Old School BMX freestyle, art and creative stuff, the future and economics, and anything else I find interesting...
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Sunday, December 31, 2017
Must do for 2018: See Cirque du Soleil Volta
There a few things that go back a long ways for me. I got into BMX in a trailer park outside Boise, Idaho, in 1982. That changed the course of my life. Just over a decade later, I was living in the infamous P.O.W. House in Westminster, CA, and I saw job ad for a circus coming to town. I wound up working in the box office of Saltimbanco, the first Cirque du Soleil show that appeared in Orange County, California. Working at Cirque changed what I thought was possible in life. There is nobody I've seen that work harder AND smarter than circus people. At that time, Cirque was just a single traveling show, a nine-year-old project that started with a group of street performers in Montreal. I could relate to that. As a BMX freestyler at the Huntington Beach Pier, I was a street performer who did tricks for around 140,000 people over a few years time.
Cirque du Soleil now has around 20 different shows, including several of the top permanent shows in Las Vegas. In the early tours, it was the best run company I've ever seen. I went on to work on four more tours that came to Orange County, mostly because it was just a fun place to go to work. Well, and I got to see the show for free several times.
The Cirque du Soleil box offices are built in a semi trailer. I spent many, many hours on the phone or at the window there day dreaming of someday performing in a BMX or rock climbing act in Cirque. That never happened for me. But now the insanely amazing organization of Cirque has put together a show around the energy and lifestyle of the action sports world. I DEFINITELY want to see this in 2018. If you get the chance, you should to.
The story behind Cirque du Soleil's Volta
The creation of Cirque du Soleil Volta
The BMX Finale of Cirque du Soleil's Volta
East Coast BMX freestyler from the 80's, Chris Lashua in Cirque's Quidam
Check the schedule and buy tickets for Volta
With a bit of looking on Facebook, you can find Daniel Dher's thoughts on seeing Volta for the first time. Happy New Year's everyone!
Saturday, December 30, 2017
2017: My Goals for a CRAZY year
My life has been tumultuous, to say the least, for about 15 years now. It's a really long story, and there are parts of my own story that I can't even tell. I'm not sure when this photo was taken, but that's about what I looked like a year ago. Only my four legged niece Willow was brave enough to be in a photo with me. Living with my mom for five years, my weight crept back up to near the highest it's ever been. In 2007, as a taxi driver in California, I bulked up to 374 pounds. I managed to lose much of that, getting down to 245 in 2011. Then I started driving a taxi here in Winston-Salem, and gained much of it back.
In any case, a year ago I had two choices: become a Sumo wrestler or start losing weight again. After some soul searching, I realized I'd never make Yokozuna. There ain't nothing good about being fat. OK, being super fat DID actually save my life once as a taxi driver, but that's the only time it helped.
Around May 1st, 2017, I weighed in at 368.8 pounds. In the situation I was in then, It was really tough to lose weight. But I wound up having it out with my mom, and heading here to Winston-Salem, living homeless, and focusing on getting my art going as a business. I had two main goals this year:
1) Lose weight and get below 300 pounds.
2) Start making a living from my art and writing.
I "failed" at both. That's how most people would categorize it. I didn't make either goal. But I come from the BMX and action sports world where "failure" is simply seen as a necessary part of life. I weighed myself today at the mall for a quarter, and came in at 317 pounds. And that was all bundled up for the cold weather. So I'll call it 315 pounds. While I didn't achieve my goal, I DID manage to lose about 54 pounds in the last eight months. I'll take it.
As for making a living from my art and writing... I have eight drawings up at Earshot Music here in Winston-Salem, my first solo art show. Four have sold, and that show helped me sell a couple more. I'm staying busy as an artist. I'm not making a living, but I'm making about 1/3 of a living doing what I love to do. Like with my weight, it's not exactly where I wanted to be, but it IS progress.
That's the point of goals. Even if you don't achieve the goal exactly, just working towards a goal gets you heading in the right direction.
Here are my two main goals for the first six months of 2018:
1) Lose 50 more pounds, and weigh in at under 265 by July 1st, 2018.
2) Get to the point where I'm making $1200 a month or more from my art and writing by July 1st, 2018, and have my own place to live.
Those are the two big things I'm working towards. What are you working towards in this New Year of 2018?
In any case, a year ago I had two choices: become a Sumo wrestler or start losing weight again. After some soul searching, I realized I'd never make Yokozuna. There ain't nothing good about being fat. OK, being super fat DID actually save my life once as a taxi driver, but that's the only time it helped.
Around May 1st, 2017, I weighed in at 368.8 pounds. In the situation I was in then, It was really tough to lose weight. But I wound up having it out with my mom, and heading here to Winston-Salem, living homeless, and focusing on getting my art going as a business. I had two main goals this year:
1) Lose weight and get below 300 pounds.
2) Start making a living from my art and writing.
I "failed" at both. That's how most people would categorize it. I didn't make either goal. But I come from the BMX and action sports world where "failure" is simply seen as a necessary part of life. I weighed myself today at the mall for a quarter, and came in at 317 pounds. And that was all bundled up for the cold weather. So I'll call it 315 pounds. While I didn't achieve my goal, I DID manage to lose about 54 pounds in the last eight months. I'll take it.
As for making a living from my art and writing... I have eight drawings up at Earshot Music here in Winston-Salem, my first solo art show. Four have sold, and that show helped me sell a couple more. I'm staying busy as an artist. I'm not making a living, but I'm making about 1/3 of a living doing what I love to do. Like with my weight, it's not exactly where I wanted to be, but it IS progress.
That's the point of goals. Even if you don't achieve the goal exactly, just working towards a goal gets you heading in the right direction.
Here are my two main goals for the first six months of 2018:
1) Lose 50 more pounds, and weigh in at under 265 by July 1st, 2018.
2) Get to the point where I'm making $1200 a month or more from my art and writing by July 1st, 2018, and have my own place to live.
Those are the two big things I'm working towards. What are you working towards in this New Year of 2018?
Thursday, December 28, 2017
Latest drawings: Jerry Garcia, and Miranda Lambert & Carrie Underwood
I've been drawing away for the last few weeks. Jerry Garcia is sold, the first drawing I sold on Craigslist. He should be traveling to his new home tomorrow. Sharpies on paper, my unique scribble style, 18" X 24".
This one of Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood is for my friend Ben, who's been helping me out big time for the last several months. I've totally lagged on getting this one done. Sorry Ben. It should be in his hands tomorrow. Sharpies on paper, my unique scribble style, 18" X 24". I've got a good feeling something bad's about to happen.
This one of Miranda Lambert and Carrie Underwood is for my friend Ben, who's been helping me out big time for the last several months. I've totally lagged on getting this one done. Sorry Ben. It should be in his hands tomorrow. Sharpies on paper, my unique scribble style, 18" X 24". I've got a good feeling something bad's about to happen.
December 28, 2017: How to get mugged and cold weather
I knew it was pretty chilly when I poked my head out of my blankets in my tent this morning. I got to McDonald's, and looked up the temperature on the local news website. "18 degrees, feels like 8 degrees," it said. Yeah... pretty chilly. All the NC locals here in McD's are complaining about the cold. They all slept in nice warm houses last night. Camp fires are not an option where I'm camped out. Lots of blankets have to suffice.
My main focus these days is turning my art and writing into a viable business. Why don't I "just get a job?" Haven't been able to find one in North Carolina since I drove a taxi over five years ago. If you read the article linked in that last post, you know that I'm not alone. After three serious attempts at job hunting a couple years back, 150 online applications turned up one response, at a fast food place. When I met the manager, she saw my overweight, middle-aged self, and changed her mind.
Here in central North Carolina, the only directive people give is "just keep looking for a job." But the Californian in me, the entrepreneurial side, realizes there are other options. I decided to create my own job. I started in November 2015 with an old, battered laptop running Windows XP, some art supplies, ambition, and not a dime to my name. I was living for free with my mom, but it was far from an ideal environment. Two weeks into my attempts to sell artwork, my computer died. I sold a couple of drawings to buy another cheap, refurbished laptop. I managed to sell my unique Sharpie marker drawings cheap, but on a halfway consistent basis, ever since. Even now, I average only $2 to $4 an hour for the work I do. Not much, but it's something.
But where I was living was an apartment in continual financial crisis. So I was never able to re-invest the little bit of money I made. My mom and I didn't get along when I was young, and we still don't. Long story, lots of back story, but the end result is that I came back to Winston-Salem from Kernersville with about $20 a couple of weeks ago. I choose to live in a tent rather than go to a homeless shelter for a few reasons. 1) I have a laptop that I use to blog and sell my artwork. It WOULD get stolen or destroyed at a shelter. 100% chance, no question. 2) No bed bugs in my tent. 3) I can work as much as I want, which is every waking hour. I love what I do, and get up psyched to get to work. I don't have to go to bed a 9 pm and have to wake up at 5:30 am for no reason, like I would in a shelter. 4) Shelters suck. 50-60-70 guys snoring, yelling, talking shit, and stealing your socks (and anything else they can nab). 5) Homeless shelters ARE NOT geared to help people actually trying to get back to work. They are geared to funnel you into programs for either mental health or addiction (whether those apply to you or not), and then scamming Social Security disability to get a check from the government. There are no entrepreneurial homeless shelters. But there should be.
Last night, I left the library, planning to buy a ten-ride bus pass at the station. I had less than $20 in my checking account, so I couldn't pull cash out. The only store nearby wouldn't let me get $5 cash back on a purchase. But I had I gift card from Christmas I planned to buy the bus pass with, because I had no cash or change for the bus. But the machines only take cash. I went to the window, and couldn't buy a bus pass there either, I needed cash.
Since I have some community service to do, and need to stay out of trouble, I chose not to panhandle a dollar for the bus. Instead, I walked the 3-4 miles from the bus station to my campsite. Walking under a bridge near Baptist Hospital, I saw a guy in the shadows walking towards me. I noticed him put his right hand in his pocket and appear to pull something out. After years of taxi driving and homelessness, my radar went off. As we got close to each other, he opened his arms up wide and said "Merry Christmas, man!" And tried to give me a big hug. It was December 27th. Christmas is over. I didn't recognize the guy. He was a black guy, late 20's maybe, a skinny dude. I had to literally put my hand on his chest and firmly, but not aggressively, push him away. "I don't do hugs, man," I told him. His expression changed. Whatever he had in mind, he realized he had picked the wrong guy. He stepped away and we continued going our different directions. He acted like it was a mistake, and I didn't press the issue or get aggressive. That's the way to handle a mugger, I guess. I weighed about twice what he did, and there was concrete in every direction. If it had turned into a pushing and shoving match, he would have wound up in the hospital, and I might have, too. Or jail. But we both treated it like a simple misunderstanding, and that was that. After about 20 feet, I looked back. He put his right hand back in his pocket, apparently putting whatever it was back in his coat pocket. I shuffled on "home," and spent an hour under my covers trying to warm up. I've never been mugged before. I wasn't last night either. Life goes on. I've got drawings to do.
My main focus these days is turning my art and writing into a viable business. Why don't I "just get a job?" Haven't been able to find one in North Carolina since I drove a taxi over five years ago. If you read the article linked in that last post, you know that I'm not alone. After three serious attempts at job hunting a couple years back, 150 online applications turned up one response, at a fast food place. When I met the manager, she saw my overweight, middle-aged self, and changed her mind.
Here in central North Carolina, the only directive people give is "just keep looking for a job." But the Californian in me, the entrepreneurial side, realizes there are other options. I decided to create my own job. I started in November 2015 with an old, battered laptop running Windows XP, some art supplies, ambition, and not a dime to my name. I was living for free with my mom, but it was far from an ideal environment. Two weeks into my attempts to sell artwork, my computer died. I sold a couple of drawings to buy another cheap, refurbished laptop. I managed to sell my unique Sharpie marker drawings cheap, but on a halfway consistent basis, ever since. Even now, I average only $2 to $4 an hour for the work I do. Not much, but it's something.
But where I was living was an apartment in continual financial crisis. So I was never able to re-invest the little bit of money I made. My mom and I didn't get along when I was young, and we still don't. Long story, lots of back story, but the end result is that I came back to Winston-Salem from Kernersville with about $20 a couple of weeks ago. I choose to live in a tent rather than go to a homeless shelter for a few reasons. 1) I have a laptop that I use to blog and sell my artwork. It WOULD get stolen or destroyed at a shelter. 100% chance, no question. 2) No bed bugs in my tent. 3) I can work as much as I want, which is every waking hour. I love what I do, and get up psyched to get to work. I don't have to go to bed a 9 pm and have to wake up at 5:30 am for no reason, like I would in a shelter. 4) Shelters suck. 50-60-70 guys snoring, yelling, talking shit, and stealing your socks (and anything else they can nab). 5) Homeless shelters ARE NOT geared to help people actually trying to get back to work. They are geared to funnel you into programs for either mental health or addiction (whether those apply to you or not), and then scamming Social Security disability to get a check from the government. There are no entrepreneurial homeless shelters. But there should be.
Last night, I left the library, planning to buy a ten-ride bus pass at the station. I had less than $20 in my checking account, so I couldn't pull cash out. The only store nearby wouldn't let me get $5 cash back on a purchase. But I had I gift card from Christmas I planned to buy the bus pass with, because I had no cash or change for the bus. But the machines only take cash. I went to the window, and couldn't buy a bus pass there either, I needed cash.
Since I have some community service to do, and need to stay out of trouble, I chose not to panhandle a dollar for the bus. Instead, I walked the 3-4 miles from the bus station to my campsite. Walking under a bridge near Baptist Hospital, I saw a guy in the shadows walking towards me. I noticed him put his right hand in his pocket and appear to pull something out. After years of taxi driving and homelessness, my radar went off. As we got close to each other, he opened his arms up wide and said "Merry Christmas, man!" And tried to give me a big hug. It was December 27th. Christmas is over. I didn't recognize the guy. He was a black guy, late 20's maybe, a skinny dude. I had to literally put my hand on his chest and firmly, but not aggressively, push him away. "I don't do hugs, man," I told him. His expression changed. Whatever he had in mind, he realized he had picked the wrong guy. He stepped away and we continued going our different directions. He acted like it was a mistake, and I didn't press the issue or get aggressive. That's the way to handle a mugger, I guess. I weighed about twice what he did, and there was concrete in every direction. If it had turned into a pushing and shoving match, he would have wound up in the hospital, and I might have, too. Or jail. But we both treated it like a simple misunderstanding, and that was that. After about 20 feet, I looked back. He put his right hand back in his pocket, apparently putting whatever it was back in his coat pocket. I shuffled on "home," and spent an hour under my covers trying to warm up. I've never been mugged before. I wasn't last night either. Life goes on. I've got drawings to do.
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
Why Millennials are Screwed (and how that affects the rest of us)
In this incredible article (that's incredibly long) from Huff Post/Highline, Michael Hobbes goes into great detail to explain the structural problems in our world that are making life so difficult for Millennials, (and some of us middle aged Gen Xers). The stereotypes are misleading, as usual, and our current American way of doing things is stacked against most of the people in the country. It's in your best interest to READ THIS ARTICLE. I know most of you won't. And then you'll be baffled and whiny when more epic social changes start happening.
Saturday, December 23, 2017
What will we do with all those empty buildings?
This still of the thrashed escalator area at Rolling Acres Mall is iconic to many now. This 2014 clip was an early look at what's now called the Retail Apocalypse. A quick online search will show a consensus of articles and videos listing thousands of stores that have closed and people expecting about 400 entire shopping malls to close within the next five years. That's if we DON'T have a recession anytime soon. On a timeline basis alone, we're due for a recession any time now.
While thousands of new stores have opened, more than 6,700 retail chain stores have closed in 2017 alone. There were thousands more in the past few years. There are a bunch of different reasons for this. This Bloomberg News article (Nov. 2017) adds crazy amounts of debt to the picture of retail stores losing ground to online sales, and the millennials' penchant for seeking experiences over piles of material goods. Any way we look at it, there are tens of millions of square feet under roof becoming empty. That's in addition to all the old factories and warehouses from decades of manufacturing decline. It looks like that this year's closing stores are just the beginning.
I happened to be born just a few miles from Rolling Acres Mall, the one in the clip above, in Akron, Ohio. I followed my parents around that mall, and many others, as a kid. This mall has been demolished. But hundreds more are still standing, and the term "dead mall" is part of our vernacular now. There's a dead mall, completely empty, fifteen miles from me right now. I'm sitting in the McDonald's in the parking lot of another mall that's packed right now with Christmas shoppers. But it's definitely not packed the rest of the year. The mall behind me is doing better than most. But two of its anchor department stores are Sears and J.C. Penney's, which are both struggling. For now, though, it's still alive and kicking.
My point here is that we have a HUGE amount of buildings of all kinds standing empty in this country. We have a lot more buildings that will become empty in the coming years. So...
What are we going to do with all that space?
Here are some of my favorite ideas:
Indoor Skatepark- Van's store/skatepark- Orange, CA- large, two story mall store
Indoor Skatepark with Amazing Art- Iianera, Spain- old church
Art Colony- Santa Fe Art Colony- Los Angeles, CA- old industrial buildings
Indoor Mountain Bike/BMX Park- Ray's MTB- Cleveland, Ohio- 100,000+ sq.ft. factory
Indoor Dirt BMX Park- Burlington Bike Park- Burlington, Washington- warehouse
Indoor (underground) Mountain Bike Park- Louisville Mega Cavern, Louisville, KY- old mine
Indoor Ropes Course/Zip Lines- Lousiville Mega Cavern
Indoor Wood BMX Park- Daniel Dhers Action Sports Complex- Holly Springs, NC- warehouse
BMX/Skateboard/Gymnastics Summer Camp- Woodward East, Woodward, PA- warehouses
Indoor Climbing Gym- Allez Up- Montreal, Quebec, Canada- old sugar silos
Martial Arts Tricking Practice Gym- Various dojos/gyms- warehouse/industrial spaces
Indoor Parkour/Freerunning Course- Unknown location, warehouse
Indoor Slack Line- Somewhere in Canada, eh- dining room
Indoor Snowboard Park- Montana Snow Center- Westerhoven, Netherlands- warehouse
Indie Art Gallery/Performance space- AAA Electra 99- Anaheim, CA- industrial space
Independent Theater- Center Stage Theater- Naperville, IL- warehouse
Public Library- McAllen, TX- old Walmart store
$1000 Movie Stage- Unknown- old barn
Privately Owned Movie Studio- Tyler Perry Studios- Atlanta, GA- decommissioned Army base
Friday, December 22, 2017
How the Homeless Relocation in the U.S. (doesn't) work(s)
I just saw a short clip of this on MSNBC online. Thousands of homeless people every year are given bus tickets to get them away from some cities. In this article, The Guardian (UK) looks at the effectiveness of these programs.
Alternative Christmas Carols
Just watch this one. I mean it. The Dickies, "Silent Night."
Need a break from the holiday madness about now? Thought so. Here ya go:
"Little Drummer Boy" - Joan Jett
"Oi to the World" - No Doubt
"Merry Christmas (I don't want to fight tonight)" - The Ramones
"The Season's Upon Us" - Dropkick Murphy's
"Merry Xmas" - Face to Face
"White Christmas" - Johnny Cash
"The Chanukah Song" - Adam Sandler
"Oh Come All Ye Faithful" - Twisted Sister
"Carol of the Bells" - Trans Siberian Orchestra
"Father Christmas" - The Kinks
"Christmas Wrapping" - The Waitresses
"Christmas in Hollis" - Run DMC
"Twas the Night Before Christmas" - Snoop Dogg
"Christmas Hell's Bells" - AC/DC
"White Christmas" - Guns & Roses
"Smells Like Christmas Spirit" - Not Nirvana
"Christmas Wrapping (Jewish version)" - Save Ferris
"Merry Muthafuckin' Christmas"- Eazy-E
"12 J's of Christmas" - Afroman
"Happy Skaladays" - Reel Big Fish
"Jingle Bells" - Eminem
"Blue Christmas" - The Partridge Family
"Little Drummer Boy" (Peace on Earth)" - David Bowie and Bing Crosby
Thursday, December 21, 2017
Mind baffling TED Talk by Skateboarder Rodney Mullen
It just occurred to me that I might be the only homeless person who's had a published interview with a person who's done a TED Talk years later. My life is filled with obscure things like that. Actually, Rodney has done several TED Talks. Groups of super intelligent, high achieving techies, scientists, business people and others show up in rooms like this and willingly spend 18 minutes of their precious time to listen to a skateboarder. Why? Because Rodney is well known as one of the most innovative people in action sports, not to mention the whole world.
Yes, I know Rodney kind of jumps around in this talk, and comes across like a somewhat scatter-brained genius. That's because he is a somewhat scatter-brained genius. It's a little hard to follow. But he brakes down skateboard tricks into little groups of movements. Once you learn a basic group of movements, a trick, then you can either add variations to that trick, or take that trick to an entirely new type of terrain. In doing this, skaters (and other action sports people) continually innovate, and add to the collective base of tricks. The community respects these contributions (mostly), and those contributions then live on long past the time you came up with them, and continue to evolve.
I first met Rodney in August of 1986, at a place we called The Spot, just north of the Redondo Beach Pier in California. I had just started a new job at Wizard Publications, a BMX magazine publisher, and my new co-worker and roommate Lew said, "You gotta meet this skateboarder Rodney, he's amazing." Lew and I went to The Spot to practice our flatland BMX freestyle tricks on a good sized brick area. After we'd been there for a couple hours, Rodney rode up on this rickety, old, black beach cruiser bike he called Agnes. Where we would just start practicing our tricks, Rodney prepared to skate. He taped his fingers, checked over his board, and stretched. It was the first time I met a skateboarder who actually trained. Then he did some basic, but still hard, tricks to warm up. Then he skated, alone, for two or three hours.
At one point, he stopped to take a break, and Lew and I rode over to say "hi." Rodney was staying with then washed up skater Steve Rocco for a few weeks. Lew introduced me, and we talked for a few minutes. Rodney was kind of quiet, really down to Earth, and obviously really smart. After meeting him that first night, I started hanging out after I was done sessioning, and watch Rodney skate. We started talking, and hit it off. So I got to know him over those three weeks or so, and then later that fall when stayed at Rocco's for another month.
FREESTYLIN' magazine, where Lew and I worked, was covering skateboarding at the time, as well as BMX freestyle. So I got the chance to do a short interview with Rodney, and he even got a photo on the cover of that issue (below). BMX freestyle and skateboarding drew a weird crowd of people who generally felt like outsiders to "normal" life. Some of those guys were the total crazy daredevil types. But hanging out with Rodney, I found it was possible to read big books, be smart, and still be part of the BMX/skate world. The more introverted, intellectual skaters and bikes often invented technically hard tricks. Those tricks were often taken to bigger and crazier version by other riders and skaters. That's where the community aspect of action sports, which Rodney speaks of at the end of this talk, comes into play. No one person in these "sports" is "The Best," and everyone can contribute to the scene. You can read my 1986 interview with Rodney Mullen. I couldn't get that to load today. If you can, it's in the skate section of the magazine near the middle.
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
The Difference a Good Scene Can Make
The Boise BMX track around the time I started racing. We called it Fort Boise then, because it was in a drained sewer pond behind the old Fort Boise site. This little place changed the course of my life.
I got into BMX in a trailer park outside Boise, Idaho in 1982. There were about 12 junior high and high school guys there, not many girls, and not much to do. We watched bad TV re-runs all afternoon in the summer, then came out as it cooled off in the early evening. When I first moved there, we'd get games of wiffle ball, football, or basketball going against each other every evening. And we'd ride our BMX bikes on some little jumps and berms a forgotten motorcycle rider had made a couple years before. It was just something for us bored teenagers to do. That's how it started.
As the summer of 1982 progressed, we rode our bikes more, and played traditional games less. We were just a bunch of punk kids trying to learn a new trick on our bikes and out-do each other. Our little rivalries grew and faded, and we all started breaking parts on our cheap bikes. And we started getting better. BMX became our thing. I didn't realize it then, but we organically formed a little scene, pushing each other to improve.
We started buying magazines with money made babysitting or mowing lawns. When one kid bought a magazine, he'd hide it and read the whole thing in one night, sometimes twice. Then, he'd bring it out the next day and we'd all flip through it, learning the names of top riders and looking at the tricks in the photos. As our cheap bikes broke, we bought (some kids stole) better parts. We all tried to learn a new trick without the others seeing it, we were hyper-competitive with each other, always trying to be the first to pull off a trick or move we saw in a magazine. Because of that, we progressed fairly quickly.
In those pre-internet days, news traveled at a snails pace, and it took us several months to learn that there was a BMX race track in Boise. For those of you not familiar, "BMX" is a short version of "bicycle motocross." One Saturday in October, four of us and three bikes piled into Scott's mom's Ford Pinto. It wasn't a hatchback, so it was a tight fit. I left my bike at home, because I was the worst rider in the trailer park at that point.
We went to the track, tried it out, and coached each other on the best lines to take and where to pass other riders. The three guys who rode, Scott, Brian, and James, all won trophies. We were hooked. We headed back to the trailer park like we'd just conquered a foreign land or something. When the other kids saw our trophies and heard our stories, the plan immediately began for the next race. Unfortunately, that was the last race of the year.
Early that next Saturday, we piled in my dad's Ford Van, about nine of us, all with bikes, and unleashed our low-budget, but high energy crew on the local BMX scene. Most of us had "K-Mart Special" bikes with a few upgraded components. Most of the local kids had bikes that ranged in price from $350 to $600 each. They had full motocross style leathers as uniforms, we had shabby Levi's and T-shirts. They had custom number plates, we had paper plates with numbers hand written by the officials taped to our handlebars. That day, I first saw the difference a tight scene can make.
All day long we heard one phrase over and over from kids and parents; "Where did all these fast kids on piece-of-shit bikes come from?" It was the first race for most of us, the second race for those three. We were not only competitive, but we all went home with trophies, mostly first and second place. We had everything going against us... except the thing that mattered most that day. Hunger. We lived BMX. That's all we had to cram our teenage anger, frustration, and energy into. Even before that first race, BMX was our life. We had something to prove to the world. We came from a bunch of families that were more dysfunctional than most, and we all had issues. BMX gave us something to focus on, to be good at, and to begin to progress as a human being, not just a bike rider.
That desire for personal progression shaped the whole course of my life. I went on to take chances, on my bike and off, that I never dreamed of early on, and that many wouldn't want to try. I learned, first on a physical level, then on a life level, to get back up every time I fell down. Or was pushed down. Or punched in the head (that's for you Scott). I'm still trying new things and progressing today. And even now, at 51 years old and really overweight, I still have the urge to ride a bike and keep progressing.
Financially, my life's a mess. Like many, I got stuck in an industry that changed drastically due to new technology. But I'm still going, still at it, and my artwork is starting to open some doors. Now, 35 years after that summer in Blue Valley Trailer Park, I look at scene of people pushing each other in a totally different way. Over those three and a half decades, I've learned that much of the progress in the world comes from small groups of people pushing each other to get better. Scenes. Art scenes. Music Scenes. BMX, skateboard, and other action sports scenes. Entrepreneurial scenes. High Tech scenes. These are all loosely connected. My work I'm doing these days is trying to share the importance of these small scenes, especially creative scenes, how they grow, and to help build better ones.
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
A $4 Billion Dollar Reason Why Your City's Innovation District Needs a Skate (and Bike) Park
Does your city have an Innovation District, a place where high tech start-ups and a hip urban lifestyle come together? Dozens of cities around the U.S. and the world have built them, including the city I'm now living in. But I bet none of them look like the place above. In this clip you see my long time friend Pierre, skating below the Huntington Beach Pier in Southern California in 1989. This is what the area looked like on weekdays and during the winter then. On summer weekends it was packed with people. Surfers came every morning to surf by the pier. Skateboarders and BMX freestylers, like myself, hung out and drew crowds every weekend in this spot. The police didn't like us there, and told us to stop skating and riding every time our crowds blocked the walk/bike path. It was a good place to practice, hang out, meet girls, and grab a slice of pizza at Papa Joe's or a burger at Wimpi's afterwards.
So what does a skate and bike spot from the 1980's and 1990's have to do with the rise of "Innovation Districts" around the world. To most people, there appears to be no economic development happening at this spot in the video above. But an article I just read in Transworld Skateboarding brought the two together, in my mind, at least.
First, let me tell you that I got into the sport of BMX racing, and then the emerging sport of BMX freestyle in high school. It was the early 1980's, and I lived in Boise, Idaho. I graduated high school and couldn't afford college. Much to EVERYONE's dismay, I kept learning tricks on my little bike, and my life took a far different path than anyone imagined. I met a lot of weird young people, and wound up working in the BMX, and then the skateboard industry.
One day, in the fall of 1986, while working at the offices of FREESTYLIN' magazine, four of us were standing outside on break when pro freestyle Ron Wilkerson rode up on his motorcycle. On the back, he had a young blond kid. It was the first time any of us met that kid. When I got laid off a few months later (mostly because I didn't like the band Skinny Puppy), that kid was hired for my old job. He wound up fitting in well there.
In January of 1987, I took a job in Huntington Beach, and I started hanging out at the H.B. Pier every weekend, and I met a bunch of local skaters and BMXers, as well as others who stopped by while in the area. I was at the pier nearly every weekend for several years. Pierre, the skater above, was one of the first people I met, along with a skater named Don and many others. One of those kids, one I don't specifically remember, but know was part of the local scene, is mentioned in the Transworld article I just read. He was just one of the kids that skated by the pier now and then, and sessioned Huntington High and other places I often rode my bike.
Years later, in about 1997 or so, local BMXer John Paul Rogers invited me to his "Loser Christmas" at his house in H.B. There were a bunch of BMX industry guys from other parts of the country who didn't have family in the area. So we all got together, drank a few beers, played pool, rode the mini ramp, and watched really crazy videos. I wound up spending much of the day on the backyard trampoline doing some tramp boarding. That's where you have a skateboard deck (no trucks or wheels) and jump on it on the trampoline and try to do tricks. There was another bike/skate industry guy there who I'd heard of, but never met before. We took turns on the board on the trampoline much of the day. He was trying to pull a solid method air, and I was working on a 720 shove-it. We both landed our tricks that day, and got to know each other.
Hang in there, I'm pulling it all together. I met those guys because I did what everyone in my life thought was crazy, and focused on learning tricks on "a little kids bike." If I had gone to college, it wouldn't have happened. If I had spent my time learning computer coding, it wouldn't have happened. If I had moved to a 1980's version of today's "innovation districts," it never would have happened.
The guy I met on the back of the motorcycle in 1986 was a 17-year-old named Spike Jonze. The kid I don't specifically remember from the H.B. street skating scene was Jason Lee. The guy I hung out with on the trampoline at the Loser Christmas was Jeff Tremaine. The article I just read in Transworld Skateboarding figured up the box office revenues of the movies those three guys have either directed or starred in. The total comes to $3,692,000,000. That's not a typo. Yes, those three guys have gone on from skateboarding and helped bring in nearly 3.7 BILLION DOLLARS in worldwide box office revenues. Really.
Wait, you want to call me out for round that number up to $4 billion, right? I mean, rounding up $300 million dollars is a big jump. That's not pocket change, unless you're Bill Gates, maybe. Remember Pierre, the skater in the video above? Pierre Andre Senizergues is now best know as the founder of Sole Technologies, the parent company of Etnies and E's shoes, 32 snowboard boots, and Altamont clothing. Our mutal good friend from the pier, Don Brown, is the vice-president of marketing there. While I don't know exactly how much Sole Tech has grossed over the years, I know it's way over the $300 million needed to bring the total up to a nice round $4 billion.
If you build a skate and bike park in your city's Innovation District, it's unlikely that those skaters will create billions in sales over the years. But, then again, it was really unlikely in 1986 that Spike, Jason, and Jeff would either.
The Innovation District in the city I now live in outlawed skateboarding in that area. I love irony. Maybe they should read this article in Transworld.
Monday, December 18, 2017
10,000 Page views... Heck yeah
To celebrate hitting the 10,000 page view milestone on this blog, here's the remaining version of a 7 minute promo video I did for the short-lived Christian Hosoi/Vision Skateboards collaboration Tuff Skts in 1990.
Last summer I decided to bring all my assorted blogs together, not sure how it would work. But I wanted get away from telling old school BMX stories on one blog, sharing my artwork on another, and talking about the future, economics, and other stuff I'm interested in on other blogs. Yesterday this new blog crossed the first big milestone, 10,000 total page views. That may not mean anything to you, but I'm stoked on it. Thanks for checking it out.
Sunday, December 17, 2017
White Bear Creations has moved
This is the second version of Winston-Salem's tree mural, now on Liberty Street. The original was on Trade Street, on the front of the building where The Sweet Potato restaurant now resides. I have absolutely nothing to do with this mural, but it's a landmark in the W-S art scene, centered around Trade Street downtown. I'm finally getting into that scene after years in this area.
To those of you in the know, White Bear Creations, the likely future name for my Sharpie art/writing business, has moved back to Winston-Salem, NC, and now resides in a less than lovely tent in the woods. In other words, I'm homeless again. But I've got a bunch of unique, "scribble style" Sharpie drawings to do, and I've been working on them all day.
Last night, after a friend helped me move my tent to a more secluded location, and went beyond the call of friendship helping me struggle to put it back up, I cleaned out the tent. As a rule, I don't have food in my camping area when homeless. But I had some pudding cups left in the tent when I got arrested for buying donuts, and spent three days in jail, a couple months ago. Something (animals? kids?) got in there and spilled pudding all over the floor of the tent. That may not sound like a big deal, but a tent smelling like vanilla pudding is way to attractive to local critters.
When I got settled in last night, I thought sleeping in a tent on a night the temperature was going to drop to 26 degrees (F) would be the biggest thing to deal with. I had enough covers to stay plenty warm, much to my surprise. But the four different critters scratching at the outside of my tent, trying to find that damn pudding, turned out to be the biggest issue last night. What can I say... neighbors be buggin'.
I spent the day today working on my Sharpie drawings indoors and getting grilled by a local snitch. As homelessness goes, that's more exciting than I like my days to be. Got a bunch of drawing done, though, far more than when I was sleeping on a couch in a nice warm, but drama-filled, apartment recently.
Things that are worse than homelessness #1
Dealing on a day to day basis with a person who exhibits most or all of the symptoms of Borderline Personality Disorder is worse than being homeless.
Friday, December 15, 2017
Blues Brothers drawing up at Earshot Music
This is my latest drawing for the show at Earshot Music in Winston-Salem. It's up on the wall now, and selling for $120. If anyone here on the interwebs is interested, I can facilitate the sale, and I'll pay shipping (USPS 1st class in continental U.S.). Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24".
Earshot Music is at 3254 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC. It's in the shopping center across Hanes Mall Blvd. from Hanes Mall. It's the place with Marshall's, Toys-R-Us, and A.C. Moore, next to Marshall's. Stop by and check out my work and all their music.
Earshot Music is at 3254 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC. It's in the shopping center across Hanes Mall Blvd. from Hanes Mall. It's the place with Marshall's, Toys-R-Us, and A.C. Moore, next to Marshall's. Stop by and check out my work and all their music.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
The F.C.C. Repeals Net Neutrality despite 22 MILLION Americans petitioning for it
In a 3-2 vote today, the Federal Communications Commission repealed the rules known as "Net Neutrality." At least 22 million Americans signed petitions to keep the rules in place. In yet another Republican-backed handout to large corporations, Internet Service Providers will now be able to charge various websites, and perhaps even blocking popular sites that don't want to pay up. There will be all kinds of lawsuits over this, but for now the new rules are supposed to go into effect in a couple of months.
The video above, posted 11/30/2017, gives a quick but good view of the kinds of changes we're likely to see.
A a small time, but serious blogger, I'm one of the tens of millions of people likely to get seriously reamed by this rule change. So I'm going to do my best to keep up on this issue, and share what I learn.
Here are articles about this:
The New York Times
Net Neutrality Explained- 2015 Wall Street Journal video
The FCC laughing at the millions of "save Net Neutrality" comments it receivied
Wikipedia page on Ajit Pai, who was appointed chairman of the FCC by President Trump in March 2017
Monday, December 11, 2017
Ride In Peace: A Tribute to Kevin Robinson
"That's what bike riding's about, that's why I ride a bike, that right there... We sit at home, we think up stuff, we try it, and it works... we just keep progressing."
-Kevin Robinson, after landing the first double flair at the 2006 X-Games
Kevin Robinson, one of the most progressive BMX riders ever, died suddenly of a stroke, this past Saturday, December 9th, 2017. He was 45 years old and left behind a wife and three children.
My blogs about BMX have been my own personal take on the BMX freestyle world that I was a part of in the 1980's and 1990's. Kevin Robinson is one of the riders I never met. I know him, like most of you, from seeing video clips of him pulling one seemingly impossible trick after another. He pushed the progression of BMX more than most, if not all, of the the amazing riders in the 21st century. He inspired thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, of riders to push their own limits. More important, everyone I've heard who knows him says he was a cool human being, not just an amazing rider. That is something that can't be said for a lot of pro athletes.
Rather than write a big post about someone I never knew personally, I'm going to put a bunch of links of his riding and interviews to check out. RIP K ROB, and empathy, best wishes, and condolences to his family and all his friends.
World Record 27 foot quarterpipe air
Alli Sports Interview
27 foot high World Record quarterpipe air
Vert session at Woodward East
No handed flair on Mega Ramp
Riding a Big Wheel
Double flair attempt on Mega Ramp
Kevin's Woodward Experience
Kevin on The Late Show with David Letterman
Talking about his foundation
K-Rob BMX school assembly programs
84 foot ramp to ramp back flip
And here's a TED Talk Kevin gave.
Thursday, December 7, 2017
Happy Birthday Bob Morales!
Happy birthday to Bob Morales. Not only did he turn BMX freestyle into a sport by founding the ASPA and then the AFA, but he added the word "gription" to the English language.
I was the only BMXer who rode this halfpipe
The Gauntlet on American Gladiators. I was not only the first guy to run through the gauntlet in the testing phase, I was the only BMXer ti ride this halfpipe. It was all about 2 inch thick foam, not good to ride. A lot of fun to run through though. On camera blocking day, Siren (Shelly Beattie) and I got into a full on wrestling match. She kicked my ass, but I was able to reach across the finish line. I also had lunch with Dean Cain one day on the set. Cool guy and really good athlete.
Monday, December 4, 2017
Canyon Lands...the atrocities continue...
When I hear the name "Canyon Lands," I think of adventures like this. President Trump just stripped away the "National Monument" status of a huge chunk of these lands by presidential proclamation. Bummer. There's a reason we have national monuments. It's because we live in a kickass country with lots of great wild areas worth protecting for future generations. The inevitable impeachment can not some soon enough.
Why are you here?
I recently ran across Simon Sinek's videos online. That's kind of weird, because the last 40 of my 51 years of life have been trying to find out the "why?" of life. Like many, my childhood was one of daily pain, misery, and simply trying to survive. At age eleven, I really began wondering what the point was. What is the point of life itself? Why are we here on this planet with so much struggle and pain and corruption and just plain mean people. What could possibly be the purpose to it all?
While others focused on creating lives and careers and family as we grew up, I wandered through a series of weird jobs. I found early success, but it didn't bring happiness. I've been through some pretty tough trials. I kept plugging away, even though there seemed to be no point to life much of the time.
Early on in my search, I heard this ridiculous idea that we are spiritual beings of some sort, and that we venture into these physical bodies on planet Earth to learn what we can in this realm. OK, every tribe around the world, every religion believes in some sort of soul or spirit that is more than just our physical bodies. That's not what seemed crazy to me. What seemed crazy was that some people think we "signed up" for the particular lives we are born into. Some people believe that our souls actually pick our parents in a way, to push us to learn particular lessons that can only be learned by coming into this crazy world.
When I first heard that idea in my early 20's, it seemed absurd. "I picked my parents and my extended family? On purpose? Have you met these people?" I dismissed that crazy idea and went on reading books, answering lists of questions, fasting, meditating, and sessioning on my bike and sometimes on my skateboard. I kept searching.
Little by little, bits of insight and understanding came to me. Through crazy times and fun times, I struggled and occasionally soared. Bit by bit, a bigger picture was revealed. Now, at age 51, weighing in at 315 pounds and with few teeth left after my crazy journey, I've realized that small group of people I heard in my early 20's were right. Our souls, or spirits, or whatever you want to call them, they pick the situation we're born into. We did it to ourselves.
In a sense, life is the ultimate thrill ride, the toughest adventure race. We "sign up" for our crazy adventures here on Earth. But here's the kicker. As soon as we enter these human bodies, we forget what we signed up for. We not only have to try to survive this crazy world, we have to try and figure out why we're here in the first place. All along the way we complain about the adventure, and most people get overwhelmed by it.
But think of it this way. If you signed up for a Spartan race or a mud run, the point is to see if you can make it through the challenge. It'd be pretty stupid to stop in the middle and say, "Why are you people torturing me like this?" If you pay money to go to a haunted house at Halloween time, you don't fight the people in the house that jump out and scare you. You paid money to have them jump out and scare you. That's the whole point.
But in this adventure of life on Earth, we have the added challenge of amnesia. We paid to enter this fun house, we signed up for this adventure, but part of the adventure is forgetting that we actually did come into these lives on purpose. We bought a ticket to the "Human Being" adventure, and are then given amnesia, so a big part of the adventure is figuring out that it actually IS AN ADVENTURE.
From this point of view, everything changes. So... why are you here? What adventure did you sign up for?
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
My recent Sharpie art, part 5
This is the last of my Sharpie "scribble style" drawings I've finished. This drawing of Tupac Shakur was supposed to be for the current Earshot Music show, but it sold before it made it up on the wall. I'm working on a replacement right now. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is the Kurt Cobain drawing I did, in the online flyer version, because it's way better than the photo I took. Photo by Phred at Earshot. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is the first order for a drawing I got form the Earshot Music show. "Bob Marley: One Love." Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is my personal favorite of the drawings up right now at the Earshot Music show. "Tainted Love" is a great song, and I was looking for an excuse to draw Harley Quinn from the Suicide Squad movie, inspired by this fan video using Marilyn Manson's cover of the song. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
For anyone who's curious, these drawings take about 25 to 35 hours each to draw.
This is the Kurt Cobain drawing I did, in the online flyer version, because it's way better than the photo I took. Photo by Phred at Earshot. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is the first order for a drawing I got form the Earshot Music show. "Bob Marley: One Love." Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is my personal favorite of the drawings up right now at the Earshot Music show. "Tainted Love" is a great song, and I was looking for an excuse to draw Harley Quinn from the Suicide Squad movie, inspired by this fan video using Marilyn Manson's cover of the song. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
For anyone who's curious, these drawings take about 25 to 35 hours each to draw.
My recent Sharpie art, part 4
My first hero as a 5-year-old kid was Bruce Lee. It was all because my friend Cliff's older brother had this poster in his room. My take on the epic Enter the Dragon still of one of the most badass guys of all time. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
Janis Joplin, blues legend and inspiration to generations of female singers. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
My second tribute to Prince, which was part of the current Earshot Music show in Winston-Salem, NC. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
Janis Joplin, blues legend and inspiration to generations of female singers. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
My second tribute to Prince, which was part of the current Earshot Music show in Winston-Salem, NC. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
My recent Sharpie art, part 3 BMX drawings
My take on Vic Murphy's classic (black and white) photo doing a one footed tabletop off a curb. My unique scribble style. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is my drawing take on my own B &W photo of the legendary Dave Vanderspek on his GPV at the Palm Springs Tramway race in 1987. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is one of my earlier BMX drawings. Ron Wilkerson with a stretched one hand one footer. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
This is my drawing take on my own B &W photo of the legendary Dave Vanderspek on his GPV at the Palm Springs Tramway race in 1987. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
This is one of my earlier BMX drawings. Ron Wilkerson with a stretched one hand one footer. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
My recent Sharpie art, part 2
I met pro surfer Karina Petroni, and a couple of her good friends, when I gave them rides in my taxi in Huntington Beach, CA in 2008. When I wanted to try a surf picture, she came to mind. This drawing of Karina duck diving under a wave was my first surf themed drawing in my Sharpie scribble style. Sharpies on paper. 18" X 24". Sold.
This drawing of surfer Kelly Slater is done from an old photo, and is the first actual surfing drawing I tried. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available. Below is a drawing, "Johnny Cash, The Man in Black," is in the show right now at Earshot Music in Winston-Salem, NC. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
This drawing of surfer Kelly Slater is done from an old photo, and is the first actual surfing drawing I tried. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available. Below is a drawing, "Johnny Cash, The Man in Black," is in the show right now at Earshot Music in Winston-Salem, NC. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Available.
My recent Sharpie Art, part 1
These are not the greatest photos, but that's what I have. For 12 years now, I've been drawing different types of drawings in my unique 'scribble style." Two years ago this month, unable to find ANY job in this area, I stepped my art game, and started working to turn my art and writing into a living. I didn't have a dime, literally not a dime, when I started. Now things are gaining momentum. So here's look at some of my drawings from the last few months. Above is Carolina Panthers quarterback Cam Newton doing his Superman thing. Hey, if you don't want him to to do this, don't let him score. Heh, heh, heh. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Gave this to a friend.
"Do the impossible, it really pisses off normal people." Sharpies on paper, 11" X 17". Gave this to a friend.
Princess Leia. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
"Do the impossible, it really pisses off normal people." Sharpies on paper, 11" X 17". Gave this to a friend.
Princess Leia. Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24". Sold.
Times have changed in Boise
Several times I've written about how I got into BMX in Blue Valley trailer park, outside Boise, Idaho, in 1982. We all know that the data mining programs are paying attention to what we look up and search online, and the algorithms put ads and other stuff in front of us using that info. Today, on the new Mozilla front page, this came up, "The King of Boise." I started to click past it, then decided to take a look. The article is about some dumbass kid who rode BMX and was the biggest Oxycodone dealer in Boise, apparently.
I stopped reading. It's lame that they had to add BMX riding to a drug dealer article. I wondered how the hell this popped up #1 on my feed, then remembered writing about BMX riding and Boise.
Unlike the skate artist Pushead, who lived in Boise when I did, I actually really liked Boise. There was actually a good BMX racing scene in the 80's, and I was one of the first few freestylers to help promote that in the area. I haven't been there since 1987, but you can see from the clip above they have a great skatepark there now. It'd be cool if someone would write a big article about that, and not about some stupid drug dealer.
Monday, November 27, 2017
A forgotten Woody Itson trick
If you started riding in the first wide wave of BMX freestyle in the mid 1980's, you remember Woody Itson as a pioneer of flatland. If you were in the Southern California scene in the early 80's, you might remember Woody riding skateparks or getting an occasional magazine photo jumping.
But here's one even Woody might not remember. In 1990 Woody's Diamond Back deal was over, and he was riding just for himself, according to a interview bit I just found on 23mag.com . During that year, I was riding the amazing flyout jump at Oceanview High School in Huntingtin Beach often. I was also shooting video for my first self-produced bike video, The Ultimate Weekend.
I just came across this still I made from the video a while back. Woody Itson, unsponsored, throwing a switch handed jump. In 1986, a 14-year-old Mat Hoffman debuted that trick to the freestyle world. Four years later, Woody was pulling it off. Heck, I made the video and I forgot this shot was in there. You can find it at 23:52 in the video.
But here's one even Woody might not remember. In 1990 Woody's Diamond Back deal was over, and he was riding just for himself, according to a interview bit I just found on 23mag.com . During that year, I was riding the amazing flyout jump at Oceanview High School in Huntingtin Beach often. I was also shooting video for my first self-produced bike video, The Ultimate Weekend.
I just came across this still I made from the video a while back. Woody Itson, unsponsored, throwing a switch handed jump. In 1986, a 14-year-old Mat Hoffman debuted that trick to the freestyle world. Four years later, Woody was pulling it off. Heck, I made the video and I forgot this shot was in there. You can find it at 23:52 in the video.
Friday, November 24, 2017
Detroit Bike City
"I've always found the best way to read a city's mood in is on a bicycle."
In today's world of media coming at us from a million different directions, I rarely take the time to read a long newspaper article. I can't remember ever looking at the Travel section of the New York Times. But when that line above popped up in my view, I said, "You had me at bicycle." I just read this whole article, and it was a great read.
It starts as a great bike rider piece, but morphs into a look at the incredible and varied ways community activism, and investment by one rich guy, are rebuilding Detroit. If you remember the heyday of America's Industrial Age, you remember Detroit as Motor City, the car manufacturing powerhouse city. Then it became one of the cities hardest hit by the collapse of our manufacturing economy. For a decade or more, Detroit's been best known for urban decay and "ruin porn." In this article I read not only about the rebuilding of the former Motor City, but a look at how this whole country is going to rebuild itself while our elected representatives argue in Washington argue with each other in public and joke of free drinks in private. This article is a look at the D.I.Y. spirit that will spread rapidly when we tumble into our next recession and realize the future is up to us, not the "experts" or the power brokers behind the scenes of our world.
If there's anything about your town or city that you think needs improvement or a new start, read this article. Then make something cool happen.
In today's world of media coming at us from a million different directions, I rarely take the time to read a long newspaper article. I can't remember ever looking at the Travel section of the New York Times. But when that line above popped up in my view, I said, "You had me at bicycle." I just read this whole article, and it was a great read.
It starts as a great bike rider piece, but morphs into a look at the incredible and varied ways community activism, and investment by one rich guy, are rebuilding Detroit. If you remember the heyday of America's Industrial Age, you remember Detroit as Motor City, the car manufacturing powerhouse city. Then it became one of the cities hardest hit by the collapse of our manufacturing economy. For a decade or more, Detroit's been best known for urban decay and "ruin porn." In this article I read not only about the rebuilding of the former Motor City, but a look at how this whole country is going to rebuild itself while our elected representatives argue in Washington argue with each other in public and joke of free drinks in private. This article is a look at the D.I.Y. spirit that will spread rapidly when we tumble into our next recession and realize the future is up to us, not the "experts" or the power brokers behind the scenes of our world.
If there's anything about your town or city that you think needs improvement or a new start, read this article. Then make something cool happen.
Meet Leticia Bufoni... THIS WOMAN CAN SKATE
NSFW (Not Safe For WIFE) OK old school BMXers, are you ready to feel old, lame, AND creepy?
Meet new school skater Leticia Bufoni, a 24-year-old pro skater from Brazil. She manages to combine the looks of a model, the body of an aerobics instructor, and the street skating skills of a hardcore pro skater. In this clip above you can see Leticia playing the model role. If you only watch this clip, it's safe to assume that I'm just some creepy old HAS BEEN guy.
This clip shows Leticia proving that she could beat you in a game of SKATE, unless you routinely take out guys like Nyjah Huston Chris Cole or Ryan Sheckler. Seriously, watch this clip, it's nuts. So what does this have to do with BMX? In this clip, she learns how to backflip a BMX bike into a foam pit... in four tries. Really. OK, Daniel Dhers is coaching her, but still. Look out world.
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
"We were all a bunch of dirtbags"
This is a drawing of Bob Marley I just finished a few days ago. What can I say, I've been doing creative things my whole life. I've been drawing since somebody put a crayon in my hand before I can remember, like many of you. But I'm a late bloomer. So now, in my 50's, my drawings in my unique "scribble style" technique with Sharpies. My first solo show at indie music shop, Earshot Music in Winston-Salem, NC, opened a couple weeks ago. Here's the Winston-Salem Journal artist profile that came out just before the show, written by Lisa O'Donnell. I gave props to my BMX and action sports roots, and named a handful of the creative people who inspired me. There was no way to list everyone, but a few of you are named in the article. Thanks to all of you other former "dirtbags" of the action sports world for showing me that getting art out to the world is actually possible.
I'm on a couch right now, not fully homeless. I'm looking to sell enough drawings to get a cheap room as soon as I can.
I'm on a couch right now, not fully homeless. I'm looking to sell enough drawings to get a cheap room as soon as I can.
Sunday, November 19, 2017
Earshot Music Show: Take 1
Top: Gene Simmons/KISS, Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24"
Above: "Tainted Love" featuring Harley Quinn and Joker from Suicide Squad, Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24".
This is my first solo art show. I had my early Sharpie art up in an indie gallery in California in 2005-2006, but not in any shows since. It's a small show, but I'm stoked a handful of people came out, and two drawings have sold and I have an order for a third. I've been doing my unique thing with Sharpies for a long time, but never really considered myself a visual artist.
It was a crazy summer that led to this show happening, which you can read more about in the previous post. I've been drawing in my "scribble style" with Sharpie markers since 2005. It all started when I tried to draw a mural on the wall of my jail cell sized bedroom in 2002. It sucked, and I started doing huge collages on big rolls of paper, and shading in between photos with markers in different doodle-type designs. Over 15 years, its evolved into this, and it's still evolving drawing by drawing.
"Gwen and Now," Gwen Stefani in 1995 and 2017, Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24"
When this show opened, I was trying to do what I could to promote it on the ground. Jane, Earshot art director, lined up this Winston-Salem Journal artist profile of me, which I was really stoked on. It didn't show the music related drawings I'm focusing on now, but told my background well. When the show opened, I was broke, and didn't even have a camera to take photos of the show, and forgot to ask someone else to. In these three posts you can see the drawings at Earshot Music. It's a great music shop with rare and hard to find CD's, DVD's and vinyl records. So if you're in the Triad area, stop by and take a look in person. I work from photos, and would love to draw your favorite musician (or athlete)...if they don't suck. I have a Facebook fan page at "Steve Emig The White Bear."
Pick one: "L" or "F"
______ame ass arteest
Me outside Earshot
Above: "Tainted Love" featuring Harley Quinn and Joker from Suicide Squad, Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24".
This is my first solo art show. I had my early Sharpie art up in an indie gallery in California in 2005-2006, but not in any shows since. It's a small show, but I'm stoked a handful of people came out, and two drawings have sold and I have an order for a third. I've been doing my unique thing with Sharpies for a long time, but never really considered myself a visual artist.
It was a crazy summer that led to this show happening, which you can read more about in the previous post. I've been drawing in my "scribble style" with Sharpie markers since 2005. It all started when I tried to draw a mural on the wall of my jail cell sized bedroom in 2002. It sucked, and I started doing huge collages on big rolls of paper, and shading in between photos with markers in different doodle-type designs. Over 15 years, its evolved into this, and it's still evolving drawing by drawing.
"Gwen and Now," Gwen Stefani in 1995 and 2017, Sharpies on paper, 18" X 24"
When this show opened, I was trying to do what I could to promote it on the ground. Jane, Earshot art director, lined up this Winston-Salem Journal artist profile of me, which I was really stoked on. It didn't show the music related drawings I'm focusing on now, but told my background well. When the show opened, I was broke, and didn't even have a camera to take photos of the show, and forgot to ask someone else to. In these three posts you can see the drawings at Earshot Music. It's a great music shop with rare and hard to find CD's, DVD's and vinyl records. So if you're in the Triad area, stop by and take a look in person. I work from photos, and would love to draw your favorite musician (or athlete)...if they don't suck. I have a Facebook fan page at "Steve Emig The White Bear."
Pick one: "L" or "F"
______ame ass arteest
Me outside Earshot
Earshot Music Art Show: Take 2
Earshot Music, in the shopping center with Marshall's and A.C. Moore, across form Hanes Mall
So here's how it happened. I wound up broke last summer and wound up camping out in the woods of Winston-Salem. After three days, I ran into a guy who asked about my situation, and he gave me a tent, a big dome one. That became my headquarters. Every night I slept alone in the woods, which is sketchy. Every morning I'd wake up, walk about a 3/4 of a mile to McDonald's, and order a sausage biscuit and a large drink. Then I'd pull my laptop (a gift form my niece Katherine, after she got a new one for college), and get word out about my artwork. Two garbage bags inside my backpack kept it dry through months of Carolina rain ans thunderstorms.
Johnny Cash: The Man in Black. 18" X 24", Sharpies on paper.
Then I'd pull out my big art pad, also double wrapped in trash bags, to keep it dry. I had a good sized plastic box with my art supplies. I spread out my stuff on a table at McD's, and I'd draw for a while. Other times I'd take a bus across town to a library, and draw there. I sold a 2 or 3 drawings over the summer, and scraped up money when I had to for food and bus fare. Most days I had two sausage biscuits and a drink to eat all day long. I got a lot a ton of drawing done, and lost 65 pounds, to boot. Not the ideal lifestyle of an artist. But I was determined.
The wall with my drawings up at Earshot Music, 1254 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC
One day, a couple of hippie looking guys at McDonald's said they liked my drawing. It was one of the musician drawings, Johnny Cash, I think. One guy said, "You should show your stuff to that music shop across the street. They like music themed art, and your drawing is way better then what they have on the wall right now." I doubted the comparison, but I took the guy's advice. I walked Earshot Music, completely scummy and smelly from my homeless life. I showed my work to the manager working that day. He was stoked on it. A couple days later, I showed it to Phred the owner, and he said they'd be interested in putting a couple of drawings up on the wall for sale. Things progressed, and Jane the art director contacted me. Next thing I knew, they were asking me when I could have enough drawings to do a full show. So I wandered around Winston all summer, scraping up money for food, living through thunderstorms in a tent, and getting helped out by my friends Rick and Ben in times of need. Eight of my drawings went up on the wall, two have sold, and I'm busy doing more to replace those. I'm also working on one for Ben, which I promise to get done soon. Really, Ben. I've been putting his drawing off all summer, trying to get the others done. All the drawings are for sale, $120 each, through Earshot Music. I will also be glad to do one of your favorite musician (or athlete), IF I can find a good photo to work from.
So here's how it happened. I wound up broke last summer and wound up camping out in the woods of Winston-Salem. After three days, I ran into a guy who asked about my situation, and he gave me a tent, a big dome one. That became my headquarters. Every night I slept alone in the woods, which is sketchy. Every morning I'd wake up, walk about a 3/4 of a mile to McDonald's, and order a sausage biscuit and a large drink. Then I'd pull my laptop (a gift form my niece Katherine, after she got a new one for college), and get word out about my artwork. Two garbage bags inside my backpack kept it dry through months of Carolina rain ans thunderstorms.
Johnny Cash: The Man in Black. 18" X 24", Sharpies on paper.
Then I'd pull out my big art pad, also double wrapped in trash bags, to keep it dry. I had a good sized plastic box with my art supplies. I spread out my stuff on a table at McD's, and I'd draw for a while. Other times I'd take a bus across town to a library, and draw there. I sold a 2 or 3 drawings over the summer, and scraped up money when I had to for food and bus fare. Most days I had two sausage biscuits and a drink to eat all day long. I got a lot a ton of drawing done, and lost 65 pounds, to boot. Not the ideal lifestyle of an artist. But I was determined.
The wall with my drawings up at Earshot Music, 1254 Silas Creek Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC
One day, a couple of hippie looking guys at McDonald's said they liked my drawing. It was one of the musician drawings, Johnny Cash, I think. One guy said, "You should show your stuff to that music shop across the street. They like music themed art, and your drawing is way better then what they have on the wall right now." I doubted the comparison, but I took the guy's advice. I walked Earshot Music, completely scummy and smelly from my homeless life. I showed my work to the manager working that day. He was stoked on it. A couple days later, I showed it to Phred the owner, and he said they'd be interested in putting a couple of drawings up on the wall for sale. Things progressed, and Jane the art director contacted me. Next thing I knew, they were asking me when I could have enough drawings to do a full show. So I wandered around Winston all summer, scraping up money for food, living through thunderstorms in a tent, and getting helped out by my friends Rick and Ben in times of need. Eight of my drawings went up on the wall, two have sold, and I'm busy doing more to replace those. I'm also working on one for Ben, which I promise to get done soon. Really, Ben. I've been putting his drawing off all summer, trying to get the others done. All the drawings are for sale, $120 each, through Earshot Music. I will also be glad to do one of your favorite musician (or athlete), IF I can find a good photo to work from.
Friday, November 17, 2017
Earshot Music Art Show: Drawings sold already
I'm totally stoked that lots of people seem to be psyched on my work, and that a couple have sold. I'm not in this to be any kind of famous artist. I just want to draw things that people dig and are psyched to hang on their wall. Both drawings are Sharpies on paper, in my unique "scribble style," and 18" X 24".
Sunday, November 12, 2017
Desert Treasure...The Nude Bowl: then and now
Here's old school BMXer Rick Thorne with even older school skate legend Steve Alba at one of my favorite places in the world, The Nude Bowl. Way out in the SoCal desert, on a hillside past Palm Springs and overlooking Desert Hot Springs, there lies the remains of a nudist colony. Sometime in the late 1970's or early 80's, the naked people abandoned it. Somehow, skaters found it.
I started working on an old school BMX project today, and looked up some riders from BITD on You Tube. Much to my surprise, I found Rick Thorne's Pool Hunters. The bald guy in this clip looks vaguely familiar. Anyhow, I watched four different clips tonight, and this one at the Nude Bowl with pool skating legend Steve Alba reminded me of my sessions there. A blog post was inevitable. I even learned a few things about the pool I didn't know in this clip.
I first heard of the Nude Bowl in 1988, in my little cubby hole of a room at Unreel Productions, the Vision Skateboards video company. The biggest part of my job then was dubbing copies of videos for people throughout the Vision world. People of all different jobs needed videos, mostly VHS copies, of different things, and I made those copies. I was also the tape librarian, so I made window dubs of all the raw footage that got shot, labeled the tapes, and organized them in the tape vault. One of the best parts of that job was that I got to watch raw footage that the skaters shot, usually a day or two after it happened. In those tapes, I first saw footage of this crazy pool out in the desert called the Nude Bowl, and several other skate spots. This was at a time when Del Mar skatepark closed, and the sole surviving skatepark in Southern California was Pipeline in Upland.
While I always sucked at riding ramps, and never could air much above coping, but I loved riding pools. Figuring out lines and carving pools was a blast, just pumping around at speed seemed one of the best things to do on a bike. I finally bought Mike Sarrail's old truck in '88, and managed to ride Pipeline five or six times right before it closed. Since I happened to work for Don Hoffman, whose parents owned Pipeline, I was able to ride Pipeline a bunch more times after it closed. I loved riding pools from then on, even though I never rose above coping.
Sometime in late '88 or early '89, I got the job of taking a couple of the Vision skaters out to the Nude Bowl for a session and a low key video shoot. I can't remember which skaters, though Kele Rosecrans comes to mind. So we made the trip inland, and I bounced the little Unreel Toyota van off road and got about 100 yards from the pool. The road was too gnarly at the time to get the van to the top. We hiked the last little bit, and when I first saw the pool, it seemed like the best thing in the world. In those days, we had to worry about police or security guards nearly every spot we rode. But at the Nude Bowl, nobody gave a fuck. That was awesome.
I went out to the Nude Bowl two or three more times in '89, to shoot video of skaters, and I made sure to take my bike and carve some lines when I could. In those days, when there were no concrete skateparks at all, it was amazing to ride a pool, hour after hour, and not worry about anybody shutting the session down.
When I started working on my self-produced video, The Ultimate Weekend, in 1990, a session at the Nude Bowl was one of the first places I thought of. It was sometime in the summer when I finally got it to happen. Somehow, I was able to talk skatepark legend Brian Blyther to make the trip out there, though he wasn't riding vert all the time then. He brought Xavier Mendez, another skatepark rider from the 80's. I got the then unknown ripper Keith Treanor, English vert rider John Povah, and flatlander/photographer Mike Sarrail, and we headed out. Despite it being 105 degrees out, we had a great little session. I got footage for my video, and it was a good day all around, despite the heat. You can watch it at 25:54 in this video.
As luck would have it, that session at the Nude Bowl wound up being the first time the pool showed up in a bike video. To make it even better, I used music from Toledo punk band, The Stain, and they had recorded a song called "Pool Party" for some skater friends. It was the perfect song, and I had these crazy dreams of making it a music video and getting it played on MTV. That never happened, but it was a cool video section anyway. In these two clips, you can see a 27 year span of one of the most legendary skate/bike pools ever. Props to Rick Thorne for doing a great series on real life pool riding and skating.
Rick's Nude Bowl clip had 2,605 views when I wrote this post. I'm just curious how many views this post may help it get.
I'm doing most of my new writing on Substack now, check it out: