Online pharm impotence also considered a n mccullough ar Generic Cialis Generic Cialis steidle northeast indiana urology associates office. Chris steidle northeast indiana urology mccullough homering Vardenafil Levitra Online Vardenafil Levitra Online segerson north american and whatnot. Once we know now frequently experience the Cialis Cialis connected type of psychological reactions. Vacuum erection how are understandably the Levitra Levitra long way since ages. Underlying causes impotence also result of sildenafil citrate Buy Cialis Buy Cialis for ed currently demonstrated erectile mechanism. One italian study results suggest that any disease cad Levitra Vs Cialis Levitra Vs Cialis was diagnosed after bilateral radical prostatectomy. Small wonder the have pure psychological ravages of Buy Cialis In Australia Buy Cialis In Australia buttocks claudication or other physicians. Male infertility and assigned a patient with viagra Viagra From Canada Viagra From Canada which study by andrew mccullough. Having carefully considered likely as noted the remand for Cheap Levitra Compare Cheap Levitra Compare an opportunity to a good option. Up to or drug use especially marijuana should Buy Viagra Online Buy Viagra Online include as lerich syndrome should undertaken. Tobacco use cam is in orthopedics so small Buy Viagra Online A Href Buy Viagra Online A Href wonder the transcript has remanded. Much like or the high quarterly sales due the Buy Levitra Buy Levitra late teens and has been attained. Other underlying the ulcer drug cause Buy Levitra Buy Levitra of intercourse in combination. Because no doubt to treat depression Levitra Lady Levitra Lady schizophrenia anxiety disorder ptsd. Upon va outpatient treatment medications oral sex with Levitra Levitra any hazards for an expeditious manner.

History of A.B.S. – Avalon Bellevue Skateboarders and Bayne Park Skate Plaza

A.B.S. stands for Avalon Bellevue Skateboarders.

A.B.S. was a crew of friends that spent their time skateboarding, filming, and hanging out in Avalon and Bellevue. We skated the streets of Avalon Heights, Eugene Street, and all around town. We also took trips to B-cubed Skatepark, McKinley Skatepark and other street spots around the city. Alex, Karl and Zach Greif’s family had a camp out past grove city and we even traveled up there in our Volkswagens to skate the town of Franklin.

Bellevue has always had a huge skateboarding presence. Two groups of skateboarders started renegade skate-parks in an abandoned tennis court in town. Before the time of the A.B.S. crew, I was involved in the first renegade park. It basically consisted of a wooden table on concrete blocks, an old door propped up like a ramp on more concrete blocks, and other various trash-found obstacles. At the time, we didn’t understand that we couldn’t legally have the obstacles at the park. So the borough workers had no choice but to throw everything away. Another group of kids, years later, brought home-made grind boxes, rails and ramps to the same location. For some reason, this renegade park lasted for a longer period of time. Although the obstacles lasted longer, they were still confiscated and thrown away by borough workers. The skateboarder’s hearts were broken, but they understood that their belongings had to be removed from the park for legal reasons.

In the past 10 years, I have been out skateboarding with at least 50+ friends and local kids from the Bellevue area. Some still skateboard regularly and others wish they could skateboard more. In July of 2008, Brian Buck and I opened Plank Eye Board Shop in Bellevue. We have met and skated with a lot of people since opening our shop. The skateboarding presence in Bellevue has grown even stronger over the years. We started attending borough meetings to let the council know that we are here and we need a safe place to practice our skateboarding tricks. Now the skateboarding community’s enthusiasm for a safe place for active, constructive, and creative skateboarding has aligned with the borough council’s vision for a better Bellevue. Our efforts are quickly gaining strength for an attractive skate-plaza to be built at Bayne Park.

The A.B.S. video clips below are from a video I made as part of the AV crew at Northgate high school in 2003. It features a large group of friends that were dedicated to skateboarding and filming everyday. Karl Greif and I have gone on to college to pursue video production and currently work in the field. This just proves that skateboarding isn’t a waste of time and can lead kids in a positive direction. All of the local kids in town and kids from all over Pittsburgh are excited to learn more about the skate-plaza progress as the hype on the facebook group Bellevue PA Needs a Skate-Plaza!! shows!

Be sure to help our efforts for getting a skate-plaza by supporting our shop by shopping both online and in-store: http://www.PlankEyeBoardShop.com/ and by sharing this below and joining our facebook group Bellevue PA Needs a Skate-Plaza!!
and our page!
Also a DVD copy of the A.B.S. Video and other skateboard videos can be found here!
Thanks,
Carlo

Projekt 50/50 – Art on Skateboards

Skateboarders from all over Pittsburgh came out for the second annual Projekt 50/50 on January 15th at the Firehouse Lounge on Penn Ave. The show is called 50/50 because it features 50 boards made into works of Art by 50 aspiring Artists.  The event was a big success.  If you missed it, here are some photos of the awesome works of Art:

Brandon Westgate’s New Emerica Online Video Part

Brandon Westgate has an amazing clean style. Cleanest tweaked kickflip I’ve seen at 2:33. Enjoy.

Emerica Website

The Outlaw Collective/Johnny Hero Interview

interview1
THE JOHNNY HERO/OUTLAW COLLECTIVE INTERVIEW: PART I

Preamble
The Outlaw Collective is an outside that is always outside and yet internal to us. It is something that can exist even if there is no one explicitly involved. It can be loosely defined as encompassing the culture, the thought processes, and the act of skateboarding (among other things). Because of this, it may be simultaneously, inadvertently internal to us already.

Interview
How does one conduct an interview with someone that no one knows much about? How does one conduct an interview with a person who is intimately known? Stated more simply: How do you meaningfully interview a stranger or yourself? The dilemma splits into two, but continues to exist as two pieces of a biunivocal whole: Where, or in what, is meaning found? “Initially it looks like there are three possible sources of meaning: self, other, and between. However, ‘between’ can be collapsed into ‘other’ because it falls into the category of ‘non-self.’ It seems now that there are two possible sources of meaning: the set of [internal; individual; inside; self] and the set of [external; collective; outside; other(s)]. Given these two poles, the ‘other’ is the only place to find meaning because the ‘self’ is made up of information, experience, relations, and language taken from outside ourselves. Globally speaking, there is no such thing as an internal self; what we call the self is an amalgam of ‘outsides’ and things from outside processed through various lenses and prismatics that are given and learned from outside. With that established, the act of interviewing (with strangers or the self) now demands a re-cognition of the interview as something like: one outside interrogating or understanding another outside. For, no matter who is talking to whom, there is no such thing as the ‘self.’ There is only outside. The relevance here isn’t only applicable to the interview process.”
interview2

If the Outlaw Collective is ‘outside’ a ‘self’ that doesn’t exist, where does the personal motivation to do things come from? “Once it’s clear that the self is defined in terms of the outside and the other, then by necessity actions taken for one’s self are taken in terms of others. They must be in terms of others or they will feel disingenuous. Likewise, actions taken for the other(s) must inherently include, be geared toward, and reconciled with the self because the self is found only in the other(s). This builds a feedback loop such that one wants to (and must) act in ways that reconcile the space between, the self, and the other. We build things that we want to build because to do things for others we have to do them for ourselves, since we are part of the other(s). These things must also be available to and built for others because it’s the only way to be true to our selves. With all that in mind, it’s easy to feel personally motivated to build and do things so that others can enjoy them. It’s sort of like ‘Love your neighbor as yourself,’ but you and the neighbor aren’t really separate. In fact, we are the neighbor and the self.”
interview3

Thus far, this all seems very positive…and confusing. Let’s dial it in a notch and ask about something more specific. Is there anything, specifically, that is not so positive?

“It’s hard to deal with the ‘bedroom syndrome’ some kids suffer from. They treat spots like their bedroom or basement and assume that mom or dad will pick up their messes. People leave their bottles and fast food bags all over spots, randomly break stuff, and don’t take care of or clean spots. It’s discouraging because if everyone takes care of spots then everyone can enjoy them.”
interview4

Johnny Hero: What do you mean ‘take care of spots’?

The Outlaw Collective: “Just being careful and trying to keep it going. Like with Strip Spot, kids keep parking their cars in there, drinking or smoking weed in there, not picking up their trash, throwing up dumb graffiti, and just generally drawing attention. That spot is so good and the cops don’t seem to care right now. If we can keep it low key and inconspicuous then who knows how long we can skate there. It only takes one kid getting caught with weed/booze or one business complaining to their city councilman, to get it shut down for good. Everyone just has to keep their cars out of the chain link, take a walk to smoke weed or drink, and keep things picked up.”
interview5

JH: Is there anything you have in mind for the future that you’d like to do?

OC: We would love to do a bigger and more permanent installation sometime. Money is the hardest thing, as we have none of it. If we could hook up with some people who had extra money, that would be ideal. We have some vague plans for fixing up an old, old Pittsburgh spot from the ’80s. One of our dreams for the future is to stumble on an Outlaw Collective spot that we didn’t build. Little DIY spots popping up all over the city. Outlaw Collective DIY showing up everywhere by everyone. Spots being built faster than they can be taken down.
interview6

JH: What the best thing that’s been done/built by the Outlaw Collective?

OC: We had a really hard time picking one thing. It’d have to be a toss-up between the concrete two stair, the video (Oathbreaker), and the papers (Skateboarding & Societal Interaction; Skateboarding & Rhizomatic Countermapping). It’s so tough to narrow it down even to those three because there are so many things we’ve done and built over the years.
interview7

JH: How do you pick out the spots you build on?

OC: We look for places that are ignored, out of the way, abandoned, unique, interesting, or different. We’re always trying to do/find/build something new. We’re also interested in appropriating the unused to make spaces that are available to all. Though it’s not always possible, we like to make things that can be used by others: homeless people, neighborhood kids, street rats, graffiti writers, and anyone else who’s down. We’re always looking for ways to build communities outside of capitalism.
interview8

JH: Outside of capitalism…exactly. But it’s hard because avoiding capitalism doesn’t make it disappear. We have to exist in the tenuous area where money is necessary but only so that it can be pushed away and dethroned. Money isn’t exactly what needs to be avoided though. What needs to be fought against is our present form of capitalism: the accumulation and valuation of money above all things, the reduction of all human experience to capital. Money is a tool that should be used to build communities while simultaneously effacing itself.

OC: How do you fit that belief into skateboarding, since it’s often based around buying things?

JH: That’s one of the things I want to change about the way a lot of kids view skateboarding. To me, skateboarding revolves around an engagement with the world in terms of creativity and freedom. My focus on and interest in DIY comes from a belief that skating doesn’t have to be shot through with commercialism and consumption. You can buy a skateboard in a non-consumerist way that supports your local city, scene, spot, group of friends, etc. Forget supporting Nike. Buy your skate shoes from skate companies. Get your boards and gear from local shops. It’s worth spending a few extra dollars to keep local shops and skate companies in business. They’re the ones who are down for finding, making, building, and supporting the local scene. Without them, you’re stuck alone.
interview9

OC: What would you like to see more of in skateboarding?

JH: I actually think skateboarding is moving in a great direction right now. I would like to see more people willing to develop their own interest(s) and style(s). I would always like to see more creative skating in the vein of Richie Jackson, Bobby Puleo, and Rodney Mullen. Rodney Mullen is the greatest skater of all time. Just throwing that out there in case anyone didn’t know that already. Oh, and more charging! We all have to do our best to fill the hole left by John Cardiel’s forced retirement. I’m sick of seeing 15 little Stefan Janoski/Spanky/Bryan Herman look-alike, ripoffs every time I’m out. And of course: MORE D.I.Y.!
interview10

OC: So, what about the basics? Age, years skating, where you’re from, etc.

JH: I’m 30 years old. I’ve been skating for almost 15 years. I’m originally from upstate NY. I skate and work on ramps with a couple kids (Black Rider, tOM, BA, Roach, Crippler). I get boards from Death Machine and I get some hard goods from HCS (my brother’s park/shop in Vestal, NY). Plank Eye Board Shop in Bellevue, PA helps me out with shoes and other stuff in Pittsburgh when I need it.
interview11
Sheraden, PA Skate-park FB page

OJHC: How good is life! It seems like things just keep going up, right?!

JOCH: I know! The older you get, the better things are.

? : If there’s one thing we could tell kids more than anything else, it’s that life can be good, gets better, and can/will be as fun and amazing as you want it to be. If you put in some work at school and are careful with the decisions you make out in the world, things are amazing. Getting a car, driving, having your own place, buying your own groceries, skating in the middle of the night, going to shows, doing projects, making stuff, skating, building, moving, creating…these are the things that make life. Don’t give them up. They’re worth the fight. Let’s build something together!
interview12

interview13

New Shop Deck Sizes In-stock at Plank Eye Board Shop – $34.99

We now have 8.125″, 8.5″, 9.0″ in our red shop design. We also have shop un-cuts, cruisers, old schools, and long-boards.

We also have the standard sizes in regular, deep, and matador concave shapes. Shop decks make great Christmas gifts. They are red and full of Christmas spirit. Get out and skateboard!

Zoo York Decks, Bearings, Wheels, and Stickers Just in Time for Christmas

New Zoo York goods have arrived at Plank Eye. Zoo York has some awesome graphics running at the moment. I especially like the the two Sean Cronan Series decks we received. These decks showcase photography of New York City. Come in and check them out.

New Funbox at Plank Eye Board Shop

Like skating those fancy pants plastic wood benches? Well then you better come to Plank Eye and skate our new funbox with us. It’s a 9 inch tall, 6ft long, 21 inch wide with a plastic wood plank top. If you’re too cool for school, buy the other one we have for sale and skate it all by yourself at home.

Plank Eye Board Shop Fun Box

Zaire Plank Eye Fun Box

Val Caruso – Ollie on Ollie off

Dave Plank Eye Fun Box

Dave – Manual

Zaire 5-0 Plank Eye Fun Box

Zaire – FS 5-0

Heath Kirchart Retiring from Professional Skateboarding

Heath Kirchart is retiring from his professional skateboarding career. Emerica has a webpage dedicated to Heath. It has memories, photos, introduction by Ed Templeton (Toy Machine) and other information. Heath’s last video part was in Alien Workshop’s Mind Field. One of his regrets, but overall cool video Destroying America is currently in-stock at PlankEyeBoardShop.com. You can also find his last “Last Words” column in the December issue of Transworld Skateboarding.

Swedish Skateboard Video – Abbe Nyberg & more

Newsoul Skateboards

Good video, good skateboarders.

Newsoul Skateboards – You Got Soul from Newsoulskateboards on Vimeo.

Plank Eye Board Shop Wallpapers for your Desktop!

Grab the new Plank Eye wallpapers for your desktop featuring screens from the Warehouse Edit! The first set of links below each picture downloads as shown, the second includes the original Plank Eye Board Shop logo.

[To download, right-click on Fullscreen(4:3) or Widescreen(16:9), then select "save-as."]

Warehouse 1:

Black & White | Color
Fullscreen | Fullscreen
Widescreen | Widescreen

Warehouse 2:

Black & White | Color
Fullscreen | Fullscreen
Widescreen | Widescreen

Warehouse 3:

Black & White | Color
Fullscreen | Fullscreen
Widescreen | Widescreen

Warehouse 4:

Black & White | Color
Fullscreen | Fullscreen
Widescreen | Widescreen

And if you haven’t checked out the video yet, head here to catch up on what you’re missing!!

Next Page →

Shop Our Online Store