If Cities Could Dance
How Black Roller Skaters Carry Forward LA's Iconic Scene
Season 4 Episode 3 | 6m 33sVideo has Audio Description
LA Black skaters push the culture forward amidst a pandemic and economic downturn.
In LA, jam skaters draw from a community and culture built over generations at Venice Beach and at rinks across the city. Over the past year, roller skating hit the mainstream as a safe and relatively accessible pandemic-era pastime. Skates were sold out for months, and skaters became major influencers on Instagram and TikTok. But longtime skaters are quick to remind everyone: This isn’t a fad.
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If Cities Could Dance is a local public television program presented by KQED
If Cities Could Dance
How Black Roller Skaters Carry Forward LA's Iconic Scene
Season 4 Episode 3 | 6m 33sVideo has Audio Description
In LA, jam skaters draw from a community and culture built over generations at Venice Beach and at rinks across the city. Over the past year, roller skating hit the mainstream as a safe and relatively accessible pandemic-era pastime. Skates were sold out for months, and skaters became major influencers on Instagram and TikTok. But longtime skaters are quick to remind everyone: This isn’t a fad.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADProblems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipHi, I'm Alicia Reason, here in Los Angeles, the roller skating capital of the world, with "If Cities Could Dance."
Let's keep rolling!
(chilled out stylish trance music) Roller skating to me is a chance to freely express myself without any distractions from the outside world.
It's the truest form of me.
- [Kamry] It gives us a freedom to do what we want and gain a sense of artistic liberation.
And we have to acknowledge the history and the power that comes with roller skating.
(chilled out stylish trance music) - [Raquel] This is nothing new.
This is our culture.
This is our lifestyle, passed down in generations.
(Funky upbeat percussion music) (R&B soulful music) - [Alicia] The vibes in Venice are just very creative.
L.A. is a land of opportunity.
You just never know who's watching.
People come from all over the world.
They see these YouTube videos, shows on TV or whatever.
(R&B soulful music) - [Kamry] I haven't been around in the skate community as long as a lot of other skaters have.
But to me jam skating is you have more freedom to express yourself.
There's not that many rules when it comes to jam skating.
It's just jammin', you know?
I got more into roller skating when I lived in Seattle.
There wasn't a ton of Black people, so when I moved to L.A. two years ago that's when I really started dabbling in it.
I started Sista Skate during a time of racial reconciliation.
I realized that there needed to be not only a safe space for Black and Brown women to learn roller skating but also to thrive in the field of roller skating.
We need to have a place where we can shine light on all the talent that's happening around us.
(R&B with intoxicating synth music) - [Alicia] I grew up skating, so I started when I was eight years old at Detroit Roller Rink.
The most dancing they would do on skates is like ballroom hustle.
I moved out to California.
I saw that there was a community at Venice Beach for skating.
And then when I saw them infusing dancing and skating, this is my world right here.
(R&B lofi smooth music) I have to give it up for the OGs.
They brought essentially break dancing on skates.
People would really crowd around them and were just really fan boy and fan girling around them, allowing for them to freely express themselves.
They were just like one of a kind.
(R&B lofi smooth music) Generation after generation just comes in and learns from them.
They've just set the tone.
(Hiphop with 80's synth music) Mar Vista, the reason why we're skating there is because our floor at Venice is currently under construction.
It has become well known because of Instagram's postings and all of that.
It's like the staple right now for pandemic skating.
(Hiphop with 80's synth music) (Contemporary R&B Hiphop music) - [Raquel] In a skating rink, it's a huge difference.
(laughs) The wood floors, it's just a whole different vibe.
It's more like family oriented.
It's more like a tight knit community.
We do a lot of trios, the circle, like the unity roll.
It started with my grandmother, just went down generations, my immediate family and my four kids.
I started them at three.
Three sounds early, but that's not even that early.
My cousin, her baby is a year, and she's in skates.
(Laid back and groovy funk music) We're known for like sliding.
We are like really international.
We pick up a lot of different moves from all over.
The DJs are very important.
You just need that certain sound, that certain beat.
(Laid back and groovy funk music) Skate Depot was my home rink.
They closed in 2014.
That's where I grew up.
They tore everything down.
You wouldn't even recognize it.
World on Wheels is a legendary landmark in California.
My cousin Nip was able to help reopen the establishment, but during this pandemic they couldn't make it.
I was kind of losing it.
I was skating inside the house, and I need to do something.
That's when I created my Roxy's Backyard Boogie.
I invited small businesses also to come out and showcase their work.
I turned that negative into a positive by creating this Boogie and bringing all genres of skaters together.
- [Kamry] Even though the pandemic has been horrible, roller skating now encourages us to take up any space.
Roller skating is resistance, because it's creating joy and peace.
As long as we have like our wheels, we still feel like a sense of strength and empowerment.
- [Alicia] Thanks for watching, everyone.
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If Cities Could Dance is a local public television program presented by KQED
