SPORTS
Roller skating becomes pandemicâs hottest trend
T
by Breanne Doyle
he hottest fads of 2020 seemed to revolve around throwback trends and simple pleasures: going to the drive-in, taking up a new instrument, picnics in the park, baking, and walks around the neighbourhood to keep you from going insane. But no trend was quite as cool as taking up the ultra-retro, athletically challenging pursuit of roller skating. Thousands of wobbly beginners took to their driveways and cul-de-sacs to take part in the sport, and we wanted to know why. We spoke to various skate clubs and business owners around the province to get their take on why roller skating blew up the way it did. Toilet paper, Lysol wipes, and baking supplies were maddeningly hard to get your hands during the pandemic. And as it turns out, so were roller skates. Jacqui Streber, the administrator on a British Columbia-based Facebook group made to buy and sell secondhand roller skates, said the groupâs numbers have increased massively in the past year. It currently has 1,700 members. âI was usually getting two to three requests a week, and now Iâm getting between five and seven requests to join the group a day,â Streber told the Straight. âWhich, you know, for our small little group is pretty impressive.â Itâs not just secondhand purchases that are through the roof. Lisa Suggitt owns RollerGirl Rollerskates, Vancouverâs only exclusive roller-skate equipment store, which has been low on stock for the past year and a half. âSales started to surge within weeks of COVID being declared a pandemic,â Suggitt said. âWe had good stock and were ready for the skating season to come, or so we thought.â Suggitt and her team have been working day and night to fulfill orders while constantly selling out of supplies and dealing with a national roller skate shortage. The shop turned to sourcing and im-
Carla âbootyquakeâ Smith cofounded the Rolla Skate Club, which has 500 online members, some of whom pay extra on their memberships to support BIPOC skaters. Photo by Breanne Doyle.
Sales started to surge within weeks of COVID being declared a pandemic. â retailer Lisa Suggitt
porting roller skates from the U.K., China, and Italy. But come 2021, there was an even higher demand for skatesâa demand that the supply chain still wasnât ready to handle, according to Suggitt. âWe ran out of stock in March 2021 and have been basically operating from one stock drop to another ever since,â she explained. âStock arrives, we process it, and it sells out immediately.â WHY IS IT SO POPULAR?
Carla Smith, cofounder of Rolla Skate Club in Vancouver, told the Straight she believes the athletic or physical benefits from skating were a huge draw for some new skaters.
Rolla Skate Club has a portable rental shop for Vancouver skaters. Photo by Breanne Doyle.
âItâs a joyful outlet for people to move their bodies, to improve or maintain their physical health by being active and doing something that challenges their body,â she said. âIt also provides an incredible mental releaseâand thatâs something that people have really needed.â According to her, another part of the appeal is the sense of escapism. âWhen youâre watching people roller-skate, the thing that jumps out, I think, is you feel their sense of joy and freedom. I think thatâs what has subconsciously drawn people to roller skating.â Besides the physical and mental benefits from roller skating, itâs also just fun, noted Suggitt from RollerGirl. âYou lace up your skates and all your worries and problems disappear,â she said. âYou focus on the present, the wind in your hair, the sun on your face, the feeling of speed. It is exhilarating and so much fun! âIt also doesnât hurt that roller skating has style,â she added. âIt looks good, and it makes you look good when you do it. This cool factor helped roller skating take off on social media.â DONâT CALL IT A COMEBACK
The sport, since its golden age dating back to the â30s, has gone through many phases 6
THE GEORGIA STR AIGHT
JULY 1 â 8 / 2021
of mainstream popularity. In the â40s and â50s, Vancouver had several rinks dedicated to roller skating, such as Skateland, Trianon Roller Rink, and the Centre Gardens Roller Bowl. From the â60s through the early 2000s, the disco-rockinâ Stardust Roller Rink was the place to go in several municipalities for roller-fanatics. Nearly two decades later, roller skating seems to be the cool thing to do once again. Considering the huge increase in popularity now, one might even consider calling this a âcomebackâ for the sport. But seasoned skaters argue thatâs unfair to say. âItâs become an important conversation in roller skating within the communityâ to not call roller skating as having a rebirth or a resurgence,â Smith said. âBecause thatâs only the case for white folks. âAt the beginning of the pandemic⌠there were some really popular TikTok videos of some white, Barbie doll-ish looking people with a lot of followers rollerskating,â Smith continued. âAnd there was a lot of backlash against the idea of rollerskating culture as being rebornâjust because white people âdiscoveredâ it again.â Alisa Luke, a founding member of the BIPOC roller skate club Bad Bounce agrees. âRoller skating has always been a part of Black culture,â Luke told the Straight. âRoller skating is representative of resilience and joy to the Black communityâŚ. Calling it a comeback diminishes the contributions Black people have made to this art form.â To encourage diversity and accessibility in its programs, Rolla Skate Club offers 85 percent subsidies to Black and Indigenous skaters in its instructor training program. It also has a âRollas Helping Rollasâ program in which its 500 online members can contribute a few extra dollars toward their monthly memberships to support skaters of colour or those facing financial need. Meanwhile, Bad Bounce, which is dedicated to advocating for and championing BIPOC skaters in Vancouver, was founded by Alisa Luke, Jessie Wilson, Mariana Menendez, and Katya Isichenko. In reaction to the civil rights movements of the past year and a half, the troupe knew there needed to be a skating space specifically for Black, Indigenous, and other people of colour. âWe were originally inspired to form after we had ventured out to dance [and] rec skate together and noticed how whitewashed the existing skate scene was here,â Luke said. âOur objective is to hold that safe space for folks who may have felt discouraged to enter such a white scene. In doing so, our hope is to open peopleâs eyes to the problems that are obvious to us yet are somehow invisible to so many. âAfter all,â Luke said. âThis is a stolen pastime, from stolen people, that we all enjoy on stolen lands.â g