View Full Version : A Lord Of Dogtown Re-emerges


Pathtek4
07-31-2008, 07:38 AM
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/07/30/sports/30xgames_450.jpg

The New York Time's published an article about Jay Adams release from prison. Adams was released from a Federal Correctional Institution in Sheridan, Oregon on July 8, 2008 where he served a four-your sentence for his connection to a drug deal between California and Hawaii, and currently is in a half-way house. He's hoping to make it to the Xgames this year, not to skate, but to be with the sport! Best of luck Jay with all you do!

Taken from the New York Times:
COSTA MESA, Calif. — A specter from the grittier past of skateboarding has reappeared, ready to reconnect with his past without letting it drag him down.

The X Games are scheduled to begin in Los Angeles on Thursday, and Jay Adams, whose skateboarding career has been the subject of two major films, wants to attend. Adams, 47, does not compete anymore, but he hopes to watch and visit with friends he has not seen in years. More important, he wants to reunite with his wife and a daughter he has never seen outside of prison.

The decision about the X Games will not be up to him. The relationship with his family will be.

Adams was transferred from a federal prison in Oregon on July 7 to a halfway house in Garden Grove, Calif., where he will serve the final months of a four-year sentence for his role in a major drug shipment scheme. Although he has enjoyed increased freedom, his schedule and movements remain strictly supervised.

“They like to keep tabs on you, and know where you are at all times,” Adams said Tuesday of those running the halfway house, who will decide whether he can attend the games.

In the late 1970s, Adams was a leading figure in a seminal vertical skateboarding scene rising from a seedy section of Santa Monica and Venice known as Dogtown.

Adams had been a talented teenage member of the Dogtown-based Zephyr Skate Team, known as the Z-Boys. Together they helped shape modern skateboarding with an aggressive attitude and style born in the streets, and maneuvers inspired by their favorite surfers.

“Jay was one of the biggest innovators of skateboarding in his time,” said Danny Way, 34, who will compete in the skateboarding Big Air event at the X Games on Thursday. “He brought a carefree personality to skateboarding, and skateboarding has always been a little rebellious.”

Although Adams initially rode the rising popularity of skateboarding to fame, he eventually chafed at the sport’s increasing emphasis on commercialism and contests. Soon his rebelliousness overshadowed his skating.

“We were wild and acting crazy and not being very positive role models,” he said of his fellow professional skaters.

This led to serious legal problems for Adams in 1982. While hanging out in Hollywood after a concert, he taunted a gay couple, which led to a fight. Adams said that he fled, but that a crowd joined in and stomped one of the men to death.

Adams was convicted of felony assault and sentenced to six months in prison.

He spent the next two decades in and out of prison as he battled drug addiction and his own demons. After the deaths of his brother, father, grandmother and mother in less than two years, he hit bottom during the late 1990s. Adams was, in his words, “a down-and-out junkie.”

In 2001, an award-winning documentary, “Dogtown and Z-Boys,” chronicled his early rise and fall and catapulted him back into the limelight. At the time, Adams was serving two and a half years in a Hawaiian jail on drug charges.

He was released in 2002. In 2005, Hollywood followed up with a feature film, “Lords of Dogtown,” in which Emile Hirsch played a young Adams.

By then Adams had begun trading on his renewed status. He signed endorsement deals, but failed to pay taxes for three years. He relapsed into heroin addiction. And in June 2004 he was overheard on a federal wiretap introducing a crystal meth dealer in California to a buyer in Hawaii.

He was not arrested until November 2005. In the meantime, he stopped using drugs, got married and was expecting a child. All of which weighed at his sentencing when the judge showed leniency.

Still, if he breaks the law again, Adams expects to be locked up for a long time. “My good-luck chances with judges are through,” he said. “I can’t make those mistakes anymore.”

Since emerging from prison, Adams has spent most of his time at an indoor skate park at the headquarters of the surf apparel maker Hurley in Costa Mesa. That was where he was on Tuesday morning, sitting on a skateboard in the middle of the cavernous space, tattoos scrawled across his face and outstretched arms and legs.

He works there as the facilities manager, keeping the park clean and making sure that skaters have signed liability waivers.

A condition of his release, the job requires him to wake at 5 a.m., followed by an hour-and-a-half bus ride to begin work at 8 a.m. He is back at the halfway house and in bed by 9. On some nights he attends drug or alcohol treatment.

The simple schedule is designed to help Adams, a recovering drug addict, readjust to civilian life.

“We’ve got to make sure he gets on the bus and gets to work on time,” said his agent, Peter Townend, a former world surfing champion who has known Adams since the late 1970s. “If he gets too much too soon, he’ll go off the tracks again.”

Family and friends are watching him closely. His wife, Alisha, and 2-year-old daughter, Venice, are in Alabama biding time while Adams demonstrates that he can control his addictions. He also has a 14-year-old son, Seven, who lives in Santa Cruz, Calif.

Adams, whose fearsome appearance belies a soft-spoken demeanor, said his faith in God and the routine of work would help him remain drug free.

“My ideal future would be to be with my wife and family and to be somewhere where I’m helping young kids not make the mistakes I’ve made,” he said.

Meanwhile, he looks forward to resuming surfing and skateboarding.

With the X Games just 45 minutes north on Interstate 405, those dreams seem tantalizingly close.

Whatever happens this week, there are the matters of a future with his family and another five years of probation. For Jay Adams, there is a long road ahead.

fallenNJzero
07-31-2008, 08:11 AM
man i hope he gets to go, jay seems really cool..besides the whole drug thing

swordman540
07-31-2008, 09:10 AM
Good thing he is trying to clean up his act

I cannot wait to see him skate again...he might have lost it all considering the jail and drug times, but still would be cool.

Circaskates
08-02-2008, 02:41 PM
Man Jay is my hero I used to research soo much on him

ccv1991
08-02-2008, 06:02 PM
Alright!I am glad to hear that he is finnally out of jail,hopefully he will stay out this time.He is like one of the gods of modern skateboarding as far as I am concerned.It would be a shame to see him get locked up again.

ricta_rules
08-03-2008, 02:10 PM
cept for the whole drug thing he is my idol i think without him skateboarding wouldnt be where it is today

perplexia
08-03-2008, 02:41 PM
Jay Adams is awsome, he's the whole reason skating didnt go into a sport like the ones you see today. he's one of skateboardings forfathers

Ibanez
08-03-2008, 04:04 PM
Glad to know you can't keep an idol from the sport. Most people loose touch with the sport and don't try to reconnect with it (IE all the Zboys minus another 1 or 2). Seems like you can't keep Jay away from it.

oldrampratt
08-04-2008, 11:48 AM
Hope Jay keeps the faith, I will be praying that he does. I am glad he has his family in his corner.Five years probation may seem long, but he keeps clean( I know he can), will go by fast.. Keep the Faith, keep on SKATING!!!

mazonemayu
08-04-2008, 01:20 PM
can't wait to see him skating again

Berishman
08-04-2008, 01:25 PM
Haha guess this means he'll be shredding up my local park again!
lawl.
I r winnar.

the_skater123
08-04-2008, 02:36 PM
**** yeh

mitchr1995
08-04-2008, 06:40 PM
thats good hes cleaning up his act and getting his life back on track, i would have hate to see a man who shaped one of the worlds most popular sports just let life passs him by and do drugs and all that. its soo good hes got a family and a firm beliefe in god to keep him stable

VitTheSkater
08-08-2008, 10:23 AM
Jay looks.... ummm.... different. He is one of the awesomest skaters of all time. I wish he had never done the whole drug thing.

erase_the_doubt
08-08-2008, 10:39 AM
So now that most of the X-games events are over, any word on whether he got to go or not?

..and what are all the other Main z-boys up to now? i know Peralta is making films and stuff but what about Alva and the rest?

pooldogfromoz
08-12-2008, 09:22 AM
Jay Adams is one of the reasons I started skating. My heart goes out to him and I hope he recovers.

Peace Jay.

100% SKATEBOARDER FOR LIFE

soulassssn
09-05-2008, 01:21 PM
Same here, I remember hearing about him and Alva all the time when i was growing up....if it wasnt for them i wouldnt have skated......I hope he stays clean and keeps his face in the game for a long time to come....He's a legend

bkolvolcom19
09-05-2008, 01:54 PM
it would be amazing to see a legend skate again, even tho he must suck considering he hasnt skated in god knows how long.

psyonix
09-06-2008, 11:32 AM
it would be amazing to see a legend skate again, even tho he must suck considering he hasnt skated in god knows how long.

For a guy like him, I'm sure it would only take a few weeks for him to get back into his original steez.

EricsASkater
09-06-2008, 12:54 PM
I'm watching Lords of Dogtown right now because of this thread. I have to say he is AMAZING. And so far this movie is to. It really makes me think how much it would of be fun to live in the time of old school skateboarding

fallsandspills
09-26-2008, 11:10 AM
Good luck Jay, keep at it and the skating world would love to see you do well! Definitly my main skating influence & I have survived tough times, you can too.