EP 137Chatter Marks EP 137 Impact Through Wonder with Fillip Studios
Tom Kortbeek and Roos Meerman are the founders of Fillip Studios, a Netherlands-based interdisciplinary design studio whose work sits at the intersect...
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“A lot of thoughts enter my head when I return to Tailgate and Alaska. For one, it’s an opportunity to get back to my roots and see the people I grew up with. It’s a place for those who deserve to play and progress.
In one week we rode heli lines accessed by our sled, had that same sled break down, towed it past old avalanches, and had our friends make sure we still got our runs in.
What Mark Sullivan and Tailgate Alaska are doing for snowboarding is on the level of Jeremy Jones’ TGR trilogy, as far as big mountain backcountry progression is concerned. Whereas the film series inspires, Tailgate gives permission, opens the front door, and leaves you begging for more. That’s the beauty of coming home to Alaska. We live for this place and it shows in every turn we make. To share it with those who dare is icing on the cake.”
— Dustin Huebner
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Tailgate Alaska founder Mark Sullivan and Crude contributor Dustin Huebner
Well, I started Snowboard Magazine and then I sold it to Storm Mountain Publishing and I decided that, after I sold it, I had some money and I was going to take the best snowboarding vacation that I could imagine. So, I came to Valdez because I thought it was the best place on the planet I’ve ever been anyway. I had a vacation with a buddy of mine, it was just me and him and all of these pros like Jussi Oksanen and Andreas Wiig and Bjorn Leines and the whole Mack Dawg crew. It was basically me and my buddy and them hanging out in this parking lot right there (points to Tailgate parking lot). It was such a phenomenal experience that, on the drive home, I thought “man, I gotta figure out a way to share this with more people.“ And that’s what became Tailgate, I guess. That idea is what lead to Tailgate. That’s how it began. That was in 2007-2008. That was the first Tailgate Alaska.
Not in the planning or the idea of it. He was the host of the event for a few years. His job was to shake hands and kiss babies. And he’s really good at that, honestly. I would say the idea really came from the personal experience I had. I had been [to Valdez] before. I competed in the King of the Hill, the original one in the 90s. So I knew how good an [event like that could be]. I was really more affected by the riding than the contest, you know. The contest was cool, but I didn’t need to prove myself to anybody. I was here to write a story for a magazine. That’s how I got here actually. Same way as you.
I think there’s enough room here, even with the amount of people we have. I don’t think it should get any bigger really. I think it’s about the right size. I would say this is about as close to tracked as I’ve ever seen it. We just had like 10 days in a row of bluebird conditions. So, that’s about the right amount of people. As far as being an individual here goes, I think there’s room to be an individual and that’s what I think everyone finds here: their own line. You don’t need to share your tracks. Even with 500 people hanging around for 10 days you still can find your own line. And you can still be an individual, as a rider. Or just don’t come [to Valdez] during Tailgate (laughs). [Valdez] is always here. We just come for 10 days. I think the naysayers would actually be stoked because it’s kind of like one of those bug zappers, it just draws these people in for 10 days and come Monday, you can have it to yourself again.
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Yea, my goal is to have a good time. And I know it’s going to be a good time. Once you get in these mountains, the experience is real. My goal is that everyone goes home a little bit smarter and that they learned something about snow science, about how to stay safe out there, relationships with people, or whatever. Right? There’s a lot of interesting experiences people have out here.
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I thought about it. But this is the spot, right here. Look at the access you got right here (points to mountains on either side). Look, uphill, [it’s] uphill in every direction. Unlimited access. You don’t have that in Haines. Unless you’re on some crazy, sponsorship budget you can’t afford to actually access the mountains. Like, I run this shit and I can’t afford the helis (laughs).
Oh yea man. I love sledding. For years I sledded just [to get access to] snowboarding and now I’ve come to enjoy the sledding in and of itself.
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I don’t remember that, but it’s entirely possible that I took part in it. There was a lot of shenanigans. So, Borgstede, I’m calling you out: you should show up next year because I want to hang out with you. That’s what’s up.
Interview questions written by Cody Liska and conducted by Dustin Huebner. Stacey Alonzo and Dustin were behind the camera lens.
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