View Full Version : Recent Inteview with Rodney Mullen at UCLA


Pathtek4
01-17-2008, 06:07 AM
http://usuarios.lycos.es/unperro/hpbimg/rodney_mullen.jpg

In the UCLA's school newspaper, theres an interview with Rodney Mullen for all you Mullen fans...Check it out
Q&A with skateboarder Rodney Mullen
Published: Wednesday, January 16, 2008
One might call him the Thomas Edison of skateboarding. Having invented dozens of standardized tricks such as the ollie and kickflip, Rodney Mullen is one of the most decorated professional skateboarders in history.

Today, Mullen will visit UCLA to speak about his transition from outcast college student to soul skater. But first he sat down with the Daily Bruin’s Devon McReynolds.

Daily Bruin: What made you want to start skating?

Rodney Mullen: I grew up in Florida, and I never really felt like I fit in. It’s probably a common bond that a lot of skaters have and I certainly felt that. I really liked the individuality of it, where you don’t have to dress up all the same. You’re really on your own. You didn’t have a coach, no one’s going to tell you what to do and it never ends in terms of the possibility of what you can do. It presented problems from the folks because in the 1970s the culture saw (skateboarding) as a thing for bad apples. My father was really against it and thought it would lead nowhere. It was kind of a hard thing to overcome.

DB: When did you start skating, and what made you want to start in the first place?

RM: I started when I was 10. Jan. 1, New Year’s Day 1977. It was because my father had had a few drinks on New Year’s Eve. My dad was in the military, and so I thought that was the best opportunity, when he’d had a few drinks and was in a really jovial ‘I love my family’ mood. But he promised that the first time I got hurt I’d have to quit, and I said that’s fine and went with it. My dad’s a dentist, so the first thing I did was knock out my teeth.

DB: At what point did you realize you could make a career out of this and stop going to school?

RM: Almost too late, when I was trying to do both (school and pro skateboarding). I’d go out and do my thing and won all the local contests, and it grew and grew and grew, even when I was getting paid and traveling internationally. I was in my third and fourth year of college before it really started to weigh down on me of making a choice between one or the other. I probably didn’t have the courage or insight to believe that it would turn into what it did.

DB: Did running your company World Industries take away any of the fun of skateboarding for you?

RM: It certainly did. When you start to shift paths a little bit, you have to kick people off, you have to become a boss, and in their eyes that’s often sort of being a double agent. ...You start to think in terms of not just the joy ... but you focus on goals, which is always sort of a fire extinguisher when it comes to ideas. You know when you focus on goals so much it takes away from the things you need to create the thing – like enjoying it. It’s like a conceptual rigor mortis that sets in when you have the pressures of handing things in or turning things out.

There are a lot of challenges in it, that’s for sure, and just the hours it took. That’s part of why I always like to skate at night. There’s something about being alone to me that’s so conducive of it all. Plus the practicalities of living in the city because that’s the time to hit things up since no one’s around.

DB: You’ve invented dozens of new tricks. How do you come up with them?

RM: You can start sounding really airy when you talk about that stuff. That’s what I’m talking about, it’s just something I try, and this is what it feels like. Definitely, I look at all the magazines and watch all the videos religiously and see what everyone’s doing, but I don’t skate with anyone, and I think one of the reasons for my success is a “know thyself” type of thing. I know my weaknesses and I know I’ve always had trouble fitting in or being measured against someone else. I think it’s pride in a subtle form, but if I skate at a skate park there’s always that (pressure to) “make a trick,” you know, do your little checklist. There’s an entire industry of television shows and periodicals (devoted to it). I try to keep it low-key and just tumble around fundamental movements. It’s remarkable how many tricks are simple variations, different iterations of what’s right in front of your nose already that it’s unrecognizable because it’s sort of algebraic shuffling.

Does that make sense?

DB: Yeah, just a sort of building up on other things you’ve already invented.

RM: That’s right. It’s just a series of puzzle pieces and if you just turn them around in different environments, it becomes the nature of the trick, and there is such fertile ground for that. And that’s one of the reasons that I love it is because it’s easy to become cynical and say everything’s been done, but you can always come out on your own and come up with something different and there’s a real joy in that. ...

I held a title for 11 years. I won 36 out of 37 contests. All I really did was be so fixated on it I wouldn’t even play anyone in checkers.

I can’t engage in that, it was so hard for me to be measured by a number. That’s sort of the era of Tony Hawk, too – he’s really good with that and we both were sharing these complaints about contest (culture).

DB: How do you feel about the active persecution of skateboarders?

RM: It feels like persecution sometimes for sure. In almost all ways, it’s discouraging the very things of the transcendental movement with Thoreau and Emerson with their individualism – that’s what skateboarding is. It’s not people marching in uniform. It’s creative, and it’s tough. The degree of individualism and poeticism involved in skateboarding should be rewarded when in fact it’s the flip side. I wish we could change that. I think there are a lot of good people out there. Tony Hawk has a foundation that puts us on a better face for a lot of people, but it’s such a shame. I just don’t get it.

DB: What would skateboarding be like if it were legal?

RM: In some ways we’re getting more and more amazing people. Ryan Sheckler is a good example of a really gifted kid who is treated with some really great places to skate around the world.

So many eyes are watching and the rewards are so high, there’s so much support for the younger guys.

A lot of the older guys bemoan this modern era with the MTV stars.

What’s going on with our culture? We’re losing it. And the flip side of it is all these guys talk so hard about spirit and everything else and half the time they’ve got to (support) a family and they have to throw it all away.

They’ve made it their whole lives and can’t afford to go on.

DB: What do you think about the bad reputation skateboarders get, and what do you think when you see adolescent skateboarders who act really obnoxious in crowded public places?

RM: Oh my God, it drives me crazy. Especially whenever I’m out and about, tour-wise, where people expect to see you, there will be a lot of skaters waiting for you. When you’re around some of them, they take that time to show off, like “Wow! We’re crazy!”

They think that skateboarding should be about being punks and being crazy and all that does is turn away from it. It’s this hyped persona, that’s not really the heart of it anymore.

DB: How fun is skateboarding after all these years, on a scale of 1-10?

RM: It moves up and down, but it’s right back up at nine and three-quarters.

http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/2008/jan/16/q-skateboarder-rodney-mullen/

MRCK
01-17-2008, 06:12 AM
That was a very good read, thanks for sharing :)

swordman540
01-17-2008, 06:18 AM
Wow, nice find. I was surprised by the World Industries thing....

Thanks a lot :)
Rep +

Pearso
01-17-2008, 06:50 AM
Rodney Mullen started World Industries? Wow...
Thanks for that, that was a great read. Good to know his view on stuff and I must say alot of what was said by Rodney I didn't expect him to say.

girlsk8r
01-17-2008, 06:58 AM
thanks for sharing. That was cool to read!

HazzaDaShiz
01-17-2008, 07:43 AM
I knew he started Almost, but I guess that explains why WI were so big.
And why they're so crap, now that he isn't there.

Great read, great find.

remyhero
01-17-2008, 07:47 AM
Rodney Mullen didn't invent the ollie.


What kind of half *** publication is this?

At least the rest of the interview didnt suck.

HazzaDaShiz
01-17-2008, 07:50 AM
Rodney Mullen didn't invent the ollie.


What kind of half *** publication is this?

At least the rest of the interview didnt suck.

He adapted the Ollie, and invented the Flatground Ollie. Before, it was not truly an 'Ollie' as we see it today.

johnny16tx
01-17-2008, 07:55 AM
I knew he started Almost, but I guess that explains why WI were so big.
And why they're so crap, now that he isn't there.

Great read, great find.

back when mullen ran world industries nobody really liked mullen
even when he was on plan b. Nobody liked his plan b part. and everybody thought it was the worst part in the video. Mullen acturally considered quiting as a pro but desided against it..
the main reasons mullen got repopular was the thps game and getting a spot on globe

thps=getting on globe = globe opinion video part = popular again

HazzaDaShiz
01-17-2008, 08:03 AM
back when mullen ran world industries nobody really liked mullen
even when he was on plan b. Nobody liked his plan b part. and everybody thought it was the worst part in the video. Mullen acturally considered quiting as a pro but desided against it..
the main reasons mullen got repopular was the thps game and getting a spot on globe

thps=getting on globe = globe opinion video part = popular again

Was it because he was diversifying? Because now that the mainstream opinion has changed, things are different, I guess.

The Mute
01-17-2008, 08:11 AM
Good read, nice find.

And anyone who wants more info on Rodney:

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5129X5SN01L._SS500_.jpg

His Autobiography.
Buy it. Read it. Love it.

Rpl
01-17-2008, 09:03 AM
Nice find. Nice Read. Nice Mullen

all i have to say +rep

Noj
01-17-2008, 09:49 AM
When I was growing up watching skate videos, my friends and I hated freestyle. We thought it was weak. At the same time, I remember there being a respect for Rodney that we didn't have for other freestylers. Maybe that was just our crew, but we'd watch his parts with the fascination of watching a circus freak. Like, "what the hell was that he just did?" I recall watching Search For Animal Chin in the early 90s and realizing that Mullen had done a 360 flip in 1987.

Anyway, cool interview. Thanks for posting it.

johnny16tx
01-17-2008, 03:23 PM
Was it because he was diversifying? Because now that the mainstream opinion has changed, things are different, I guess.

not really
nobody liked freestyle
and mullen was still doing that
then in the plan b videos people got kinda hyped
but bored i guess...
he just never got real popular
and he went behind the scenes
then came back :)

krookedskater
01-17-2008, 03:38 PM
good find some of his words suprised me.

Higher-Class
01-17-2008, 05:40 PM
Rodney Mullen didn't invent the ollie.


What kind of half *** publication is this?

At least the rest of the interview didnt suck.
Unless the only kind of ollie you do is a tail tap out of a quarter pipe, yes, he did invent the ollie.

Geo
01-18-2008, 08:20 AM
Rodney Mullen started World Industries? Wow...
Thanks for that, that was a great read. Good to know his view on stuff and I must say alot of what was said by Rodney I didn't expect him to say.

I wasn't just rodney who started world industries. well actualy mullen didn't even think of it. It was all steive rocco. He approached mullen and asked him wheather he wanted to run it with him.

remyhero
01-18-2008, 08:26 AM
Unless the only kind of ollie you do is a tail tap out of a quarter pipe, yes, he did invent the ollie.


Alan "ollie" Gelfand invented the basis of the trick itself, if I do a backflip 900 on street and someone does it in the halfpipe, guess what, SAME TRICK!!! You can credit him for being the first to ollie on flat, but he did not invent the basis of the trick.

By your logic, someone else invented the kickflip and 360 flip too.

BAD BAD BAD Logic.

Necromortis
01-18-2008, 05:26 PM
^Except Alan Gelfand's ollie and Mullen's ollie are fundementally different, in that Mullen came up with the idea of dragging your foot up the deck in order to level it out. Alan never did that.

Hence, Mullen did invent the ollie.

~Necro

HazzaDaShiz
01-18-2008, 06:30 PM
Alan "ollie" Gelfand invented the basis of the trick itself, if I do a backflip 900 on street and someone does it in the halfpipe, guess what, SAME TRICK!!! You can credit him for being the first to ollie on flat, but he did not invent the basis of the trick.

By your logic, someone else invented the kickflip and 360 flip too.

BAD BAD BAD Logic.

If you're talking about a literal backflip, then you'd be landing on your head.

hardcore1200
01-20-2008, 01:22 PM
that was really interesting to read he has some really interesting opnions on skaters today and skateparks and the image skaters are getting

Sk8photographer
01-20-2008, 01:28 PM
Haha, I accidentally put "goof find". I meant good find.

Preston951
01-21-2008, 06:08 PM
this was awesome!
thanks mike!

and i wonder what everyone at UCLA will think about this haha... :D

trm4583
01-23-2008, 11:45 AM
back when mullen ran world industries nobody really liked mullen
even when he was on plan b. Nobody liked his plan b part. and everybody thought it was the worst part in the video. Mullen acturally considered quiting as a pro but desided against it..
the main reasons mullen got repopular was the thps game and getting a spot on globe

thps=getting on globe = globe opinion video part = popular again

Nobody liked his Plan B part? Are you insane? His part in Second Hand Smoke was revolutionary at the time. Did you actually skate back then and watch videos and read the mags, considering you would have only been about 3 or 4? You say the main reason he became popular was the THPS game. That is total bull$hit. I started skating in the early to mid nineties and I can tell you that he has been extremely popular since the day I started skating. He's always had major skate media coverage.

sicktrick
01-24-2008, 06:22 PM
Rodney Mullen started World Industries? Wow...
Thanks for that, that was a great read. Good to know his view on stuff and I must say alot of what was said by Rodney I didn't expect him to say.

i read his biography, and i dont think rodney made world industries. i know he was at world industries from practically the beginning, but i believe steve rocco was actually the "founder" i guess, but yeah, rodney was always highly involved with world.

flyingmarlin
02-20-2008, 06:08 AM
If you're talking about a literal backflip, then you'd be landing on your head.



Lol, He could bust out some epic head spins!