Thrasher – August 2019

(avery) #1
183

context clues, personal experience or
look up what you’re trying to say. That’s
the thing about having an open mind
as well, people reading this interview
might think you come off as pretentious,
but it’s just how you are. I don’t think
you should have to change yourself or
the way you explain things just to cater


to a broader audience. Obviously, you
don’t want to be stuck in a box, but
people might now view you more like
an academic than a skater. I think it’s
important to let thoughts like that go.
I agree. I like what you said. One thing
that’s nice about being put in a box is that it
led to me taking the whole idea of skating
differently. Back to that question: have I
reached a different kind of career than the
one I imagined myself to possibly have, one
that would be really boring? I think I have. If
you’re working with your own career, you can
play with it so much, play with expectations.
It is so funny to hear people talk about me
skating contests. It’s a contest—you have
to skate the big rail to get a high score and

everybody knows it. So I was skating the rail
and everyone was freaking out saying, “He’s
only a tech guy; he’s not known as someone
who skates this stuff.” You can do a simple
Internet search and find the rails that I’ve
skated. At the same time, it’s true. I didn’t
skate that many rails but I was, like, Fuck
it, I’m going to do some weird shit. Lately, in
the past two months, I’ve done some of the
gnarliest shit I’ve ever done and I don’t take it
seriously at all. I did this huge ollie at a plaza
in Madrid. Thousands of people have seen it
and a couple people have tried it. Someone
even got really close but they needed a tow-
in. I thought, Fuck it, and I wanted to do it
without a moped. I had ollied a gap in the
recent past that was three feet shorter but

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