Ode to a Smalltown Skater Punk

Tony Hawk in Pretending I’m a Superman

Sometimes you end up with a post stuck in your head that develops a life of its own. Sometimes I veer wildly into territory that I doubt anyone is interested in, and this might go there. The biggest challenge however is I am not even sure how I am going to navigate what I am wanting to talk about. Let’s start with the basics. This weekend I watched an excellent documentary on the making of Tony Hawk Pro Skater called “Pretending I’m a Superman” name from a line in the Goldfinger song Superman. I don’t think it exists on any of the streaming services, and was available for rental for $5 or to purchase for $10 so I just outright purchased it. It was a phenomenal documentary and essentially covers both the evolution of the skate scene and the events that lead to the creation of the Pro Skater franchise, and it’s eventual downfall.

Tony Hawk Pro Skater 2 in all its old-school glory

There are times that I wonder if I am legitimately going through a mid-life crisis. There are times when I get hit so hard by nostalgia that it is almost painful. While I have been messing around with retro consoles lately, this latest venture was triggered by the impending release of a remastered Tony Hawk Pro Skater 1+2. THPS was a very important game for me, but maybe not because of the reasons you might think. I spent a good chunk of my adolescent years as a skater punk, growing up in a very small town without much of a support structure for those sort of en-devours. Thankfully I had a group of about a dozen or so friends who had similar interests at a similar time, but in the pre-internet era we were grossly ignorant about a great many thing.

If not the an exact match, very close in appearance to my first Skateboard

One of the things that you need to be aware of about living in a tiny town prior to the spread of the information super highway is just how small of an existence it was. In a small town in the 80s and early 90s you pretty much had a Dollar General, a Grocery store and if you were exceptionally lucky a Walmart. If something could not be obtained from those locations it was effectively a strange and magical artifact. Weirdly enough my very first skateboard came from the local grocery store and was purchased by me pestering my parents for all of the C&H Greenstamps they had available. I have no clue what the equivalent cost was, but above is an image that if not the same model comes mightily close to my memories of it.

It was not a good skateboard, but then again at that point we had no clue what a good skateboard was. My friends had similarly bad skateboards and we thought we were cool. The board lacked a lot of features that you really need to do much with it… namely it was completely flat and had no concavity at all. Second problem it didn’t really have much of a tail, so you were wildly limited in what you could realistically do with it. However it claimed by be a “Ninja” skateboard, which sounded really cool to us at the time. This was apparently a thing because I remember at least two other friends having one branded this, and a few others riding Nash which were at the time equally horrible. The thing I remember the most about it is just how bad the wheels were. They were an exceptionally squishy urethane that picked up every rock and caused you to come skidding to a halt at random.

Thrasher Magazine, a key lifeline of knowledge

Our primary source of information in these early days were horrible movies like the 1986 Josh Brolin vehicle… Thrashin’. The movie did serve a greater purpose however because it introduced us to the Red Hot Chilli Peppers which is a theme that will resurface later. The grocery store news stand infrequently carried the magazine Thrasher, and it was pretty much a race to see who could purchase it before they would ultimately sell out. I had the good luck of being Catholic and our tradition was to go to the Grocery store immediately following Mass, which was a good two hours before anyone else in town would be there. As a result I managed to pick up most of the issues, because the concept of subscribing to a magazine was wildly foreign to any of us.

Santa Cruz Slime Ball wheels

As we came to realize just how bad our skateboards were, we sought a way to improve our lot in life. The friend who could talk his parents into buying him anything had mail order as an option. The rest of us needed a physical location, and at this point the only place any of us knew was Gadzooks. This was located in a mall roughly an hour and a half from our tiny town, and was effectively a clothing store chain. For some reason unbeknownst to any of us, they carried a small stock of decks and various bits needed to make a proper skateboard. While I did not get my first skateboard there, I did manage to talk my parents into a pair of 65 mm Santa Cruz Slime Ball wheels that were neon pink and neon green. While this was largely a stop gap measure because the board itself was still awful, it did go a long ways to making the experience more manageable.

The Skateboards that I owned throughout the years

My first real skateboard came not long after that, but I remember it being a Christmas present. It was however the sort of Christmas present that you know about because you ended up having to pick it out. By then we had found another option for skate equipment in the form of a ski shop called Think Snow. They didn’t have much in the way of stock, but had access to order pretty much anything we could want and I wanted the Jason Jessee Neptune board. I mean your first skateboard is going to be chosen because it has badass graphics right? I also got to pick out a pair of turquoise gullwing trucks to go with it… which I thought looked cool but in hindsight were really poorly designed and lead me to grinding the bolt off.

I managed to assemble the rogues gallery that were all of the boards I rode over the years. The first one being of course the Jason Jessee. It had a really shallow tail and nose kick, which lead me to grossly over compensate with the Staab Genie, which was a heavy as fuck monstrosity that was designed for ramp skating. This lead me to over compensate again when I got the Natas which had a really short wheelbase and pretty aggressive nose and tail kicks, but was not really comfortable for my already 6’2″ frame. The Danny Way board was a case of finally choosing a board for how it felt rather than how it looked. Jason Lee was another case of me doing this, even though I did really like the Cat in the Hat artwork. Side note this is in fact the same Jason Lee of Television, Movie and now photographic fame.

Footage from Streets on Fire by Santa Cruz

The biggest challenge by far of being a skater from a small town was the general lack of options for where to skate. I grew up in the country, and since skateboards do poorly on dirt… I spent a lot of time without many options. My dad ran a photography business and when he added a studio onto the house, it included a really nice ADA compliant wheelchair ramp. I spent many an hour riding down that ramp and then trying to bail before falling off when I hit the gravel.

The highlight was always when I got to got visit my “city friends” and hang out, but that in itself was its own kind of misery given that our town had an excessive number of brick streets. If you have ever encountered it… apparently at some point in the history of the town we had a famous brick plant and as a result many of our street were never paved over to show this heritage. Given time and as the skateboarding fad spread, we got access to ramps of varying degrees of quality, and I even got a second hand 8 foot tall half pipe which was enjoyable and increased my access to riding more regularly.

Footage from Ban This by Powell Peralta

All of that said there was still a lot of time when riding just wasn’t feasible. At home I had a three-tier giant fingerboard skatepark that I had built out of cardboard, index cards and the barrels of various pens as coping. There were a very small number of Skateboarding games on the NES but between my friends and I we had copies of them all. I spent most of my time playing Skate or Die, but later I got access to the port of Atari’s far superior 720. The other major downtime activity was watching various skate videos that we had somehow acquired.

I say somehow acquired because you have to remember, in a small town that which does not come from Walmart does not exist. That said there was a bit of an underground trade in bootleg copies of things that someone at one point legitimately purchased. Anytime something new would enter the system, there would be a sequence of bad copies of copies until practically everyone had access to whatever it was. One of my happy realizations of late is that a lot of these skate tapes have found their way onto YouTube. So now it is entirely possible for me to watch some of my favorites including Streets on Fire by Santa Cruz, Ban This by Powell Peralta, and I even managed to find a copy of the Vision Street Wear US Championships that I can only assume someone originally taped off cable. Side note… most of us had no access to cable television either.

Small towns don’t really have a proper culture of their own, but instead adopt things through whatever means necessary. We didn’t have peers to look up to and show us the ropes. Instead we relied on these videos and the few magazines we could scrounge together. As a result being the impressionable youths that we were, our identities were very confused mirrors of what we had been seeing. We dressed like the skaters we saw dressed. My artwork at the time was deeply influenced by the artwork that adorned the boards and my best friend and I spent countless hours drawing what our boards would look like… you know when we went pro because that was absolutely a thing that was going to happen.

Of all of the influences, I would say the biggest for me personally was the music. In a small town we had access to two kinds of music… hair metal and even bigger hair country music. I mean I listened to my fair share of Poison and Def Leppard, but craved something more. These skate tapes had these phenomenal soundtracks from band we had never heard of, and had no clue how to even get access to. I remember pausing the credits to Streets on Fire and scribbling down the name of every band that had been featured. Our little tribe made it a mission to spend birthday and allowance money trying to acquire a trove of this magical stuff.

Of course not a damned bit of it was available local, so it would involve frantically scouring the racks of every music store we got access to, but over time through a similar bootleg network we had built up a soundtrack for this shared culture. This lead me down the rabbit hole of labels like SST Records, Epitaph and Sub-Pop and to obscure dives like Mohawk Music that I still miss to this day. This also represents the time when we were heavily listening to bands like Black Flag, DRI, Fugazi, Minutemen, The Descendents and still my favorite of the batch Firehose. Once one person got access to something, it was rapidly spread throughout our burgeoning community, because that is the sort of thing that happens when access to anything “new” is so damned limited.

Tony Hawk Pro Skater Remake

So when I talk about Tony Hawk Pro Skater, it is all of these things that come rushing back to me in their vivid technicolor glory. It has never necessarily been about the specifics of the game, but instead the quirky culture that surrounded my days as a skater. I was never certain what lead me to stop skating, but looking back now I think it has a lot to do with the fact that I spent the majority of my junior year in high school pretty damned ill. I was having black out spells and even managed to very neatly park my car into the ditch during one of them. With this came a fading away from a lot of the people that I had been involved with… I lost my gig as drummer of our band and as that circle of friends made their way into harder and harder drugs I sorta just stayed purposefully distant.

Around this same time circumstances lead to us getting our very first computer, a 25 mhz 386 with two whole megabytes of ram, which we eventually upgraded to four. With this my friend group changed as well, as I shifted from Skateboarding as my primary interest to all the things that had taken a backseat. I delved more deeply into pen and paper roleplay and wargaming. I spent more time playing Super Nintendo and then was completely blown away when I got to play Wolfenstein 3D for the first time on the PC. The underground network of acquirers of things shifted from bootleg music and skate videos to bootleg copies of Civilization or Prince of Persia. I still lived in a tiny town and my access to things was just as impossible given that Walmart didn’t start selling anything PC Gaming related until I was in college.

After that the come the internet and access to all of that knowledge that I had so desperately been wanting all the years trapped within my tiny confines. I commuted back and forth to junior college for two years, and during that time I was introduced to my wife from a mutual friend from Belgium. This acted as a gateway to meet a lot more denizens of Undernet and ultimately influenced which college I went to, leading us to get together as more than just passing friends. My life changed in a lot of ways rapidly as happens when you graduate high school and move on with living.

The truth is I was never a good skater, but I enjoyed it. I could Ollie if somewhat unreliably, and through moments of sheer miracle could occasionally land something like a pop shove it. The truth is among the dozen or so of us in the little tribe… there were maybe three with any real talent that acted as tutors to the rest of us who just enjoyed cruising around and doing simple things like grinding parking blocks. To the best of my knowledge none us actually skated past our senior year. I kept my board in the back of my car for years and through a bit of freak accident wound snapping a truck trying to land a kick flip. I never repaired it after that and as a result it put a somewhat permanent end to my skating days.

Tony Hawk Pro Skater Remake

We are nearing the launch of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1+2 on September 4th, and with it has come this flood of emotions. I have access to the warehouse demo, and it plays just as well as I remember the originals playing. That said none of my feelings are really about the game, and are instead about this fairly important time in my development. Deep inside of me is still buried a little skater punk, and I think this is the era when I developed my deep distrust of authority figures. We went through a period where everyone seemed to be trying to pass ordinances to stop us from having fun, and I got shot at (I think it was just a pellet gun) by a local gas station owner when we rode up to try and buy something out of the pop machine.

Nostalgia is a very powerful drug, one which I seem to be deeply susceptible to. I am thankful to this time and the influences it had on my musical tastes. I still get joy by watching those old skate videos, and from time to time I break out a fingerboard with a strong desire to once again build a completely nonsense skate park. For the time being however I will just look forward to the THPS Career Mode and the ability to build and share sweet park designs with my friends online. Like I said at the beginning of this nonsense, this is a post that I felt like I needed to write. I am writing it in large part for myself, but maybe someone out there will get some enjoyment from it as well. I will close by channeling my preteen self that was listening to way too much Exploited… Fuck the police, Skateboarding is not a crime.

FFXIV Yo-Kai Event

Last night we continued with our adventures in Schitt’s Creek, and instead of working on the Shaman in World of Warcraft I decided to spend some time in Final Fantasy XIV. Right now there is an event going on that crosses over with Yo-Kai Watch, a thing that I know next to nothing about other than the fact that the toys did not sell here at all and are available in mos Dollar Tree stores. I’ve always sort of assumed it was Pokemon but instead creepy ghosts? This is not the first time we have had this event in XIV, but the last time around I was apparently not paying any attention.

Participation is really simple, which is in part why I am interested in joining in the nonsense this time around. Essentially you complete a quest, get a wrist item and then doing FATEs while wearing that wrist item allows you to collect Yo-Kai medals. You can turn these in for very unique minions or weapons that are seemingly themed after the series. I apparently accepted the quest last time around but never turned in it… which lead to a lot of confusion when I first logged in trying to figure out how to get started. One thing of note… the event specifically calls out certain areas of the game with eligible fates.

  • La Noscea
  • The Black Shroud
  • Thanalan
  • All Heavensward Zones
  • All Stormblood Zones

Essentially it seems like they specifically ruled out Mor Dhona and Coerthas Central Highlands which I guess makes sense given that those specifically are common FATE grind spots.

I spent a chunk of last night low key doing FATEs in The Fringes, largely because it was easy to zone out from Rhalgr’s Reach. However it seems like a lot of people had that idea and I even bumped into my good friend Jess while leveling out there as well. I collected enough medals for seven of the seventeen pets and got all of level 73 on my Red Mage while running around. I am not sure how far I will make it but it does provide an interesting reason to be in Final Fantasy XIV, which had been something I was admittedly lacking. I’ve not done any of the 5.3 story, so in theory at some point over the weekend that will happen as well.

Miss Kaiyoko Star created an excellent infographic outlining what zones need to be done for the various weapons. It seems like the numbers of things needed has been reduced from the last time the event was run. I remember there being an escalating scale that took awhile to cap out, but now it just seems like you get 1 cheap minion and 1 cheap weapon and then all addition after that are at a fixed cost. So if my math is correct 49 medals for all of the minions and then significantly more complicated situation for the weapons given that they require you to do FATEs in a specific zone with a specific minion. However that all adds up to 165 legendary medals.

If nothing else it does serve as a good opportunity to level some more jobs. Right now I have Warrior, Samurai and Bard at the level cap and I’ve most recently been working on the Red Mage. About and hour and a half of running FATEs earned me a level, and I have a feeling that is probably going to be about the case going forward. FATEs are not a fast way to get levels, but they are a reliable and consistent one… and require just about the right level of interaction for sitting and watching something on Netflix.

Netflix and Lava Burst

Last night I took a break from attempting to halt the Mongol invasion of Japan and returned to Azeroth. I have three characters horde side that are not 120. Weirdly they also represent most of my allied races characters aka my Maghar Shaman, Void Elf Priest and Vulpera Rogue. I made a massive push and leveled so many things to 120 in such a short period of time, that I am now sorta keeping these as a low key side project for when I need equally low key levels of activity. World of Warcraft is comfort gaming that I can more or less play in my sleep at this point, and sometimes you just need that in your life.

I am however getting somewhat tired of Borean Tundra. It is significantly more efficient than Howling Fjord but it also lags a bit and has a few quests that I absolutely cannot stand. I am standing where I am because I was lured over to complete a quest without reading what it was. I abandoned the quest where you load a mule up with wreckage and then try and get it back to base without losing anything. I just cannot be bothered by that nonsense and as a result I think I am probably going to be seeking out a command board to get the starter quest to go elsewhere in Northrend.

I am not a completionist at all and I will happily abandon quests left and right, especially when I am playing an alt. I’m 76 currently and I believe the elevator stops when I get to 80 and will ultimately transition over into I believe a choice of Pandaria or Cataclysm. As frustratingly gated as it is, I do enjoy the content in Pandaria significantly more as it has aged. In fact my overall opinion of that expansion has also increased significantly with age. Strangely Burning Crusade and Wrath of the Lich King on the other hand are content blocks that I don’t look forward to in quite the way that I once did because the game has evolved since those days as has my attention span.

In my normal tradition of discovering things years too late… my wife and I have recently started a watch through of Schitt’s Creek. I had heard of the show but never got around to checking it out, and quite honestly I had no clue what the Pop Channel was. It turns out it is the channel formerly known as Prevue and later the TV Guide Channel… which is peak levels of irony since I used to work for the parent company during the early 2000s. I spent New Years of 2000 on the roof of the corporate headquarters since we had an all hands order as we prepared for all of the post apocalyptic things that were supposed to be happening.

It is a good show but I am not entirely certain if I can pinpoint WHY I find it so funny. I think on one hand it is that Schitt’s Creek is not dissimilar to the tiny towns that both my wife and I grew up in. I know the people that are represented on screen and serve as a foil to the Rose family. David and Stevie are without a doubt my favorite characters, but I do admit it was a little weird seeing Chris Elliot playing Roland without devolving to full Cabin Boy levels of nonsense. I think the series does a good job of creating humorous fish out of water situations without going all the way in painting the local folk as idiots. I ran like hell as soon as I could get out of my small town upbringing, and am still in many ways running from it… but that said I still have certain nostalgia for the cast of non-sequitur characters that small towns create.

As of last night we are about halfway through season three and I am hoping by the time we get there the sixth and final season will be available on netflix.

The Goodest Foxxo

It has to be terribly jarring to read this blog for any length of time. I end up hyper-fixating on a game for a number of days, weeks or months and then toss it aside to embrace whatever my new thing is. When a new Diablo or Destiny season starts… you are probably going to be reading a lot about those games. When I am playing a narrative adventure, you are going to get nothing but that until I either tire of it or finish the story. In theory you probably should have seen more posts about Horizon Zero Dawn but I had other things that I wanted to talk about apparently during the days I was actively playing it.

Right now I am hyper-fixated on Ghosts of Tsushima, and pretty much spending every available gaming moment playing it. I don’t love playing with a controller, but I can manage and I am happy that I did find the very comfortable Nacon Revolution controller. I am not terribly certain exactly which model I have, given that I purchased mine from Ebay. Mine is the one without interchangeable thumbsticks and with a BNC style connection on the cable. Mostly the big benefit is that it is large hand friendly and my pinky doesn’t fall asleep when I am gripping it in quite the same way that it does with a base PS4 since I am having to contort my hand slightly to get them all to fit comfortably on the grip. I’ve never gotten used to a “pinky out” grip, which probably would solve that particular problem.

There are a bunch of elements in this game that are just charming. Firstly there are no doggos to pet that I have found, but you can in fact pet a good number of the foxes to tell them how good they are for leading you to another shrine. The map of the world seems smallish to me, but in practice the world itself seems very large because of the density. You don’t move around for very long without encountering something to draw your attention away and pull you off your mission. It might be a scream on the wind that leads you to intercept a patrol of Mongols that are just about to kill some civilians, or it might be a golden bird trying to lead you to something important.

While I talked yesterday about not really using the horse, I think it is important to show off what Pete was talking about. After you finish a story mission, you are often times presented with a little vignette of you and your very good horse bonding. You are given the choice of three names for your horse.. Nobu (Trust), Kaze (Wind) and Kage (Shadow). I named mine Nobu and went with the deluxe appearance for him. One of the weirdest aspects I have experienced is that if you accidentally mount another horse… it will start responding to your call instead of your official special Samurai horse. This got real annoying last night and I had to get a sufficient distance away from the camp in question before Nobu would respond. I personally internalized this as him having a spat with me for trying to mount another horse.

It is such a beautiful game, but anytime I am presented with a scene like this… it is admittedly a little bittersweet. It would have looked so much better on my PC or if I had a PS4 Pro. While you are in the flow of the game you don’t notice the softness to the detail, but when you stop and take a still frame it is there. I am not sure what it is about the Straw hat, but as soon as I was able to buy one I adopted that as part of my official appearance. I also am not terribly fond of the look of the masks in practice so I have decided to go around without one. The other thing that I have noticed and find interesting, is how little I find myself sneaking around now that I have become more accustomed to the controls. I pretty much begin every fight now by storming into the camp and imitating a showdown.

There are just so many things that Ghosts of Tsushima does well, and considering I am not even close to finishing the first little area of the game… I expect to have it in rotation for awhile. That is at least until some new shiny object distracts me and makes me forget about it for a bit. Another thing that I am really wanting to do at some point is restart Jedi Fallen Order with a Keyboard and Mouse. I opted for a controller because the game strongly insinuate that is how you should be playing. That said the little bit that I have played with KbM, it felt completely natural and fluid. My thought is restarting from the beginning would allow me to learn the abilities organically rather than trying to play catch up. Additionally there is the problem that I am in the middle of Kashyyyk and have no clue at all what I was doing when I was last playing.