After spending a night stuck in a hotel room watching Fuel TV and the accompanying endless X Games promos, I have a better sense of what drives action sports industry’s popularity among mainstream America’s youth, particularly in contrast to what drives outdoors supposed lack of popularity among America’s youth:
- Sick tricks.
- Peer powered online community
- SoCal-centric
1. Sick Tricks
Skateboarding, freestyle moto-cross, surfing, BMX, snowboarding, wakeboarding in real life and as represented in TV coverage consist of successful or attempted sick tricks, one after another after another after another… sick tricks galore without pause.
In outdoor we have epic adventures of perseverance that are sick in their own right but are much better suited for books and long-form magazines than for TV, and who reads anymore? Old people.
2. Online Community
Go to Shredordie.com. Click around…
The pursuit of sick tricks builds community. Go to any skatepark and watch as the entire posse of punk-ass kids celebrates when one of their own completes their first 540 shove it. They then go to the home of whomever parents are at work and study the DVDs of their rock star athletes, then go back to the park to try and duplicate the tricks, film it and post it on ShredorDie.com. The community then comments, shares, disses…there is an ongoing conversation.
Outdoor pursuits are individualistic, introspective and take place in remote locations. The more remote the better. It’s very spiritual, lends itself nicely to poetry. And we all know who writes poetry…
3. SoCal-centric
Save for wakeboarding’s foothold in Florida, the entire action sports world is based out of SoCal: the manufacturers, athletes, media, events.. If outdoor is going to build a youth movement, we need to build it in SoCal, primarily because that’s where trends start in the U.S.
Outdoor’s base camp is Boulder, CO. Boulder is a really nice place, ask anyone that lives there. It’s also wealthy, white, and uber-liberal (not that there’s anything wrong with that)…Boulder is elitist. If we want to continue to reach out to affluent white people, Boulder is the perfect place from which to work.
We’re only kidding a little…
Outdoor is clearly different than action sports, and that’s the opportunity: Further developing and promoting a well-defined alternative to the action sports world.
The bottom line is if you want things to be different, you can’t do things the same. But what?
Some ideas next week about chasing cool, parents, climbing and more…?