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{{Short description|American skateboarding magazine}}
{{Infobox Magazine
{{confused|Skateboarder Magazine}}
{{about|the 2004-2017 magazine|other magazines|List of skateboarding magazines}}
{{Infobox magazine
| title = The Skateboard Mag
| title = The Skateboard Mag
| image_file = Skateboardmag.jpg
| image_file = Skateboardmag.jpg
| image_size = 200px
| image_size = 200px
| image_caption = March 2006 Cover of ''Skateboard'' Magazine
| image_caption = March 2006 Cover of ''Skateboard'' Magazine
| editor = [[Dave Swift (photographer)|Dave Swift]]
| editor = Dave Swift
| editor_title = Editorial director
| editor_title = Editorial director
| frequency = Monthly
| frequency = Monthly
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|}}
|}}


'''''The Skateboard Mag''''' was an independently published American [[Skate magazine|skateboarding magazine]] that published over 100 issues (in 2005 its circulation was approximately 90,000<ref name="Union"/>)<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref>{{cite web|title=100th Issue Celebration|url=http://theskateboardmag.com/2012/06/100th-issue-celebration/#.URdbilp4Yup|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Ed Dominick|date=1 June 2012}}</ref> and featured professional skateboarder, [[Danny Way]], on the cover of its inaugural issue, depicted mid-air while executing a gap to noseblunt slide on a construction known as the "Mega Ramp".<ref name="Issue"/> As of February 2005, the publication was owned by a group that consists of seven partners, while the magazine employed eleven full-time staff members.<ref name="Union"/> In 2014 it became a part of a website and in 2017 its existence on the website stopped.
'''''The Skateboard Mag''''' was an independently published American [[Skate magazine|skateboarding magazine]] that published over 100 issues (in 2005 its circulation was approximately 90,000<ref name="Union"/>)<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref>{{cite web|title=100th Issue Celebration|url=http://theskateboardmag.com/2012/06/100th-issue-celebration/#.URdbilp4Yup|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Ed Dominick|date=1 June 2012}}</ref> and featured professional skateboarder [[Danny Way]] on the cover of its inaugural issue, depicted mid-air while executing a gap to noseblunt slide on a construction known as the "Mega Ramp".<ref name="Issue"/> As of February 2005, the publication was owned by a group that consists of seven partners, while the magazine employed eleven full-time staff members.<ref name="Union"/> In 2014, it became a part of a website and in 2017, its existence on the website stopped.


==History==
==History==
Internal tensions between the ''Transworld Skateboarding'' magazine staff and owners AOL Time Warner{{Citation needed|date=February 2013}} prompted the resignation of several key editorial members, such as Mike Mihaly, [[J. Grant Brittain]], [[Dave Swift (photographer)|Dave Swift]], [[The Skateboard Mag]] Founding trio was later joined by TransWorld Skateboarding Senior Photographer [[Atiba Jefferson]] who all later launched ''The Skateboard Mag'' publication (the first issue was published in April 2004<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref name="Issue">{{cite web|title=The Skateboard Mag Store: Issue #1|url=http://theskateboardmag.myshopify.com/collections/frontpage/products/issue-1|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=10 February 2013|year=2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=The First Covers of Iconic Skateboarding Magazines|url=http://www.complex.com/sports/2013/10/skateboard-magazine-first-covers-premiere-issue/the-skateboard-mag|publisher=Complex|accessdate=31 October 2015|date=30 October 2013}}</ref>). Jefferson, whose seminal mentor was Brittain, revealed in May 2012:
Internal tensions between the [[Transworld Skateboarding|''Transworld Skateboarding'' magazine]] staff and AOL Time Warner<ref>{{Cite web |date=11 April 2023 |title=skateboardrater |url=https://skateboardrater.com/ |website=skateboardrater}}</ref> owners prompted the resignation of several key editorial members, including Mike Mihaly, [[J. Grant Brittain]], and Dave Swift. Later, The Skateboard Mag Founding trio was later joined by TransWorld Skateboarding Senior Photographerer [[Atiba Jefferson]], who all later launched ''The Skateboard Mag'' publication (the first issue was published in April 2004<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref name="Issue">{{cite web|title=The Skateboard Mag Store: Issue #1|url=http://theskateboardmag.myshopify.com/collections/frontpage/products/issue-1|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=10 February 2013|year=2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=The First Covers of Iconic Skateboarding Magazines|url=http://www.complex.com/sports/2013/10/skateboard-magazine-first-covers-premiere-issue/the-skateboard-mag|publisher=Complex|accessdate=31 October 2015|date=30 October 2013}}</ref>). Jefferson, whose seminal mentor was Brittain, revealed in May 2012:


<blockquote>
<blockquote>
So, in 2006, we were all working at Transworld with Dave Swift, Grant ... Brittain. I think I'd gotten to the point—you've done everything you kinda could. And, with that magazine being bought and sold that many times, and being corporate-owned, a lot of things had changed. Even when I started working at Transworld, it was just owned by the bombers; it was independently owned. It was just different, it wasn't the same. There was a lot of things that became very corporate about it. And that was just-it is so hard to do with skating. There were so many things we couldn't justify. So we decided to break off and start out own magazine, The Skateboard Mag, in 2006.<ref name="Atiba1">{{cite web|title=Shoot All Skaters: Atiba Jefferson|url=https://theberrics.com/shoot-all-skaters-atiba-jefferson-part-1|work=The Berrics|publisher=The Berrics|accessdate=10 February 2013|format=Video upload|date=28 May 2012}}</ref></blockquote>
So, in 2006, we were all working at Transworld with Dave Swift, Grant ... Brittain. I think I'd gotten to the point—you've done everything you kinda could. And, with that magazine being bought and sold that many times, and being corporate-owned, a lot of things had changed. Even when I started working at Transworld, it was just owned by the bombers; it was independently owned. It was just different, it wasn't the same. There was a lot of things that became very corporate about it. And that was just-it is so hard to do with skating. There were so many things we couldn't justify. So we decided to break off and start out own magazine, The Skateboard Mag, in 2006.<ref name="Atiba1">{{cite web|title=Shoot All Skaters: Atiba Jefferson|url=https://theberrics.com/shoot-all-skaters-atiba-jefferson-part-1|work=The Berrics|accessdate=10 February 2013|format=Video upload|date=28 May 2012}}</ref></blockquote>


Jefferson's view was reinforced seven years earlier in an interview that Brittain participated in with the ''Union-Tribune'', whereby Jefferson's mentor stated, "We did not like the whole corporate deal, not knowing what was in every issue ad-wise. It wasn't about skateboarding anymore."<ref name="Union" />
Jefferson's view was reinforced seven years prior in an interview that Brittain participated in with the ''Union-Tribune'', whereby Jefferson's mentor stated, "We did not like the whole corporate deal, not knowing what was in every issue ad-wise. It wasn't about skateboarding anymore."<ref name="Union" />


Other key members of ''The Skateboard Mag'' who moved across from ''TransWorld Stance Magazine'' were Art Director, Ako Jefferson (Atiba Jefferson's brother<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Ako Vs. Atiba|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YD7Q0Hnonf0|work=YouTube|publisher=Google, Inc|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Nick Damjanoff|format=Video upload|date=21 May 2010}}</ref>), writer, Kevin Wilkins,<ref>{{cite web|title=Kevin Wilkins Interview|url=http://www.fecalface.com/SF/features-mainmenu-102/other-whatnots-mainmenu-93/104-kevin-wilkins-interview|work=Fecal Face Dot Com|publisher=Fecal Face Dot Com|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Isaac McKay-Randozzi|date=21 April 2006}}</ref> and Transworld Publisher, Mike Mihaly (the three had worked a combined total of forty-four years for ''Transworld Publications'').<ref name="Union">{{cite news|title=Skateboarders only|url=http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050227/news_m1sc27skatem.html|accessdate=10 February 2013|newspaper=The Union Tribune|date=27 February 2005|author=Whitelaw Reid|agency=Union-Tribune Publishing Co}}</ref> The first issue was released in March 2004, Issue #1 April 2004.<ref>[http://www.theskateboardmag.com/shop/index.html?action=view&=&sku=TSM01 the skateboard MAG° » Shop<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061112072040/http://www.theskateboardmag.com/shop/index.html?action=view&=&sku=TSM01 |date=November 12, 2006 }}</ref>
Other key members of ''The Skateboard Mag'' who moved across from ''TransWorld Stance Magazine'' included Art Director, Ako Jefferson (Atiba Jefferson's brother<ref name="Atiba1" /><ref>{{cite web|title=Ako Vs. Atiba|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YD7Q0Hnonf0 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211214/YD7Q0Hnonf0 |archive-date=2021-12-14 |url-status=live|work=YouTube|publisher=Google, Inc|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Nick Damjanoff|format=Video upload|date=21 May 2010}}{{cbignore}}</ref>), writer, Kevin Wilkins,<ref>{{cite web|title=Kevin Wilkins Interview|url=http://www.fecalface.com/SF/features-mainmenu-102/other-whatnots-mainmenu-93/104-kevin-wilkins-interview|work=Fecal Face Dot Com|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Isaac McKay-Randozzi|date=21 April 2006}}</ref> and Transworld Publisher, Mike Mihaly (the three had worked a combined total of forty-four years for ''Transworld Publications'').<ref name="Union">{{cite news|title=Skateboarders only|url=http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050227/news_m1sc27skatem.html|accessdate=10 February 2013|newspaper=The Union Tribune|date=27 February 2005|author=Whitelaw Reid|agency=Union-Tribune Publishing Co}}</ref> The first issue was released in March 2004, Issue #1 April 2004.<ref>[http://www.theskateboardmag.com/shop/index.html?action=view&=&sku=TSM01 the skateboard MAG° » Shop<!-- Bot generated title -->] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061112072040/http://www.theskateboardmag.com/shop/index.html?action=view&=&sku=TSM01 |date=November 12, 2006 }}</ref>


As of October 2016, the editorial director of the magazine was Dave Swift, who is a current skateboard photographer and had worked for ''Transworld Skateboarding''as Editor-In-Chief, Staff Writer and Staff Senior Photographer.<ref>{{cite web|title=RAIDERS OF THE ARCHIVES: DAVE SWIFT Pt. 3 of 3|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Lf2mTSyuCQ|work=YouTube|publisher=Google, Inc|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=skateboardermagazine|format=Video upload|date=2 October 2012}}</ref>
As of October 2016, the editorial director of the magazine was Dave Swift, who is a current skateboard photographer and had worked for ''Transworld Skateboarding'' as Editor-In-Chief, Staff Writer and Staff Senior Photographer.<ref>{{cite web|title=RAIDERS OF THE ARCHIVES: DAVE SWIFT Pt. 3 of 3|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Lf2mTSyuCQ |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211214/2Lf2mTSyuCQ |archive-date=2021-12-14 |url-status=live|work=YouTube|publisher=Google, Inc|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=skateboardermagazine|format=Video upload|date=2 October 2012}}{{cbignore}}</ref>


Veteran skateboard photographer Grant J. Brittain confirmed on October 7, 2014, that the Skateboard Mag publication, of which he was a photo editor for, has reached an collaborative agreement with the Berrics. Brittain published the announcement on his Instagram account: "We started a new endeavor, the Skateboard Mag is under The Berrics skateboarding umbrella." <ref>[http://instagram.com/p/t1JGQtS6YU Instagram]</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Anthony Pappalardo|title=The Berrics Acquires the Skateboard Mag|url=http://www.jenkemmag.com/home/2014/10/16/the-berrics-acquires-the-skateboard-mag/|accessdate=26 May 2020|work=Jenkem|date=16 October 2014}}</ref> Following this the magazine ceased publication and became part of the website Berrics.
Veteran skateboard photographer Grant J. Brittain confirmed on October 7, 2014, that the Skateboard Mag publication, of which he was a photo editor for, has reached an collaborative agreement with the Berrics. Brittain published the announcement on his Instagram account: "We started a new endeavor, the Skateboard Mag is under The Berrics skateboarding umbrella."<ref>[http://instagram.com/p/t1JGQtS6YU Instagram]</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=Anthony Pappalardo|title=The Berrics Acquires the Skateboard Mag|url=http://www.jenkemmag.com/home/2014/10/16/the-berrics-acquires-the-skateboard-mag/|accessdate=26 May 2020|work=Jenkem|date=16 October 2014}}</ref> Following this, the magazine ceased publication and became part of the website Berrics.


==Mission statement==
==Mission statement==
The ''Skateboard Mag'''s mission statement stated that it {{cquote|''Seeks to maintain the independent nature and integrity of the skateboard culture at all levels, provide readers with a broad, accurate, and knowledgeable view of skateboarding, and advance skateboard publishing through excellence in photography, writing, and design.''}}<ref>{{cite web|title=The Skateboard Mag on SkateboardDirectory.com |url=http://skateboarddirectory.com/dir2/The_Skateboard_Mag.html|work=The Skateboard Directory |publisher=Josh Rabinowitz|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Josh Rabinowitz|year=1999–2013}}</ref> In a February 2005 interview, the magazine's three primary founders, Brittain, Swift, and Mihaly explained the ethos of the magazine and the main points of distinction from their former employer by stating that the target audience is "hardcore skateboarders", while ''Transworld'' retains a tendency towards the mainstream aspect of skateboarding culture. Mihaly explained: "We don't have any beef with those guys. We've been doing what we're doing for a year and realized we can all coexist. The further we can separate the umbilical chord from them the better."
The ''Skateboard Mag'''s mission statement stated that it : {{cquote|''Seeks to maintain the independent nature and integrity of the skateboard culture at all levels, provide readers with a broad, accurate, and knowledgeable view of skateboarding, and advance skateboard publishing through excellence in photography, writing, and design.''}}<ref>{{cite web|title=The Skateboard Mag on SkateboardDirectory.com |url=http://skateboarddirectory.com/dir2/The_Skateboard_Mag.html|work=The Skateboard Directory |publisher=Josh Rabinowitz|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Josh Rabinowitz|year=1999–2013}}</ref> In a February 2005 interview, the magazine's three primary founders, Brittain, Swift, and Mihaly explained the ethos of the magazine and the main points of distinction from their former employer by stating that the target audience is "hardcore skateboarders", while ''Transworld'' retains a tendency towards the mainstream aspect of skateboarding culture. Mihaly explained: "We don't have any beef with those guys. We've been doing what we're doing for a year and realized we can all coexist. The further we can separate the umbilical chord from them the better."


==Digital photography==
==Digital photography==
Line 42: Line 45:


<blockquote>
<blockquote>
You know, it's really funny, because, at ''Transworld'' I did my film, ''Cross-Process'', you know, it was really funny, because right when ''The Skateboard Mag'' came is when digital photography came ... right when that magazine started is right when I almost switched over to a 100 percent digital. Which gave me a whole different look again ... which really changed the way that my photography looked."<ref>{{cite web|title=SHOOT ALL SKATERS Atiba Jefferson - Part 2|url=http://theberrics.com/shoot-all-skaters/atiba-jefferson-part-2.html?autoplay|work=The Berrics|publisher=The Berrics|accessdate=10 February 2013|format=Video upload|date=1 June 2012}}</ref></blockquote>
You know, it's really funny, because, at ''Transworld'' I did my film, ''Cross-Process'', you know, it was really funny, because right when ''The Skateboard Mag'' came is when digital photography came ... right when that magazine started is right when I almost switched over to a 100 percent digital. Which gave me a whole different look again ... which really changed the way that my photography looked."<ref>{{cite web|title=SHOOT ALL SKATERS Atiba Jefferson - Part 2|url=http://theberrics.com/shoot-all-skaters/atiba-jefferson-part-2.html?autoplay|work=The Berrics|accessdate=10 February 2013|format=Video upload|date=1 June 2012}}</ref></blockquote>


==Free Fabes campaign==
==Free Fabes campaign==
In October 2012, the magazine assisted with the "Free Fabes" campaign, organized by the DGK skateboard company for former professional skateboarder and actor, Fabian Alomar. Alomar, who was a member of the now-defunct Menace skateboard team (founded by [[Kareem Campbell]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Untitled Document|url=http://www.48blocks.com/joeysuriel/joeysuriel.html|work=48 Blocks|publisher=48 Blocks|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Joey Suriel|author2=K }}</ref>), was arrested on a non-violent drug possession charge in Hollywood, California, United States (US). The magazine also uploaded unseen footage of Alomar from the 1990s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Free Fabes Lost Part|url=http://theskateboardmag.com/2012/10/free-fabes-lost-part/|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=9 October 2012|author=Templeton Elliot|date=5 October 2012}}</ref>
In October 2012, the magazine assisted with the "Free Fabes" campaign, organized by the DGK skateboard company for former professional skateboarder and actor, [[Fabian Alomar]]. Alomar, who was a member of the now-defunct Menace skateboard team (founded by [[Kareem Campbell]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Untitled Document|url=http://www.48blocks.com/joeysuriel/joeysuriel.html|work=48 Blocks|accessdate=10 February 2013|author=Joey Suriel|author2=K }}</ref>), was arrested on a non-violent drug possession charge in Hollywood, California, United States (US). The magazine also uploaded unseen footage of Alomar from the 1990s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Free Fabes Lost Part|url=http://theskateboardmag.com/2012/10/free-fabes-lost-part/|work=The Skateboard Mag|publisher=Strictly Skateboarding|accessdate=9 October 2012|author=Templeton Elliot|date=5 October 2012}}</ref>


==Location==
==Location==
Line 51: Line 54:


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Extreme sport]]
*[[Skateboard]]
*[[Flip tricks]]
*[[Flip tricks]]
*[[The Berrics]]
*[[The Berrics]]
Line 62: Line 65:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Skateboard Mag, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Skateboard Mag, The}}
[[Category:American monthly magazines]]
[[Category:Monthly magazines published in the United States]]
[[Category:Defunct magazines of the United States]]
[[Category:Defunct sports magazines published in the United States]]
[[Category:Magazines established in 2004]]
[[Category:Magazines established in 2004]]
[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 2014]]
[[Category:Magazines disestablished in 2014]]

Latest revision as of 00:56, 29 October 2024

The Skateboard Mag
March 2006 Cover of Skateboard Magazine
Editorial directorDave Swift
CategoriesSkateboarding
FrequencyMonthly
Circulation90,000 (2005)
PublisherStrictly Skateboarding
First issueApril 2004
Final issue2017
CompanyStrictly Skateboarding
CountrySolana Beach, California, United States (US)
LanguageEnglish
Websitehttp://www.theskateboardmag.com/
ISSN1548-3975

The Skateboard Mag was an independently published American skateboarding magazine that published over 100 issues (in 2005 its circulation was approximately 90,000[1])[2][3] and featured professional skateboarder Danny Way on the cover of its inaugural issue, depicted mid-air while executing a gap to noseblunt slide on a construction known as the "Mega Ramp".[4] As of February 2005, the publication was owned by a group that consists of seven partners, while the magazine employed eleven full-time staff members.[1] In 2014, it became a part of a website and in 2017, its existence on the website stopped.

History

[edit]

Internal tensions between the Transworld Skateboarding magazine staff and AOL Time Warner[5] owners prompted the resignation of several key editorial members, including Mike Mihaly, J. Grant Brittain, and Dave Swift. Later, The Skateboard Mag Founding trio was later joined by TransWorld Skateboarding Senior Photographerer Atiba Jefferson, who all later launched The Skateboard Mag publication (the first issue was published in April 2004[2][4][6]). Jefferson, whose seminal mentor was Brittain, revealed in May 2012:

So, in 2006, we were all working at Transworld with Dave Swift, Grant ... Brittain. I think I'd gotten to the point—you've done everything you kinda could. And, with that magazine being bought and sold that many times, and being corporate-owned, a lot of things had changed. Even when I started working at Transworld, it was just owned by the bombers; it was independently owned. It was just different, it wasn't the same. There was a lot of things that became very corporate about it. And that was just-it is so hard to do with skating. There were so many things we couldn't justify. So we decided to break off and start out own magazine, The Skateboard Mag, in 2006.[2]

Jefferson's view was reinforced seven years prior in an interview that Brittain participated in with the Union-Tribune, whereby Jefferson's mentor stated, "We did not like the whole corporate deal, not knowing what was in every issue ad-wise. It wasn't about skateboarding anymore."[1]

Other key members of The Skateboard Mag who moved across from TransWorld Stance Magazine included Art Director, Ako Jefferson (Atiba Jefferson's brother[2][7]), writer, Kevin Wilkins,[8] and Transworld Publisher, Mike Mihaly (the three had worked a combined total of forty-four years for Transworld Publications).[1] The first issue was released in March 2004, Issue #1 April 2004.[9]

As of October 2016, the editorial director of the magazine was Dave Swift, who is a current skateboard photographer and had worked for Transworld Skateboarding as Editor-In-Chief, Staff Writer and Staff Senior Photographer.[10]

Veteran skateboard photographer Grant J. Brittain confirmed on October 7, 2014, that the Skateboard Mag publication, of which he was a photo editor for, has reached an collaborative agreement with the Berrics. Brittain published the announcement on his Instagram account: "We started a new endeavor, the Skateboard Mag is under The Berrics skateboarding umbrella."[11][12] Following this, the magazine ceased publication and became part of the website Berrics.

Mission statement

[edit]

The Skateboard Mag's mission statement stated that it :

Seeks to maintain the independent nature and integrity of the skateboard culture at all levels, provide readers with a broad, accurate, and knowledgeable view of skateboarding, and advance skateboard publishing through excellence in photography, writing, and design.

[13] In a February 2005 interview, the magazine's three primary founders, Brittain, Swift, and Mihaly explained the ethos of the magazine and the main points of distinction from their former employer by stating that the target audience is "hardcore skateboarders", while Transworld retains a tendency towards the mainstream aspect of skateboarding culture. Mihaly explained: "We don't have any beef with those guys. We've been doing what we're doing for a year and realized we can all coexist. The further we can separate the umbilical chord from them the better."

Digital photography

[edit]

The launch of The Skateboard Mag coincided with the popularization of digital photography in skateboarding and Atiba Jefferson has revealed that he made the shift upon his commencement at the publication:

You know, it's really funny, because, at Transworld I did my film, Cross-Process, you know, it was really funny, because right when The Skateboard Mag came is when digital photography came ... right when that magazine started is right when I almost switched over to a 100 percent digital. Which gave me a whole different look again ... which really changed the way that my photography looked."[14]

Free Fabes campaign

[edit]

In October 2012, the magazine assisted with the "Free Fabes" campaign, organized by the DGK skateboard company for former professional skateboarder and actor, Fabian Alomar. Alomar, who was a member of the now-defunct Menace skateboard team (founded by Kareem Campbell[15]), was arrested on a non-violent drug possession charge in Hollywood, California, United States (US). The magazine also uploaded unseen footage of Alomar from the 1990s.[16]

Location

[edit]

As of February 2013, the headquarters of The Skateboard Mag was located in Solana Beach, California, US.[17]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Whitelaw Reid (27 February 2005). "Skateboarders only". The Union Tribune. Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d "Shoot All Skaters: Atiba Jefferson" (Video upload). The Berrics. 28 May 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  3. ^ Ed Dominick (1 June 2012). "100th Issue Celebration". The Skateboard Mag. Strictly Skateboarding. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  4. ^ a b "The Skateboard Mag Store: Issue #1". The Skateboard Mag. Strictly Skateboarding. 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  5. ^ "skateboardrater". skateboardrater. 11 April 2023.
  6. ^ "The First Covers of Iconic Skateboarding Magazines". Complex. 30 October 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  7. ^ Nick Damjanoff (21 May 2010). "Ako Vs. Atiba" (Video upload). YouTube. Google, Inc. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  8. ^ Isaac McKay-Randozzi (21 April 2006). "Kevin Wilkins Interview". Fecal Face Dot Com. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  9. ^ the skateboard MAG° » Shop Archived November 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ skateboardermagazine (2 October 2012). "RAIDERS OF THE ARCHIVES: DAVE SWIFT Pt. 3 of 3" (Video upload). YouTube. Google, Inc. Archived from the original on 2021-12-14. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  11. ^ Instagram
  12. ^ Anthony Pappalardo (16 October 2014). "The Berrics Acquires the Skateboard Mag". Jenkem. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  13. ^ Josh Rabinowitz (1999–2013). "The Skateboard Mag on SkateboardDirectory.com". The Skateboard Directory. Josh Rabinowitz. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  14. ^ "SHOOT ALL SKATERS Atiba Jefferson - Part 2" (Video upload). The Berrics. 1 June 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  15. ^ Joey Suriel; K. "Untitled Document". 48 Blocks. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  16. ^ Templeton Elliot (5 October 2012). "Free Fabes Lost Part". The Skateboard Mag. Strictly Skateboarding. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
  17. ^ "Contact Us". The Skateboard Mag. Strictly Skateboarding. February 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
[edit]