First of all, itâs not the Department of Motor Vehicles. Anyone who calls the DMV home has had to explain that to someone at some point, that itâs an acronym for the Washington, D.C./Maryland/Virginia region, a part of the country where state lines and city limits blur as Northern Virginia cities like Alexandria, the nationâs capital, and the southernmost cities of Maryland (Baltimore chiefest among them) blend into a distinct cultural region. For anyone who knows or comes from the area, âDMVâ holds a different weight in their shared vernacular. It doesnât matter if the rest of the country associates it with one of the more exhausting errands we all have to run at some point or another. If you know, you know.
Second of all, youâre crazy if youâre trying to put up buckets in a pair of Nike Foamposites in the year 2024. When the shoe debuted back in 1997 and became an on-court favorite of Penny Hardaway, it was lauded for its futuristic design and premium technological advances (the upper is composed of a liquid-injected polyurethane that molds to the shape of your foot over time the more you wear it). The future it seemed to signal has long since passed and the name of the game in basketball sneaker tech has moved in the direction of lightweight low-tops, leaving the bulky and heavy Foamposite in the dust from a performance standpoint. To many, it now looks more like a relic of the past than a message from the future. But if you rep the DMV, you know.
The DMV is differentâdifferent in the sort of ways you can only understand from afar by keying into some of the fruits of the region: Rico Nasty and The Wire and Logic and Minor Threat and John Waters and McKinley Dixon, just to name a few. It is difficult to articulate the common thread that runs throughout the cultural output it produces, but the link is tangible. It has long been an unsung hub of sneaker culture, full of passionate collectors who know the game well. And whether youâre a local head picking up a limited-run collab from a local boutique like the esteemed A Ma Maniére or just hitting up the nearest Foot Locker to see whatâs good, if you rep the DMV you own a pair of Foams. They arenât timeless classics like New Yorkâs Air Force 1s or the Nike Cortezâs vice grip on Los Angeles. The DMV isnât about timelessness or mass appeal. Itâs weird and wild and doesnât aim to cater to outsiders. Perhaps itâs only fitting that it would latch onto something as singular as the Foamposite.
Instagram content
This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.