Menwys y ddefnydd, pasteol.
Éw medde Collgell yn oed y niifftidCH
Ac rwy'n mynd i letio llog yn un Half Asland.
A rhai Gallwn niysg rail dim i chi cilio gyda'r paró thema, ond rydym yn ei wneud beth ddweud y bydion unrhyng 400 ongoing.
Ond today I think of it as an uncompetitive thing, I think that's really the thing that really comes to my mind.
But, I see it as a little bit like a break dancing thing in New York in the 80s, it's like people are basically showing off.
But, in a way that's quite good, that they help each other out and skill share and...
You know what came up with that break dancing thing, is like...
You are kind of showing off and there is a bit of an edge to doing something better than someone else,
but only because they are going to do it as well and then you will have to do something else.
It's not like beating somebody and I think that really bled into the whole skateboard culture of,
you know, I think it's really lovely to see lads on the park showing each of the how to do stuff
and I think that's what comes to my mind with those kind of sports,
is they are not competitive in that way of beating somebody.
a mae'n fymlci ffrydwyd ca purelyradd.
ении yn rhoi'r fyddechiun sy'n gallw cyfeiriadu cael welr pests 8,
mae'n byw byw'r phae hallau iawn.
Be'n rhai o obviouslyid y hefyd.
Y cyfun, listed byw nhw busw Ast
yma yng nghymru cynyddiw recognise –
yw'r JaehComment affirm wrth y gall,
Wel, oedd gwaith yma yn gallu digw y pw tact flori.
I cael ei fod yn jechydhad wil,
rees, souks ac dyma'r ong cyfo y gallai'r gwrth deisiw'r yng Nghaeion
Them aws'r窴 gwaedd Hedben Cymre?
Mort er mwyn i gyd yna yn launch!,
ni oedd yn deisio cychwyn a Chesnalen a jo
a the Hula Hoot thing and Trapeze, silks and all that kind of stuff that came out of the circus that's now left that arena and has kind of got a life of it outside of it.
I think it's really good because I didn't really like circuses, like circus circuses. I thought they were a bit silly, but actually a lot of the skills and things that went on within it put into a different environment, I think was more interesting.
Dw i'n d Jenin yw'r meddwl yw W14 i'dych chiced sefydlu neu gallwn hynny yw
Cynydd o manufact Gymraeg Erbyn mor cy studioswg gwunddiad adjacentcio?
Cyng Fastan ärny a bod eu cy tekrara gy hasteiaidai a herswn kuortfumpig hamdach?
Yn gall fan hyn hyn.
Bydd neul hyn yn lifnes y nifer.
Rydymser yn rhoi немножко, byrd, werth, ei dYNodarn,
hynny'n i lawer i ei hunain.
ac newid hynny yn y film neu arall yn y rem Newshinn ac roedd yn oeddi ryn 이것도io,
byddwn yn gwybod at y peth banydd rhain y padr nesaf cosmetics ar wahanol ut mwy o'r
Ien ymateb ystod dwytest ond yn fwy baradio sy'n rŵn bod ph attitude.
Felly ble eidda Cassania Beforward yn ystod
sydd o bwrw o'r hyn biz 87,
ar y llogion calculatef sydd wedi bod eithaf yn eistedd y baher twee.
o wnaeth yr hwnnw. Rywnaeth e'n assistanceu phos y ddau,��세요.
Mae hoffi y creu o'r oedín tychiumnau
o fyny ar ein syniadau
Спасибо boudd eraill o'n ffordd, niddadwch chi'n feastio'r bobl
a'r ffordd ond 35 o ffordd tych'sfaf
wszyscy eyth i ni allanaw,
i'r chen
That song has got completely consumed by this commercial thing
Is that a bad thing? I don't know
I mean who cares really? It's what happens
And I think the fact that the mainstream endlessly accommodate Haven't got
Or the experimental makes that world have to re-think things
Because it's been done
So how do you think does it change for people doing it if it becomes more commercial?
I think you have got a Institute here haven't you,
Roeddwn ni'n hunio heb mae'r erbyr gyfanas Lyfr oedd y teimlo yn rhoi ddechrau caOTT
Rwy'r erbyr yr agnod yn tyniadant, mae bwb gyfe reger
Antioliad dd解f tendarell y gymaint y bydwyd
ac fel ei wedi bod hi'n ysgolwnad hwnnw.
Yna bienainrhyw-mynxiattiaid sydd yn gen Memiriasol.
Felly mae'r wneu'r PSN yn ffasol13 mae'r rech situationاء.
Felly mae'r t Firstly Mae Gweineta
GO 4, crow Kate.
Ez gara capacity o bwysig a fysg unigset o bwysig,
mae'n yn ni oedd yn cysylltu i fewa a derbyn yr archf womb,
mae hyn oedd am gwylosistanding,
bosses fretstaw,
cy
yn bearwood.
Ian ni'n cyfrifnwyr, byddwn ni'n ceisio ran
fel yna niis, ond when they then become mainstream then that can't be a subculture and mainstream at the same time.
And where the line is between a subculture or mainstream I don't really know, but it's with music it's like
if only a few thousand people know of something and it's only played in certain clubs and you have to go there to hear it then that's very definitely a subculture thing and as soon as it's on the radio
Archif uaffrai, mae'n grwp rym Dadcorstion Dream Cod.
Fe yma rwy'n my懸 DA surgery, rwy'n my bap yn edrygu yn edrygiad wedi haddien fearsyr.
Dyn ni'n rhai fan gofyn y Flamades international rwy'n mynd o yan i chi gydy'i cri disgrwydig eu maeğrdu trafaliaethol?
Ac mae'n
If you want to go, how do I do this particular skateboard trick, or hula hoop thing, whatever,
and Google it, somebody somewhere will have made a video about it and if you can bother
to watch it and follow the instructions you can probably learn how to do it.
That kind of throws up a lot of questions about education and all kinds of things these days but
I think it's different for education because it's not just about learning something, it's about
how do you critically think about things. I don't think you can learn that from a video
and you can't learn how to do, you can't learn how to ride a bike by watching somebody ride a
bike, you've got to ride the bike but I think you can watch a video that might help you do it.
I think that's a wonderful thing about the internet and it's all really new isn't it?
It's only like 10 or 15 years old really, all this stuff but then being special is harder
because that's the tricky thing is if everybody can do everything or can access everything,
how do you do something that really stands out? That's the thing that's made more difficult.
That's also there on the internet sometimes, as in people do new things, adventures and put them
up with the sport. Yeah but then it's done isn't it? So then you've got to, it's like that's done.
Somebody's made that video, they put it on YouTube so I know I have to do something else.
At the topic, why do you think people do it, participate in those sports?
What all niche sports? No mainly hula hoop silks, acrobatics.
Okay well it's why do people do it because it's fun, because it makes you feel better about yourself,
keeps you fit. Does it make you feel better about yourself? I'd say it does. Yeah that's what I'm
saying yeah, so there's a sense of achievement and accomplishment about it, if you try and do
something and you can't do it and then two months later you can do it, anything makes you feel good
about yourself and it's also something about, what I really love to see people do is do something
that involves discipline, you know that's a lot of discipline to practice something behind you
know, to make something look effortless and good, there's always like, what did they say? It takes
10,000 times of doing something to become an expert in it, it's a lot and so when you make
something look effortless like the best jugglers or hula hoop people whatever they're doing something
that looks easy, you know how much effort has gone behind making that look easy and that's discipline
and I think that's a really good thing to have in your life, that ability to practice something
a thousand times till you get it, even when you have to go through that feeling of just like I
can't do this, can't do it, I'm never going to get this and then you do it and you keep doing it
and then you get it, it's an amazing feeling. And how do you think that's different though sport,
what you learn and what you get out of them from mainstream sports? Well I think it's a fundamentally
different thing and my daughter when she was little used to mess around on the bars in the park
and she'd be hanging about on these bars for hours flipping about doing all this stuff and
she went into a gymnastics class and as soon as they saw her they were like we're having you in
the county team, you're some park girl but we'll soon train you up and get you like we need you to
come three times a week and we need you to do this and she was like no, no, no, no, I just
doing it because I like doing it, forget I'm not doing it but they spotted it in her straight away
that she had the talent and the skills but she had no interest in competing against anybody else
and I think that was a real turning point for her because she she knew that she had a talent but
you don't have to do that competitively to enjoy it and I think that's where those kind of sports
really come in is to join a community of people who just get off and doing what they're doing when
sharing it with each other for each other that's lovely it's very different from doing something
because you want to beat somebody to make you better or your team better or your culture or
country better I mean it's the time we grew out of that. So you reckon it's mainly like self
I don't know individualisation that's like one of the main values and ideologies behind
doing it of freedom or what else would you think are like main values that are behind those sports
I think it's something about yes there's an individual side to it which is satisfactory and
you know discipline and self-fulfillment but the cooperative thing is kind of like being in a
band you know if everybody does their bit and it works then the the end result is bigger than
the some total of each individual bit you create something bigger than the individual components
and that is what makes things feel a bit magical
and lastly why do you think those new sports are becoming so popular now
I think we're just tired of
it's like it's almost like a backlash undercurrent at the moment of things going back in time
it's like now we've got these flashy gizmos it's like yeah I've got the whole world at my fingertips
in my pocket everything's easy you know things got too easy it's like your generation you know
you can think of a tune you've downloaded it and you've got it 30 seconds later you know
ancient people like me who had to wait two weeks and then catch a bus to a record shop to get the
album that you wanted and then you couldn't you know you had to carry it home and get it out and
put it on and it's like that kind of specialness was really special now when you just yeah I've
got it you know people want something special back and I don't think that's something that
you can't feel special without having to work for something if you get it too easily it's like
so hot so I think that's why it's coming back it's like now we've got everything at our fingertips
we don't even know what to do with it people are coming back they know phones are getting bigger
again you know now we've grown out of um people putting stupid ring tones on their phones now
everybody's got a ring again now somebody's phone rings and everybody looks around because
everybody's got a ring just a normal ring on it again it's like things are coming back around
is like a phone is a phone it's not it doesn't have to be a computer doesn't have to be everything
you just talk into somebody I mean it's it all sounds very old school I mean if I had my way
I would teach you lot on old analogue kit because there was something about if you cut something
with a razor blade which is what I had to do for 10 years to edit it together you there's no control
z you've made a decision it was really satisfying and I just think that's what's happening I think
people want that old school turns on better yeah it's tactile as well as that's the thing of
trouble with the computers is you know when you had a reel-to-reel recorder and you had to tape
and razor blade and sticky bits and you know editing was a very tactile thing you're clicking
a mouse or just you know we're gonna move up soon we'll move away from quirky keyboards and a
mouse and it'll just be like clicking your fingers or a voice command but I think everybody wants
that experience of something that's tactile it's a big part of who we are as human beings to
touch things and feel the space around you and operate us and I think parkour's a really
interesting thing that's come out of all of that now it's like reclaiming urban space as something
that can become a playground that's not you know some horrid old dirty office block suddenly
becomes something you can play with I think that's really brilliant is that a useful kind of shite
emo nid. That's great.
