Rodney Mullen and I are joining forces to discuss our lives, careers and how we helped each other find our metaphorical “secret tapes” in life.
April 4: New York
April 7: Austin
Tickets available for presale starting tomorrow, January 30 at 10am local. General on-sale begins this Friday, February 2 at 10am local (links in bio)
Roller Skating’s got a magazine called @skatefantom and @tonyhawk is inside! He let me air over him… what a sweet guy ! Check out the mag for more ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Thanks for these @matt_fookes_photo & always 📸
Roller Skating’s got a magazine called @skatefantom and @tonyhawk is inside! He let me air over him… what a sweet guy ! Check out the mag for more ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Thanks for these @matt_fookes_photo & always 📸
Roller Skating’s got a magazine called @skatefantom and @tonyhawk is inside! He let me air over him… what a sweet guy ! Check out the mag for more ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Thanks for these @matt_fookes_photo & always 📸
Roller Skating’s got a magazine called @skatefantom and @tonyhawk is inside! He let me air over him… what a sweet guy ! Check out the mag for more ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Thanks for these @matt_fookes_photo & always 📸
Roller Skating’s got a magazine called @skatefantom and @tonyhawk is inside! He let me air over him… what a sweet guy ! Check out the mag for more ⭐️⭐️⭐️ Thanks for these @matt_fookes_photo & always 📸
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Yesterday I had the privilege of skating Dodge Skatepark, an area that my dad helped to design nearly 35 years ago. It remained in its original form up until November of last year, after locals rallied the city council and raised funds for resurfacing and slight upgrades. It was inspiring to hear from skaters that grew up here, as the park became their gathering place and, in many ways, their salvation from life’s hardships. It wasn’t the best or most modern design but it served a purpose far beyond a training grounds or competitive landscape. The skaters of Columbus and surrounding areas felt connected to this space in a way that is hard to explain unless you’ve been lucky enough to have a place like it. It was kinked and crusty and beloved for its uniquely flawed design. And now it’s smooth with proper coping, but has kept its shape and raw charm. In some ways, it is the only [literal] concrete legacy of my father’s impact on skateboarding; he knew us skaters as creative misfits that just needed a sense of community to thrive into our adult lives. Thanks to Donny @smellycurb for meeting me on this frigid morning and giving me first-hand insight to the rich history of this sacred place. And thanks to my lifelong skate friend & OG skatepark advocate @mikivuckovich for taking these pics. It was my pleasure to help revitalize the park and roll around in my dad’s honor. He would have been proudly stoic but stoked to see it. Dodge Park
Pow! ❄️🤿🏂
@mammothmountain Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Pow! ❄️🤿🏂
@mammothmountain Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Tomorrow we celebrate 25 years of @tonyhawkthegame in the best way possible: with @birdmanthps @bodyjar_official @dzdeathrays & @alex_lahey playing songs from THPS 1-4 while we skate a custom halfpipe INSIDE the theatre. Reese and I barged the ramp build today in order to show you what fakie ollies look like “in da club.” Thanks to all the fans of our game series for keeping the dream alive. Hoping to do more events like this in the future. #THPS25
🎮🛹📼🎸 The Fortitude Music Hall
Tomorrow we celebrate 25 years of @tonyhawkthegame in the best way possible: with @birdmanthps @bodyjar_official @dzdeathrays & @alex_lahey playing songs from THPS 1-4 while we skate a custom halfpipe INSIDE the theatre. Reese and I barged the ramp build today in order to show you what fakie ollies look like “in da club.” Thanks to all the fans of our game series for keeping the dream alive. Hoping to do more events like this in the future. #THPS25
🎮🛹📼🎸 The Fortitude Music Hall
Fakie ollie, Cedar Crest, 1987
This was my only visit to this legendary ramp which was built in the unseen forest of a country club. It was placed at the intersection of four county lines so that no police or authorities could claim full jurisdiction to have it removed. Genius DIY renegades. Check out the “Blood and Steel” documentary for the full story.
📷: @lapperzine
✌🏽🇦🇺 #THPS25
📷: @dupedupe The Fortitude Music Hall
A tall, but true tale of delivery via FedEx. And I still have Cooper’s board! I keep hoping it will help me to learn Indy backflips just like my animated character. #ad #FedEx
A tall, but true tale of delivery via FedEx. And I still have Cooper’s board! I keep hoping it will help me to learn Indy backflips just like my animated character. #ad #FedEx
Frontside air, Oasis halfpipe. 1980: Dogtown Triplane, [@mikesmithsliberty’s old] Indy’s, Blood Wheels & gardening gloves.
Fun / frightful fact: Oasis was directly under the freeway overpass that leads 805 south to 8 east. People used to throw bottles at us as they drove by, leaving glass shards in the bottom of the bowls. Wheels and kneepads were no match for for such sharp slivers. The park closed not long after this photo was taken. Mission Valley East, San Diego
Thank you Brisbane! #THPS25 was a celebration like no other. We’re ready for more.
🎞️: @aaronjawshomoki The Fortitude Music Hall
Tickets for our Darkslides & Secret Tapes shows are now available with code: DARK.
Link in bio ⬇️➡️🔺🔺📼📼
Skaters are drawn to chaos 🛹 New Episode of Hawk Vs Wolf with the legendary Rodney Mullen Out Now!