Daily Bread Write Up on Magsampler.com

quoting Daily Bread Magazine :
We recently found this through a random Google search and thought everyone would appreciate reading a review of the magazine by an non-blader.
Friday, December 23
Street rollerblading is a culture even more than a sporting activity, according to Daily Bread Inline Skate Magazine, today’s newbie in the MagSampler.com catalogue. It’s not an activity/culture that I know anything about, so I have to rely on Daily Bread, which has been around since 1993, for a take on what’s happening.
While we in the New York area have been seeing rollerblading on the six o’clock news as a novel way to commute in the absence of subways and buses, the major use of rollerblades by the young men who are subjects and fans of the magazine seems to be descending rather steep outdoor stairways via their railings, with serious physical penalties to be paid for leaving those railings too early.
From the articles in the November 2005 issue titled “The Anger Issue” it’s obvious that rollerblading, at least in terms of media coverage, has been in serious decline in recent years.
There’s an illuminating interview on the subject with Mark Shays, founder and president of an organization called ASA Events (its original name was the Aggressive Skaters Association). He recalls how ASA was founded in 1994 to promote rollerblading, aided financially by the makers of skates and ancillary equipment. Through the rest of the decade it created all sorts of rollerblading events and bargained successfully with the likes of ESPN to get them on television.
But by 2001 ASA saw the handwriting on the wall and diversified to skateboarding and BMX racing, for which the cable sports networks still have a voracious appetite. Though Shays continues to work to include inline rollerblading stunts in his organization’s shows, he admits it hurts: “It is impossible to calculate just how many dollars have been lost due to our insistence on keeping rollerblading involved.” Shays blames the media’s loss of interest in rollerblading on factors such as resentment from skateboarders to inline skating’s meteoric but brief rise and, perhaps more tellingly, “many of the top [rollerblading] guys who used to go to the first multi-sport events acted like immature kids and the other sports’ top pros began to stereotype all skaters as punks who never had to pay their dues.”
The issue also has a somewhat bitter interview with rollerblading pro Eric Schrijn, who at 25 is considered one of the grand old men of the sport (he’s the guy pictured on the cover). Asked what he wants out of skating, he replies: “I guess I already got it; I’m an icon in this sport, I’m healthy, I’ve got some good homeboys, but I would like to actually be a part of this movement with mainstream TV and magazines That’s what I want from skating, for this shit to get respect and blow up, so we can get paid respectably. I make $600.00 a month from skatingit sucksit feels like we are starving artists. Daily Bread, published in San Diego, features lots of pictures of guys caught in the act of going down those frightening stairways all over the country.
The magazine also uses extremely small type, so rollerblading, like carrots, must be good for the eyesight. Daily Bread is a wee bit defensive about the diminishing popularity of the rollerblading lifestyle and culture. From editor Justin Eisinger’s opening editorial: “People everywhere fail to see the value of rollerbladers, at least here in America; which is the most f**ked up part of all If you quit skating because someone told you it wasn’t cool, f**k you. If you quit skating because you got a girlfriend, or went to school, or got a job or blah, blah, blahF**K YOU.” After all, it is the Anger Issue. Surprisingly, the ** are theirs, not ours.
An annual subscription (12 issues) to Daily Bread Inline Skate Magazine is $21.95 from the publishers, and they’ll throw in a “get blades” shirt; you can get a sample copy from us for $2.59 (no shirt). -
Magsampler.com, December 2005
Daily Bread Magazine : dbmag.com
Tags: daily bread






April 29th, 2006 at 2:45 pm
w00t w00t
April 29th, 2006 at 2:55 pm
i hate hearing outside people’s opinions on rollerblading, i dont think anyone can understand it until they’ve actually tried it for a while
if i was reading that review from the perspective of a person who had never heard of rollerblading either, I’d think, “wow, those guys need a life”
there is not a single other rollerblader in my college, and a few of my friends have seen me skating, and they jus think its immature
for me, rollerblading is more about the culture, the friends you make, the experiences you have, the travelling etc. I usually jus keep rollerblading quiet when people ask me what I do, me trying to explain it would give it no justice at all
peace.
April 29th, 2006 at 4:04 pm
No its good to see these things coming out that are positive.
April 29th, 2006 at 5:17 pm
DB rocksssssss
April 30th, 2006 at 12:04 am
“seems to be descending rather steep outdoor stairways via their railings, with serious physical penalties to be paid for leaving those railings too early”
Haha priceless
April 30th, 2006 at 3:27 pm
haha yeah it may see cheesy the things they say about rollerblading, but its good exposure and they use direct quotes from DB, which is very very good in getting our voices heard, am i right?
April 27th, 2008 at 11:40 am
Here no one rollerblades they all skateboard,which personally is pretty lame i mean you can’t go fast or anything.(well you can but at a price…)Me and my can out roll most bikes and they care about dinky little peices of wood…tch…