New film from Frisco’s John Spriggs and pro freeskier Taylor Seaton to screen in Summit

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A shot from “Must Be Nice,” a new ski film from Frisco resident John Spriggs and pro freeskier Taylor Seaton. The movie was filmed by Ed Clem and will make its Summit County debut Saturday, Nov. 27, at 10 Mile Music Hall, 710 Main St., Frisco.
John Spriggs/Courtesy photo

EAGLE — In detailing his “miles of styles,” the rapper Freddie Foxxx once said you must be out your brain to think he’s not the nicest in the game.

Using the same vernacular, pro freeskier Taylor Seaton and Frisco resident John Spriggs have done something similar through a new era of ski film that has disrupted the old model so rapidly, and so intensely, that anyone who was part of that bygone era now viewing these modern capabilities can only say, “Well, that must be nice.”

Spriggs, Seaton and filmer Ed Clem called in a small crew of skiers and snowboarders (with Spriggs himself showing off some impressive skills on a binding-less ‘pow surfer’) to help with their newest project, and if you expect to keep up with that crew then you’d better be nice with it, in a Freddie Foxxx kind of way.



Therein lies a few of the many entendres revealed in the title of Seaton and Spriggs’ new short film, “Must Be Nice.”

But the film is more than a showcase of the crew’s miles of styles. Through his lens, Clem is able to tell the story of Spriggs’ simple satisfaction with the fact that he’s at this point of his career, only to realize just how fleeting the moment might be.



The film is dedicated to Johnny Kuo, a close friend of Spriggs’, who was killed in an avalanche in East Vail while Spriggs was in Montana creating the film.

“Must Be Nice” will screen at 7:15 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 27, at 10 Mile Music Hall, 710 Main St., Frisco. The event will also feature two other short ski films just released this fall, including “A Connection to Gravity” by Wiley Miller and “Recreate” by Lucas Wachs. There will be a raffle with ski and fly-fishing gear to be given away between films. Tickets are $10 online at 10MileMusic.com or $15 at the door.

A first-person point of view from John Spriggs in 2021 as he performed for the camera in “Must Be Nice.”
John Spriggs/Courtesy photo

‘Now we’re big boys’

“Must Be Nice” features incredible big mountain lines, large jumps and camera angles, and shots that were possible only with a massive budget just 10 to 15 years ago.

Spriggs was part of that era in his early 20s, when he was featured in five Warren Miller films between 2005 and 2009, and continued to film into the 2010s with high-profile companies like Teton Gravity Research.

“You had to film with a film company that had all the gear, all the filmers, all the budgets,” Spriggs said. “You were there to ski, and they made the movie.”

Now in his mid-30s, Spriggs still has the skills to attempt to earn those big film parts, but he has chosen to go the independent route in recent years.

“We learned from those big film companies,” he said. “It taught us a lot.”

Spriggs said while working with a small crew of friends makes for a much bigger workload in getting to a finished product, he finds it more rewarding. He also said his crew has matured to the point where they’re able to afford more of their own personal time and money to invest in the project.

“Now we’re big boys, and we can fund our own gear and fund our own seasons without having to rely on these meager budgets that their sponsors might give you,” Spriggs said. “We’re older now, we can get our own sponsors, do our own thing and have our own freedom.”

John Spriggs airs off a cliff in “Must Be Nice,” a new short film making its local debut Saturday, Nov. 27.
John Spriggs/Courtesy photo

Freedom to fly

The creative freedom of independent filmmaking allowed Spriggs and Seaton to incorporate into “Must Be Nice” something you don’t see in ski movies anymore: A halfpipe segment.

Seaton, a member of the U.S. Ski Team with Olympic dreams in the competitive arena of the halfpipe, shows off the many axis points and rotational directions a skier can flip and spin in the halfpipe while discussing how that has helped him in other realms of skiing.

In 2018, Seaton became the first X Games competitor to land a halfpipe run that contained five 900s spun in different directions.

“Taylor is not your average halfpiper, and I’m glad we were able to show how much variety he brings to that discipline,” Spriggs said.

While halfpipe skiers have made movies in recent years, Seaton said it’s been more than a decade since a ski movie featured a halfpipe segment.

“The last one I know of is Tanner Hall ‘The Massive’ from 2008,” Seaton said. “My friends are like ‘What? You got to make a professional halfpipe segment for a ski movie? Must be nice!’”

Taylor Seaton airs out of the X Games halfpipe in 2019.
Benton Inscoe/Courtesy photo

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