Freestyle walking
The art of freestyle walking (loosely related to free running) is a means of self-expression and creative interaction with one's environment. Freestyle walkers use leaps and air moves, clever footwork, dance or any non-traditional walking movement. Today, many practitioners view it as the act of rollerblading or skateboarding without the skates or board. Some participants use soap shoes with grind plates that allow the freestyle walker to grind or slide easily along surfaces such as curbs, ledges and bars. With the increase in popularity of soap shoes during the mid- to late-1990s, many newcomers to freestyle walking mistakenly began to refer to the act of grinding using soap shoes as freestyle walking. The term "Freestyle Walking," itself was coined in 1996 on the television show MTV NEWS: UnFiltered by Brandon Kennedy, Tom Mottier and Brian White of Wheaton, IL.[1]
Moves
Basic examples of freestyle walking moves include:
- Broadsides
- Falls
- Fallbacks
- Sweetfalls - "also known as actually falling, but then jumping back up like nothing happened" [2]
- Flips
- Freak flips
- Grabs (airbound, often grabbing a part of the body such as the ankle or foot)
- Hangings
- Heelclicks
- Hops
- Jams
- Jangles
- Jukes
- Rolls
- Slides
- Rail slides (often sitting on a rail, or using shoes with grind plates)
- Spins
- Late spins
- Sick spins
- Slim spins
- Stalls
- Swings
- Taps
- Vaults
Named moves
- Brian Toshin' AKA Da Cockpit
- Craigy Special: Named for originator Craig Mycoskie [3]
- EthanFromes
- Injun (crossing the legs and making a two-fingered "war feather" gesture behind the head, in mid-air)
- Jefferies
- Mikey Likey
- Tree-hugger: hanging onto a tree (usually the trunk)
- Koala: A tree-hugger done hanging onto a branch, not the trunk[4]
- Winter Chills
- Daniel Tosh: back flipping over a little person
- Monty Python: front flipping over a shrubbery
- Johnny Appleseed: a tree-hugger done on an apple tree
- Hookiejuke: a backward juke
- Hookiejangle: a backward jangle
- Jay Leno: a jangle that touches your chin to the surface being jangled
- Flasher: a nude jangle
- Daddying: legs akimbo, leap into the air, juking with the left shoulder and repeatedly thrusting the pelvis while making sharp spanking motions with the right hand. 180 on the way down and repeat facing the other direction.
- B-Daddying: daddying done against another person's leg or buttocks
- The Ape-Thing: eat a banana as you sail threw the air
- Fluegelhorn: slide to the left, slide to the right and shimmy
- The Boner: kind of hard to explain
Related arts
Related art forms are extreme walking and trail rushing, similar in motivation but including additional elements. Extreme walking normally involves any element of danger, whereas the related art of trail rushing is essentially freestyle walking on a trail. Both of these (as well as soaping) are considered to be subsections of the larger concept of freestyle walking.
Some see a correlation between parkour and freestyle walking. Although the two contain seemingly similar movements, the art forms are driven by different motives. Parkour focuses on efficiency in movement; freestyle walking focuses on spontaneity and glory in movement. There is also a correlation between freestyle walking and free running: both focus on aesthetics over efficiency. However, free running is oriented towards a specific destination, and moving through an environment quickly. Freestyle walking has no intended path.
Another derivative of freestyle walking is freestyle coning, in which participants confine their "freestyling" to the area around a small traffic cone, often using the cone in the freestyle.
Equipment
The equipment needed for freestyle walking is nothing but an urban to sub-urban landscape and a person wanting to express themselves. To help with some of the more difficult moves, such as wall rides, a shoe may be made to give more grip while getting rid of some of the excess weight.
For grinding without inline skates or a skateboard, shoes with grind plates are frequently used.
In the media
Freestyle Walking is the subject of the recently funded documentary film "Lords of Soaptown," which chronicles the sport's history of the sport as well as that of Soap Shoes, featuring interviews with the sport's creators.[5]
See also
External links
- Freestylewalking.org
- This Is Footing Crew
- How to Freestyle Walk (blog)
- Quarantined Crew Freestyle Walking
- Photos
- Inverse Air
- YouTube video: Ministry of Silly Walks
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iG5WRpjQlew
- Freestyle Walking Club video #6
Notes
- ↑ "Freestyle Walking on MTV News Unfiltered".
- ↑ free swag runner
- ↑ FreestyleWalking.org Walker of the Week Craig Mycoskie
- ↑ Koala, as differentiated from a tree-hugger, can be seen at: How To Freestyle Walk
- ↑ "Lords of Soaptown Indiegogo page".