Simpsons Skateboarding Dog

  1. Simpsons Skateboard Dog
  2. Skateboarding Dogs Video
  3. The Simpsons Skateboarding Game
Bamboo - A skateboarding dog in Southern California
Dusty — an Australian Cattle Dog in Newcastle

There are several skateboarding dogs whose exploits have been featured upon TV, websites and other media. Skateboarding dog stories are commonly used at the end of news bulletins as human interest stories.[1]Bulldogs are especially good at this activity as they have a low centre of gravity and wide body.[2]

The overall idea for a Simpsons skateboard game is perfect. I mean, in the early 90's, I looked to Bart as a skateboarder. One of the Simpsons best gags is Homer skateboarding and tumbling down a cliff side. Why not a Simpsons skateboarding game? Well, it's the way this game was executed that doesn't deliver. The Simpsons Skateboarding is an extreme sports video game based on the animated sitcom The Simpsons. It was released for the PlayStation 2 in North America on 12 November 2002 and Europe on 6 December 2002. The game was developed by The Code Monkeys and published by Fox Interactive and Electronic Arts. Smithers kidnaps Maggie so Homer, Marge, Bart and Lisa set off across Springfield, from Krustyland to Moe's Tavern, to Channel 6 and finally to the power plant to take on Smithers and Mr.

Such dogs have been featured on television, such as in the MTV show Rob and Big. One skateboarding dog named Tyson appeared in this show and has since been featured on many websites as the pioneer of skateboarding dogs. Another bulldog, Tillman, has appeared in Greatest American Dog.[3] Tillman holds the Guinness World Record for 'Fastest 100 m on a skateboard by a dog.'[4] Another dog, Extreme Pete, can do the half pipe and ride a skateboard down stairs.[5] Other skateboarding dogs are Xiao Bai (Whitey) who skates in Taipei Park in Taiwan,[6] Biuf, whose owners started a skateboarding bulldog club in Lima, Peru and Otto, who holds the Guinness World Record for 'Longest human tunnel traveled through by a dog skateboarder'.

Dogs are able to push while standing on a skateboard, or they can run towards the board and leap on. Most skateboarding dogs have difficulty carving because they cannot easily shift their weight on the board. Dogs cannot grind. Dogs are agile on the board and are able to turn around or perform other walking moves on the board, similar to what longboarders know as dancing. Many skateboarding dogs appear to enjoy the cooling effect of the wind on their tongues. The dog may chew on the board or wheels, especially if they are using their mouth to carry the board.

Dogs can be trained to ride skateboards by familiarising them with a skateboard in stages and rewarding the dog as it becomes more comfortable and accomplished.[7] Other dogs apparently figure it out independently.[citation needed] A children's book was published on this subject in 2006: Little Yellow Dog Says Look At Me.[8] In this fictional story, the dog skateboards for attention.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Simpsons Skateboard Dog

  1. ^Joseph N. Pelton; Robert J. Oslund; Peter Marshall (2004), Communications Satellites: Global Change Agents, p. 252, ISBN0-8058-4961-0
  2. ^Kyra Sundance (2010), 101 Ways to Do More with Your Dog, Quarry Books, pp. 104–5, ISBN9781592536429
  3. ^Heather Havrilesky, I Like to Watch, Salon, retrieved 20 July 2008
  4. ^'Fastest 100 m on a skateboard by a dog - Speed - Explore Records'. Guinness World Records. 2009-07-30. Retrieved 2013-01-18.
  5. ^'Extreme Pete'.
  6. ^Dude, That Dog Is Riding a Skateboard, The Scoop, April 13, 2002
  7. ^Carina Beth MacDonald; Stephen Gorman; Eli Burakian (2009), 'Skateboarding Dogs', Knack Dog Tricks, Globe Pequot, ISBN9781599216126
  8. ^Time Off: Book Worm, Liverpool Echo, April 27, 2004
Simpsons Skateboarding Dog

Further reading[edit]

Skateboarding Dogs Video

External links[edit]

The Simpsons Skateboarding Game

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