HOW IS SKATEBOARD MARKETING STILL THIS BAD?

June 7, 2021/ / ARTICLES, VIDEOS/ Comments: 35

If you saw this video last weekend while watching the big names huck for money and Olympic dreams, you probably thought this was a leftover from the early-2000s, only it wasn’t. Yes, there really was a rap video about riding a skateboard, doing tricks, and competing or something.

Companies like Mountain Dew — who have tried their hand at content creation several times — have to know this doesn’t work, or at least have shown samples to a focus group who probably threw up. There will always be corny advertising from outsiders that utilize skateboarding, but why does it happen in actual skateboarding such as The Dew Tour? People who actually skate or have skated have to work in advertising, right?

Skating has been inserted into everything from Dunkaroos to cell phone commercials for decades and with the exception of Spike Jonze, the results are consistently cringe. But why?



Truth be told, I’ve written several listicles for Mountain Dew’s Green Label site in the past because I like money, I like writing about skateboarding, and if the piece is lame, that’s on me. I say this to give you a look behind the curtain.

Companies like Mountain Dew dew hire people from skateboarding but that doesn’t mean those people have the “final say.” You often get dealt a shit sandwich and have to try to season it to make it palatable.

I’ll give you an example. Your boss signed off on some mini-documentary about a whatever pro who’s “a legend in the making,” just because they’re one of the Energy Drink Riders®. In my case I’d give a hard pass but if you’re the Editor In Chief, you have to run this shit, so yeah, you try to do it the least shitty way possible.

The other major ways craptastic content is produced are through “influencers” and outside advertising agencies. Having years of experience working with both at various agencies, I’ll dive into the agency side first but both are absolutely ridiculous, antiquated, and inorganic.

Here’s exactly how it works: Take any legacy brand, chances are that their demographic is aging and they want to align themselves with Millennials, or Gen Z, or whatever based on some intel they get from the data and finance departments. They then do a study on what that “target” is into. And there it is – skateboarding – the golden goose.

The kids are into the fastest growing action sport in the world whose popularity was heightened by the pandemic and cool kiddos having more time to pursue their passions. These kids are tech-savvy, they transcend genre, they’re diverse, they’re urban, they’re fucking cool, and they all skateboard.

So when you know who you need to market to, the next step is to create a story, so they hire the yarn spinners known as advertising agency people, some of which “used to skate” or “have a kid who’s really into it!” These agencies are owned by people who love money but play hard to get with brands because they “value their integrity.” Guess what? They don’t at all, but it sounds cute.



These agencies sell the dream of creating content that is “authentic” and “organic” but there is literally not a brand on Earth that can’t be inserted into a skate story “authentically.” Skaters eat fast food, they buy pain killers, they stay in AirBnBs, they drive cars, they wear makeup and pants, and they buy them at Target, therefore, every brand and corporation has a “long-standing relationship with the skate community,” but they need the right agency to convey that very real and not-manufactured relationship.

Now to the meeting where the cringe is made. After the hellos, someone cool from the brand tells you how cool they are and then pulls up a presentation that is 27 slides too long, talking you through this story and how they need you to make a thing. The agency–who slyly stacked the meeting with a bunch of employees who look like the target demographic—then explains how they really “get it” and how they can tell this story. Then you have lunch, then you go expense a dinner, get drunk, lowkey admit it’s all stupid, and when the check clears, you make something shitty.

I know this because I’ve been in that room as “the skate guy” and later, had to look over work for egregious misappropriations of culture and errors. Sure, I can say “Oh man, no one would ever say or wear that” or “Hmmm, yeah, I don’t think people in skating respect that influencer,” but brands get crushes on what they perceive as cool and agencies have relationships, aka they get perks for using kooky people. Basically, it’s all rigged and stacked to ensure something not that great will be made, and that’s usually the outcome. It’s trash because it’s doomed from the start, and it’s easy to take a check and let it all slide.

As Tony Hawk has shown us, you can just lean into cash grabs and no one really cares because you’re still the Birdman. Tyshawn working with Warby Parker? Why not? The only thing you’re risking is your rep and more often than not, your fans understand capitalism and will give you a pass, plus celebrity is a hell of a drug.

Yes, there are people who work at agencies and brands who skated, care about skateboarding, and are trying to do the right thing, but there’s a really funny dynamic that is native to skateboarding. It’s so big and broad that everyone wants it, but when you speak up and say something isn’t authentic, the client will tell you that skating is actually too niche and you’re too on the inside to know what “real people,” aka consumers, really want.



And that is why Mountain Dew chose to use this big event before the Olympics to try to go hardbody NBA mode and give skateboarding a hype song, tapping a rapper that doesn’t skate and nobody knows to write corny lines about what it takes to be a skater and “make it.” Now it’s just the latest example of marketing teams who are responsible for sportifying skating failing to reach their audience.

It mostly misses the mark because as skaters, we aren’t really watching the Dew Tour because we want to see someone “take it all.” We love watching amazing skateboarding regardless of the context. The competition is purely the medium, but MK Asante is rapping about it as if he got an email with bullet points of “things skaters think of whilst ripping.”

So what could the marketing team have done instead? Certainly not have Asante drop lines like, “Got ollies with more pop than Game Stop.” For starters, they could have done some basic digging into acts skaters already actually like, and maybe picked someone that resonates within our circles on an organic level.

When you elevate something that’s already there and real, that’s when it feels like you’re actually giving back. And even if it ends up being a bit corny (which it almost inevitably will), you and everyone involved will probably get a pass for the decent attempt anyway.

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Comments

  1. lamebrain skateboards

    June 7, 2021 2:52 pm

    How could we not all love a song with such powerful lyrics like…

    “Courage On Deck like two trucks
    Hop on and do what you want

    True freedom they need us to stunt
    Back-side 180’s to front

    And we know struggle like we knows-grind
    Hustle for runs all in Due Time”

  2. Balls

    June 7, 2021 3:06 pm

    Sk8 or die ?

  3. MK Asante

    June 7, 2021 4:07 pm

    *correction lol I actually made the song and … I’ve skated my whole life. I grew up in Philly watching Stevie and Kalis skate Love Park and skating has inspired my entire life, aesthetic, and view on the world. Dew Tour asked me to do the song because I write about skateboarding Love in my memoir Buck and I also rap. Hip-Hop culture has contributed a lot to skateboarding and vice versa so it was a natural and organic connection. I wrote it and performed it from the heart and with decades of skating in me. I started skating when there were no TV competitions, definitely no Olympics, etc. so all of this is new to me. I embrace it because the sport/culture is growing and reaching more people. Peace.

  4. skatebeer

    June 7, 2021 4:39 pm

    Stuff like this allows every poser wannabe to latch on to a culture that they are not cool enough for. That is what skateboarding has become today. It is not for everyone. It should not be for everyone. The acceptance has to be earned.

    People are quickly forgetting the unspoken skateboarding etiquette. Yes…these “rules” exist for a reason. Don’t like it, don’t skate. Maybe I’m a delusional jaded old kook from the mid 90s that romanticizes the intimidation. But the intimidation helps filter out the weak who are doing it for the wrong reasons.

    “everyone was doing hard tricks. Dennis was skateboarding”

    • fan of dennis

      June 7, 2021 4:42 pm

      nice tampa pro reference last line. that was a killer run.

      • skatebeer

        June 7, 2021 4:47 pm

        thanks. It’s meant to emphasize my point. We’re getting farther and farther away from skateboarding with stuff like this. I saw a lot of hard tricks during this contest, but not a lot of skateboarding.

    • Scott Blacula

      June 7, 2021 5:52 pm

      As another old kook from the mid-nineties, I can’t agree more, particularly about acceptance being earned. While drunk and belting through old KOTR DVDs over this past weekend, my wife let me know that our 12 year-old nephew had just bought a skateboard, and told me to be a good uncle and let him in on some stuff. I have zero issues teaching the kid how to ollie, but explained that I can’t teach a kid “culture” that was wearing a Fortnite shirt last time I saw him and still literally cries when shit doesn’t go his way.

      I then told her a rather embarrassing story about being 10 or 11 and getting my ass handed to me by a group of young skateboarders that I tried to stick up to. Two years later, most of these kids would become my best friends, but I basically cut my mullet, bought an issue of Thrasher, and thought I could hang. Tough love, in some senses, actually works and makes you grow as a person. There isn’t enough of it in our culture anymore.

      • 23y/okook

        June 8, 2021 1:24 am

        I agree with skatebeer. the clothes and home made esque videos are now magnets for product exploitation and Tik Tok users that are dying to be vintage and raw. Nothing wrong with having a style (there are so many) but weird to see flocks of it. And scottblacula on the tough love, people from LES i didnt even know or follow used to cut my ass on my own ig profile back when I was a full kook core 12 year old but looking back it prepared me for the worst more or less.

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