Miami Inverted: A Skateboarding Retrospective by Robbie Weir and Willie Miller

By Nick Hutchinson, published Jan 26, 2006
Published Content: 28  Total Views: 21,391  Favorited By: 3 CPs
Rating: 3.4 of 5
It's hard to nail down exactly what skateboarding means to all those who have practiced what for much of its early evolution was not even recognized as a sport, but for the legions of skateboarders who grew up idolizing the likes of Tony Alva, Jay Adams, Stacy Peralta and Tony Hawk, skateboarding has always translated to a lifestyle and an attitude.

In Miami Inverted, a memoir by Florida skater, former Bones Brigader and Walker team rider Robbie Weir, Weir (now 40) takes us back to when life revolved around Tracker Trucks, Rector shorts and sweaty days at the local skatepark. In straightforward and unadorned prose, Miami Inverted recalls Weir's lifelong involvement with the skateboard culture.

From his spot in a Burger King commercial at the age of 13 to his amazing return to competitive vertical skating in his mid 30s, Weir's book, part anecdotal recall and part scrapbook, views the sport of skateboarding through the eye of a veteran insider who took his lumps along the way.

Weir's skateboarding career began in South Florida, where he honed his vertical skills in the bowls, half pipes and snake runs at the Runway Skate Park in Perrine (just south of Miami). His experience at the Runway set the foundation for Miami Inverted.

The Runway was the biggest skatepark in the Miami area during the '70s skatepark boom. Sometimes known as the "kinkway" due to its bumpy transitions, the park, which was open from 1977-1980, spawned a host of hot local skaters, including Monty Nolder, later sponsored by Santa Cruz Skateboards, the smooth riding Shawn Webster, freestyler extraordinaire Robert Rodrigues (who invented the rolling finger flip impossible and the 540 cross leg impossible), the inimitable Tracy Ramos (see page 140 for the mug shot of all mug shots) and a host of others, Weir included.

Takeaways
  • The Runway Skatepark in Miami was open from 1977-1980
  • Robbie Weir skated with a young Tony Hawk
  • Weir was able to eat at his local Burger King for free following his BK spot
Did You Know?
That Weir has worked with Ty Pennington and super model Heidi Klum
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