The Hand of God.
Imagine jet setting between endless summers on both hemispheres, meeting your childhood heroes before getting in the van and calling them teammates, and skating all the best spots on the planet for a paycheck. That’s more or less what Alex Lawton’s life looks like on paper. After winning his first skateboard in a raffle, he now divides his time between Brisbane and Melbourne, Australia, with six-month trips out to California and/or Europe, and is currently in the process of filming for the upcoming full length Element video with his crew of Nyjah, Evan, Westgate, Madars, Greyson, Tim Tim, Julian, Appleyard, Nick, Levi, Ray, Durrant and the rest. Back home in Brisbane for a quick pit stop, I managed to wrangle Alex via telephone to find out what the catch must be. Instead, I came away with something far more valuable—the recipe for Alex and Evan Smith’s proprietary magic juice—aka The Hand of God. Please read responsibly.
How long are you back in Oz for?
I got back on the 20th (of October), a couple of weeks ago. Right now I’m back where I’m originally from, which is Brisbane. Just to see the fam and the homies, then I’ll base myself back in Melbourne.
How is the Melbourne scene doing? Didn’t they just lose Lincoln Plaza?
Yeah. It was mainly because of everyone drinking there. People felt like they couldn’t walk through. But it all worked. There was never any drama. It was just this one person in the council that kept pushing for it. It’s pretty funny actually because all the locals now still go back there, hang out, drink, and still do all the same things there. They still try to skate it even though it’s not even really skateable anymore.
So it was all a waste basically.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2017-Ausgabe von TransWorld Skateboarding.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 2017-Ausgabe von TransWorld Skateboarding.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Bones Europe
Waking up to a text from Jaime Owens about going to Europe with the Bones Wheels team was not a bad way to start my day; especially considering it would be my first time going overseas. And what a better time to go than during the Copenhagen Open? Two weeks later the squad and I met at LAX and prepared to get on the ten-hour flight we were all dreading. But with help from a little bit of booze, a few movies, and occasional sleep it wasn’t too bad. I even heard someone singing. To my surprise, I looked over and it was Dakota [Servold] singing in his sleep!
Mason Silva
Life is good for Mason. Since being lured into the useless wooden toy game by his brother Dayton, and the weird European videos he would watch in the basement, Silva stopped surfing long enough to win a skate contest he didn’t even plan to attend, got sponsored by Element as a result, then had Eric Koston walk up to him unannounced at the Berrics to offer him free shoes from Nike. Some people just have it that way.
waiting for hurricanes
ben gore’s first experiences on a skateboard all occurred during hurricane warnings on the southeast coast of florida.
alex lawton
the hand of god.
Torey Pudwill Flatbar Frenzy
Basing an entire video project around only skating flatbars might sound like a shot in the dark. How many flatbar spots do you even know of? Surprisingly, there are a lot more of them out there in the wild than we could’ve imagined—in all shapes and sizes—and lucky for us, our boy Torey Pudwill took it upon himself to hunt them down. From coast-to-coast and country-to-country, welcome to Torey’s Flatbar Frenzy. This ain’t your average front yard flatbar sesh! —BRIAN BLAKELY
Weedmaps
You’ve probably caught the buzz about Weedmaps and its endeavors in the skate community. You may be asking yourself, “What are they doing in skating?” or else you’ve realized what a dream sponsor it is for its lucky team riders.
Chima
Fresh off a four-year bachelor’s degree in Propeller production, Chima Ferguson finds himself back home in Sydney, Australia, for a pregnant pause between chapters.
Jimmy Cao
Where you’re from influences who you are. Growing up skating with Jamie Palmore, then being mentored by Willy Santos, and for most of your adult life absorbing the other-worldly talent and laid back vibes of Wes Kremer, Tyler Surrey and Marius Syvanen, it’s no surprise Jimmy Cao blossomed into a versatile powerhouse on four wheels. He’s beyond past due for this—his first magazine interview. Find out why Vietnam will be the next big skate destination, how Finesse Skateboards and Hubba Wheels’ ads factored into his career path, how he avoided Scandinavian boat jail and more. Get ‘em Chippy.
Riddles in Mathematics
Our 29th full-length, 21 years since Uno (TWS Video 1, 1996) will have premiered in downtown LA by the time you read this. Once again wrapped in the skilled supernatural vision of Christopher Thiessen—Riddles in Mathematics marks the second video in our catalogue, after last year’s Substance—under his signature VX-centric “in the trenches” style. Starring Yaje Popson, Ben Gore, Leo Valls, and Bobby De Keyzer Riddles also co-stars Stevie Perez and Bobby Worrest. Shot worldwide in Paris, Bordeaux, New York, San Francisco, Long Beach, Los Angeles, and Barcelona, we pulled Chris from his intensive editing binge on the eve of judgment day for a quick Q & A covering his latest masterpiece. —MACKENZIE EISENHOUR
Josh Pall
Turn and face the strange. Ch-ch-Changes. Already away from home since leaving Brisbane for Sydney, Australia six years ago—PASS~PORT’s and Nike SB’s rookie pro—Josh Pall (also fittingly the holder of multiple real world passports) is pondering some imminent further moves. Wherever he decides to call home over the next year (LA, NYC, EU, or elsewhere), said locale will also serve as the backdrop for his part in the upcoming PASS~PORT full-length— tentatively scheduled for winter 2018. Raised on the wholesome/not-so-wholesome videographic trio of Jump Offa Building (’98), The Storm (’99), and This is Skateboarding (’03)—Josh sat down for a phone interview to discuss severing his working class safety net/side gig to jump headlong into skateboarding for a living, and the truths and fallacies of “lucky yellow shirt” theory, Come on in. The water’s great. —MACKENZIE EISENHOUR