Internal tensions between the
Transworld Skateboarding magazine staff and AOL Time Warner owners prompted the resignation of several key editorial members, including Mike Mihaly,
J. Grant Brittain, and Dave Swift. Later, The Skateboard Mag Founding trio was later joined by TransWorld Skateboarding Senior Photographerer
Atiba Jefferson, who all later launched
The Skateboard Mag publication (the first issue was published in April 2004). Jefferson, whose seminal mentor was Brittain, revealed in May 2012: So, in 2006, we were all working at Transworld with Dave Swift, Grant ... Brittain. I think I'd gotten to the point—you've done everything you kinda could. And, with that magazine being bought and sold that many times, and being corporate-owned, a lot of things had changed. Even when I started working at Transworld, it was just owned by the bombers; it was independently owned. It was just different, it wasn't the same. There was a lot of things that became very corporate about it. And that was just-it is so hard to do with skating. There were so many things we couldn't justify. So we decided to break off and start out own magazine, The Skateboard Mag, in 2006. Jefferson's view was reinforced seven years prior in an interview that Brittain participated in with the
Union-Tribune, whereby Jefferson's mentor stated, "We did not like the whole corporate deal, not knowing what was in every issue ad-wise. It wasn't about skateboarding anymore."), writer, Kevin Wilkins, and Transworld Publisher, Mike Mihaly (the three had worked a combined total of forty-four years for
Transworld Publications). The first issue was released in March 2004, Issue #1 April 2004. As of October 2016, the editorial director of the magazine was Dave Swift, who is a current skateboard photographer and had worked for
Transworld Skateboarding as Editor-In-Chief,
Staff Writer and Staff Senior Photographer. Veteran skateboard photographer Grant J. Brittain confirmed on October 7, 2014, that the Skateboard Mag publication, of which he was a photo editor for, has reached a collaborative agreement with the Berrics. Brittain published the announcement on his Instagram account: "We started a new endeavor, the Skateboard Mag is under The Berrics skateboarding umbrella." Following this, the magazine ceased publication and became part of the website Berrics. ==Mission statement==