The Week on Hangup 27/09/20
Coming on Wednesday is our Extended article on Creature’s recent Northwest Revn tour video, featuring most of our favourite Creature riders including; Chris Russell, Kevin Bækkel, Willis Kimbel, Cody Lockwood, John Gardner, Cory Juneau and more… Become a paid subscriber if you’d like access to that one!
Hangup Zine 14’s deadline is fast approaching, if you’d like to submit photos, an article, or anything else for that, contact us before the First of October!
Extended Preview: Antihero’s Quantinium
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Following on from Antihero’s occasional, and excellent, Implosionistic Tendencies series, Antihero released a Chris Pfanner-centric video that ticks all the right eagle-themed boxes.
The skate footage begins with an attention grabbing team montage with tricks from Frank Gerwer, Raney Beres and Tony Trujillo before the introduction of main man Pfanner. The great thing about Chris is that his footage is absolutely timeless - it could have been taken from any point of his career, even the pre-Antihero Yama days, or even from a different period within skateboarding, say, prime mid-00’s Zero or Toy Machine. His trick and spot selection has always remained consistent; shove its, rails, the odd boosted flip trick, street grabs, late shove its. It’s no less impressive because of this!
Malaga with Alex Hallford and Jordan Thackeray, whilst filming for Lovenskate’s Don’t Worry Gordo with Jackson Davis behind the lens…
Check out Dave Morgan’s video release piece here.
Panasonic Youth Gran Canaria trip with the heavy crew of Ben Broyd, Dead Dave, Tom O'Driscoll and Gary McNaughton!
Back to Basics
After publishing Ginger’s Suffolk Skate Trip edit a few weeks ago, we were reminded that we hadn’t published his article from Hangup Zine 12, so here it is!
If you’d prefer this in print, pick up a zine through our store.
Sam Raynard | Backside Boneless
This is Sam Raynard doing a bs boneless at The Pioneer. Sam’s been one of my favorites to watch recently. I think it’s the style, the sort of back to the future-style I’ve seen some people taking.
I feel like people are getting more stoked and are drawing a lot more inspiration on the 80s skaters. I for one love watching old videos of Tim Jackson doing weird wall bashes and Neil Blender finding too many ways to do handplants. It all just seemed like a more carefree and positive time in skateboarding. Everyone seemed like they skated for the fun and not just to be the best.
Will Kirkby-Rampling | Layback
Perhaps that’s why more people nowadays are interested in the earlier days of skateboarding, because it seemed more fun. With the approach of the 2020 Olympics, more people are going for gold and trying to best the best. Maybe people just want a break, a little fresh air and a reminder of why we love this plank of wood so much.
I’m not saying I don’t want to see someone lipslide a handrail from hell or kickflip a psycho street gap. I think it’s important to watch and appreciate as much skating as possible because it means you will look at skateboarding in so many more ways. If all you watch is pool skating you wouldn’t think of skating a handrail or know how to, and vice versa.
Daniel Tabakin | Invert Wallbash
I personally love watching old videos because of the lost tricks. Especially when I started skateboarding all I knew was street skating, but when I saw old videos I realised how much more was possible with it. Learning laybacks and bonelesses is something I wouldn’t have done without the old videos, but because of the new videos I realised you can take the old tricks to new terrain and make new ways of skating all together.
I just think that people nowadays are also wanting to know more about skateboarding and how it started. Because how can you go forward if you don’t know which way you came from.
Nasir Roumeu | Fastplant
Nasir Roumeu | Wallie Crook
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Daz Block becomes the latest to get his own edit in Cornmarket’s The Local series!
A beautiful Huf tribute from The Berrics.