After seven years of community building, championing the LGBTQIA+ skate community and wicked video compilations, artist Jeffrey Cheung’s There Skateboards has taken center stage by launching its own SB Dunk Low at this year’s Olympic Games in Paris. Despite the incredible strides the brand has taken, Cheung wants to make one thing clear — There is “just a skate company,” and its team simply wants to share their own vision for it. There’s chaotic Parisian adventure was one that involved a release party for its Nike SB Dunk Low, the premiere of a new skate video for Nike SB and plenty of other Olympic festivities.

In the wake of the successful journey, Cheung caught up with us to share how the partnership with Nike came to life, There’s mission, inclusivity at the Olympic Games and, of course, the SB Dunk Low collaboration that just flew off of shelves worldwide. You were just in Paris for the release party of your SB Dunk Low. How did it feel to have everything come together for the launch, especially with the Olympics going on? It was surreal, we were out here with almost the whole team.

I was super hyped to share the new video we filmed for the shoe and premiere it at the Centre Pompidou in such an epic way. We only had about 2 weeks to film for it and I think it came out pretty sick. It feels great to be able to celebrate it with everyone.

While it’s been amazing, being here is for sure weird for us. The Olympics are pretty messed up with their trans-exclusi.