Talk:Roller skating
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Artistic Skating not even mentioned?
[edit]There is a huge, international community of artistic competitive roller skaters, who have the same competitive skating events that ice skaters have. These roller skaters skate figures, free-style, pairs, dance, and free dance, and even dress in similar competition outfits. They hold Nationals and World's competitions, and they are in the Pan American Games. Since this group of athletes has been active for around a century, you may assume that this information would fit into any quad-skating category you may provide; however, I think it's big enough to warrant a category of its own. This very important segment of the skating world has been completely ignored in the article, although links to some of their organizations are provided. http://usarollersports.org/ Indeed, a disproportionate amount of space has been given to in-line skating considering how recently it came into existence, and particularly in view of the exclusion of artistic roller skating. --Catwoman07076 11:48, 2 September 2007 (UTC)
Polyurethane
[edit]There is no mention of wheel materials in the article, the use of polyurethane surely being a highly significant development in the history of skating. Perhaps a knowledgeable contributor could rectify this. Spiridens 06:50, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
- I added a section in the alternatives about Polyurethane wheels. It still needs its own section but it is at least mentioned now.--Ovxt (talk) 21:22, 17 April 2021 (UTC)
Removed Section In Agressive Skating
[edit]It read like an advertisement for a particular brand of skate. Completely irreverent, didn't fit the context of the section. It's gone now. 24.247.219.140 12:30, 2 July 2006 (UTC) C.M.
Rollerblade
[edit]Rollerblade should say something about the company rather than simply redirect to roller skating. Many people (including large business and govts making warning signs) use the term "Rollerblade" when they mean something more general. Tom Brown 10:31, 19 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Agreed
Never used the Talk option before, so my apologies if this is not in proper form.
I agree that "Rollerblade" should talk about the company as well as link to this page.
I also think we should add some content in there such as skate maintenance, a list of skate companies (like K2, Rollerblade, etc), a more detailed history of skating, a more detailed page on aggressive/street skating (my specialty), and links to other useful content like "skate wheels" and "skate bearings".
Ofcourse, I'm very new to Wikipedia, so I have no idea how to do any of that - but I've been rollerblading for well over a decade, so I can provide as much content as necessary to make it happen.
--Miketwo 01:57, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC)
I changed rollerblade and added comments to Talk: aggressive skating. I'm new to Wikipedia too but have worked with Wiki's before. Just make changes. Adding info about wheels and bearings sounds like a good idea though I'm not sure how to organize overlap vs disjoint info between inline and skateboarding. For example, cleaning bearings and existance of youth cultures are similar, but many differences exist. (Miketwo, have you been rollerblading or inline skating for >10yrs? :-P) Tom Brown 05:09, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Redirects and Organization
[edit]I really think who ever put this page together and all these redirects together has no idea what they are talking about. Inline skating and rollerskating are two completely different activities. Within inline skating alone there are many completely unrelated categories that deserve their own pages or articles. Providing links to each other would be reasonable, but to lump it all together like this just proves who ever wrote this has no clue. If it were up to me I would completely delete all of the current pages and start from scratch.
- Alan Hughes
Tom, while I can understand Rollerblade's desire to not have their trademark violated, and your desire to educate people that the use of rollerblade (rollerblading, blading, bladers, etc..) is technically wrong, I think we should write this encyclopedia with the audience in mind. If it's a frequent misuse of the word, then you know "someone" is going to come into Wikipedia, type "rollerblading" in the search engine, and be very confused if they don't get the inline skating page (and instead get something on the Rollerblade company).
So I propose this kind of massive re-organization:
Have single general "Roller Skating" page, with subsections "History", "Quad Skating", and "Inline Skating" (plus others, but that's later on). Then set up the redirects and links as follows:
(note: when i use a "/s" or "/ing", I mean the plural and the gerund - eg. skate/s/ing = skate and skates and skating)
The search/linked words --> destination
skate/s/ing --> disambuguity page
inline skate/s/ing, blading (but not blades!) --> "Roller Skating#Inline Skating"
rollerblading--> Roller Skating#Inline Skating, but with boilerplate text at top describing TM misuse
rollerblade/s--> disambuguition link to Inline Skating at top. content describing the company and trademark (mis)use
roller skate/s/ing --> "Roller Skating"
quad skate/s/ing --> "Roller Skating#Quad Skating"
Also, the current "Roller Skate" page should be incorported into "Roller Skating", or should at least be confined to talking only about the details of the quad skates themselves (i.e. no history of skating). We are duplicating effort here by having two well-written histories of skating, when it could all be on one good page.
Finally, on the "Blades (disambiguation)" page, we should put a link such as "Blades is slang for rollerblades"
I know it's "incorrect" to use the term rollerblading in that way, but let's get the end user to the page they want to see (roller skating#inline skating) and THEN, on that page, educate them about the misuse of the word rollerblade.
It's a fairly large proposed re-org, which is why I want to bring it up on the talk page first. I want to iron out the organization in here and then do it. Please feel free to add/change my search --> destination chart above. Once we all seem to agree on a good organization, we can start moving things around and altering redirects. Soon we'll have the best roller skating article ever!!! We will be featured in Wikipedia's brilliant prose, and will be the envy of generations to come.
Maybe.
--Miketwo 16:11, Apr 27, 2005 (UTC)
- I agree that people searching for rollerblade/s/ing likely want inline skating but do not think we should promote TM abuse by automatically forwarding to inline skating (even if it includes info about the incorrect use of the TM). People searching for rollerblade/s/ing should be clearly told about the TM. I don't think more than a 5-7 words about the misuse of the word rollerblade belongs on roller skating#inline skating, a detailed discussion is appropriate at Rollerblade or RB (??).
- We seem to be making a similar choice as between 2 and 3 at Disambiguation#Types_of_disambiguation with the rollerblading redirect. I have made a larger link at Rollerblade, but perhaps you would rather make it a strict disambiguation page and move detailed talk of the TM and company to one of Rollerblade (trademark) or Rollerblade (company).
- I changed the layout in your chart, but would also be happy with any option described in my paragraph above.
- Tom Brown 16:58, 27 Apr 2005 (UTC)
- Ok, I disagree that we'd be "promoting" TM abuse (because the term is already so widespread), but how about a compromise. On the disambiguation page you cited (great link btw!), I found this part: which says
- "Do not disambiguate, or add a link to a disambiguation page, if there is no risk of confusion. Ask yourself: When a reader enters this term and pushes "Go", would they expect to view any of the articles listed on the disambiguation page?"
- So if we take that as a starting point, we end up with this:
- Rollerblading means the user almost definitely wants inline skating, so we should send them there.
- Rollerblade and rollerblades can equally mean the company/product or the type ("inline skates"). I propose that we make the company the "primary topic" in this case, meaning that (as you have suggested above) we have a "disambuguition link to Inline Skating at top. content describing the company and trademark (mis)use".
- Finally, in both articles, at the top, we can have some common boilerplate text saying something like "use of the word rollerblade to mean inline skating is discouraged because it's a form of Trademark Dilution".
- I've updated the little chart above as well. But how's that sound to you?
- --Miketwo 18:11, Apr 27, 2005 (UTC)
- Sounds reasonable to me. Technically the company says use "TRADEMARKS ARE NEVER VERBS. WRONG: rollerblading. RIGHT: in-line skating, skating." but I agree with reasoning. Someone can always change it later. I don't think inline skating needs a big link to rollerblade. The existing "frequently and incorrectly called rollerblading" seems fine. Good luck sorting out the aggressive skating pickle. Tom Brown 08:36, 28 Apr 2005 (UTC)
- Ok. I finished changing the redirects and updating Roller skating with some History. It's good to have a concentration of people working on one main page, and then creating spinoff pages (aggressive skating, inline soccer, etc.) as necessary. Feel free to test the search engine, cause chances are I screwed up at least one thing. =p
- --Miketwo 14:58, Apr 28, 2005 (UTC)
THIS PAGE DEFINATELY NEEDS SOME WORK REGARDING HISTORY AND WHAT IS QUAD SKATING -ROLLER SKATING> THE PAGE MAKES REFERENCES TO QUADS BUT THERE IS NO HISTORY OR DEFINITION. QUADS CREATE CONTEXT FOR INLINES BUT THERE IS NO EXPLANATION OF QUADS> I WILL ADD A QUAD SECTION SINCE ROLLER SKATING WAS ONLY QUADS FOR DECADES, what a disappointing page :: --Hardballhock 14:58, Jun 06, 2006 (UTC)
Who sets the redirects? I think it would be good to redirect Rollerblade(s)(ing) to a disambiguation page that lists the company page and to inline skating. It would also be good to include a comment in inline skating on the trademark misuse. - Bill Fuhrmann
Robert Henley
[edit]I de-wikified the Robert Henley link as it pointed to a completely different Robert Henley. I was going to write another article about the Robert Henley who invented the ball-bearing skate, then disambiguate, etc. But I can't find anything about Robert other than that he invented the skate -- so perhaps an article is unnecessary for the moment. OTOH, his uncle, Micajah Henley, was an early producer of skates (the "Chicago Skate") [1] so perhaps an article on Micajah, with mention of Robert's contribution, would be relevant. I can't write one today, but I will try to do it later, or if someone else gets to it first, and wants to do it, feel free. ManekiNeko | Talk 21:22, 3 October 2005 (UTC)
Cleanup
[edit]I just did a bunch of cleanup; copyediting, writing new material, etc. I tried to make the page more inclusive; though inlines have been popular for the last 15-20 years, quads are still used and were the roller skate for a century, so I included quads in places where it seemed appropriate. (I am both a quad and an inline skater and have competed on both.) I expanded the quad section a bit since there is no page for quad skates, so until we separate that material out into its own article, it needs to be here. I also removed the cleanup tag as it seemed ok to do that now.
One thing -- the quintessence skates so prominently mentioned in the article? I did a google search. There are very few references to "quintessence skate" in Google (39 if you leave out dupes) and the vast majority of those are mirrors of this article. So I don't think the q-skate is one of the "three kinds of skates" -- it just doesn't have that kind of notability. I changed the article to refer to the two kinds of skates, quad and inline, but I left in a mention that there are some other less-common variants like the quintessence skate. ManekiNeko | Talk 09:41, 14 October 2005 (UTC)
History update -- some of the information in the History section seemed to be contradicted by info in the History of Roller Skating reference book, now that I finally pulled it off the shelf to check. I edited the article a bit, both to expand what was there, and to reflect the facts from the book. I trust the book more than I trust the web page that included some of the earlier data... ManekiNeko | Talk 23:10, 3 November 2005 (UTC)
Free skating
[edit]I just removed a paragraph from the Free Skating section that was a good description of a particular technique (cess slide); I removed it because it seemed kind of random. We don't have a list of all the various techniques from any of the other kinds of skating here, and there didn't seem to be any particular reason to focus on this one technique. (Also, is that a "free skating" technique or just a general aggressive technique? It might have been in the wrong place anyway.) Now, if there is an article about Free Skating, that might be a good place to put such a list. I made a link to Free skating (inline) so someone can start a free skating article. (It's named Free skating (inline) because free skating is also the name for one of the disciplines of ice skating.) -- ManekiNeko | Talk 01:44, 11 February 2006 (UTC)
Yeah, about that. Freeskating is an off shoot of free running and parkour right?
copyright violation
[edit]The revision as of 07:07, 2 May 2006 inserts a massive chunk of text in the "Aggressive skating" section which is attributed to "www.anti-rocker.com". I'm no expert, but can see no licensing information anywhere around Daniel Barlow 16:23, 2 May 2006 (UTC)
pics and stuff
[edit]I've added some more pics. There weren't any on the page of non-inline skates, and that wasn't good. Also, more pics of skates in general were needed, since the skates themselves redirect to this article. ENpeeOHvee 19:03, 15 June 2006 (UTC)
LandRollers
[edit]There is no mention at all of the new style of roller skate made by LandRoller (http://www.landroller.com). These skates are neither quad skates nor in-line skates and should be mentioned in order for readers to be knowledgeable about the continued evolution of roller skate and latest developments in equipment. Gary 20:41, 9 September 2006 (UTC)
New Category of Quad Skating Added
[edit]In all my years of skating I have never seen any listing or description of Quad Freestyle Dance Skating (locally known as Funk Skating). It evolved from Roller Disco and Jam Skating but is of a different nature and quality than these. It seems to be an obscure and, sadly, dying form of skating and is such a unique sub-class of Quad skating that it deserves to be documented and a record of it's existence preserved. In order to understand how this activity merits special recognition one must first understand the physics produced by Quads, followed by an explanation of their application and effects on rhythm skating. A key ingredient and mover of this type of skating is the music. It mostly always has a prominent baseline and the aim is to synchronize to the beat. A spontaneous unrehearsed type of freestyle Shadow Skating results. It is a non-competitive activity that is not concerned with doing "tricks". If anyone has done or knows of this kind of skating, your observations and input would be valued. Tano 01:39, 18 January 2007 (UTC)
incorrect info
[edit]i'm a quad roller skater whos been skating for 5 years and some of this stuff is incorrect —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Madcow 93 (talk • contribs) 19:22, 11 March 2007 (UTC).
Rollerwars Info
[edit]There is a sport/forthcoming tv show, Rollerwars, which involves rollerblading? and is a combination of basketball/wresling/american football on rollerskates inside a giant inflatable set.
check out www.rollerwars.com
It was designed as a TV series.
As I worked on it ( I worked on the design of the inflatable) I have not included it in the main section, lest i get into "trouble" but some fellow Wikipedians might want to add references/info.
Clean up External links
[edit]There seems to be a lot of external links on this site, many of which seem to be spam (WP:SPAM). It would be better if someone with more knowledge of the subject and WP policy actually did the clean up.Hammer1980·talk 11:08, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
Merge anti-rocker info
[edit]In December 2007 it was proposed that Anti rockers be merged into this page. That article was a single paragraph without any context, explaining what anti-rockers were. The merge proposal wasn't properly formed (the proposer didn't add the merge tag to this page) but it seems uncontroversial so I have carried out the merge, added the info as a paragraph in "Aggressive inline skating" and redirected "Anti-rocker" to this article.
Am happy to discuss if anyone disagrees. Euryalus (talk) 23:33, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
Too many tricks!
[edit]Is it necessary to have that huge list of tricks? It doesn't concern those of us reading the article for information about rollerskates and it makes the article awfully long and cumbersome. I think it belongs elsewhere. Southsailor (talk) 16:51, 1 May 2008 (UTC)
Discussion merged in from Talk:Quad skates
[edit]Redirect
[edit]I redirected roller skates to quad skates( from roller skating) since roller skating is a verb not a noun...but perhaps quad should redirect to roller skate or quad skate (singular)?--Hardballhock 05:02, 21 October 2006 (UTC)
Key?
[edit]What is meant by adjustable tension, and what were roller skate keys used for? Thanks, Maikel 09:40, 25 March 2007 (UTC)
The roller skate key is what is used to adjust the kingbolt on the underside of the skate. The kingbolt on the modern skate is the mechanism for adjusting the amount of side-to-side rocking motion and lengthwise tightness of the skate ("adjustable" tension).205.158.221.246 17:58, 18 May 2007 (UTC)DLL, 5-18-07
Actually, a roller skate key was used to tighten the front metal braces that held strap-on skates to ordinary outdoor shoes. Catwoman07076 (talk) 22:38, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
The type of skate key mentioned above is also mentioned in this Wiktionary entry:
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/skate_key — Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.48.34.37 (talk) 15:51, 8 September 2020 (UTC)
Where can I find strap-on quads, kind of like the one in the picture? 90.230.28.160 00:17, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
Please edit to specify Aggressive Inline Skating vs. just Aggressive Skating
[edit]I think since this is most commercially used term (see ESPN Xgames pre-'95) the most easily recognized term should perhaps be the name of the section. There is many different forms of "Aggressive Skating" with various forms of unusual skates (IE Land Roller Offroad skates, also i cant remember the name but there are ones with ball wheels that have complete motion in all directions so you can do some crazy stuff with them)yet the only type of aggessive skating discussed is inline (and most predominant unless your talking about a skateboard). Plain aggressive skating is far too ambiguous for the content. Also the linked Aggressive Skating link has been proposed to merge with Inline Aggressive Skating and renamed as Aggressive Inline Skating since it is the only subject discussed. Maybe some redirects may be helpful to find the articles on Aggressive Inline skating better? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.122.164.200 (talk) 08:41, 8 February 2009 (UTC)
apo ti apotelunte ta loller blades?
Strap-on quad skates
[edit]A article called Strap-on quad skates should be made. Current models available today are mentioned at http://forums.about.com/n/pfx/forum.aspx?nav=messages&webtag=ab-inlineskate&tid=1958 Baically, only 1 good brand exist for rigid strap-on skates: the Skorpion; see http://www.skates.com/Scorpion-Quadline-Strap-on-roller-skates-p/skrpq.htm The others (including http://www.asseenontv.com/prod-pages/dualz_skates_ontv.html) are non-rigid types, which will thus only work with solid shoes
History of Roller Skating : New information
[edit]There are two things that need clarification.
1. Has anyone got a reference for the term "roller skating" ? Can someone cite the earliest use of the term ?
2. Most books covering the history of Roller skates seem to suggest that the modern roller skates (not inline) were invented in the USA in 1863.
This cannot be correct as there is a drawing by the spanish painter Goya who lived in Paris in 1820's of a young man clearly on roller skates.
The drawing itself is to be found in the Frick collection. Entitled Locos Patines or Mad Skates .
http://www.frick.org/assets/images/exhibitions/goya/Goya_LocosPatines.600.jpg
Most books suggest that a M Petibled of Paris invented "inline" roller skates around that time 1819. There is a possibility that the translation from the original french has led people to incorrectly believe that his skates were inline. In fact they could have been of a conventional design, with two wheels on each side of the foot. The evidence of this is circumstantial via the Goya drawing, but the French patents office would not have allowed identical patents to be given for the same invention.
Aquafire (talk) 07:16, 24 December 2009 (UTC)
Identify established Freestyle locales in US cities?
[edit]I'd like to add some content about freestyle skate gatherings in major U. S. cities like NYC and SF. Suggested link for SF: http://www.sfskaters.org/public/html/page7.html#2.2 and for NY: http://www.skatecity.com/nyc/where/centralpark.html--PFS (talk) 18:06, 26 March 2010 (UTC)
Please correct the definition of skating -- "terrain" is incorrect
[edit]{{editsemiprotected}} Change terrain to surface in the definition. The definition mentions smooth terrain, but skating does not occur on terrain, it occurs on surfaces. Definition from the Merriam Websters Collegiate Dictionary -- 1) a geographical area 2) a piece of land 3) the physical features of a tract of land. Obviously, the third one is what the writer intended, but that definition does not encompass wooden skating rinks and skate parks, nor paved skate paths. Terrain refers to the parts of land that are not covered by man made surfaces, and these are the places that skating does not happen.
Done BejinhanTalk 12:47, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
Pending changes
[edit]This article is one of a number (about 100) selected for the early stage of the trial of the Wikipedia:Pending Changes system on the English language Wikipedia. All the articles listed at Wikipedia:Pending changes/Queue are being considered for level 1 pending changes protection.
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Many of the articles were selected semi-automatically from a list of indefinitely semi-protected articles. Please confirm that the protection level appears to be still warranted, and consider unprotecting instead, before applying pending changes protection to the article. |
Comments on the suitability of theis page for "Penfding changes" would be appreciated.
Please update the Queue page as appropriate.
Note that I am not involved in this project any much more than any other editor, just posting these notes since it is quite a big change, potentially
Regards, Rich Farmbrough, 23:48, 16 June 2010 (UTC).
Am I missing something? (re: 1970s/1980s roller disco)
[edit]Don't get me wrong -- I'd have no problem with it being a separate article, or distinguished from "proper, respectable" roller skating in some other way. :) It's a fad that may well annoy those who do artistic, competitive, or otherwise "serious" roller skating. However, I find it odd that there doesn't seem to be any mention at all, anywhere in the article, of the massive popularity of (quad) roller skating rinks in the 1970s and 1980s. It was a very big deal in the United States for a whole generation, of which you've probably already guessed I am one, and it's odd to think it would go completely unnoticed in any comprehensive article on roller skating. If I've overlooked it, let me know on my user page; otherwise, let's do what we can to remedy the oversight. Lawikitejana (talk) 00:13, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
What?
[edit]Just delete this whole thing. Do research and try again. Here is a link to the start with your research. https://www.britannica.com/sports/roller-skating 2603:6081:100:1AA3:C110:24A6:7B11:EE6C (talk) 00:21, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
- Yeah this article is awful and riddled with suppositions and lacks a lot of citation for some of its claims.
- absolute garbage. 168.149.232.104 (talk) 10:02, 30 December 2023 (UTC)
This article can use some of the new sources I dug up for Inline skates
[edit]I've been rewriting Inline skates. I am far from done. See its talk page for my progress.
During this process, I dug up a lot of resources that may be useful for this article, as they share a common lineage. You can look through these new references, as well as new images I uploaded. Many are Plimpton-style quad skates. I also noticed that on Google Books I often found two-wheel skates and quad skates (of course simply called roller skates at the time) advertised in books, journals and magazines together. Where you see me showing inline-like skate pictures from after 1863, you will often find quad-style skate pictures and drawings in the same sources.
I actually have additional materials on roller skates and roller skating. But I am obviously not using these extra resources for inline skates. If anyone ever rewrites this article or roller skates, feel free to ping me. Fred Hsu (talk) 00:44, 8 December 2024 (UTC)
The "In popular culture" that User:Plantdrew removed
[edit]User:Plantdrew made this removal of the "In popular culture" section. I only noticed it because of my ongoing work on inline skates. I don't have any connections to the section here that was removed because of lack of references (mostly). But it seems to me that someone did put in lots of effort to compile that. Perhaps the section can be revived in the future, with proper references. Some entries have references already. I don't know if they are accurate. Some entries may be self-explained by articles they link to. I pasted it back here for now. Fred Hsu (talk) 00:40, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
- Dude add it back and make sure someone tells anyone next time he does it
- Still angry for what I just experienced in a game 100.16.21.177 (talk) 03:21, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
In popular culture
[edit]- 1907 – An Awful Skate, the first silent movie by the Essanay Film Company at a time when Chicago was movie capital of the nation.[1]
- 1916 – Charlie Chaplin's film The Rink is partially set at a roller skating rink and roller skating party.
- 1950 – In The Fireball, Mickey Rooney skates with Marilyn Monroe as then-new media of TV introduces roller derby into the homes of millions.[1]
- 1955 – Gene Kelly roller skates as part of a dance routine in It's Always Fair Weather.
- 1971 – The song "Brand New Key" by Melanie uses roller skates as a theme.
- 1972 – Kansas City Bomber, starring Raquel Welch, is about the roller derby scene.
- 1975 – Rollerball is a dystopian science fiction film centered on a roller skate-based tournament.
- 1978 – Linda Ronstadt dons a roller skating outfit on the cover of her album Living in the USA and in its promotional materials, which helps bring the sport a resurgence of interest in the United States.
- 1979 – Skatetown, U.S.A. with Scott Baio, Flip Wilson, Patrick Swayze and Maureen McCormick.
- 1979 – Roller Boogie with Linda Blair.
- 1980 – Xanadu, with Olivia Newton-John and Gene Kelly, has rollerskating as a recurring theme.
- 1980 – Heaven's Gate, with Kris Kristofferson and Christopher Walken, set in 1890s Wyoming, features a scene in an early roller-skating rink called "Heaven's Gate".
- 1983 – Star 80 includes a rollerskating party at the Playboy Mansion.
- 1984 – Starlight Express, a musical written by Andrew Lloyd Webber, opened on London's West End. The cast perform on quad skates.
- 1991 – A Roller Skating Jam Named "Saturdays", a 1991 single by De La Soul and music video filmed at Lace's roller rink on Long Island, New York.
- 1995 – Man of the House features a scene where Jonathan Taylor Thomas uses early model rollerblades to get around Seattle.
- 1997 – Boogie Nights Brandy/Rollergirl played by Heather Graham features many rollerskating scenes throughout the film.
- 1998 – In Brink!, in-line skating is presented as an extreme competition for teens in California.
- 2000 – In the video game Jet Set Radio, the player controls characters using inline skates to move through the city.
- 2005 – Roll Bounce centers on a group of teenagers who compete in a rollerskating competition in the late 1970s.
- 2006 – In the movie ATL, set in Atlanta, the protagonist – portrayed by T.I. – and his friends had a great love for skating.
- 2008 – MTV's America's Best Dance Crew auditioned Breaksk8, a group of hip hop dancers on roller skates.
- 2008 – The video fors "Seventies" by Laurent Wolf and "Kim & Jessie" by M83, featured the Miss'ile skate dancers.
- 2009 – Whip It, directed by Drew Barrymore, stars Elliot Page as a small-town girl who joins a hard core all-girl roller derby team, featuring Barrymore and others.
- 2009 – The MTV television film My Super Psycho Sweet 16 features a roller skating rink called Roller Dome.
- 2010 – Skateland, starring Shiloh Fernandez and Ashley Greene, is set in the 1980s, and includes scenes of roller skating and roller rinks.
- 2010 – In the first season Glee episode "Home", a local roller rink called Rinky Dinks is used for rehearsal space for the glee club after their auditorium is commandeered.
- 2014 – Beyoncé rollerskates in her music video for the song "Blow", which is set in a roller rink.
- 2015 – Rap duo Rae Sremmurd's music video, "Throw Sum Mo", is filmed at Moonlight Rollerway near Los Angeles.
- 2016 – Musical comedy duo Ninja Sex Party also filmed their music video "Cool Patrol" at Moonlight Rollerway.
- 2016 – Gwen Stefani's music video, "Make Me Like You", which is the first "live" video recorded during the 58th Annual Grammy Awards and was filmed at Warner Bros. Studio in Burbank, California, features roller skating.
- 2016 - The Disney Channel Latin America series Soy Luna revolves around a group of teenagers on a skating team.
- 2017 – In the documentary Roller Dreams, starting, Mad, Sara Messenger, Terrell Ferguson, Larry, Jimmy and Duval, which follows a group of five legendary roller dancers in 1984 in Venice Beach, California.
- 2017 – The music video for "Everyday I Love You" by South Korean girl group Loona, features the group member ViVi working at a skate rental store, and often skating with a boy in some scenes.
- 2018 – United Skates, a documentary about roller skating in the United States.
- 2020 – Actress Ana Coto roller skates to "Jenny from the Block" by Jennifer Lopez in a post on the short video sharing platform TikTok.[2] The video is credited with reviving the hobby.[3]
Fred Hsu (talk) 00:40, 14 December 2024 (UTC)
- ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
:0
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "Ana Coto on TikTok". TikTok. Retrieved 19 May 2020.
- ^ "Roller skates are the new must-have item thanks to this TikToker". NBC News. Retrieved 19 May 2020.