitzgerald, Willis Kimbel, welche für eine Woche nach Portland geschickt wurden und mit diesem Clip zurück gekommen sind. Silas Baxter-Neal hat sich auch mit rein geschlichen!

Der Montag und der Regen sind ein Dreamteam, sie wurden geschaffen um das fröhliche Wochenende, welches so gerade hinter einem liegt, schnell zu vergessen und eine leicht chronische Depression auszustrahlen.
Die Schwarzmalerei hat aber jetzt ein Ende, wir haben nämlich den Louie gefunden! Der kann Handstand mit toller Frisur und zack, die Laune sprintet in bisher ungeahnte Höhen.

Alec Majerus ist einer der neuen Flip Ams und hat Potenzial dies in Zukunft zu ändern, den Status versteht sich.

Willy Wagner aus Berlin macht 10 Tricks am 3 flat 3 Set im Wintergarten der Redaktion für Mongo Bongo Berlin.

Willy Akers hat besonderes Glück bei seinen Kugellagern und einem Nosebonk der etwas anderen Art. Der Welcome Part für Lucky Bearings.

From Dawn Til Dusk zeigt die Deathwish Jungs, um Jim Greco und Erik Ellington in ihrem Skate und Create Video für Transworld Skateboarding.

Auch wenn in weiten Teilen des Landes Schnee liegt, fahren einige unserer Kandidaten mit kurzen Hosen unter praller Sonne. Den Anfang macht Mark Frölich, der sich mit einer Firing Line auf der Thrasher Seite warmfährt. Da kommt demnächst mehr!

Loading the player …

Oscar Meza bekommt von WeActivist gleich 2 x die Gelegenheit sein Talent zu zeigen. Hier sein Welcome Video Part 2.

Nixon war in Barcelona und hat seine europäischen Teamfahrer eingepackt, mit den Jungs ist man wohl immer pünktlich. Alex Mizurov, Chris Pfanner, Javier Sarmiento uvm. haben diesen Clip mitgebracht.

Auch im Norden schien mal die Sonne auch wenn das schon eine Weile her ist. Marc Bultmann hat einen der most underrated Skater des Landes: Jan Marinko, auf die Jagd geschickt und das ist dabei rausgekommen.

Den Abschluß macht Jimmy Carlin, der über die Arbeit zum neuen Transworld Video “Perpetual Motion” spricht. Man darf gespannt bleiben.

Wir begrüßen nun recht herzlich: das Wochenende. Es kommt aber nicht alleine und hat einige “Big Names” im Gepäck. Wir starten mit dem wohl besten Skater unter europäischer Sonne, wenn nicht sogar darüber hinaus. Lucas Puig skatet D.I.Y. Spot in Toulouse, die Homies dürfen natürlich nicht fehlen.

Chaz Ortiz zeigt euch ein paar Outtakes, aus seinem True East Part von Zoo York.

Eric Kostons Lost & Filmed ist am Start und nein, er ist nicht zurück auf Lakai.

Patrick o’Dell setzt sein Epicly later’d fort und hat diesen Trailer von Eric Dressen, der euch ein wenig Skateboardgeschichte nahe bringen wird.

Wenn wir schon bei den Veteranen sind, gibt es noch ein 30th Anniversary Interview vom Transworld Magazine mit John Cardiel persönlich, der übrigens am 17.01 in Berlin im House Of Vans auflegt.

Die Redaktion wünscht ein schönes Wochenende.

Den Start macht das Adidas Team, das mit der ganzen Mannschaft in New York aufkreuzte. Dennnis Busenitz, Lucas Puig, Pete Eldrige und weitere namenhafte Supporter hatten eine gute Zeit im LES Park.

Real Skateboards haben eine neue Boardserie am Start und wenn man dann so skatet wie Massimo Cavedoni, dann sollten wir die alle kaufen.

Cody McEntire ist ein Biest auf dem Skateboard. Seine Firing Line unterstreicht diese Aussage. Boom!

Loading the player …

Hutträger sind ja immer ein bisschen suspekt, weil sie irgendetwas unter ihrem Hut verstecken müssen: Bei den Jungs von Brixton ist das in diesem Fall ziemlich gutes Skateboarding im TWS Park.

{title}