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Skateboarding is the act of
rolling on or interacting with a skateboard. Someone who skateboards is
called a skateboarder or skater.
Skateboarding can be an art, hobby, sport
or a method of transportation. It is often portrayed in the media as an
extreme sport, although this is criticized by some skaters. Because of
its creative aspects, it can also be seen as an art form. Skateboarding
has been shaped and influenced by hundreds of skateboarders throughout
the years. A 2002 report by American Sports Data found that there were
12.5 million skateboarders in the world. Eighty percent of skateboarders
polled who had used a board in the last year were under the age of 18,
and 74 percent were male. The popularity of Female skateboarders is,
however, higher than ever .
History
The first skateboard
The first skateboard originated sometime in the
1950s and coincided with the initial popularization of surfing in California.
The earliest skateboards were homemade and were constructed of flat wooden
planks attached to roller-skate trucks and wheels. Skateboarding was originally
called "sidewalk surfing" and early skaters emulated surfing style and moves.
Skateboards may or may not have evolved from "crate scooters." Crate scooters
preceded skateboards, and were essentially similar except for having a wooden
crate attached to the front, which formed rudimentary handlebars. In the film
Back to the Future, Marty McFly is seen confiscating such a scooter from an
unsuspecting 50s youth, and ripping the crate off to fashion an improvised
skateboard.
In the mid 1960s skateboarding became something
of a craze. A number of surfing manufacturers such as Hobie and Makaha started
building skateboards that resembled small surfboards and assembling teams to
promote their products. The popularity of skateboarding at this time spawned a
national magazine, skateboarder magazine and the 1965 international
championships were broadcast on national television. The growth of skateboarding
at this time can also be seen in Makaha's sales figures which quoted $4 million
worth of boards between 1963 and 1965. Yet by 1966 sales had dropped
significantly and skateboarder magazine had stopped publication. Skateboarding's
popularity dropped and remained low until the early 1970s.
Second generation
In the early 1970s, Frank Nasworthy started to
develop a skateboard wheel made of polyurethane. The improvement in traction and
performance was so immense that the popularity of skateboarding started to rise
rapidly again, and companies started to invest more in product development. Many
companies started to manufacture trucks (axles) especially designed for
skateboarding. As the equipment became more maneuverable, the decks started to
get wider, reaching widths of 10inches and over in the end, thus giving the
skateboarder even more control. Banana board is an term used to describe
skateboards made of polypropylene that were skinny, flexible, with ribs on the
underside for structural support and very popular during the mid-1970s. They
were available in a myriad of colors, bright yellow probably being the most
memorable, hence the name.
Manufacturers started to experiment with more
exotic composites, like fiberglass and aluminum, but the common skateboards were
made of maple plywood. The skateboarders took advantage of the improved handling
of their skateboards and started inventing new tricks. Skateboarders, most
notably the Z-Boys, started to skate the vertical walls of swimming pools that
were left empty in the 1976 California drought. This started the vert trend in
skateboarding. With increased control, skateboarders could skate faster and
perform more dangerous tricks, such as slash grinds and frontside/backside airs.
This caused liability concerns and increased insurance costs to skatepark
owners. Many skateparks went out of business and were torn down. By the
beginning of the 1980s, skateboarding had died again.
Third generation
The third skateboard generation, from the
early/mid eighties to early nineties, was started by skateboard companies that
were run by skateboarders. The focus was initially on vert ramp skateboarding.
The invention of the no-hands aerial (later known as the ollie) by Alan Gelfand
in 1976 made it possible for skaters to perform huge airs off vertical ramps.
While this wave of skateboarding was sparked by commercialized vert ramp
skating, a majority of people who skateboarded during this period never rode
vert ramps. Because most people couldn't afford to build vert ramps or didn't
have access to nearby ramps, street skating gained popularity. In the
mid-eighties, street skating was performed on wide vert boards with short noses,
slide rails, large soft wheels. Skateboarding, however, evolved quickly in the
late 1980s to accommodate the street skater. Since few skateparks were available
to skaters at this time, street skating pushed skaters to seek out shopping
centers and public and private property as their "spot" to skate. Public
opposition, and the threat of lawsuits forced businesses and property owners to
ban skateboarding on their property. By 1992 only a small fraction of
skateboarders remained as a highly technical version of street skating combined
with the decline of vert skating produced a sport that lacked the mainstream
appeal to attract new skaters.
Current generation
The fourth and current generation of
skateboards is dominated by street skating. Most boards are about 7¼ to 8inches
wide and 30 to 32inches long. The wheels have an extremely hard durometer
(approximately 99a). Additionally, very high durometers offer the benefit of
reduced drag on hard surfaces which results in an overall faster ride. The wheel
sizes are relatively small so that the boards are lighter, thus making tricks
more manageable. Today, modern wheels are currently around 48 to 60mm in
diameter and advances in technology have made them extremely light compared to
the wheels of the eighties. Most decks are still constructed out of Canadian
Maple, with 7-plys being the industry standard for strength and durability.
Board styles have changed dramatically since the 1970s but have remained mostly
alike since the mid 1990s. The contemporary shape of the skateboard is derived
from the freestyle boards of the 1980s with a largely symmetrical shape and
relatively narrow width. During the 90s ramp or vert skateboarding dropped in
popularity.
Trick skating
With the evolution of skateparks and ramp
riding, the skateboard began to change. Early skate tricks consisted mainly of
two-dimensional maneuvers (e.g. riding on only the front wheels (nose manual),
spinning like an ice skater on the back wheels (a 360 pivot), high jumping over
a bar (sometimes called a "Hippie Jump", long jumping from one board to another
(often over fearless teenagers lying on their backs), and slalom.
In 1976, skateboarding was transformed by the
invention of the first modern skateboarding trick by Alan "Ollie" Gelfand. It
remained largely a unique Florida trick from 1976 until the summer of 1978 when
Gelfand made his first visit to California. Gelfand and his revolutionary
manoeuver caught the attention of the west coast skaters and the media where it
began to spread worldwide. An ollie is performed by popping the tail of the
skateboard, sliding the front foot towards the nose and lifting up the back foot
to level the skateboard out. This results in the skateboarder, along with his or
her skateboard, lifting into the air. At first, none of Gelfand's companions
believed it was possible to perform a feat like this, and they thought he was
attaching his feet to the board somehow.
The trick was reinvented by Rodney Mullen in
1981, being transferred to the horizontal plane and used as a trick for
freestyle skating (a style of skating popular in the seventies and eighties
based on stationary maneuvers). Rodney Mullen also invented the ollie kickflip,
which, at the time of its invention, was dubbed the "magic flip." No longer was
the trick simply to fly from one place to another. On the way the board could be
made to twist and flip. The development of these complex tricks by Rodney Mullen
and others transformed skateboarding. Skateboarding went from being performed
only on the street to the vertical tops of the half pipes (and other terrain
like huge stairs (sets) and handrails).
The act of "ollieing" onto a rail or pole, and
sliding along it on the trucks of the board, is known as grinding and has
become a mainstay of modern skateboarding. Types of grinds include the 50-50
grind (balancing on the front and back truck while grinding a rail), the 5-0
grind (balancing on the back truck while grinding a rail, kind of like a manual(
a manual is pressing down on the tail of the board while riding without letting
the tail or front wheels touch the ground.) the nose grind (balancing on the
front truck while grinding a rail)and the crooked grind (balancing on the front
truck at an angle while grinding). There are various other grinds that involve
touching both the trucks and the deck to the rail, ledge, or lip. The most
common of these is the smith grind, in which the rider balances over the back
truck while touching the outer middle of the board to the grinding surface in
the direction from which he or she popped. The boardslide is also very common,
in a boardslide a rider ollies onto a rail and lands on the middle of his deck
while grinding. Popping and landing on the back truck and touching the inner
edge of the board, i.e. popping "over", is known as a feeble grind.
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How to
Skateboard
Culture
Skateboarding was originally tied to the
culture of surfing. As skateboarding spread across the United States to places
that were unfamiliar with surfing or its culture, it developed an image of its
own.
The image of the skateboarder as a rebellious,
nonconforming youth has declined in recent years. This rift between the old
image of skateboarding and the new one is quite visible: magazines like
Thrasher portray an image of skateboarding that is dirty, rebellious, and
still firmly tied to punk, while magazines like
Transworld Skateboarding portray a more modernized, diverse, and controlled
image of skateboarding stars.
Films like Dish Dogz help improve the
reputation of youths committed to skateboarding, depicting the individuals of
this subculture as people with a positive outlook on life, prone to poking fun
at each other with no hard feelings, and having a healthy competition of
sportsmen. According to the film, lack of respect, superior thinking and
hostility towards each other is generally frowned upon, albeit each of the
characters (and as such, proxies of the "stereotypical" skateboarder) have a firm
disrespect for authority and rules in general. Group spirit is supposed to be a
heavy influence on each member of the community. Such presentations are devoid
of showcasing criminal tendencies, and do not try to tie extreme sports to any
kind of illegality.
Skate shops
As Skateboarding became bigger so did the need
for more products. At first local surf shops would be the only place to find
boards and even then there wasn't much of a variety. So skateboard shops started
popping up mostly in the west coast then in the East coast until it spread to
where you can get a board and anything else you need and not have to travel very
far.
Skateboard ban
The only country ever to ban skateboards was
Norway, in the period between 1978 and 1989. The use, ownership and sale of
skateboards were forbidden. The ban was said to be due to the perceived high
amount of injuries caused by boards. The ban led skateboarders to construct
ramps in the forest and other secluded areas to avoid the police.
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