ADVERTISEMENT

Does the death of print mean the death of the poster-lined grommet den?

Because what’re the kids going to stick on their walls then?

Surely by now you’ve heard that long-standing US surf mag Surfing has folded? It’s not the first cab off the rank either, with other legendary publications like Waves and Transworld Surf already going the way of the buffalo thanks to increasingly digital times. And it raises a lot of questions, this whole death-of-print thing. Questions about our attention spans. Questions about journalistic integrity. Questions upon questions, really, but one that’s slipped under our noses until now is: with surf mags no longer being the medium of choice for today’s surf-media consumer, what will become of the once-hallowed grounds of the grommet surf den?

See when I was a grom (and for many moons before that too), there was no better way to declare your devotion to the sport of kings than to plaster every inch of your bedroom with posters ripped straight from the bleeding heart of your favourite surf mags. What a glorious feeling it was, applying thick globs of blu-tack, eyeing off a space on the wall, then, once the masterpiece was mounted, standing back to admire both your beautiful handiwork and your undying dedication to the cause. Because it was about more than just aesthetics, that act, it was a statement of resistance. It said ‘Fuck you, school!’, ‘Fuck you, Mum and Dad!’, ‘Fuck the whole world!’ because right now this strange and wonderful thing called surfing is my God and Saviour, and if I’ve got to live by your rules and do all this other shit you want me to do, then this place here is my sanctum, and I’ll decorate it however the hell I want.

And so it was, posters of Andy, posters of Rasta and Taj and Bruce, all these larger-than-life figures looming over you in some immortal moment of shred right through your adolescence. You’d eyeball those things for hours, argue about their various merits while smoking cones with your mates, and could still picture them perfectly even years after you’d moved out because in some abstract, expressionistic way, they represented a big part of who you were in that time and place.

Do surf posters still line the walls of grommets these days? I hope so. Being thirty, it’s been a while since I’ve entered into a teenager’s room, but I’m guessing the tradition still persists. In another ten years, though, who’s to say it will? Who’s to say anyone besides nostalgia-struck forty-year-olds will even care?

Maybe they’ll have an app for it by then.

 

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
A bi-monthly eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW
HAPPENINGS
Your portal to cultural events happening in and around the surfing sphere.
Find Events
SUBSCRIBE TO TRACKS
A bi-monthly eclectic tome of tangible surfing goodness that celebrates all things surfing, delivered to your door!
SUBSCRIBE NOW
HAPPENINGS
Your portal to cultural events happening in and around the surfing sphere.
Find Events

LATEST

The Goons of Doom and DJ Eddy are firing up again after the Easter weekend carnage in Torquay.

Tributes have poured in for the Australian whose boards had been ridden by many top professionals.

URBNSURF is bringing wave garden technology to the city's Olympic Park.

A look at the victims of the mid year cut and which nations are left on tour.

ADVERTISEMENT

PREMIUM FEATURES

The distilled surfing memories of Dave Sparkes.

Peter Townsend with G&S

"Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far."

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

TRACKS PREMIUM

Get full access to every feature from our print issues, read classic Tracks issues from the 70s, 80s and 90’s, watch all of our classic films & more …

CLASSIC ISSUES

A threat to Angourie, the death of vibes, and a tongue in cheek guide on how to become a surf star.

PREMIUM FILM

YEAR: 2008
STARRING: JOEL PARKINSON, MICK FANNING AND DEAN MORRISON

This is the last time the original cooly kids were captured together and features some of their best surfing.

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

PRINT STORE

Unmistakable and iconic, the Tracks covers from the 70s & 80s are now ready for your walls.

Tracks
Kandui Resort Interstitial