I don't even know how to describe it, I've always, I've always just done whatever the
hell I wanted to do for the most part.
I've never wanted to grow up.
I think I had started making art stuff just to kind of like fill in the void that used
to be skateboarding that I was always out doing, you know, but I just, from domestication
just couldn't be out skateboarding.
I'm probably age and energy and all that kind of stuff, so I still have no clue what
I'm doing, but I've never felt like I ever did.
I just do whatever I feel compelled to do, you know.
I started making art and I got obsessed with it.
I don't really feel like an artist because I never have, I never was when I was a kid,
but I got obsessed with making this stuff and it kind of, it's the closest thing that
I've found to scratch the edge that skateboarding scratched, even though it doesn't, nothing
scratches an edge like skateboarding does when you're really focused on it and doing
it.
But it's like the closest thing for an aging skateboarder, you know, to fill that void
that whenever you look for it in skateboarding.
It's me, my friend Sid, otherwise known as The Little Los Indian, but he came to me to
do this show and then just the fact that he's, you know, he has his Indian background and
I'm totally like a white boy, like my family's from like Oklahoma and Texas and I've always
embraced that side of me and always been into like good old fashioned country music.
So the whole idea of this show, I just, I love the idea behind it and the two coming
together and I totally embraced the whole vibe and it was, it was a lot of fun.
All it is is two friends, two skaters, an Indian and a white boy coming together and making
it all come together thanks.
You can't turn down a native, we're going extinct.
