Professional skateboarder Tony Hawk told Bitcoiners at the sold-out Bitcoin 2021 conference today that their lifelong passion is a little bit like Hawk’s: skateboarding, and that they should keep on keeping on.
“If you’re working in […] Bitcoin, and you’re enjoying what you’re doing, I think you should stick with it,” he said to a cheering crowd of Bitcoiners.
As a skateboarder, Hawk has spent his life pushing a niche subculture into the mainstream—the ultimate goal of Bitcoiners, who want everyone to use their cryptocurrency.
“I was still living the dream, I was skating for a living… it was a meager living but it was for a passion,” Hawk told his captive audience. “It was just a passion and I feel like that’s where [Bitcoiners] are at.”
“I embraced the idea that skateboarding was for misfits. I felt like a misfit as a kid. I felt like I found my community, my tribe.”
His interviewer, Jeremy Gardner, a crypto investor and co-founder of crypto betting market platform Augur, said, “it’s remarkable how an industry can bring people together, and Bitcoin does that.”
“The audience is just Bitcoiners of every culture and every background. It’s like, this is part of the zeitgeist,” Gardner said. “This is just a moment where Paris Hilton DJ’d at a Bitcoin conference!”
The 52-year-old Hawk no longer skateboards. In March, he sold an NFT of a video of what he said would be his final 540-degree ollie trick.
Hawk is one of the first donors to charity: water’s Bitcoin trust. The trust will hold charitable Bitcoin donations until at least January 2025, the charity announced yesterday at the conference. Hawk was also the charity’s first Bitcoin donor in 2014. But charity: water CEO Scott Harrison said the nonprofit sold his 4.8 Bitcoin donation for a total of $1,435 that year.
At the Bitcoin 2021 conference, Hawk is auctioning off 50 limited edition skateboards for his charity, The Skateboard Park. Skateboards have a printed slogan on them that will surely resonate at the Bitcoin conference: end fiat.