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Parts of a Skateboard Truck | Skateboard Buying Guide | Tactics

Channel: Trick Dojo
Published: 2026-02-09T04:47:07Z
Playlist: TD Library — Setup & Gear

Notes:

Jamie Foy represents the new generation of street skaters—technically progressive, creatively ambitious, and uncompromising in difficulty. His recent parts showcase how modern skateboarding pushes boundaries while maintaining accessibility and joy.

Who This Video Helps

Street skaters interested in modern progression. Also for anyone wondering what current-generation skateboarding demands and rewards.

What To Watch Closely

  • Difficulty without losing style. Foy lands incredibly hard tricks but they still look clean. Technical skill and artistic expression coexist.
  • Spot creativity in familiar locations. He finds novel approaches to common spots. That creative problem-solving is trainable.
  • Confidence and commitment. Foy attempts gaps and heights that most skaters would skip. That willingness comes from systematic progression, not recklessness.

Common Mistakes

  • Thinking modern progression requires inventing tricks. Foy combines known tricks in creative sequences. Innovation often lives in combination, not invention.
  • Skipping progression steps to match difficulty. Foy’s difficulty is built on solid fundamentals. You can’t copy the top without the foundation.

What To Take From This

Watch how Foy structures lines. He doesn’t just land tricks—he builds sequences with rhythm and payoff. That line architecture is a skill worth studying.

Dojo Note

Jamie Foy shows that modern skateboarding isn’t losing its creative edge despite technical progression. If anything, the best skaters combine both. Your skating is most interesting when it’s both difficult and creative, not one or the other.

What To Learn Next

Study how Foy uses filmography and editing. The trick is half of it; how it’s presented matters equally. That presentation awareness improves your personal skating expression.

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