Part of being a good rider is knowing how to utilize a spot. Part (most) of being a good video editor is knowing how to utilize a soundtrack. This is a great example. Edited by Oleg Lyubimov.
Category Archives: Video
Markit Zero: Christian Rigal and the Markit DVD
Hot on the heels of the Deadline video comes another highly anticipated release- Markit Zero.
Firstly, how long did you guys film for?
Well everyone was supposed to be done after a year and 9 months (June 1st), but Dennis was hurt for more then half the video (separated shoulder, dislocated the other one 3 times, broken femur, broken wrist, broken colar bone, and a broken foot), Geoff came on late and also got hurt towards the end, and I broke my foot. So that deadline didn’t really work out, haha. Filming ended up going into August (I was even filming last week, haha) and now its fully done in September. The day I finished the video was actually the same day we ended our first SLC trip two years ago somehow. Crazy coincidence.
What format/cameras did you use?
It’s all 720x60p, and it was shot on 2 HPX170’s, a 60d, a couple of clips from the dennis ghetto cam (HMC40), a HPX250 and a couple iPhone/Go Pro clips. There’s is also a standard def clip in Chad’s intro that’ll make sense when you see it, haha.
Who has full sections?
Everyone- Chad Kerley, Connor Lodes, Dennis Enarson, Mike Jonas, Geoff Slattery, Rob Wise, Ronnie Napolitan and myself.
Where did you guys travel to?
I think we did about 14 trips for this video, we hit both sides of CALIFORNIA as well as ARIZONA, UTAH, OREGON, NEW MEXICO, MASSACHUSETTS, PENNSYLVANIA, TEXAS, NEVADA, ILLINOIS, SPAIN, and Dennis an I managed to get some clips on random trips to JAPAN and RUSSIA.
How will the video be released?
Both DVD and iTunes. We’ll be selling hard copies at the Texas Toast world premiere in Austin and at our San Diego premiere on the 26th of October at the Mission Valley YMCA park. All of the shops and distros that put in orders will also be premiering/selling the video that weekend too. Then on November 1st it goes live on iTunes for purchase/digital download.
What’s the duration of the video?
It’s 1 hour and 3 mins long
Did you do 100% of the editing/authorizing?
I did all of the editing and Mike Jonas did the DVD authoring.
Who did the design work and how much work went into titles and graphics?
Our cover/menu art was done by Nick Sawyers, he did all of Hucker’s S&M frame graphics too, thats how we found him. We came up with some ideas, gave him some notes and he pretty much came up with everything else himself. We went back and fourth a couple of times until everyone was stoked, I think it all turned out rad.
As for the titles, I knew I wanted to do something a little different, but nothing over the top. So I hit up Kelly Bolton and he started working on some 3D titles for us. I sent him all the clips with the title placements and then he worked his magic with lighting the titles and creating some movements. I think it gave the video a nice touch.
How long did you spend editing?
Well I gave myself 2 months to finish it all, but between all the riding I was doing trying to finish my part and a couple of trips that came up it was done it about a month and a half.
Besides the injuries, any other setbacks?
Kinda, nothing too crazy though. One of my cameras slowly went out on us and a couple of clips look kinda crazy because of it. That happened on the same trip that someone dropped my tripod on too, so we took almost a month off from filming until I got a new camera and got the parts for my tripod.
Aside from that, I had to re edit a whole section because this band wanted and insane amount of money for a song. Finding a new song that we can clear/afford in 4 days was less then an easy task. So that whole ordeal pushed the end of the video back a week to the point where we had to rush the duplication for the hard copies.
Will you be releasing a trailer?
Yeah, but we’re just going to do a quick 60 second trailer to give you a little glimpse of the video, we’ve actually got a full 2 song leftovers promo that’s dropping next week. So because of that I think the short trailer will be perfect. This will also double as the trailer that the general public will see on iTunes if they’re browsing around or want to see what it’s all about.
How/when/where will it premiere?
Our main world premiere is at the Texas Toast contest in Austin Texas on October 19th. It’s going to be all ages at Shakespeare’s bar and well be selling hard copies as well.
Then our other main premiere will be in San Diego October 26th at the Mission Valley YMCA. We’re doing a jam at the park, giving a bunch of free stuff out, selling products, premiering the video and then selling it as well.
Aside from that all of our distros and shops will be hosting premieres as well the same weekend, with copies available for sale at all of them.
Glitch and Switch: The Deadline Video Review
It seems pretty futile to write a review for the Deadline video; you already know it’s fucking ridiculous and you’ve already made up your mind to buy it, or at least see it. I guess this is more of a warning as to what is in store for you, and for BMX as an ever-progressing activity.
Long story short- It’s worth the wait. Filming could have continued into next year and it would still be worth that wait. And I’m pretty confident that had that happened, there still would be little to no issues with clips being stolen or outdated. Director and editor Tony Ennis said the only thing he wishes he could change about it would be to have filmed for it longer (Filming began nearly seven years ago). The actual deadline of the video he attributes to Steve Croteau, who organized the premieres, in effect pulling the plug on filming, just a day before the first showing in LA. With a fair share of injuries (Broken collarbone for Garrett, jacked wrist for Ty, Colin’s elbow and JJ’s back) and some hardware malfunctions (Ty’s first clip), production of the video was anything but trouble-free. You can see Tony holding the eyepiece to his VX in some shots as if it’s about to fall off.
The cameras used (VX1000, VX2000, VX2100, HMC-150 and a 7D) were plagued with issues. “It got pretty bad- we still used cameras knowing they were gonna glitch but it’s what we had… Since the footage was glitchy we just kinda of used it as a theme for the video.” Strategically placed static-y Deadline graphics are used as fillers and segues. Every section has an intro that depicts the rider’s personality or certain skills, such as whistling or starting fights. Second and sometimes third angles are implemented and totally rational. We all know that some setups require more than one camera, and luckily most of the crew are proficient filmers. The video is heavy on ramped slow-mo, but for good reason. If you blink for too long you’d probably miss a barspin or two.
Originally Tony and the crew wanted the video to be available on iTunes for easier worldwide access, but music clearance became a substantial problem, getting quoted at $100,000 for Garrett’s last song alone (Pink Floyd). “Most of the hold up on the video was due to the soundtrack but we are happy with it. I just hope everyone around the world can see the video since its only coming out on DVD at the moment.”
The crew traveled expansively- from their home base in San Diego, they visited the East Coast numerous times, hit locations in the Midwest and flew to Barcelona twice. Some clips are from Colorado, Miami, Arizona and Las Vegas. A couple clips were filmed in China and Russia. More localized travels included San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Jose. “We were going up to LA every weekend at the end of the video so I can’t say how many trips exactly.”
I’ve watched Deadline probably 20 times since receiving an advance copy at the Brooklyn premiere earlier this month, and each viewing yields a newfound excitement and respect for the video.
The intro is a montage and is full of humorous wordplay, with lyrics synced to shots. I was not expecting the video to be funny, really, at all. I was delightfully relieved that amongst the seriousness of the riding, clever and lighthearted editing keeps spirits higher. The song will get stuck in your head for a few days probably. I’ll put it this way; If the intro were a web video, it would be the web video of the year- hands down.
Ty‘s intro portrays him as somewhat of a madman- laughing maniacally at the tops of rails, punching himself in the head and squawking loudly like a caged eagle. His first line has to be one of the heaviest filmed, ever. The least expected component of Ty’s part, for me, would definitely be the fastplants. There are a couple, one of which, to wallride 180, could not have been done with better style. Newer clips see Ty riding a freecoaster and doing it expertly; The second of two clips on Leslie ledge had me shitting. Earlier on in his part he drops a super clean fakie tooth 180 out. I’m not usually a fan of 540’s but the ramped slow-mo railhop 5 challenged my mind. His last couple clips follow a general rule of “spin to win” off rails, out ledges, hard way over out of uprails. His last clip is huge. You can’t bail out of something like that. Literally eight minutes later, it’s all over and you can’t remember what just happened. And that’s just the first section.
SteveO follows with an introduction filled with weed smoke, manned second angles and general pedestrian bullying. His song could not have been chosen better to fit his attitude and flow (Steve credits Chris Marshall for blasting it in heavy traffic). No 60/40 setup is safe from his ambidextrous skills. I was pleasantly surprised by a freecoaster fullcab clip out of some rail/ledge combo move. He hits a rail with two lesser-done (possibly never) moves at the end of his section. Ender is crazy and almost disastrous.
Augie‘s part was definitely the most surprising. Riding with such a crew must do something to a man, mentally, pushing you to try more and more ridiculous things. I still don’t know which side is his natural grind, because he does ludicrous shit on both sides. Some of the crashes gave me a third-hand headache (secondhand would be seeing it in person, third-hand is watching it in video). His song fits the riding very well. Superman railhop. He is arguably the king of the over-tooth grind (opposite and regular). This one over-L to opposite hanger should win an award- you’ll know which one I’m talking about. His ender is craaaazzzzyyyyyy, and the security guard that was trying to kick them out wanted him to do it again. No fucking chance.
The following montage leading into the friends section is genius. It follows a loose storyline and concludes with probably the funniest clip you could ever get out of a police officer. Some highlights of the friends section include Tammy‘s opening gap to wallride, a crazy halfcab from Miles Rogoish, a wild hanger from Tony Neyer, Lil Jon doing a gap to ledge where he barely even touches the ledge, Dennis Enarson mastery, Bruno Hoffman grind technology and Josh Harrington closing out the section with an NBD on El Toro. Totally fucked.
JJ‘s part I am most psyched on. There are two clips involving fakie wallrides that made me want to leave the premiere immediately and go ride. Unprecedented stuff. Then right after the second fakie wall clip, he mistakes an uprail for a dirt jump and clicks a beauty of a maneuver. He’s possibly the ruler of the hard 180 to grind. Everyone at the venue was severely excited about this one clip- it’s so hard to describe but it’s something like a 180 tooth 180 to opposite smith. His icepick game is impeccable- second to last clip is so dialed. His last clip is as amazing as it is funny. Note the leg technique.
Colin Varanyak shoots large caliber rifles in his intro, a perfect analogy for his riding I think- very aggressive and explosive. I believe he has the shortest part in the video, but it’s still over two and a half minutes long. Within that time he manages to do a few incredible moves, including a wallride to crook and a nollie opposite ice down a rail. My friend says that had his up-railride gap to wallride been the only clip in the entire video, he would have been satisfied. Colin scored my favorite clip in the video- a 180 backwards ice 180 manual 180 out. So smooth and fluid. His second to last clip could have been deadly. His ender is just ridiculous. Perfectly executed on a perfect setup for this trick.
Kevin Kiraly‘s part dumbfounded me, mostly because I totally forgot he was in the crew. I don’t know how that happens, but his section is wildly original. In the title of this review, the “switch” that I mention is due mostly to Kevin’s section. I can’t name many riders doing the scope of tricks he does in an opposite or switch-footed manner. His song is classic and fits his style to a tee. His hair and wardrobe game is on point throughout. Ender would have been prime had it been regular footed, but he does it switch footed and frankly he does it so smoothly that it doesn’t even look difficult. There was little to no struggle.
Garrett‘s part… I dont’ know what to say about it. There are legitimately three songs and not one of them are any sort of chilling or b-roll section. It’s pretty much straight hammers all the way through. I guess you could say the last song is all NBD tricks. His first song is filled with bangers. His second song wins NORA. His third song changes BMX forever. I can’t even start to detail some of the tricks, but imaging playing a BMX video game and just hitting every button at once. Everyone’s jaws were on the floor for the entire duration of his part(s). I laughed, I cried, I nearly shit myself. Your results will probably be similar.
Let’s talk about some of the clips in the credits. Colin starts a line with a truck down D7 (a large, large 7 stair in NYC, Dillon Lloyd trucked it a few years ago, but this is some next level shit) and proceeds to try something even crazier directly afterwards. Garrett lands a backwards rail halfcab whip out. I guess it’s a little sketchy, but anyone in their right mind would have definitely used it in their part. (There is something even crazier than his ender in the bonus reel, but he chose not to include it in his section because it was purely accidental.) Some clips that were slow-motion in the video are played real-time in the credits and take on a new life.
The bonus reel is lengthy but worth at least one watch. There are some crazy clips that didn’t get used in the video and some gruesome crashes that you probably don’t want to see (Colin’s elbow-breaking crash is burned into my mind).
DVD’s should be available next week, but we all know what that means with these guys. They’re probably at some schoolyard in Cali right now filming some bonus-bonus material.
Get psyched, because what you’re about to see will change the way BMX is ridden.
Behind the Chocolate Truck DVD with Matt Miller
To coincide with the video review I just posted, here’s a couple Q’s & A’s with the man behind the lens and monitor but also with one of the standout parts of the video, Matt Miller.
Alright, so what’s up with the name “Chocolate Truck”?
“It has really no significant meaning. Probably 5 or 6 years ago we wanted to come up with a name for our video, and we were all trying to think of serious names or something and Carl was just saying the dumbest names, and Chocolate Truck was one of them. I think it stuck for the sole reason that theres no stupid meaning or anything behind it, it was just completely random. Then i just got some basic stickers made and it went from there. People are pretty disappointed whenever we explain the name haha.”
How long did you guys film for this video?
“We filmed for this for about 5 or 6 years, pretty much the entire time I was in college. Most of the footage we used in the video is from the last two years but Kevin has stuff in there from when he was 15. Carl’s footage is from a long timespan as well.”
What cameras were used and who did the filming?
“The video was filmed with a VX2100 and a VX2000, with some random DVX footage in the mix. I did a majority of the filming but NickyB and Steve Tassone helped me film my part.”
How long did you spend on editing? What software did you use?
“I use Final Cut Pro 7 and it took me around 7 or 8 months to edit everything. Im really unorganized so I spent alot of time relabeling shit and finding lost footage. Its hard for me to sit down and just bang everything out at once so I would just edit for a couple weeks and then wouldn’t touch it again for a month or two sometimes.”
Did you guys travel much?
“Not much at all. Its hard to organize trips cause the crew is so big and we all had jobs or school shit to handle. We went to Boston and Baltimore for some weekend trips, but the video was filmed mostly in Philly which is what we wanted anyway. Hopefully we can travel a lot more for the next one.”
Who chose the soundtrack?
“The soundtrack was a collaboration between everyone. Some dudes picked their own songs or I would throw them ideas until something stuck. Certain people like Joby would always put their song on when we were in the car or just hanging out, so when it came time to pick music, those songs just made the most sense to use. Navaz found Brendon’s song for me too. Both of Kev’s original choices got used in web edits, so we had to change them last minute. I think a lot of people who make videos really want to use music that is relatively unheard of, but I didn’t really care too much about that. I just wanted everyone’s part to fit their personality and I wanted to make sure the video wasn’t too serious or anything.”
What is your favorite clip, or is there any clip that has a great story behind it?
“One of my favorites is Carl’s uprail to fence stall. We all told him to try it and he ate shit the first two times and then just did it perfect his next try. His reaction is pretty funny he looks so surprised that he landed it and everyone is laughing in the background. Brendon’s last two clips were filmed 30 minutes apart. We were driving to the kink rail and we saw this other rail and stopped there first so Brendon could fire it out real quick. Nicks infamous Polejam fall is one of my favorites and the Dog Shit bitch in the extras always makes me laugh. We tried to submit it to Worldstar but i guess they weren’t feeling it haha.
I think everyone has some really stand out clips in their part so its hard to name them all. Pretty much every clip I used in the Intro and Credits are my favorite as well because there just funny to watch and it gets me siked to ride with everyone.”
Which part was easiest to edit? Which part was hardest to edit?
“The easiest part to edit was probably my own. Its easier to edit something when your the only one who really cares how it comes out. When you edit someonelse’s stuff, you have to make sure they are happy with it too. A couple times I would be really siked on a part, and would show it to them all hyped and they would hate it haha. The hardest part to edit was probably Brendon’s. It was originally edited to a pretty weird song that was kind of out there but we all really liked it. But the more and more you watch something that can change pretty quickly haha. When we changed the song it was hard for me to start over from scratch and come up with a new idea of how the part should look since i had the original one stuck in my head. But Im really happy with how it came out and I think it’s his best video part yet.”
Any problems/injuries/setbacks?
“Me and Brendon both broke our ankles, NickyB broke his nose and John Yoh is always getting hurt. The most serious one was Kev. He compound fractured his leg in Baltimore a year and a half ago which ended filming for him. He still had enough footage for a full section though. Aside from that a lot of people who we planned on having full parts ended up quitting. Things moved pretty slow for the first couple of years. Once a bunch of us got a house together it made filming and organizing everything a lot easier so the last two years is pretty much when we got motivated and filmed the entire video. At one point though, our house got robbed and my computer and primary hard drive were stolen. I had to spend a lot of time re logging all the tapes from 4 years prior which sucked. I even had to make John Yoh nose manual the spring garden fountain twice cause that clip was lost completely haha.”
Who shot the photos in the menu/on the DVD?
“I shot all the photos and Jay Dyer at Animal did the template layout for me. I have an old Canon AE-1 that I bring out sometimes and I like messing around with disposable cameras.”
Did you ever find it difficult to balance riding time and filming time?
“Yeah for me it is really hard. I enjoy filming a lot and making videos but I would always rather be riding. Riding in Philly there are so many little spots to hit when your cruising, and having a big ass camera on your back takes the fun out of it for me. It sucks cause some days I just wont bring the camera out because I want to ride, but those always end up being the days when everyone kills it haha. I give credit to anybody who rides and films it takes a lot of patience.”
Will there be another Chocolate Truck full-length DVD?
“Yeah, eventually. Most of us want to work on some short term projects for a quick change and do a little bit of web stuff since we never really have. But we haven’t stopped filming since we finished the video. Everyone is pretty eager to keep filming, so hopefully this next one doesn’t take as long as the first did haha.
I want to thank everyone for filming for this video and for all the good times. Thanks to Navaz, Bob and Darryl for answering all of my questions. Jay Dyer for doing the artwork and Schimpf and Marshall for shooting photos. Kink, Animal and ODI for keeping my bike nice. Word, ALYK, Hood Antics, LFS, SAF, AM:PM, 90East, SharkAttack and all the other crews out there making their own videos. Thanks to all our friends and family and thanks to everyone who supports us. Follow us on instagram @chocolatetruck.”
Pick up the DVD here. Seven bucks shipped- you can’t go wrong.
Pure Fix in the City
Get yourself some stylin’ wheels from Pure Fix!
VX1000 Filming Tips with Beagle
“With these little secrets, you can make your footage look golden.”
A very entertaining watch, even if you aren’t a filmer. Very unconventional techniques, but he gets results.
















