A Special Interview & KAPITAL Skate Session w/ Chris Chann
Write-up & Interview by: Chris Gibson
Inevitably it probably happened on one of those cursed, headache-inducingly bright, hot and windless days that only happen in Los Angeles. Bored to death from the lack of swells, an intrepid and maybe a little foolish group of surfer bros bolted some wheels onto a board and dared each other to catch some concrete waves. The minute it started somebody probably ate shit, scraped themselves up, bled, ripped their clothes.
Chris Chann was born 60 years after these prototype skaters but he's cut from the same cloth. What started as just skating around and filming his friends doing dumb skits has turned into 1.42 million youtube subscribers and 237,986,417 views as of this writing.
There's something in the air here in Southern California that leads to that kind of invention, some combination of boredom and stupidity, of risk taking and just a flat out desire to try something new for fun and the laughs. It's as vital today as in the buttoned up and stifling 1950's.
Speaking of the 50's... across the other side of the pacific, the country that invented the word Tsunami was starting its own wave... not of concrete but of textile. After losing World War II, and with the eruption of the Korean War in 1950, Japan became America's manufacturing base for its military effort.
"the country that invented the word Tsunami was starting its own wave... not of concrete but of textile."
First off tell me a little about yourself
I grew up in Echo Park, LA. I went to school for kinesiology - I've been skating since I was 5 years old... I started focusing on the social media stuff about halfway through college. When I was in high school I used to try to do like... funny skits with my friends, and then I started focusing on the skateboarding side of content when I was in college.
At the end of college I was applying to grad school, that's when a lot of the skating video stuff started really taking off, and I decided I have to go one way or the other... because either way is a huge time commitment. I pretty much went with skating and I've been doing that since.
Would you consider yourself more of a skateboarder who youtubes or a youtuber who skateboards?
I think since the start i've been a skater that makes content, over time it's definitely shifted though. As i've gotten older and gotten more into the creative space. When I was younger I just skated and filmed skating- I didn't really care to be creative or anything, I didn't really grow up as a "creative" person... I just wanted to skate. I guess i liked making funny videos when I was younger,
What does skate culture in LA mean to you?
Growing up in LA it feels like there's two different scenes here, there's the scene that I grew up with just like my local friends skating, and then as I got better and older and more into skating it became more of a like international hub of skating, and I've met so many friends here from like, Japan, Brazil, places all over Europe, and I realized wow, all these people are coming here to LA just to skate, so it is a huge hub of skate culture.
What is your favorite place you've skated outside of LA?
Definitely Barcelona, It blew my mind away.... I was so like, skateboardingly culture shocked. I always thought growing up that LA was like the best place for skating... and then when I went to Europe I went to Barcelona and I realized Oh my God.. the architecture here is sick and there's a skate spot at, like, every single train station. I remember finding all these little spots, we were cruising around I remember thinking... "are we not gonna stop here? This would be like the best spot in LA" and everyone would be like.... "oh no that's just like.... on the way to the spot" ... but that's just like heaven to me- if I could do something all the time it would be to just travel and skate, that's the dream.
I think since the start i've been a skater that makes content, Over time it's definitely shifted though. As i've gotten older and gotten more into the creative space. When I was younger I just skated and filmed skating- I didn't really care to be creative or anything, I didn't really grow up as a "creative" person... I just wanted to skate. I guess i liked making funny videos when I was younger,
"I put a rail over the LA river... like a 28 foot rail and I skated that rail."
I don't want to make you blow up your favorite skate spots in LA... but what do you think some of the wackest skate spots in LA are?
Honestly I might get hate for this.. but I hate most of the regular LA skate spots. Theres not really a specific spot that comes to mind, but I kinda hate the cement look... like plain cement ledges, they're fun but they just don't look that good on camera but yeah just like hot bland LA school cement. I think schoolyards end up kinda ugly too.
Do you think skateboarding has a place in fashion?
It's like oil and water a little bit - in skating you're like ruining your clothes... you're literally just tearing your shit up, but that's also why I'm so drawn to it. I think it's fucking cool to skate in something that shouldn't be skated in... It just makes it interesting. I've been skating so long I think I get excited by anything new being integrated.
What are your top 3 LA meals?
I grew up eating Tommy Burgers on Rampart... the original one. I feel like people either love or hate it. Something about the chili burger just hits.
There's this truck I recently found near Rampart/Macarthur park area that sells this seafood cocktail, soupy tomato sauce with onion, cilantro and a bunch of shrimp. You eat it with a tostada and saltine crackers. It's like my favorite thing to eat.
Number three... getting Dim Sum with my family in Chinatown. It's super nostalgic for me.
Skateboarding is in the Olympics now - what does that mean to you?
I fully back it. I think whatever helps skaters out financially and just if skating becomes a bigger thing, if it offers more people the opportunity to skate I think that's a cool thing. I respect where people who aren't down with it are coming from, trying to keep skating more low key and underground but for me I'm all for it. It's also exciting for all the olympians.. like that's the sickest shit ever to be an olympian.
"in skating you're like ruining your clothes... you're literally just tearing your shit up, but that's also why I'm so drawn to it. I think it's fucking cool to skate in something that shouldn't be skated in..."
Kapital is a brand that blends classic Americana motifs with Japanese design - with this big rise of skate culture in Japan do you see Japanese skaters riffing on American skate culture?
They do but they also have their own thing. Skate culture and fashion is pretty universal throughout the world. It's similar but there's something distinct about it that I can't put my finger on.
What does 2022 have in store for Chris Chann
Shit.... getting my life together I guess.
How many times did it take you to skate this wall
Oh dude so many.. there was something about that wall...it was kind of protruding a little bit... I didn't land it the way I wanted to but I wanted to keep everything moving.. I was kind of nervous because of the crew too.. overall it was a super fun shoot.
Featuring - Chris Chann @chrischann
Interview/Write-up - Chris Gibson @qwizzzz
Photography - Avi Loud @aviloud &
Katy Shayne @katyshayne
Styling - Santiago Hurtado @santgazi
Casting - Aria Daniella @ariadaniella
Photography - Avi Loud @aviloud, Katy Shayne @katyshayne
Photography - Avi Loud @aviloud
& Katy Shayne @katyshayne