I've been in the skate scene since 1989, and I can tell you skating has been mainstream since the first X Games and Tony Hawk Pro Skater came out. All the gate keeping in the community is ridiculous because skateboarding sold out a long time ago.
@Tooamazin2 жыл бұрын
Same but since ~93 and it always blew my mind when people were called "posers" and other shit when they work skate branded clothing when they didn't skate. Do you also call out people who buy NFL/NBA/NHL etc clothes/jerseys when they don't play? It's some of the dumbest "I wanna be a hipster" things.
@markvanzantjr67312 жыл бұрын
Been in the game for over 23 years, rolling ankles and knocking myself out, punk rock anarchist my entire youth, and I got to say at my age, I agree 100%
@finnmcginn99312 жыл бұрын
@@Tooamazin early 90s was the gatekeeping pinnacle of skating.
@Jordan__Sloan2 жыл бұрын
Hahahaha yep
@esleddy37102 жыл бұрын
defiantly since pop culture, fashion and media borrows from skateboarding so much. im happy all the skater now get so many brand deals and making more $
@YudiMuchanis Жыл бұрын
I've been skateboarding since 1992. And I love when skateboard brands get noticed by the mainstream. It means they're thriving. Brand is a business. And businesses have to make money. As long as they're still keeping their core values, they're still good in my book.
@Grimeandcrime9 ай бұрын
I couldn’t agree more. Also thrasher wouldn’t have survived without all the hype from celebs. I would be so sad if thrasher died, it’s at the heart of skating.
@Alexander-km8es9 ай бұрын
Yeah I like the fact that people hated me for being a skater nowadays it's just gate keeping and eliteism from other skaters that are just up them selves
@JoeyMFBones9 ай бұрын
I mean there's two sides to the coin, not one or the other. It's great to hold true to your values and only when $$ compromises your values do you have a problem.
@VolkXue8 ай бұрын
the people i know that work for Thrasher today are still pretty hardcore, punk skaters.
@kazum18094 ай бұрын
Like Revive skateboards they stay true to who they are. That’s core AF
@theeturnone2 жыл бұрын
damn, no mention of Jake passing. . thats pretty f-up
@slipsream472 жыл бұрын
And Kevin Thatcher!
@woiowoiow1902 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was wondering about that. When he passed the amazing stopped selling at my local market that had been selling it for over a decade.
@brain41549 ай бұрын
how is it fucked up? lol
@mikehemens93599 ай бұрын
hella dead
@UltimateLifeTool2 жыл бұрын
Great video about Thrasher, however you failed to mention the two most important people who Created the Magazine AND were the reason Thrasher mag was totally core for so long- Kevin Thatcher (the First editor, Creator of the mag, and artist who created the first cover, and MOFO- the first photo editor, and photo journalist who wrote most of the stories and took most of the photos.) The skateboarding World and Thrasher owes EVERYTHING to these two men- Visionaries who were let go without even a thank you for their groundbreaking work for DECADES before the Phelper was made editor to completely Destroy and sell out The Most Core Mag in Skateboarding History.
@encyclopediabrown13342 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@thomasstahle30122 жыл бұрын
Sad But Well Spoken Hack Man , MOFO Is Still Accessable But KT Has Gone Way Underground And His Words , Insight , Photography And All Around Skate Art Sense Will always Be Missed !!! Skate Boarding History Cannot Be Changed Glad Icons Like yourself Still Speak The Truth And Live It ...
@boundarysentinel41812 жыл бұрын
☝️Vision”streetwearies”
@teamlamedetroit84072 жыл бұрын
Oh shit! Hackman the Gnarly speaks! Legend!
@eatassonthefirstdate10 ай бұрын
agreed, FUCK that junkie. being a racist, sexist, drunk, addict piece of shit dick head isn't an identity. and he sucked at skating anyways.
@filmercode2 жыл бұрын
You can't do a Rise and Fall if there was no fall..
@bigmike18502 жыл бұрын
Ya this guys a fuckin clown they sell sweatshirts with a logo on it for $60
@westsiderydin2232 жыл бұрын
Oh thrasher has fallen it’s not what it used to be
@No4Snappy2 жыл бұрын
been looking for this comment
@BertoBoyd2 жыл бұрын
Exactly
@shilohikem14872 жыл бұрын
@@westsiderydin223 what do you mean be specific
@billjordan39522 жыл бұрын
Rip Jake Phelps
@theeturnone2 жыл бұрын
thank you. . i cant believe it wasnt mentioned
@MidTierVillain2 жыл бұрын
I got him Tatted on my side, with the iconic glasses, in black & white.. RIP
@colddworldd93362 жыл бұрын
He was a crazy ass drunk not a hero 😂😂
@godstomper2 жыл бұрын
I remember meeting him once in Sf while I was delivering for Uber.I walked into a off South of Vaness restaurant called Starboard and he was in there hanging out with the owner. He handed me a fortune cookie and I was like, ok , cool, free food.
@Baking_baked2 жыл бұрын
Note. You owe me 14 minutes of my life back.
@philipibaugh29252 жыл бұрын
I always wondered what happened with the all of a sudden popularity of Thrasher magazine clothing. I had a subscription for about 3 years or more in early 90s. Being from a small town in Pennsylvania Thrasher magazine was my connection to the bigger world of skateboarding. The music got my attention more in long run and found out about a ton of awesome bands idk they used to have interviews with lots of punk rock and hardcore bands that is what I liked best about Thrasher. I used to order so much stuff through that magazine.
@cycologist70692 жыл бұрын
Skateboarding wasn't popular in Pennsylvania back then?
@disiamtheillusion2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact : skate and destroy was the slogan .skate or die was an 80s arcade game.both awesome
@MrGwaldo Жыл бұрын
Which inspired Read And Destroy (R.A.D.), the British skate mag.
@Tucker_Gnarlson9 ай бұрын
First you skate, then you die
@Tony-i5f9 ай бұрын
Skate or Die was awesome in the arcade but Skate and Destroy is one of the best skateboarding video games.
@G.G.___1628 ай бұрын
There was also the PS1 game: Thrasher - Skate and Destroy At the time, that was the best skateboarding game for actual skateboarders. But if you weren't a skateboarder you would've hated that game, and would have had much more fun with the Tony Hawk's games
@jazzturkey21082 жыл бұрын
Kinda fucked up to not mention Jake's passing. Also bananas that people don't understand that they are a business trying to survive in a failing economy where skateboarding as a whole isn't in the public eye as much as it was a decade ago.
@tiredasf1072 жыл бұрын
Cause this guy doesn’t know shit
@Decan1982 жыл бұрын
This video was 12mins of saying “skaters don’t like Thrasher anymore because it became mainstream” in different ways.
@rzadigi2 жыл бұрын
Sorry, but Thrasher has never fallen. It’s been around forever and has never gone out of business, unlike every other skate mag (and surf and snowboard mag). It’s got the most watched KZbin channel in all of skating and it’s Skater Of The Year Award is the most respected and desired of all. Who cares if celebrities started wearing Thrasher merch? BFD. The Izod collab is questionable but Thrasher is just a small privately owned company and does want to survive. Especially considering they’re still printing a magazine, and magazines have pretty much gone the way of the dinosaurs. Thrasher has been supporting skateboarding for decades and they deserve immense respect and credit for their hard work in representing the pure heart and soul of skateboarding🙏❤️
@robertdominicanrepublic2 жыл бұрын
Got my first copy of Thrasher around 1986 at Kona in Jacksonville, FL. The magazine was made for us and encouraged us to continue skating regardless of the push back we received from the masses. Who gives a sh*t if they decided after several decades to sell their gear in a few mainstream stores, collaborate with Lacoste or make a few extra dollars. Long live Thrasher!
@johnm39462 жыл бұрын
I got my first issue at Kona too about the same time!
@pwn3d_d1rt Жыл бұрын
Fucking exactly dude 🤟
@profo4544 Жыл бұрын
People who actually skate dude, pretty sure the video went over it but i bet you know more, show me one line dude. Go film a line of tricks, u probably cant even skate.
@seancascanet1420 Жыл бұрын
Bro stfu you're the worst type of skateboarding culture and shouldn't even be allowed apart of the culture. Assholes like you are the ones who dont know how to skate past a kick flip. Idc if someone can Ollie or not just enjoy the skateboard you have. Youre just a young piece of shit gatekeeper who won't back up his shit. Go upload any trick and this 32 year old man will one up you easily each time I fucking challenge you
@seancascanet1420 Жыл бұрын
Try me bro upload anything you have your best trick and I'll match and up it..try me.. skateboarding is for everyone and You're the worst of it....I can call you a poser for only doing the easier tricks..anyone who rides that board are worth respect
@godstomper2 жыл бұрын
Thrasher definitely got me into finding out about underground bands like Napalm death, Nirvana and GG Allin and this was back in the 80s .
@TuriyanGold2 жыл бұрын
Spastic Blur!
@jackstevens5852 жыл бұрын
That’s tits!!! That’s how I found a bunch of awesome band!!! Still listening to DK today!
@robfromvan9 ай бұрын
That’s why skaters hate it. Because what does Napalm Death and GG Allin have to do with skateboarding. Do you think Nyjah Houston or Daewon Song listen to Napalm Death or GG Allin?
@godstomper9 ай бұрын
@@robfromvan I know Salman Agah hates music. I dunno about these other guys. Well Thrasher started notes from the underground so I guess somebody there likes music
@robfromvan9 ай бұрын
@@godstomper I know, I just fail to see the connection between the music and skateboarding. Between 86 and 89 skateboarding got really huge and so many kids got into it, but they were mostly normal kids who played other sports before that like baseball, etc., and none of them gave a rat’s ass about punk rock. Actually more of them were into rap. Even now most pro skateboarders simply don’t listen to punk. Can you imagine Daewon Song or P-Rod listening to punk? I doubt it. Punk really has nothing to do with skateboarding, yet Thrasher puts them together as if they’re somehow connected just because that was the musical taste of some skateboarders in the late 70’s and early 80’s.
@nomoreprospecting Жыл бұрын
It seams like most of the Top Skaters have moved down here in San Diego - good choice! I worked at Thrasher in 1987 for a little over a year. I owe that to Steve Cab introducing me to MoFo at a party in San Jose. I got my story submitted into Thrasher called "Pacific Theater" about me skating all over the Pacific in Asia, mostly Japan while in the US Navy on the USS Midway. Anyway I worked in Production at the Magazine mostly making T-Shirts and sending our products out to stores and Skateparks. MoFo, Matt Etherege, and another guy all played in a band called "The Drunk Injuns" and they were the coolest band! Oh - memories! I remember Maria (Fausto's Niece) Secretary, KT editor, MoFo, Fausto & Eric. Sorry to hear of Fausto passing away from a Bicycle accident and Eric passing away from - well - not a good scene. It was an interesting part of my life!
@oldskater261510 ай бұрын
What was you're MOS? My Dad was on the Midway as well as a HT. We where there during that time.
@craigmeehan69889 ай бұрын
I will never wear Thrasher clothes until I can kickflip. I'm 49 and started skating in August 22. But I love Indie Trucks
@BohnezzzzzzАй бұрын
Good Luck
@solidrock65242 жыл бұрын
My first thrasher had the Red Hot chili peppers in it as a new punk band they had just been in the movie Thrashin! The ink used to come off on my fingertips.
@joelglanton65312 жыл бұрын
Whoa that's crazy I hadn't thought in along time about how the ink from print media used to come off, I think it was around the year 2000 or so they started adding something so it wouldn't come off. Thrasher switched to glossy paper long before that but I remember you'd buy smaller zines or the newspaper and your fingers would turn black.
@marsbase372910 ай бұрын
dude, you just made me feel old! 😝
@DIRTYYETTI2 жыл бұрын
Thrasher Skate and Destroy for PlayStation 1 was literally what got me into skateboarding. I owe my love and passion for skateboarding to Thrasher.
@tiggernits15082 жыл бұрын
I fucking loved that game.
@Steezox9x6xАй бұрын
The whole point of starting underground is to make it overground. Nobody or business wants to remain on the ground floor.
@markvanzantjr67312 жыл бұрын
I've been a core skateboarder and underground punk for over 23 years, I get the critic, I know the position of the culture... and you've done a great job here with the history and the break down. You're points are valid. but can we just admit that Zumiez does care about skating? I've been with the company for a few years and I gotta tell you guys. There's not a single company event I have attended where skateboarding hasn't been spotlighted and catered too. More than half the homies in home office are tattooed punk rock kids trying to survive in a world where capitalism won, and they've found a business that lets us be us, throw hook ups to the locals, all while speaking our minds far more than any other chain would ever allow. I've literally watched us take small brands and do whatever we can to help them getting printing contracts and stay afloat. Even our company training events always end in big skate sessions and hang out time with pro's and skate companies. We can say moving in to the malls was wrong, but on the business side capitalism doesn't care how "true clvt" a brand is. Transworld mag? gone. Skateboarder mag? gone. all the other big mags? gone. Do I dislike celebrities' in thrasher clothes, absolutely yes. Do streetwear fashion heads know about twisted ankles from front boards down Hubba's? no. they don't know shit. BUT if that's what it took to keep the bible alive for all of us, then I'll swallow that pill. Because with out those shirt sales thrasher would of folded like the rest, and for every one of them eventually a kid walks into the mall and gets exposed to the magazine and the youth is only thing that will keep this alive. accessible or not. we -need- a entry point into counter culture. Is there a weird dynamic of getting anti-consumer messaging from a consumer product? absolutely. But in a world as plastic and as fast as the DLC, subscription service, tiktok, consume, hype, consumer world we live in. Winning over hearts and minds is a battle of attrition, and I'll take what I can get.
@markvanzantjr67312 жыл бұрын
Also I don't care if some teeny boppers who've never done a ollie wear Thrasher, I'm an old guy I earned my pass, and they have no impact on what it means when the core people wear it proudly. Our thrasher hats are earned in blood, sweat and bruises, it will never be less legit when I don my hoodie and go mob up in a parking garage with the homies. They'll move on with the passing of time, and we'll still be here, I sincerely hope Thrasher will be here too.
@matthogan49052 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏 They get a lot of haters for good reason but when I was coming up Zumiez and CCS was all we had access to, now 15+ years later it's easy to see that it probably wouldn't have become such a huge part of my life without them.
@TorkeyDubs2 жыл бұрын
Mall grabin your way through the punk scene
@markvanzantjr67312 жыл бұрын
@@TorkeyDubs we still care about how someone carries their board? and yeah sure, call it whatever you want, but It's worked out so far. I don't have much to prove to anyone at my age.
@BertoBoyd2 жыл бұрын
I got a homies that work in locals and Zumiez and of course I’ll support local quicker than Zumiez but I agree with you. I’ve got no problem with this. Great comment!
@Sumunuhriginal2 жыл бұрын
Thrasher is still the biggest skateboard mag and news source. They rack up millions of views on KZbin every year and if you’re a skater the most credit you’re gonna get is a thrasher cover and the SOTY award they give out. You know you’re the best of the best when your video part drops on thrashers channel.
@BillFromHalifax Жыл бұрын
the uploader is a joke lol
@archfiendkaguya6213 Жыл бұрын
@@BillFromHalifax yeah, i dont think the creator is a skater himself so i wouldnt call him a joke. but honestly thrasher is no where near dead. i think he meant it was "dead" as in from that time when the jenners wore thrasher merch and boosted its popularity in 2016 til now that people who dont part take in the community dont even take a glance at the clothes hemselves unless at zumiez or something. it did fall out of the "mainstream" a little bit per say, but definitely didnt die considering the community continues to grow everyday
@chessplayercharlesv Жыл бұрын
I just miss king of the road and bust or bail. I don't believe Thrasher has fallen. They are actually on the top of their game, they have just adapted to the nex gen in skateboarding. I think Thrasher will always be the top skateboarding magazine, even though there are a lot of other skate mags, no one really comes close to the importance of Thrasher, its legacy and its success, past, present and obviously its future.
@Peoples139 ай бұрын
Thrasher is far from hated by skaters
@SQUIRTGANG2 жыл бұрын
I've been a skater in the Philadelphia area for 20+ years and everything you said is completely accurate, great video!
@SQUIRTGANG2 жыл бұрын
@Thickok45 I'm just a regular dude commenting on a youtube video man
@logicproblems36542 жыл бұрын
Oh shit what part of Philly you from, I'm round rox
@scottyk17632 жыл бұрын
FDR is heaven.
@stalwartzero70012 жыл бұрын
R.I.P. Love. Crazy Wenning SW BS180d that with a popsicle stick.
@Filmedbyak2 жыл бұрын
215 wassup
@marcoreactionary2 жыл бұрын
The Rise and Riser of thrasher 🤘🏼
@Vinnystrobel3 ай бұрын
Um skaters don't hate thrasher, posers may wear it but that's not thrashers fault
@emmerfarro2 жыл бұрын
My Dad made me get a checking account in fall 1986 at age 15. The very first check I wrote was to Thrasher mag for a green crew neck Thrasher sweatshirt. Check # 2 went to Skip Englbom for a pair of SMA Natas rails. Those went on that black JFA mini I was riding then.
@encyclopediabrown13342 жыл бұрын
THE THRASHER EMPIRE SHALL NEVER FALL!!! BURNETT CARRIES US WELL AFTER THE FALL OF PHELPS!!! I FOR ONE OF MANY WOULD HONORABLY CARRY ON THE THRASHER CROWN AFTER BURNETTS REIGN!!! LONG LIVE THRASHER MAG!!!
@keithparker95032 жыл бұрын
If I had known as a teenager that they were selling Thrasher T-shirts down at the mall in the 1980's for the masses to buy and wear, I would not have worn their t-shirts. Skate Harassment was a real thing for me growing up skating so seeing the masses become more accepting of skating means that hopefully future generations will not have their skateboards snatched up so quickly by the deans at their high school or get harassed by people so much out on the streets or fun spots. Having the world wake up to the greatness of skateboarding is not such a bad thing IMHO.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
I've been on both sides of it. It's nice if money is there but it never was ever supposed to be about the money.
@thisgame22 жыл бұрын
There style is true skate culture. - 40 year old 90s kid
@d_ruggs10 ай бұрын
the most upsetting thing about the lacoste shirt is that when i was in school, it was us skaters vs the jocks, and jocks wore lacoste shirts and we (well 1 friend lol) had thrasher shirts. feels like when the money got right like thrasher ditched us for that 'up river' money
@jamesmarvin137310 ай бұрын
"Skate or Die" was around way before Jake Phelps / 1993. Everyone was tagging it on their grip tape and school book covers way back in 1986. I know the bumper stickers were out around then too.
@edwardduarte73939 ай бұрын
I used to draw zorlac/pushead illustrations on my notebook.
@eaglebauer9449 ай бұрын
"Skate or Die" dates back to the 1950's, when the company "Roller Derby" used it to promote their brand new roller skates "Street King".
@adrienrenaud5342 жыл бұрын
Thrasher found a brilliant way to get dorks to pay for my free skate vids I enjoy everyday.
@finnmcginn99312 жыл бұрын
It will still be here when the cool kids walk away.
@fredericsalvan74812 жыл бұрын
Hi Michael, well documented story! My problem with Thrasher : I subscribed 20 years ago, then last year, I started skipping issues, no new magazines for 2 or 3 months. I sent a couple of complaints but nobody is responsible for "publications lost in international postal service " , neither Thrasher nor US Mail nor french LaPoste. I'm sure there's some lousy dude stealing it somewhere on the line but nobody is responsible. So I sent more angry emails to Thrasher and without me asking for it, they decided to refund my last subscription renewal. All I wanted was to actually receive the mags and I got dropped out. After more than 20 years of subscription, it hurts.
@woiowoiow1902 жыл бұрын
I would buy the magazine at my local store every month for years bit they disappeared after the death of the I think the creator.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
They became quarterly publication online instead of being in print. It was in the last issue of Thrasher they announced they're going to switch to online publication. I'm sorry to hear you missed the big announcement.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
@@woiowoiow190 They did tell in the last printed issue they're going to switch over to online publication and then in a quarterly format.
@fredericsalvan74812 жыл бұрын
@@amberdyet8059 thanks for the update, looking forward for where and when to get the Mag ;)
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
@@fredericsalvan7481 no prob
@williamerickson36652 жыл бұрын
Excuse me please but I am a 62 year old SF born skater Thrasher is named after the empty public pool we use to session in San Leandro Ask Bryce or the Guerrero Brothers
@justinlast2lastharder7498 ай бұрын
Random Bay Area Skating Lore: Remember Alameda Skatepark? Remember the Freeway Scene in Matrix Reloaded? They built the Fake Freeway they shot that on right next to Alameda Skatepark. I went after they finished filming with my YMCA Summer Skate Camp, but it was still there because they only finished filming recently at the time.
@TheMorganMonroeShow2 жыл бұрын
I have been skateboarding since 1973. At that point in time, I had heroes in the industry. skaters like Patti McGee and so on. skateboarding has come and gone. One decade starts out great, the end of the decade completely disappears. skateboarding will always be here. It’s not main stream, it’s a fashion statement/fad. All that could change, but then it would be considered sold out. let’s face it. Without becoming like a little league and starting with the youth, it will never be something considered necessary. most skateboarders consider it a throwaway. not even winning it in the Olympics. and yet the most focal points of what I considered Skateboarding was a backyard rep or somewhere in an unmarked location in the woods. what’s my point here? My point is, Skateboarding can be everything. It can be punk rock, it can be a fashion statement. It could be in the middle of a cornfield in Indiana on a ramp built out of crates and paneling. The one thing that we all should make sure happens with our most useless wooden toy is that it’s not forgotten. That has a solid history of where it came from and how it got to wherever it ends up. We need to understand that if we don’t start with the young youth that does fun loving thing we cherish will continue to go up and down and struggle. because bringing in the youth and making it like a little league will bring in revenues that will actually make that happen. If you look back at the history on why Skateboarding goes up and down, it’s because the corporations make mistakes because they’re running the show. That is a fact. when the people lead, the leaders follow. When the people do nothing, that is exactly what you’ll have at what you cherish the most. nothing. It’s not yours. It’s who you’re buying the useless toy from that owns what you cherish so much. what I’m saying here is, this is ours. Cherish it. Make it a part of your entire community as it promotes uniting each other. Or, we could behave like we’re hard-core then realized as we get older our children can’t wear a helmet when they skate down a 22 stair handrail because the magazines won’t post the picture. Or they won’t win the contest because they didn’t wear a helmet. Could you imagine that in any other sport? Seriously think about your child have to play FullContact football with no gear. most state officials would consider that child abuse. when I was a kid, I never wore pads. But when I went to the skate park, it was mandatory. That was Clearwater Skateboard Park in Clearwater Florida. at the time I felt like that was stupid. But now at 60 years old I can’t walk right. that’s what I mean by us as individuals taking care of our sport. Taking care of that fad. Taking care of that fashion statement. taking care of the most amazing thing that ever become of a subculture. take possession of your cherished useless wooden toy. Pull it out of the hands of the big corporations. put it in the hands of you, we the people. Our neighbors, our fellow individuals in a community. i’m not going to say who told me this from thrasher magazine. But in the end, he looked me in the eyes and said, in the end, God wins. I thought to myself, what a profound statement. what does that have to do with Skateboarding? maybe everything. I don’t know. I’m just dialing about how cool the thing we all love the most is and how throughout the decades it comes and goes. it comes and goes, because we let it. There’s other people who want to guide where we’re going with it. blah blah blah blah blah. HAHAHAHAHAHAAHA! no matter what. I love this useless wooden toy as much as I love the entire community. skateboarders are not just skateboarders, we are family. GO US! 🤙🏼🍻🫡🏴☠️ #OfTheEpic #ItIsUs
@cycologist70692 жыл бұрын
I remember Gregg Weaver as being the first skateboard star.
@LuthersArchiv9 ай бұрын
This is really sad clickbaiting.
@9sheri92 жыл бұрын
Vice can hardly be grouped in the same sell out categories such as zumiez. Cmon man.
@ZetaReticulian2 жыл бұрын
This channel WILL GROW. Huge.
@trod59022 жыл бұрын
legit tho, this is as quality as accounts with 1mil+ subs
@xxraptorsc0pezxx2 жыл бұрын
@@trod5902 For real man he deserves to blow up
@GoddessFrancine10 ай бұрын
"Skate or die" probably came from the early 80's Zorlac Skateboard printed ad "Skate Tough or Die". If I say, "skate tough or kill yo mama" it is only a variation of the original Zorlac ad.
@nobudgetshortfilms551010 ай бұрын
There was a videogame arcade on the 80s as well called 'Skate or Die'
@rm63302 жыл бұрын
If Thrasher fell off then I'll be falling happily off with it!
@termikes1749 ай бұрын
Whatever, there has been posers almost as long as I’ve been skating.
@Dave2LA2 жыл бұрын
Good video. ive been skating for over 22 years and im happy that today I can purchase thrasher clothing (I live in Brazil) when i was 15 I had to import the magazines and could only dream about getting a shirt.
@nobudgetshortfilms551010 ай бұрын
I also live in Brazil and i only see non skaters wearing Thrasher shirts here.
@howardroark92 жыл бұрын
Should have talked about why they decided to put a pentagram as their logo.
@MickSupper9 ай бұрын
Cool that someone else has noticed. Remember the 666 Powell Peralta logo? That was even way back when.
@mikehunt47972 жыл бұрын
Thrasher is the only skatemag still on the shelves that I ever see. In the past ud have 4 or 5 different mags.
@PTSD_Karma10 ай бұрын
Never even wore thrasher when I did skate lol. It’s like wearing a band tee and not listening to that bad.
@hughmungous64872 жыл бұрын
Thrasher mag used to have some of the best band reviews back in the mid 80's, and i thank them for that
@untitledproduction51532 жыл бұрын
You know I was skateboarding before I even knew about Tony hawk or thrasher
@robfromvan9 ай бұрын
You’re an OG
@biggkoz2 жыл бұрын
I bought my first thrasher magazine in the spring of 1988 and had a subscription until about 1994. I ended up buying a maroon thrasher shirt that’s actually featured in this video about 4-5 years ago and shortly after the brand blew up. Now I feel if I’m wearing it people may think I’m a poser 😀
@morgellon78772 жыл бұрын
I've skated for 22 years, and I can really care less about the sellout thing. The entire industry sold out to Nike, Adidas, Converse, New Balance etc. I can care less about hype beasts or celebrities wearing Thrasher gear. Thrasher is the shit, but it had become synonymous with Jake Phelps; he was the mind behind Thrasher for the entirety of my skateboarding life. After Phelps' death, it's felt a bit different. It's like a great band losing their lead singer.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@MickSupper9 ай бұрын
I loved Thrasher magazine back in the 80s and I had no idea who Phelps was.
@abec6.6.6.2 жыл бұрын
Nike bought their way into skating years ago and now they are a staple and this opened the floodgates for any and all brands to homogenize our culture. I would love a Target sponsorship BTW
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
Only sells out if people let it. It doesn't bother skaters if they have money or don't because it never was ever supposed to be about the money because that is anathema to the culture of skateboarding.
@Bunnicula71 Жыл бұрын
The ads for mail order in the back was the source of my first board: a green Lucero with black Trackers and 92 Slime Balls. I wore that thing out big time. Also remember Boneite from Powell? Sadly I do
@MickSupper9 ай бұрын
I never liked Powell Peralta. I always remember their boards being so big and flat with almost no tail at all, so I went with a blank from what I think was called Z-Board and had my dad paint it, then I moved onto a G&S Grigley.
@crypress4202 жыл бұрын
My brother s friend he has known since school, is the owners of thrasher's son. Back in school (in the 90's) I had the 2 foot thrasher logo stickers in like 10 different colors. I still got a thrasher hoodie with the thrasher logo and a pentagram with a goat head and trucks in it to this day. The logo that's half hidden behind the King of the Road logo in this video.
@omgness142 жыл бұрын
When Phelps passed, you started seeing cartoony Thrasher intros and that was a sign the company switched into the wrong hands, Burnett is just not anti establishment enough and will/has made Thrasher a shell of its former self
@tanneredge97743 ай бұрын
In the 80s it was fine. Now it’s unacceptable
@robweissman59522 жыл бұрын
Jake did NOT coin the phrase "skate or die"... It was popularized by the video game 720 and then was the name of an NES game in the 80s... Who knows who actually said it first.
@snakecat5862 жыл бұрын
Thrasher is still everywhere. I skate twice a week and multiple people are always wearing it at the skatepark
@Spelonker2 жыл бұрын
Eh, I think the Lacoste collab was beyond whack and seeing the t shirts everywhere is like seeing people wear band t shirts and not listening to the music, but everything they've done with Vice was actually good and gives them extra resources to make longer, better presented docs and videos. Honestly, if they would just do the galaxy brain move (and they might already) of selling different clothes exclusively to skate shops, I don't see the problem. Skating has always had its commercial side and it's a necessary evil to keep companies afloat or to help them expand and reach more skaters, but the thing you neglect to mention is that MAGAZINES are damn hard to make any money off today. And considering that they're constantly putting out a wholly free flow of videos now where they didn't before, they have to find their money somewhere.
@G.G.___1628 ай бұрын
After 25 years of skateboardintg, and having been in the industry myself, and having several friends that are either pro or have been pro: I don't know a single person that "hates" Thrasher. Now, we definitely discuss how Thrasher has changed, not entirely for the better, since Phelps paseed; but "hate" Thrasher..? Uh, just no lol Im sure there's some people with bad Thrasher experiences, but overwhelmingly overall, skateboarders do not "hate" Thrasher"
@theBPspill2 жыл бұрын
I gotta say, vice aint exactly a main stream channel. Only people i know that watch anything on vice are probably the people most likely to pick up skating or just enjoy skate and adjacent cultures.
@TheDealer12282 жыл бұрын
I thought it was weird calling Vice mainstream, too.
@rzadigi2 жыл бұрын
Vice has been around forever and pretty much started as a Big Brother msg ripoff. Nothing wrong in working with them.
@tiggernits15082 жыл бұрын
I got a skate and destroy tattoo over 20 years ago. Thrasher was for the kids who wore vans and smoked cigs between classes. Transworld was for the kids who wore D3s and bought everything from ccs
@justinlast2lastharder7498 ай бұрын
Halfway correct. Thrasher was for the grungier skaters, Transworld was more a World Industries Advertisement.
@jackstevens5852 жыл бұрын
Damn this takes me back!!! I remember it being so hard to find the magazine in my area, but when you had one , you became a God in town…until someone got the newest addition! I always liked Gonz!!! I had his deck with Indy trucks, PnP crossbone wheels, NMB bearings!!! I thought I was bad ass! Cool video! I really enjoyed it!!!
@casmoneansthefourth9 ай бұрын
Sand that gonz deck was everywhere, give me that and some OJII’s😢
@casmoneansthefourth9 ай бұрын
Dang that
@quantum_shhhhart2 жыл бұрын
first skate video i ever saw was The Truth Hurts by THRASHER. what a great film
@DasMaggie2 жыл бұрын
My dude your channel is going to explode one day. Great quality content, very well done.
@musclecarfan742 жыл бұрын
I started reading Thrasher in 1986 nd stopped about 1993 when I graduated high school. I don't recall anybody I skated with wearing Thrasher clothes. I'm from the Chicago area, and our mall sold skateboards back in the day.
@trod59022 жыл бұрын
most underrated channel. keep going bro i promise your channel is gonna blow up
@dixoncider50462 жыл бұрын
I miss stealing skate mags from the mall. Good times
@6AM_YT2 жыл бұрын
This video is a 14 minute "tell me you know nothing about Thrasher". Jake died years ago. It seems like you're blaming him for things you don't like. The fact that Thrasher is still able to exist in magazine form is because of all the non-skaters buying Thrasher shirts. They're financing what is essentially a dead format for skaters. Good. Thanks. Enjoy your shirt. Thank God that Thrasher still exists. I first subscribed to Thrasher in 1987 and I was able to get my son a subscription a few years ago. It was a great feeling.
@erickierce72412 жыл бұрын
Hell, the local skateshop in Visalia, CA was in a mall for years in the 80's and 90's. The Surf Shop in the Visalia mall was the only skateshop in town. Just being in a mall doesn't make it bad really.
@MickSupper9 ай бұрын
Yep, I loved going to Shannon's Surf Shop in our local Willow Brook Mall in Houston, where I would by my gear.
@lawsontalks9182 жыл бұрын
mid to late 80s Thrasher was the only place to order Dr. Martens, man the wait for delivery was painful.
@rzadigi2 жыл бұрын
Haha so what??
@lawsontalks9182 жыл бұрын
@@rzadigi it brings back some great memories, do you need a hug?
@rzadigi2 жыл бұрын
@@lawsontalks918 guess u weren’t punk enough to read MRR
@lawsontalks9182 жыл бұрын
@@rzadigi possibly not punk enough, you got me 🥲
@KavaKavana2 жыл бұрын
Hey it’s skippy and he’s still rocking thrasher
@sbollin43212 жыл бұрын
Fausto and Kevin Thatcher were not “punk rock”, but they did hire younger people and put skateboarders in the magazines that did embrace the movement and featured bands who were. It was actually how I and lot of other skateboarders would find out about and eventually listen to punk, hardcore, thrash metal and hip hop, etc.
@6AM_YT2 жыл бұрын
Punk didn't exist in the 60's. That was such a weird part of the video.
@noahheath10432 жыл бұрын
I remember wearing a thrasher hoodie and a group of youngers kids walked up on me and asked me what my favorite song way by them…
@TheViolator912 жыл бұрын
Here before this channel blows up
@greedmiser8414 Жыл бұрын
As a skater thru mid 80's-2015ish from PDX, ive seen every fad and gimmick that was a part of skating. I was lucky enough to have a parent that supported my strange addiction to self mutilation that we refer to as skateboarding. I am a life long member to the Thrasher mag subscription, probably still gettin mags at the address of my youth.. anyways, skateboarding really was a crime and you needed to be somewhat of a hoodlum to participate in bombing spots. This included, running from the cops, avoiding the crazies that HATED you 'destroying' their picture perfect whatevers.. Thrasher magazine was one of the only places you could get new information on the pros, ams and products. I remember meticulously goin over ever square inch of this 'skaters bible' from cover to cover to see who had the most tweaked out japan or the hugest boneless on vert. Being lucky enough to grow up near Portland, and still skating, in the early 90s-2ks i got to experience the gnarl we call Burnside. Nothing will compare to that time in my life.. nothing! I dont skate anymore as i have the fear now but i will support skating untill the day i die. I dgaf if skating is mainstream or not, i dgaf if Zumiez sells boards n shirts to lil groms.. skating is not a thing, its a battle determined by how much you are willing to risk to push yourself out of your comfort zone.. self enlightenment, not whos wearing what shirt.. skateboarding doent care, skateboarding has no feelings.. so, SKATE AND DESTROY!!
@SilverWealth_Draper_Mint Жыл бұрын
Im from Nyc and skaters were considered nerds in the 80’s and 90’s. You were made fun of.
@cali_livin67932 жыл бұрын
I havent even seen the whole vid yet but i must say Thrasher never fell off in my eyes or any skater that ik
@markprice2225 Жыл бұрын
If you have an original Thrasher Magazine from the 80s or 90s, or in my case both! Really a shitload of em! And all are still great reads 📚 to this day! Still frame pics, captions, miss the old days
@hosoiarchives48582 жыл бұрын
I have no problem with Thrasher being sold at Zumiez
@amsf12 жыл бұрын
Still have my Thrasher and Transworld skate magazines from the 90's...
@billjordan39522 жыл бұрын
First
@johnm39462 жыл бұрын
Thrasher can do whatever they want, the more shirts they sell to the lost people the bigger the contest can be.
@jamesblake5176 Жыл бұрын
the master of disaster will always be one of my top 3 favorite skaters up there with rodney, and muska
@dingushussey41002 ай бұрын
Main problem with their mass consumer culture thing is that the product goes to crap with mass production. The quality of their sweats and the print is crap, nowadays the prints are not screenprinted but heat transfers, much like modern decks.
@TheDealer12282 жыл бұрын
You can’t make claims like “They received major backlash” without providing any real examples of said backlash. I’ve been in the skate scene for over 20 years and I watch videos on Thrasher’s YT almost every day and I’ve literally never heard anyone bitch about the “brand.” I’ve seen people semi-ironically complain about celebs trying to use the brand for clout, but that’s it.
@alexrekzu40792 жыл бұрын
you can tell by the way the narrator speaks like he is reading off a piece of paper that thrasher has fallen because this Michael T guy said so. also the obvious mispronunciations really solidify that thrasher has fallen..... oh dear 😎🍻
@MickSupper9 ай бұрын
Welcome to the internet and getting even worse with stupid AI.
@666shredordie2 жыл бұрын
I'm cool with skaters making money off of non-skaters. Skateboarding is part of mainstream culture now but there will always be core skaters. Skateboarding has proven it can last beyond the trends.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
It never was ever supposed to be about the money.
@ScrappEfolkz2 жыл бұрын
Zumiez might be corporate but the one in our mall donates money to our local diy. Local skate shop does not 🤷♂️
@WorkinClassCanadian2 жыл бұрын
I remember when the only people that wore thrasher shirts were good at skateboarding.
@aaronrichards67084 ай бұрын
About the Zumiez thing. Before Zumiez it was called Above the belt and started in the northwest I bought my first Thrasher tshirt there in 1986. I don't know any skaters who hate Thrasher honestly.
@RaulMeatFactory19755 ай бұрын
For the first 11-12 yrs Kevin Thatcher was Thrasher Mags editor. he did a sterling job imo. The 1st copy of a Thrasher Magazine I ever read was a August 1987 issue in September 1987.
@briansweda60942 жыл бұрын
It never lost it's appeal. Magazines are going out of business because of the internet. Let them make money.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
Actually they're switched to online publication.
@xXLsUTiGeRsFaNXx9 ай бұрын
I've been skating for 20 years now. People didn't hate thrasher for selling in zumiez strictly based off the fact zumiez is "corporate". It's the trickle effect that selling to a corporate company would have on skateboarding that made people hate them. It wasn't about thrasher not being a rebel. It was a betrayal to all skateboarders because, selling in zumiez was taking money out of skater-owned shops' pockets, which were already hard to keep running because it's a niche market and rarely get business. In small cities there's not enough skaters to keep the shops running. Without local shops being able hold events due to lack of funds, less awareness is brought to skateboarding and less new skaters are joining skateboarding which directly effects the skate shops sales. And with shops closing down production slows and it's harder to get boards. This slowly kills skateboarding. Skater-owned shops could have been the only ones selling thrasher, which would have forced people to go to the their shops if they wanted to buy it, which keeps them in business and in turn keeps skateboarding going. With the huge rise in Thrasher's popularity, this would have been huge for everyone's local skate shops. So much awareness could have been brought to skateboarding with that money. It seemed like Thrasher wasn't doing it for the love of skateboarding anymore. They went against everything they were about, and was even hurting skateboarding, for money. And almost all skateboarders couldn't forgive them for that.
@garyfreeman896 Жыл бұрын
Does anybody feel the same way about Vans when they only really became big after Fast Times? Was Tony Hawk wrong for doing Back To The Future? Are you a fake if you wear North Face but never go to the mountains? Is Travis Scott a sell out for working with Nike? Is it ok to wear a band/musician/singer shirt without listening to loads of their music and if so what about the Ramones Vs Madonna? Am I ok to wear a Thrasher shirt if I ride a longboard? Just interested in people thoughts.
@Menosfilms9 ай бұрын
As somebody who grew up skating from 99 and forward. It used to piss me off when all the kids who talked down on me would start wearing skate brands and didn’t even skate or know anything about skateboarding.
@jambajoby322 жыл бұрын
Aye bro I appreciate that you share both perspectives when it comes to some hot issues on these brands you share
@verifyinfieldpodcast8 ай бұрын
in 88-91 my room was blasted down in pages from thrasher. i also discovered cool punk and hardcore bands by reading interviews in the mag or seeing the t-shirt adds for the bands. i was a little confused about ten years ago when i started seeing everyone wearing thrasher shirts but i try not to judge : anyone who remembers the mid to late 80s in so cal remember how everyone was constantly being accused of being a poser, so i go easy on people.
@666thsense2 жыл бұрын
having skating being underground WAS NOT FUN OR COOL. it was just something we did as weirdos because we didn't fit in anywhere else. the same people complaining about thrasher being watered down are probably also fine with nike being in skateboarding. there's hypocrisy everywhere. most of todays skaters dont even realize they got into skating while it was widely socially acceptable and BECAUSE it was widely acceptable. to find skaters back in the day you used to have to look for the scuffed up shoes and it was rare you'd find one, but you immediately had a new friend when you did. being a skater used to get your ass kicked. a lot. even wearing OG sal 23s and MC RAPS used to get you beat up for wearing "fake jordans" and that's if you could even FIND those shoes, or ANY shoes. we used to skate in reebok workout plus (still one of the best skate shoes of all time). its ridiculous to me to see people complaining about skateboarding going mainstream when the only reason it was brought to their attention was because it was already mainstream. you can't gatekeep skateboarding.
@tylerrudd54612 жыл бұрын
Thrasher is killing it. The magazine had no way to survive these days. Don’t tell me true skaters don’t respect Thrasher, they are all over great skate parts, tampa, and most of the greats are all about “skater of the year”. They sponsor some of the crazies party contests. No one that doesn’t skate watches their content, and alot of people are watching. It’s so stupid to call anything that has given so much to skateboarding for so long a sell out. Should be titled how thrasher contributed to skateboarding for so long.
@amberdyet80592 жыл бұрын
Exactly!
@thehandleiwantedwasntavailable9 ай бұрын
Started reading THRASHER in 1991. I’m more of a Transworld guy, but I’m still a skater and I don’t hate thrasher at all. In fact, it’s the YT channel I rely on to keep me up to date on skateboarding. I still wear thrasher tshirts occasionally to this day. It doesn’t matter to me that famous people started wearing them. I started wearing them in the 90’s so why would I stop?
@danletter93572 жыл бұрын
Haven’t skated since 90’s, so my opinion don’t mean dick, but a company making money is never a bad thing. Profit drives desire for profit, and making money means people will spend that cash on shit they love. A skate company like thrasher loves skating.
@Dankelheit2 жыл бұрын
A company making profit is a bad thing if you are ExxonMobil and the profit is made by fracking. Just saying profit doesn't equal good