WHAT IS THE ROLE OF THE REMIXER IN SKATEBOARDING?

May 14, 2014/ / ARTICLES/ Comments: 18

Jenkem_Reedit_Article

The medium of the skate video has undergone radical changes in the last ten years. When I was a 13 year-old skate nerd, I never dreamed that there’d be a future where I could watch new gnarly skate footage every single day. I would have been stoked out of my face. With the “Youtube-ification” of skate videos, however, there is a catch.

Most edits (most, not all) are thrown together quickly in order to keep pace with the constant demand for new footage. In a lot of ways, skateboarders have become poster children for instant gratification, and our culture has always had a fairly short collective attention span. If your company isn’t putting out new videos on a regular basis to promote your riders and your product, it is a safe bet that you will get lost in the rising tide of coverage that is already out there.

”Maybe now is the time to fully embrace the collaborative spirit in our skateboarding culture.”

From the other side of things, skateboarding is growing and evolving so quickly that skateboarders themselves are often in a rush to get their footage out into the world. What is the point of killing yourself to get a back tail on an eleven-stair-rail, if Jimmy Handrail does a kickflip back tail at the same spot, and then his footage comes out first?

What we get at the end of the day is a huge amount of skateboarding footage and coverage, without a whole lot of artistic integrity behind the editing process. In short: quantity over quality has become (largely) the norm. But there is always hope.

Perhaps as a sort of backlash to these hastily thrown together videos, a movement seems to have emerged wherein skate footage is saved from its boring promotional fate, and re-mixed or re-edited by individuals who seem to really get what skate videos are all about. Manolo’s Tapes have become so popular that skateboard companies are starting to catch on. According to DGK’s Youtube channel: “DGK wanted our favorite remixer, Manolo, to put his spin on Parental Advisory. It will be playing exclusively on Hellaclips.com on January 6th, 2014. Mark your calendars!” It is a damn good re-mix, too. Also, anyone who pays close attention to skateboarding knows that Quartersnacks has been making amazing re-edits of skate video parts for years. The Quartersnacks re-mix of Forrest Edwards’ part in particular is a work of genius.

”There is an opportunity right now to foster a community of people that could be tomorrow’s skate video auteurs.”

A question emerges from all of this; what is the role of the re-mixer in skateboarding? Is it a hobby of little consequence, or is it a sign of things to come? Let’s think about movies for a minute, and I mean the classics: the rottentomatoes.com darlings. Everyone knows that behind these pieces of cinematic art are great actors, cinematographers, directors, and editors. The same can be said of skate videos. Obviously instead of actors we have skateboarders, but in skateboarding today the jobs of cinematographer, director, and editor are usually hats being worn by just one person. This can often be a great thing. There have been lots of people who have worn all three hats and done a fantastic job, and changed the medium of the skate video while doing it. But things are changing, and quickly. Maybe now is the time to fully embrace the collaborative spirit in our skateboarding culture.

There is an opportunity right now to foster a community of people that could be tomorrow’s skate video auteurs. Perhaps after companies release their promotional skate edits, the raw footage should be made available to editors all over the world. In this scenario, everyone wins. The companies still get to release their promo video (maybe with a grace period in which nobody else has access to the skate footage), and then when the raw footage is released, the re-editors and re-mixers of the skateboard world have the opportunity to show the community what they can do.

The companies win, because when the re-edits do emerge, it just means more exposure for their rider (and by extension, their brand). The skateboarders win because more coverage and more exposure will make them a more valuable presence in skateboarding. The re-editors also win, because with more raw footage to work with, they have more opportunity to showcase their unsung talents.

”There will be a new generation of skate videos that are once again the results of a labor of love, rather than the result of a deadline.”

But ultimately (and most importantly), skateboarding as a whole and as a culture will win. We will be creating a new niche of artistic expression within our culture. New talented individuals (who don’t necessarily have access to five-figure HD video cameras) will be discovered. There will also be a new generation of skate videos that are once again the results of a labor of love, rather than the result of a deadline. And to any of those board meeting-suit wearing-guys who are reading this: hell, there might even be a way to make money off of it.

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Comments

  1. stash

    May 14, 2014 5:39 pm

    technology has reached the point where every shit is possible to be filmed with those dslrs and everybody’s able to buy that gear for more than just an affordable price. so, along with that came a situation where people are actually demanding fewer people for “filming jobs”.. the reason is very simple – they have to pay less to one guy that will do three jobs. so that being the case, i don’t understand how could “skateboarding world” afford to hire people for every single component of filmmaking.
    and even if all that wasn’t the case, i still think filmer is the one who knows material he shot the best and should work with it later in montage.. i’ve had chances to see what kind of results happen when one guy films and the other does the montage. it’s horrible.. manolo tapes can be doing the best job ever and i say go ahead, but as josh stewart has recently mentioned in his interview – there are only few good, memorable, quality videos at the end of every year. and that’s pretty much because of what is happening around us – skateboarding industry is dictating a tempo where not many people can stand out with their videos.

  2. fergolfson

    May 15, 2014 3:07 am

    chima’s remix was way better than in since day one

  3. Nah

    May 15, 2014 11:48 am

    I feel like the editor would lose in this situation. Web pages are only going to become more cluttered with mundane edits if this became the norm. I completely agree that skate videos in general need more collaboration and the traditional “Filmed and edited by…” title at the end of every video has become fucking annoying to be honest. My opinion is that the idea portrayed in this article is backwards. It would only justify more companies to spew out weak edits. Also companies expecting the public to promote their brands free of charge is completely fucked just like this sentence was
    “The re-editors also win, because with more raw footage to work with, they have more opportunity to showcase their unsung talents.”

    I don’t even know what I am trying to say any more,

    TL;DR.

    Just NO

  4. Good convo but NO

    May 15, 2014 8:44 pm

    having so many re-edits would ruin the sanctity of the original filmer/editor/director’s work. It would result in even more over-saturation and even more shitty edits in the world. There might be trends and aesthetics that come about as a result, but those already exist without every kid with a macbook making shitty remixes out of amazing video parts that skaters put their lives on the line to film.

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