1.Hey Weasel Face! greetings from Peru Hell,all good in your chaotic life maniac?
Hey, pretty busy with a bunch of shit right now, but all good yeah.
2.Tell us about your sick artwork bro.Which are your influences in there?
I mostly get my inspiration from skateboarding and day to day things. As for artists, im a huge fan of Phillips of course, Todd Francis, Crumb and Pushead to name a few.
3.Into the skateboarding,tell me how you as you started in the skate destroy?
Well I've been skateboarding since I was like 8, just fucking around bombing down hills, my parents bought me an old school Sonic The Hedgehog skateboard when I was a kid and fell in love with it since then really. I had a few real shit paper graphic boards after that, I bought my first 'popsicle' cheap board in Newquay Cornwall when I was about 12, and I was skating down the high street and tried to pop an ollie and slipped out and my board flew into this old womans ankle haha was pretty funny, my parents went fucking mental at me. We later saw her limping around, was pretty funny.
4.Which are your favorite tricks? your prefer ride in the street or in a bowl?
I prefer to skate transition but bombing hills and skating curbs is also rad.
5.How is the scene skateboarder in your city? tell me about this.
The skate scene in my city is pretty poor I guess, our local skateparks fucking suck. Few skateboarders kicking about but mostly ruled by BMXers and scooter fags. We tend to travel around a lot and go to different skateparks in our areas. I live in the South West of England and there's fuck all to skate here, that's why I've started a D.I.Y project with my friends, have to do shit yourself if you want it, no point waiting around for something that's not going to happen.
6.What you think about the work from Neck Face?
Yeah Neck Face is rad, really like all the shit he does.
7.Apart from your killer artwork,you make a zine called Def Box,tell me more about thi shit.
Well I've got this new zine coming out called Defbox its a 20 something page zine on random crap. Just a bunch of drawings I put together, probably most stoked on this one, put a whole lot of effort into it.
Got some stuff in there I'm real happy with, going to be making some prints and maybe t-shirts from it too.
8.You know some from the peruvian skateboarding scene?
Nah I don't know anything about the peruvian skate scene ha!
9.Morbid future plans?
Not really got much plans for the future, in terms of skateboarding me and my friends are planning another skate trip to California next year which will be rad, went there 2 years ago and it was insane. Need to get back there.
Going to make a few more t-shirts later this year, maybe some longsleeve's or something.
10.Your last putrid words bro?
Fuck Nyjah Huston.
1.Killer greetings from Peru Jonathan! how are you? hows going skate and destroy life there?
Busy most of the time with Confusion and other projects, not just making the magazine, but distributing it worldwide, getting ads, printing tees, and of course updating all the internet channels (fb, ig, website). But the concrete bowl and diy skate scene in germany and europe in general is the best it's ever been. I've lived here for almost 6 years, when I first moved here there was probably 10 concrete skateparks, now there's probably 200. Building concrete skate spots is the hottest thing since the hoola hoop or the yo-yo.
2.I saw Confusion bro and is totally sick! pure true skateboarding nothing from bullshit! Tell me how born Confusion Magazine bro? how many issues have out? Influences?
Stoked you are stoked on Confusion. Yeah, we keep the bullshit (Energy drinks, sports shoes, etc.) out of it and keep it pure. Confusion was born out of the ashes of my former pool skating / concrete skatepark magazine CONCUSSION which I made with a friend in Santa Cruz, Californa for 13 years. I moved to europe and was just hoboing around with my skateboard and surfboard in 2005-2007, and after that the magazine kind of fell apart... the economy, pool skating and diy and concrete skating weren't like they are now, in every mag, it was mostly just street skating in all the other magazines. As far as influences, well, I would say Lowcard, but in fact, we (concussion magazine) influenced them, and also, I would add, Lowcard led to the death of Confusion because a lot of our advertisers quit running ads in Confusion and put them in Lowcard instead. It was an 'us or them' scenario, and we lost... Lowcard was much more cool, trendy, happening, new... Concussion was more, at the time, for a bit older dudes who skated backyard pools. Now all the street kids even have to have a line in a backyard pool in their video edits, but in the late 90s, early 00s it wasn't like that at all. Early Thrasher's could also be seen as an early influence because that was the only skate magazine I used to look at before it became like all the other corporate magazines. But honestly, the main influences were the fact that I loved to take skate, surf, live punk show photos, and my friend liked to write. I decided we should work together and make a magazine so we had an outlet.... that's how Concussion began, and now I guess i'm just addicted to making a skateboard magazine, I tried to quit, but, I started again.... and I can't stop. I need help.



3.Your other project is HO AX brother,tell us more about this please.
Hoax MFG is a skate clothing company I started with my friend, also in Santa Cruz, in 2008, right before I moved to Europe. Now we run it out of southern California and Cologne, Germany, we have guys also helping out in Australia, I mean, printing up the tshirts and helping get our message out there. Our message is that everything is a Hoax, the government, everything you are told growing up, about what is success (fancy car, shitty 9-5 job you hate, 2 weeks off for holiday to go sit on the beach drinking mai tais and getting sun burnt to return to your shitty job). It's about thinking for yourself, questioning everything. It's also making fun a bit of the whole skateboard industry, and clothing companies in general. Because, what is a skate clothing company, a logo, a skate team, ads in a mag, some videos and photos of guys wearing your shirts, ok, yeah, we can do that, so we did, but we do it our way, with a bit of political messages, rebellion and some humor. Somehow we ended up with a sick team with Chris Russell, Skreech, Donovan Rice, Hunter Okano, and Jojo Heffington. If you don't know who those dudes are, look them up. We also have another 15 dudes from around the world on the team, that are all well respected in their own countries and sometimes internationally (Jake Snelling (england), Koekie (belgium), Shoota (australia), Jose Noro (spain), Kevin Wenzke (germany), and the list goes on.... but just remember, it's all just a Hoax.



4.How is the skateboarding scene in your city/country?
The skateboarding scene in Cologne itself is good, if you are a street skater, which I am not, I'm into transition skating, preferably on concrete. But, since a few months we have a new big concrete bowl designed by Rune Glifberg from Denmark, and it's in the same skatepark as my favorite little Owl Bowl which has pool coping, and we have a spot under the bridge we started a few years ago and are still working on and another half street half transition skatepark which is cool. So the scene in Cologne is getting better, not just street skating. The scene in Germany is good, thanks to Minus Pools who built about 30 skateparks in the last 5 years. The scene in europe is really good, you can drive to 3 or 4 different countries within a few hours, or take a train or cheap flight to another 10 countries, and there's stuff to skate all over. Small towns are starting to get concrete parks, just like what happened in Oregon in the 90s.

5.Which is the team rider from Confusion Magazine? HO AX have a team rider?
Magazines don't have team riders. Skate clothing companies do. And yeah HOAX has 6 guys on the US team, 14 on the international team, and 20 on the flow team. Check out www.hoaxmfg.com The website is almost done... No, really.
6.Hardcore Punk,Skate and destroy all is part from your life?
Yes. Since I was 12 or 13.
7.Your five favorite tricks?
My top 5 favorite tricks are the grind.
8.What do you think?
SUICIDAL TENDENCIES THRASHER MAGAZINE SLAYER JEFF GROSSO Yeah, Suicidal, Thrasher, Slayer and Grosso are all solid choices. Of the 4 I would take SLAYER. Grosso is funny, skates rad and is more and more controversial, he got in a lot of trouble talking shit about all the legends at the Vans Combi party on the live webcast, that was amusing. Suicidal are classic, but they were never my favorite. Sometimes I wonder if people really like the music, or just the image. Name 10 Suicidal Songs. Institutionalized... I saw Your Mommy, Possessed to Skate, and ummmm...... And Thrasher, we already talked about, used to be good, now it's just another brand catalog. The website is good though, lots of good videos. But the print mag used to be way, way, way better. It used to be punk, skate punk... now it's commerical as fuck.
9.Future plans bro?
Keep doing what I'm doing and spread the Confusion around the world.
10.Last words Jonathan.
Do it yourself, because no one's going to do it for you. Don't sit around and complain about things, change them, and make things better. Don't follow trends, start them. Follow no one, except us: @confusionmagazine @hoaxmfg
1.Hey Adam,cheers from Peru Hell! How are you freak! all sick in the skate life?
First of all, I just want to say hello to all of the riders in Peru and South America. Things are good here in Miami. I'm still holding on. Still riding when I can and trying to stay healthy. Staying healthy is my biggest challenge.

2.Tell me how you begining riding skate? which was your inspiration to destroy the sk8? I started in the early-mid 80s on a plastic Variflex banana board just doing turns and riding down hills. By 1986 I got a regular sized board. It was a Vision Gator with Venture trucks and Bones Threes wheels. My dad got it for me. At that time skateboarding was very popular and I was fascinated by the feeling and the way it looked. Graphics on boards were so good then. They were all screen pressed and the colors and details really popped. Each board was like a piece of art. I'm from Minnesota so winters were tough, but luckily I found an indoor private warehouse with ramps called P.I.S.S. in Minneapolis. I was inspired by Justin Lynch, Nate Sheggeby, Mark Muller, Erick "Woody' Froland, Dave Leroux, then later the main guys I rode with were Bob Bogema, Brian Perry, John Muldoon, Darren Navarrette, Willie Stiles, Gregg Witt and a bunch more. They all inspired me a lot.

3.Actutally you are rider from Creature Skateboards,talk me more about this. Creature is a company my child hood friend Darren Navarrette has a lot to do with. When people think of Creature, it's hard to think about without thinking of Darren. Darren, Al Partanen and Sam Hitz are also friends I skated with as a kid. They all decided to put me on the team back in 2011. I've spent time with most of the team and they really are a special group of homies. Creature has a reputation for having gnarly dudes and yes they are gnarly, but they are all kind dudes who have respect for skateboarding and people. When I get the chance to go on tours or be a part of anything, I'm always down.

4.How is the skateboard movement in your city/country? I live in Miami, Florida and Mark Lake who is one of the most legendary skateboarders of all time lives in Deerfield Beach which is just 45 minutes away. Mark just secured a location at Ramp 48 Skatepark for us to have an indoor vert ramp. We are raising the money for it right now. I usually travel 3.5 hours to Merritt Island, Florida to skate with my friends who ride for a company called Demon Seed. They have a nice vert ramp there. Once in a while Mike Frazier is there. He is still so amazing. That guy is a freak. My other friends in Miami Rob Weir and Wayne Hildreth have a vert ramp as well. That's a smaller vert ramp about 45 min away. My other friend Chris Guilfoose has a big nice ramp in Royal Palm Beach an hour and 20 min away. If I want to skate vert, I have to travel. The City of Miami needs a big public skatepark with bowls. Miami has nothing. It's a shame.
5.What you prefer street? or bowl?
As you can tell, I prefer vertical ramps, but I also like bowls as well and I get out and skate the streets once in awhile. Skating is skating, but something about being vertical always captivated me.
6.Your five sick tricks bro.
For me right now it's just staying healthy and riding with my friends that stoke me. That is the biggest trick in skateboarding. If you can land that, you are stoked.
7.Influences bro?
Mark Lake. He's 57 years old and he is still doing inverts and airs on vert ramps. He's stoked like a little kid every time he rides. He is the salt of the earth. Just a good dude who loves to ride and he is radical. He invented the back flip with a hand touch on a skateboard. It's a Miller Flip all in one motion completely upside down. In Florida we call it the Lake Flip.
8.You know some from skateboarding from Peru?
I've never been to Peru. I'd love to go. I don't know any riders from Peru. I've met Peruanos in Miami, but no skaters.
9.Future plans bro?
In mid June going to North Carolina to skate Brian Drake's ramp then to Phishlips Ramp in Maryland for Mikeapalooza which is a huge backyard ramp get together with food, live music, etc. Going with my friends Bob Umbel who is a former pro and super ripper who is almost 50 years old and a young Pedro Delfino. Be on the lookout for Pedro Delfino. He is a very talented up and coming rider who shreds everything. You will be seeing and hearing about him.
10.Last lines insane!
I'm grateful to be skating and have support from some of the best sponsors and friends on the planet. Creature, Gullwing, S-1 Helmet, Flypaper Grip, Skeleton Key MFG. Thanks for reaching out to me with the questions and I'd like to send some positive vibes to all the riders in Peru!! Stay healthy, stay strong and skate fast.
ALFREDO HAITO
ALEX PAUL
FERNANDO PEREZ
IGNACIO UGARTECHE
SUSANA CUETO