Stuff You Should Know - Selects: How Skateboarding Works
Episode Date: January 9, 2021Skateboarding started out as something bored surfers did when the waves weren't breaking, but after a few improvements to the design, it took off like a rocket to become its own cultural phenomenon. C...ome gleam the cube with Josh and Chuck as you ollie over this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right, folks, this is Chuck. It is in selects time, March 11th, 2014. That's what we're
throwing back to today because I picked out how skateboarding works. Boy, this is a great one.
This is a sort of vintage stuff you should know, all about skateboarding, full of stories about
our own skateboarding adventures as young posers that we both were. And it's good stuff. We talk
about the history we talk all about. And, you know, of course, it's about a thing that some people
are experts in. So we get a lot wrong, but we get it mostly right. And it was a good episode. So
please do enjoy how skateboards work right now. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production
of iHeart Radio's How Stuff Works. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark and
Charles W. Chuck Bryant with me. So this is Stuff You Should Know. And Jerry, of course, is here.
Who just celebrated a birthday? Yeah, happy birthday, Jerry. In Valentine's Day. We're on our
Indian sweat lodge that we call a recording booth. Yeah. Man, it's hot. Yeah, part of it's this thing.
You want to turn this off? Because this really does put out a tremendous amount of heat. Yeah,
Josh, we have a lamp on our table that we used to see. Well, we can't see any longer. Oh, well,
flying blind. Yeah. That did make it like 3% cooler immediately. Yeah, it's that lamp. It's the lamp,
and then like, you know, just people generating heat in here. Yeah, podcasters were a balmy bunch.
Plus, there's a herd of oxen in the corner. That doesn't help. No. This has been the best
intro ever, I think. You think so? I think so. You're not being facetious? No. You know the word
facetious? What do you got for me? Well, when I was younger, I knew the word facetious. It was a
word that my dad used a lot. So I used it in like regular conversation. Correctly? Yeah. Okay. But
I'd never seen it written out, or so I thought. And then finally, one day, I ran across in a book,
again, this word I kept coming up on, and I was like, what is that word? Facetious.
And I was like, that's facetious. I don't know that I've seen it spelled either. Yeah, it looks
like facetious. No, it looks like facet, like a facet of a jewel or something. Uh-huh. And then
E-S-I-O-U-S. Yeah, there's no, I always have so bombed the spelling of that. Right, but the thing
is, it's like, I was using it correctly in conversation, and I had seen it in books. I just
never put the two together until finally, one day, it clicked. And you had to get your tattoo
changed. That's facetious across the back of your neck. Yeah, in the heart. That's right. All right.
So, skateboarding. Yeah, about the same time that I realized the word facetious, what it
was correctly spelled as, I was skateboarding at the time. So that's how it ties in. Gotcha.
That was a little skateboarder for a long time. Yeah, it was too. I did not, I'm not old enough
to where I saw all the different waves of skateboarding of the four. You saw the first two?
I saw, I didn't see the first one. That's pretty funny. That would mean I'm dead.
No, there's plenty of old boarders out there. Sure. Yeah. But I was at the age where I definitely
had the small sort of plastic board with the single little tail on the back only and clay wheels.
No. Oh, yeah. No. Yeah. Clay wheels, it seems to me like that those, the skateboards from
biblical times had clay wheels. That's what I think of when I see clay wheels. What do they
even look like? Just brown. Were they super dangerous? Well, yeah. And if you've seen the
great documentary, Dogtown and Z-Boys, they go over, it's a really good doc, by the way.
Yeah. Like amazing footage that they have and good music and highly recommended over
the movie version, The Lords of Dogtown. Was Val Kilmer in that? No, Heath Ledger was.
He played the mentor, I can't remember his name. Skip? The Zephyr crew. Yeah, Skip.
Skip went on to found Santa Monica Airlines skateboards. Oh, yeah? Yeah. He stayed on.
It's like a big influence in skateboarding. Oh, that's good. So anyway, I just wanted to
point out that I have branched a few different, like I started out with a little clay one and then
in high school is when I got the big huge fat skateboard when they were super obnoxious.
Yeah, that's when I came into skating. Yeah. 1983, 84, had like a nice Lance Mountain.
It wasn't my first board. My first board, remember the Nash Tough Tops? No.
There was, it was blank on the bottom. There were no graphics, but on the top,
cut out in the grip tape was like a star that looked kind of like a saw blade, a circular saw
blade. And then the big difference was the different colors of the board underneath. So
it was blue or pink or yellow or whatever. Mine was like neon green. Yeah, your big fat one?
Yeah. And looking back, like kind of corny. And I think after that is when like true skaters started
being like, you know, we don't really care that much about like awesome graphics. Like we just
want a good board. Good board. You wanted some rib bones on the side. You remember those?
Underneath? Yeah. Yeah, but I don't think people like those now either. Oh, no, not anymore.
Like real skaters. No, the whole point of those, I think it was, you know, to let you rail slide
or whatever, easier, but I think it was also to protect those graphics too. It totally was,
because I had a little big plastic bumper under the tailpiece too, which is counterintuitive
to doing the tricks. Yeah. Yeah. But I mean, like who cares about protecting the tail? It's weird.
Yeah. There was also a nose bone too. I was not never very good. Oh, I wasn't either. I don't mean
to give that. I mean, I spent a lot of hours skating and I never got very good. I think I
pulled off one kickflip once. Really? Once. That's good. I thought it was pretty good too.
That is the trick that you most often see kids not landing, just driving down the street. Yeah.
If you ever see a kid, like I rarely see a successful kickflip just on the sidewalk. Oh,
yeah. If you see somebody who pulls off a kickflip, the chances are there's somebody
filming them because they know that they're going to be able to pull off the kickflip. In LA,
actually, I would see more, you know, obviously better skaters out there. Sure. New York. Yeah,
true. All right. Skateboarding. Should we get going with a little history? Yeah, let's talk about
the history of this. This is so close to my heart, man. I fell down the rabbit hole the day
watching like old skate videos and like checking out old Powell Peralta boards. That was my jam
was Powell. Well, we mentioned that there have been four distinct waves of skateboarding starting in
1959 and each new wave, like it's just waned in popularity here and there and then come back
strong and stronger due to either advances mainly in like skateboard technology and trickery. Yes,
and parental acceptance. Yeah, for sure. Because it never really goes away. Skateboarding is either
ever since its inception, it's either been mainstream or else forced underground and like
practiced by juvenile delinquents who kind of kept it going and advanced it quietly until it came
back into the mainstream and parents were like, oh, okay, you guys can skate again. Yeah. But the
true origin of the skateboard, the first one that came out, the first commercially produced one,
was in 1959. It's called the roller derby skate. Yeah, and before that, you know, if you've seen
the movie Back to the Future when Marty McFly rips the little milk crate off the front of the
homemade wooden scooter, that was where skateboards really came from. You just, you know,
was sort of a homemade deal with like a peach crate as the front of your scooter.
A couple of handles. Yes, steel wheels from roller skates. Yeah, and that was super dangerous.
Right, but like you say, if you take the peach crate off and take the handles off,
you have that two by four with the roller skate wheels and they don't know exactly who did it.
They think actually several people probably did it simultaneously. Marty McFly.
In the 40s, they think surfers in California did it. There are kids in France that were seen
doing it in the 40s. So it kind of spread, it happened, it arose independently around the
world at about the same time. That's called the zeitgeist. That is my friend. So now we're in
the early 1960s and it was, I mean, it really took off like a rocket in the first few years of the
1960s. Like 50 million skateboards were sold in those first three years. It's so crazy. And it was
everywhere. Yeah. It was like the hot new craze. Well, it was like also like hula hoops and things
like that. Like it was, America was in a crazy mood. A craze mood, yeah. Right. Like whatever the
big thing was. Yeah, and skateboards fell into that big time. The problem is they were pretty
dangerous. Yeah. There wasn't a lot you could do with them. No. Because again, they're steel wheels.
It's basically a two by four on steel wheels. Yeah. You could ride down the street and you
could fall off of it. Exactly. That was the extent of it. And I think because of the safety concerns
overnight, skateboarding just went away in like 1965. It was over. Yeah. But it still kind of
stayed somewhat popular as a thing to do among surfers when the waves weren't breaking. Right.
They would just kind of sidewalk surf is what they call it. And they never really saw it as
anything bigger than a supplement to surfing. Right. It was just kind of like, it wasn't its own
thing. Right. Until the 60s, the late 60s or the early 70s, when clay wheels came about,
you could do a little more stuff, I think. Well, clay was better than the steel wheels. Right.
But still bad. Right. Like if you hit a rock in the road, you're toast. And like that's when
people started dying from skateboards. Yeah. Which kind of led to its decline again. Sure.
And then some surfers, the Zephyr crew are the ones who broke skateboarding out once and for all.
Well, yeah. Thanks to Frank Nassworthy's invention of the urethane wheel in 1972.
Yeah. He founded Cadillac Wheels. And all of a sudden it was like a smooth,
like steady, silent experience on a skateboard for the first time. Right. And then you changed
everything. It did because it could grip. It wasn't just that it wasn't rumbly any longer. Yeah.
It like the urethane could grip like concrete or. It could go over a pebble. Ascaller pavement.
Yeah. Instead of just stopping. Exactly. Yeah. And yeah, all of a sudden there were way more
surfaces that could be skated. And that plus the invention of the truck. Yeah. Which is basically
an axle for your wheels that not only allows the wheels to revolve more smoothly, especially when
you add a set of bearings. Yeah. But it also allows you to maneuver to the left or the right,
which is a big deal. Yeah. Kind of opens things up. They're twisty. Yeah. And then the
kick tail also changed everything. All these kind of came together at about the same time.
Yeah. And you mentioned the Zephyr crew in 1975. They held the first basically competition in
Del Mar, California. And that's when, and if you've seen the documentary, it's pretty great. I mean,
they had sort of the holdovers from the 60s doing like handstands and all these sort of
square antiquated moves. Right. And then these little punks came in there and just like tore
the place up and like the judges didn't even know how to judge them at the time because they'd
never seen anything like it. Yeah. It was pretty cool. It was a pool. They were skating in pools,
right? Or a bowl at least. Yeah. The pool thing came a little later because there was a big drought
in the mid-70s in Southern California. And water was actually in short supply. So people would
drain their pools or not refill them or whatever for the summer. And so they started
busing in the backyards and skating in pools. Yeah. And they would bring their own pumps and hoses
to drain like all the muck out entirely and then just like skate that pool. And there was,
at one of those pools, a kid named Tony Alva who was in that Zephyr crew was Tony Alva,
Jay Adams and Stacey Perelta. Yeah, among others. Yeah. Right. But those were like the big three.
Tony Alva was your guy, right? Stacey Perelta. Oh, I thought you were like a huge Tony Alva
dude. No, I respect for Tony Alva. No, I was always Powell Perelta. But Tony Alva at one of
those pools kept going and going and pushing himself harder and harder. And then one day
he cleared the coping of the pool and like caught air. Yeah. With his hand at first. Oh,
he did like a hand plant? Yeah. That was how that originally came about. But he did leave
contact with the pool. Right. And no one had ever done that. And everyone's like, whoa. And that
was like the creation of vert style skateboarding. Yeah. And Alva went on at like age 19 to found
his own skateboarding company. Yeah. He was the first one to use Canadian Maple veneers,
which we'll talk about. And he was like really innovative, especially for a 19 year old skate
punk from Southern California. Yeah, they all were. Yeah. It's pretty amazing. Like this collection
of kids was where most of them ended up being like very savvy, like wealthy businessmen later on.
Yeah. And right after the Del Mar competition, the Zephyr crew kind of scattered to the wind
and went and found purchase and expanded skateboarding as a sport and as a theme.
And one of the things that they brought with them from having been part of a crew
is to form their own crews of people that they sponsored, which made those people pros.
Right. And those pros would go on tour. Yeah. And when those pros went on tour,
they were skating, say, Palo Peralta skateboards and showing local kids what could be done with
the skateboard. Yeah. And those kids would go buy Palo Peralta skateboards and go out and skate.
That whole idea of doing demos on tour with pros who were sponsored by skateboarding companies
really helped expand skateboarding in the 80s and created that third wave where skateboarding just
became it. Yeah. I mean, it was big in California and Florida. Like my cousins were way into it
in Florida early on, but it really took off when kids like me in Georgia and you in Ohio
were skating up my like steep driveway and trying to do little 180 turns going back down
like it was a wave. Right. And I was one of those silly little kids. Yeah. Like was so caught up
in it at first. Well, I had a kid who lived across the tracks for me who had a half pipe,
like a good half pipe that his dad built him. And that was part of that rise in 1983, I think,
that third wave where because I should say we didn't really mention in the late 70s after
Alva skateboards was founded and Palo Peralta was founded and all that skateboarding took a hit
mainstream wise. Yeah. And it became associated with punks and like just like just punk kids.
Bad kids. Yeah. The bad kids and who literally gave skateboarding a bad name. Yeah. And so it
was kind of driven underground again. And then in the early 80s, it experienced another rise
and its image kind of changed a little bit thanks to the Palo Peralta team, the Bones Brigade. Yeah.
Who were actually like they were all young kids and they were skateboarders and all they cared
about was skating, but they were also like kind of clean cut as far as skateboarders went.
And like they didn't do drugs. At least they didn't publicly do drugs. Yeah. Stacy Peralta was a
good kid. Yeah. And so the kids that he sponsored like Tony Hawk, Mike McGill, Steve Caballero,
Christian Hasoy, all those kids were good kids too. And they had a tremendous amount of influence
on the skaters who were into them. Yeah. And so it kind of changed skating's image a little bit
too. It went from like being something that like punk kids were into to something all kids were
into. Yeah. It did go into another four year lull toward the end of the 70s before it started
coming back in the mid 80s and BMX had a lot to do with it. Oh yeah. That became more popular.
And you know, some skateboarder magazine shut down or changed names to a different, you know,
title. And it just like you said, it never went away to the adherence of like the true underground
skateboarders. Right. It's always, there's always somebody who's been skating at some point ever
since 1959. But in the mid 80s is when it definitely came back to the big time mainstream.
Yeah. And I can't tell if it's just nostalgia on my part or else if that was when it like really
exploded. But like that was, that was my wheelhouse. No, remember the videos, man? Oh yeah.
Bones Brigade videos. Yeah. And that was another thing too. One of the reasons why
skateboarding was able to spread as a sport or recreation or whatever was in part the access
to cheap VHS players. Yeah. Because the Bones Brigade made videos and people bought them.
Like you could go to your local skate shop and buy like a Bones Brigade VHS tape for like 25 or 30
bucks. You kind of had to if you wanted to learn the cool tricks. Right. That's like the only place
you could see them at the time. Yeah. And then they were produced in a way like you'd want to
watch them again and again. Like I think the fourth one, the search for animal chin actually had like
a plot and everything. Oh really? Yeah. So you would watch these things again and again. These
guys became like your heroes. And not only were you watching them do their tricks and you know,
watching their videos, but like you also wore their t-shirts. Oh yeah. Like you got their deck.
And it said a lot. Like I had a Mike McGill deck. I really was into Mike McGill. Yeah. I had a
Lance Mountain deck. Was really into Lance Mountain. And I like Tony Hawk and everything,
but I never had a Tony Hawk deck. Like you identify with a skater based on your personality type.
Yeah. And your style. Yeah. Style had a lot to do with it for sure. Sure. Then there was another
lull in the early 90s because of the recession is what everyone seems to blame it on. And I
thought it was weird. I don't remember that happening, but now that I think back,
late high school, early college, there wasn't a lot of like skate stuff going on in my world.
And I wasn't skating at the time, but I was still just young enough to pick up on that fourth wave
in the early mid 90s. Well, thanks to the X Games. That's what really brought it back big time.
And Tony Hawk too. Yeah. He kept it going. His video games definitely helped spread that
fourth wave too. And I guess it's never really gone away. No, it's bigger than ever.
Skating? Oh yeah. Yeah. Well, another thing I think that helped is that 80s nostalgia craze.
Yeah. You know how the 80s inform everything today. Part of that was that the,
I guess, re-exploring that third wave of skateboarding. So like if you go into a van
store, they're all like old pal decks or old like vision street wear decks.
Oh, vision street wear. Yeah. Yeah. And slime balls. Yeah. I have, and I still have a pair of
vans, old schools. The black and white checker. No, no, no. Those were the, I can't remember
the name of those, the slip-ons. The old schools are the black. They had the low top and the high
top that has the little sort of white wave on the side. But yeah, I still wear those shoes.
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So, Choco, we're going to talk about the skateboard itself you promised.
Yes. There are three main parts. You have the deck, you have the trucks, and you have the wheels.
Yeah. And like we said, the trucks connect the wheels to the deck and they service the
axles on the front and the back. It's a little T-shaped thing. And I remember definitely like
taking a lot of time to get your trucks the way you wanted. Some people liked them really loose.
Yeah, I didn't. And some people liked them a little tighter. If they're looser, you can turn
more aggressively. Yeah, but you also get wobble wheel if you get going too fast.
You get serious wobble wheel. But yeah, I like mine a little tighter too.
Like you want to be able to turn, but you also, I like the stability of a tighter truck.
Yeah. You've also got your wheels, which have a set of bearings.
Yeah, and the wheels haven't changed too much. No.
They're still polyurethane. Yeah.
They've changed in size a little bit, but it's the same basic concept.
Right. And again, it still depends on your preference. Like you can buy a pre-made skateboard
that's all put together, but as you know, any skater worth of salt buys the deck,
buys the trucks, buys the wheels that they want, puts it all together.
You might as well just go to like a department store and buy your skateboard if you're just
going to buy it all together. Yeah, with a little outfit that comes with it.
Your skater 101 outfit. Yeah. So the last part, arguably the most important part,
well, one of three most important parts is the deck. And the deck has evolved over time.
We talked about how the tail kicked up in the early 70s.
Yeah, just in the rear. Yeah, that allowed a lot of like tricks.
Yeah. And if you look at a skateboard from the top or the bottom,
where you're looking at the outline, that's called the plan. Yeah.
And then if you look at how the tail or the nose is kicked up and then the concave to the
interior of the skateboard, which allows more control and stability,
that's called the concave. So you've got the plan and the concave.
Yes. And those are part of the deck.
Right. They inform the shape and size of the deck. And then on top of that deck,
you have the grip tape, which I thought that would have been a recent innovation.
Apparently, grip tape was invented all the way back in 1948 for scooters.
Oh, really? Yeah. They did it back then and a guy named Ferdinand Switzhofer invented it.
Nice. Yeah. And they changed the name from Switzhofer tape to grip tape.
Right. Yeah. And in the 80s too, the thing now is your whole board is covered with grip tape.
In the mid-80s, I remember, I just had like, there were graphics on top,
so you just had tape at the front and the back. Yeah.
And it really didn't make any sense. Like you, the whole thing should be grippy.
Yeah. But I mean, like again, the Powell graphics are pretty awesome.
Yeah. Steve Caballero had that dragon or like at least you had the bones guy.
The decks are not a solid piece of wood. It's actually thin layers of veneer
and they are laminated and then you spread adhesive and you just,
you know, like with a lot of furniture, it's just many layers of thin wood compressed together
into a mold and it's a hydraulic press that just smashes it all together until you've got your,
a really solid piece of wood. Yeah. And it's definitely a lot stronger than just the sum of
its parts. Yeah, for sure. From being molded plywood. And then you cut that plan out.
Yeah. And then after that, you spray it with some sealant because you don't want to accidentally
ollie into a puddle or a fountain or something like that and have your board warp.
Or purposefully. Right. Ollie into a fountain.
And then the graphics are put on and then the grip tape.
I get a sense that graphics aren't like super cool anymore. Am I wrong?
No. I think it's a matter of preference. I think it's a matter of preference.
It definitely isn't like in the mid 80s. It was like they were so obnoxious.
Oh yeah. Remember the Gator one? No. It was like kind of like, I guess a vertigo thing,
but it was made out of different spikes. You would recognize it immediately if you saw it.
Yeah. I definitely had the stickers on my car and like it was a thing.
And we had a shop in Stone Mountain called Surf's Up. In Stone Mountain, Surf's Mountain.
Yeah. That was obviously open for like four and a half years.
And they had like skate gear and surfer gear and for all us like,
in inland living people who thought they were cool.
Like you used to have to, initially at that early wave in the early 80s,
like you had to go to like a ski shop because skiing was already established.
And then like they'd open up a little section for skateboards.
Totally. And then eventually it got a little bigger.
And then all of a sudden there were actual skate shops.
Yeah. All right. So that is the actual skateboard in all its three parts.
Right. And I guess we need to talk about how to ride this thing.
Yeah. Because the fourth part is you.
That's right. Although it looks cool just hanging on your wall.
Yeah. If you want to impress the ladies.
Sure. Like check out my skateboard.
Yeah. That was all into that. But it is like surfing.
And the reason they compare it to surfing is that it's sort of just like a smaller version.
You have the side stance just like on a surfboard.
Right.
And if you heard our surfing podcast, you heard us talk about regular foot and goofy foot.
Is there a Mongo foot on surfing too?
No, because you're not pushing off of it.
Oh yeah. Yeah.
Regular foot is your left foot forward.
Yeah.
And you're using your right foot to push.
Goofy foot is the opposite of that.
You're right foot forwards. You're pushing with your left.
Which does not feel right.
No. And I was a Mongo foot and I never knew it until I looked this up.
Yeah.
That is when your left foot is forward.
I'm sorry. Your right foot is on the board, but you're using your left foot to push.
And your foot is at the rear, not the front.
Yeah. And I just, that just feels supernatural to me.
But not supernatural, but very natural.
There's ghosts.
But apparently Mongo foot is, I think you're sort of frowned upon as a person by real skaters.
You can just be like, lay off. I've watched you. You can't even kick flip.
So you pay attention to how you stand.
That's what you say to people if they give you guff about being Mongo foot.
Well, the problem with Mongo foot is you have to shift your feet a little bit once
both are back on the board.
Right.
And I guess you can't like bust a move immediately with a trick.
Right.
Which matters if you're like competing for half a million dollars, but not if you're like
on your way down to the 7-Eleven.
Yeah. If you've never skated before and you want to try it,
I would advise to not start with Mongo foot at all.
If you don't know any better, because you won't be made fun of, you know?
Maybe, is that what kept you back? Maybe you'd be like pro right now.
That was what it was.
But I've never seen this before.
No, it makes sense though.
If you don't know which foot you're prominent with, although I would say if you're right
footed, you're probably going to be a regular foot.
And if you're left footed, you might be goofy foot.
I think it has to do with handedness.
So like if you're right handed, your left foot's going to be forward.
You're going to push with your right foot.
If you're left handed, you're going to be goofy foot.
Where your right foot's forward, you push with your left foot.
I think you push with your foot in the rear of the dominant hand side.
Or foot side.
Right.
Yeah. But I think your dominant hand is typically your dominant foot as well.
Yeah, it seems right.
Yeah.
And then if somebody came up and pushed you.
Yeah, that's the test.
The foot you put back to steady yourself, that's the one you want to use to push with.
Before you crow hop and punch them in the face.
Right. What the H, man?
Yeah, so I'd never heard that. That's a little trick you can do.
Yeah.
And I guess you're not, maybe surprise somebody, because if you think about it too much.
Right.
Like, all right, push me.
Then you try to put both feet back at once and you end up just hopping.
So there are a few different, quite a few different things you can do.
Back in the day, it was all about like the downhill slalom.
Which is boring.
Nah, I mean, super speed is not boring.
Scary.
It is a little scary.
Probably what I should have said.
I suffered a pretty decent head injury once.
Really?
Yeah, I got the wobble wheel going downhill.
And I was like, I got to bail out.
And right before I went to go jump on the grass, the board went whoop.
And I went forward and landed on my head and skidded on my head entirely.
No helmet at all, right?
No, it's like 1990.
Right.
And yeah, it was something.
Yeah, I remember.
I have not been the same since.
Most neighborhoods have one hill, you know, that you don't dare go down.
And my best friend, his name was Chuck, actually, at the time in mid-high school.
Must have been very confusing.
No, he had a hill like that.
And I remember standing at the top of it and thinking,
there's no way I should be doing this and getting on the skateboard and trying to go down.
And like you said, bailing out into the grass was always,
if you're in a neighborhood, a nice way to go about things.
Is that what you did?
I think I went all the way down, actually.
But yeah, it's a little scary, you know.
No way I'd do that now.
I remember a car was driving past and stopped and went, oh my god, are you okay?
I was like, wow, is that bad, huh?
And they finished their beer and drove on.
Right, threw their can at me.
So you also have Freestyle, which is doing tricks and things on a flat surface.
And we're going to get into the tricks a little bit in a minute.
Which if you are like, what's Freestyle that sounds stupid?
I would look up Rodney Mullen or Per Wellender on YouTube and check out some of their,
especially their 80s stuff, the early, mid 80s.
They were doing some pretty cool stuff.
And some of it is like that stuff that you were saying the California dudes doing like
handstands on a moving skateboard.
Or just the 360s like standing in one place with a nose in the air.
But then they would take their hands and like flip their board 360 degrees eight times and land on it.
They were pretty good.
Pretty great stuff.
And it gave creativity, you know.
For sure.
It's definitely like a choreography and a skateboard.
Yeah.
Well, I have a feeling you're about to say vert skating.
I wasn't, but I will.
Are you ready?
They didn't give rise to vert skating.
Vert skating.
Well, vert skating, yeah, it kind of, that came out of those dog town guys.
Yeah, in the swimming pools.
Yeah, because a pool is considered vert skating.
Vert is short for vertical, right, because you're skating on vertical surfaces.
Like a pool or a bowl or a half pipe or a quarter pipe or whatever.
Right.
Or if you're like me, two milk crates and a piece of plywood.
Did you do that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The josh pipe.
It was not that stable.
So vertical is when people started leaving and catching air,
leaving the side of whatever surface they were on.
Yeah.
Which was really exciting at the time.
Yeah, I can't imagine having been there.
And it's only gone up and up since then, you know.
Yeah.
And then you got street skating, which is, if you've seen ladies and dudes on the street,
like jumping up the air onto a park bench and grinding that park bench or railing.
Right.
Or smashing themselves trying to grind or railing.
That is street skating.
Or if you've ever played the Tony Hawk video game, did you ever play that?
Yeah.
The first one.
Yeah.
If you play that enough, people who've played that enough know what I'm talking about.
You start walking around in life and everything you see.
You think, oh man, I could grind that so hard if I could really skate.
Yeah.
Not in real life.
No.
But yeah, so street skating kind of, I guess you could say it combines freestyle with
obstacles using obstacles in the built environment.
That's street skating.
Yeah, and that's the stuff that usually you'll see frowned upon by businesses and
people thinking like these hooligans are out there.
Right.
Which skateboarding is not a crime, man.
Nope.
Although if you use a skate, go to jail.
But to combat all that crime stuff, a lot of cities built skate parks in the 70s.
What they didn't realize is that when those kids fell and cracked their heads,
their parents were going to sue.
Yeah.
And so all of a sudden the insurance premiums for skate parks went through the roof and all
the cities shut them down and they went away for a very long time.
And then I guess there was some changes in liability laws that allowed skate parks to
come back.
And so now skate parks are back, but they're very frequently put up by cities that are
like, we'll build a skate park and they don't ask the skaters how to build a skate park.
So they build like a terrible skate park and the skaters don't use it and the cities are
like, you skate punk kids, use the skate park and they're like, your skate park sucks.
And they're like, no, it doesn't.
And yes, it does in this gateway.
Or they do it well and it's too crowded.
Well, if there's one thing I know is that for every skate park in any city,
there will be a group of skaters saying this place sucks.
Sure.
I remember when we shot at a skate park, remember?
Oh yeah.
These local kids and it was a new skate park.
One of them, that one kid was pretty good.
Yeah, he's all right.
But ISM was like, guys, this is great, right?
This is new and it's in Decatur and they're like, no, it sucks.
Yeah.
Well, then that one kid lied.
He said he lived from like a seedy part of Atlanta and hit us up for bus fare.
He's a total pusher.
And yeah, one of the crew saw him go into his house like a block away in this very nice
neighborhood of Decatur.
And hide his skateboard in his backyard.
And they can be different, they can be like smaller half pipes and ramps and rails and
things and obstacles to my recommendation.
If you ever visit LA is to go to Venice Beach to their newish skate park there.
And it is like the cement bowl.
It's like a huge series of connected swimming pools.
Yeah.
And this is where you'll see some like, you'll see the old school guys that aren't
leaving the bowl that are just like carving it up is like sweet as pudding.
And then you've got guys that will really know what they're doing.
Yeah.
Like catching air and doing, you know, 360s and.
And there's a bulldog that rides a skateboard there too.
I've heard of that.
You should see him.
It's quite amazing.
I'm sure it is.
Like you can't catch air or whatever, but just the fact that a dog is using a skateboard
is pretty awesome.
So should we talk about some tricks?
Let's.
Well, almost every trick on earth is based on the Ali, the trick named after Alan Ali
Gelfand.
He invented it in the early 1970s, mid 1970s.
And that is basically when you jump up in the air and if you've seen skateboarders do
it, you might wonder how on earth do they jump up in the air and have that skateboard
seemingly attached to their feet.
Mm hmm.
I never was very good at it.
Oh, really?
No.
I could all be pretty good.
I was more of a sidewalk surfer than like a trick aerial guy.
Yeah.
You know.
Well, I wasn't a trick aerial guy either, but I could all be, you know.
Well, explain the Ali.
Oh, well, okay.
So the Ali is let's say you're on your board and you're on a flat surface.
You kick your, the tail of the skateboard down really hard against the ground.
Yeah.
And what this does is this exerted force allows you to overcome the force of gravity
and since you're jumping at the same time, you jump into the air,
you're taking off your own downward pressure on the board.
So the front of the board, the nose goes up high in the air and the fact that you've slapped
the tail against the ground means the tail comes up into the air until it's even with the nose
and the board's flat in the air and it looks like it's attached to your feet if you do it right.
Yeah.
And all of a sudden you and the board are four feet into the air and then you come back down
and you land it.
Well, that's an Ali.
It's funny you mentioned four feet.
The world record, Danny Wainwright of, I think he's from England, recorded a 44 and a half inch Ali.
Wow.
It's pretty amazing.
Yeah.
Was that like standing still?
No, you know, it's like, you know, they just set up something to jump over.
Oh, got you.
And keep adding layers until, you know, you can't jump any higher.
Yeah.
And then you've got like, you know, 10 feet to get going and then just pop up and
it looks like it's attached to his feet.
And the Ali is so integral to so many other tricks that it's almost not a trick any longer
in and of itself.
It's like the basic mechanic of whatever other trick that follows.
Right.
But like you pretty much can't do anything without Ali.
And that's how those guys originally caught air on vert skating was to Ali off of the coping,
the top.
Yeah.
And then you would catch some serious air because you already had that extra momentum
behind you as well.
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If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help this.
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And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you.
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Um, hey, that's me.
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Okay, we're back, Chuck.
We're going to talk about the names of tricks, different types of tricks.
Yeah.
All right.
So if you've ever watched the X Games and you hear the sort of annoying
announcers admittedly using all these words you've never heard,
we're going to explain what some of these words mean
just to help you follow along a little bit.
That's right.
You might hear, feet got front side there or whatever.
Front side is when you're facing the obstacle and performing a trick,
as opposed to backside when your back is to the obstacle.
Yeah, like you're basically going backwards on the skateboard.
That's right.
Yeah, let's say 180 is a pretty basic trick.
Well, it's where you Olly and you and the board turn 180 degrees to face in the opposite direction.
Yeah, like you go up the ramp and then you turn in midair and you come right back down.
You can also do it on a flat surface or you could 180 onto like a park bench or something
and grind it, whatever.
Yeah.
But the 180 also kind of forms a basis for a lot of other tricks,
especially vert tricks like 360s and 540s all the way up to 1080s.
Yeah.
And you can like grab the side of your board and just do all sorts of cool stuff.
Yeah, Tony Hawk famously completed the first 900 degree turn.
And for many years, they thought that was it until a 12 year old named Tom Sharr in 2012
pulled off the first 1080 and they filmed that it wasn't in competition.
The first one in competition was a guy named Mitch Brusco.
He did it at the X Games.
And that is three full rotations in the air and obviously you have to land it successfully for it to count.
And to live.
And to live.
And it's amazing, man.
Three full rotations in the air.
These dudes are getting up super, super high now.
Yeah.
You ever heard the word fakie?
I have.
The fakie is basically where you remain in your regular stance, but you're going backwards.
Yeah.
So you're doing like you're going into a backside trick.
That's right.
A pop shove it is when you do an ollie with the 180, but your body isn't moving.
You're just popping up in the air and flipping the skateboard around underneath you.
Right.
And then landing on it.
Yeah.
And then we talked about grinding.
There's a couple of ways you can grind.
A true grind is when you're on the actual axles.
So you got to be going forward.
Or you can go sideways and grind on your board.
And that's called a board slide.
Yep.
Or a rail slide.
And then the kick flip, of course, is the one that you see people
busting butt on.
Which I've pulled off once.
That's right.
The famous Josh kick flip.
And then, of course, Chuck, there's the manual, which is another way to say a wheelie on your
skateboard.
I was good at those.
Frontside manual.
Yeah.
Backside manual.
I could do like I was not good.
I think that's becoming clear.
Like I thought it was cool if I could do a little wheelie and do a little 180 turn on the ground.
Yeah.
No, I'm with you, man.
I understand.
I wasn't very good either.
But, Chuck, I had years of enjoyment, twice, third wave and fourth wave.
Yeah.
Loved skateboarding.
Love it.
I just love skateboarding.
I think everybody should go out on skateboard all the time.
So you're never going to be one of those old men that's like quit grinding my rail.
Oh, well, yeah.
If I had a nice rail out, John, I'd be like, get the hell off of my rail.
But I would still, it's not like I hate skateboarding in general.
Yeah.
But you might chip in and help build a halfpipe in your neighborhood.
Away from my really nice rail.
Right.
That's a good idea.
If you do want to try skateboarding, obviously, these days with the safety consciousness of
people, you should get a helmet and some knee pads and elbow pads.
And if you're smart, maybe some wrist guards, although that might not be cool.
Well, no, actually, that's another reason skate parks often go and uses
because there's local ordinances that say you have to wear a helmet and pads.
And of course, skaters are like, that sucks.
Yeah.
But the wrist guards, that's a common injury because you'll often go to brace yourself
with your arms when you fall.
And they say to try and fall on your fleshy parts of your body, but you're really kind
of at the whim of where gravity takes you.
I think at that point.
Well, you know, that was another reason I think I wasn't ever that good is because
back when I was a kid, they were all fleshy parts.
It's hard to get air.
Well, you should have been safe.
I was when you fell.
I was.
You got anything else?
No, man, that's it.
Skateboarding, if you want to know more about it, you should type skateboarding into the
word search bar at howstuffworks.com.
That's the first thing you should do.
You should follow that up by watching skate videos and go and buy a skateboard and go
skating.
Yeah.
You know, I want to get a longboard now.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
That's the old man style.
Yeah.
Just cruising.
Yeah.
Get on a flat surface and use it.
Carving the concrete wave.
The mode of transportation.
Yeah.
Are you going to learn to do handstands on?
No.
Let's see.
Since I said handstands and then laugh, that means it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this, Josh, what are you hiding?
And I'm glad to get this email because I knew I wasn't crazy.
So let's just get into this.
You know, can I say, I don't even remember this most recent reference.
All right.
Well, let's just explain here what's going on.
This is from Ben.
Ben says, hey guys, I've been living like a troglobitic troglodyte for the past six years
because I just discovered your amazing podcast a few weeks ago.
As penance, I've been listening to several per day and have since gone to over 100.
So he's binging.
He said, just notice something during the Ken Katz scuba dive episode, not one of our best.
On August 12, 2008, Josh goes into detail about he was a certified scuba diver
and that the one time he was in open water, he not only got seasick, but also got a slight
case of the bends due to surfacing too quickly.
Then in 2013, in the diving bell episode, Chuck says, I thought I remembered many moons ago,
you mentioned something about getting the bends and Josh quickly and confidently retorted,
I've never had the bends.
So I know this is almost five years later, but it begs the question,
what are you trying to hide, Josh?
You have answered some of the greatest long lasting questions in history,
but this is one of the few times where you simply added another mystery
into the pile of the enigma and conspiracy that is our world.
So have you ever had the bends?
So in 1990, I was skating down a hill and I fell and hit my head.
Yeah, I would call it a mild case of the bends.
Okay, so you just don't remember denying you had the bends?
Right.
Okay. All right, well, there's your answer.
Yeah. Well, not only do I not remember denying having the bends,
when I denied having the bends, I had forgotten that I'd had the bends before.
And again, this is a very mild case, but it wasn't just seasickness.
It was directly related to having just spent a half an hour underwater.
You know?
All right.
So I would call that the case of the bends.
I think that clears it up then.
That is from Ben Helms from Mount Shasta, California.
I'm sure Ben will be unsatisfied with your explanation of...
Ben.
I just forgot.
That's pretty much it.
Yeah.
Let's see, if you want to get in touch with Chuck and I,
you can tweet to us at S-Y-S-K podcast.
You can join us on facebook.com slash W should know.
You can see us on our YouTube channel.
Just look up Josh and Chuck on YouTube.
Tons of fun there.
And you can send us an email to stuffpodcast at howstuffworks.com.
Stuff you should know is a production of iHeartRadio's How Stuff Works.
For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iHeartRadio app.
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help.
And a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen.
So we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe.
You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White House.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.