Stab Magazine | 11 Reasons why Pete Mel has one of surfing's best jobs
498 Views

11 Reasons why Pete Mel has one of surfing’s best jobs

Interview by Craig Jarvis Fact: Pete Mel has one of the best jobs in surfing. His passport shares stamps with the world’s best surfers and he extracts details from them in their most jubilant or devastated moments. Part of the new ASP’s game, regardless of Stab’s fabulously unsubstantiated but uncomfortably accurate speculation lately, has been to deliver our sport the most excellent coverage its seen in, uh, ever. A shiny wooden desk at every stop is wonderful, but our favourite thing? Consistency! No breaks in broadcast! And you missed the last heat? It’s already in heats on demand! Wanna know what Kelly’s riding? Wait for the cut away to Pete Mel in the competitor’s area! And there’s Pete, gripping the mic, composed, dignified, tall, telling you what you wanna know, and doing so with the virtue of legitimacy, and experience. Because Pete is a big wave king. He’s the Big Wave World Tour Commissioner. He wins big wave events. And when Chopes is thumping and Kelly Slater and John John Florence are waiting to see who’ll be a finalist, Pete’s sitting in-between them steering the conversation, injecting just a little more excitement into an already-intense moment. Stab infiltrated Pete’s Ari Gold-type cellphone setup (multiple lines, bat phone and all), for a tutorial in what he’s learned as our favourite ASP World Tour Commentator… 1. I haven’t had any formal training as such. I got my lucky start when webcasts first came to surfing. It just happened by chance. I was able to get to a WCT level courtesy of Mark Warren, as he helped produce all the Quiksilver Pro events at the time. He was pretty cool in kind of extracting my ability. I realised that I liked commentating, so I started watching other sports and adopting traits from broadcasters that I thought were good. 2. The most bizarre place I’ve reported live from is… well, I don’t know if it’s bizarre, but the reporting from the channel during the Billabong Pro Tahiti was a real treat. It wasn’t the first time reporting from the water, but it was definitely the most fun. 3. I wouldn’t say I have ever been scared, but I guess there was a point during the Tahiti event that I was a bit concerned, for want of a better word. All of the broadcast boats were tied up, but all the others were jockeying around for the best view. When the sets would come, our boats wouldn’t move and everyone else’s would just smash around. With all the people swimming, paddling and floating around, there were a couple of close calls. 4. The most thrilling interview I’ve done was in Tahiti. The John John and Kelly interview after their semi final in Tahiti was really exciting. We were all together, waiting for the score to come in, and I could feel the tension. They both wanted to win that heat. We all knew it was one of the greatest heats of all time, so to sit in between them and try and keep a cohesive conversation was a thrill. 5. I do get nervous. But, it has become a lot easier as I’ve grown closer friends with the athletes. I’ve always had a relationship with the surfers, but now can I call a lot of them friends. 6. I definitely stop and consider the invisible audience. All the time. I’m an avid fan of sport and especially surfing. I sit back and try to bring to the audience something that I would like to know. Whether it be about equipment or a strategy or something similar. I always try and bring something new to every event, which can get pretty difficult to do. 7. When trolls say nasty things about me online… Well, for one I am guilty of reading the blogs. It obviously doesn’t feel very nice to be on the receiving end of nastiness, but there’s usually some truth to the nastiness. I just try to learn and grow from it. 8. There’s no worst to this job. I’m grateful, man. I’m grateful to have the opportunity to travel the world and learn from the best. Every one of the athletes and staff on tour has something to offer. I just soak it all in. 9. The best thing about the job would be the ability to share the surf with the best surfers in the world and to travel around the globe. The waves don’t hurt much either. 10. Finding enough time to chase big waves can be tough at times. I’ve recently missed a few good swells near my home at Mavericks. Missing those sessions do hurt, but I did recently get top surf a spot in Portugal called Papoa. It was new to me, and I love being able to surf a new break. It’s the ultimate challenge to catch a big one at a new spot. So it’s a trade off. 11. Live commentary in the near future? That would definitely be more angles, and better quality. We’re just starting. Like we said… legit:

news // Mar 8, 2016
Words by stab
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Interview by Craig Jarvis

Fact: Pete Mel has one of the best jobs in surfing. His passport shares stamps with the world’s best surfers and he extracts details from them in their most jubilant or devastated moments. Part of the new ASP’s game, regardless of Stab’s fabulously unsubstantiated but uncomfortably accurate speculation lately, has been to deliver our sport the most excellent coverage its seen in, uh, ever. A shiny wooden desk at every stop is wonderful, but our favourite thing? Consistency! No breaks in broadcast! And you missed the last heat? It’s already in heats on demand! Wanna know what Kelly’s riding? Wait for the cut away to Pete Mel in the competitor’s area! And there’s Pete, gripping the mic, composed, dignified, tall, telling you what you wanna know, and doing so with the virtue of legitimacy, and experience. Because Pete is a big wave king. He’s the Big Wave World Tour Commissioner. He wins big wave events. And when Chopes is thumping and Kelly Slater and John John Florence are waiting to see who’ll be a finalist, Pete’s sitting in-between them steering the conversation, injecting just a little more excitement into an already-intense moment.

Stab infiltrated Pete’s Ari Gold-type cellphone setup (multiple lines, bat phone and all), for a tutorial in what he’s learned as our favourite ASP World Tour Commentator…

1. I haven’t had any formal training as such. I got my lucky start when webcasts first came to surfing. It just happened by chance. I was able to get to a WCT level courtesy of Mark Warren, as he helped produce all the Quiksilver Pro events at the time. He was pretty cool in kind of extracting my ability. I realised that I liked commentating, so I started watching other sports and adopting traits from broadcasters that I thought were good.

2. The most bizarre place I’ve reported live from is… well, I don’t know if it’s bizarre, but the reporting from the channel during the Billabong Pro Tahiti was a real treat. It wasn’t the first time reporting from the water, but it was definitely the most fun.

3. I wouldn’t say I have ever been scared, but I guess there was a point during the Tahiti event that I was a bit concerned, for want of a better word. All of the broadcast boats were tied up, but all the others were jockeying around for the best view. When the sets would come, our boats wouldn’t move and everyone else’s would just smash around. With all the people swimming, paddling and floating around, there were a couple of close calls.

Kelly_Pete_John_def4. The most thrilling interview I’ve done was in Tahiti. The John John and Kelly interview after their semi final in Tahiti was really exciting. We were all together, waiting for the score to come in, and I could feel the tension. They both wanted to win that heat. We all knew it was one of the greatest heats of all time, so to sit in between them and try and keep a cohesive conversation was a thrill.

5. I do get nervous. But, it has become a lot easier as I’ve grown closer friends with the athletes. I’ve always had a relationship with the surfers, but now can I call a lot of them friends.

6. I definitely stop and consider the invisible audience. All the time. I’m an avid fan of sport and especially surfing. I sit back and try to bring to the audience something that I would like to know. Whether it be about equipment or a strategy or something similar. I always try and bring something new to every event, which can get pretty difficult to do.

7. When trolls say nasty things about me online… Well, for one I am guilty of reading the blogs. It obviously doesn’t feel very nice to be on the receiving end of nastiness, but there’s usually some truth to the nastiness. I just try to learn and grow from it.

8. There’s no worst to this job. I’m grateful, man. I’m grateful to have the opportunity to travel the world and learn from the best. Every one of the athletes and staff on tour has something to offer. I just soak it all in.

9. The best thing about the job would be the ability to share the surf with the best surfers in the world and to travel around the globe. The waves don’t hurt much either.

10. Finding enough time to chase big waves can be tough at times. I’ve recently missed a few good swells near my home at Mavericks. Missing those sessions do hurt, but I did recently get top surf a spot in Portugal called Papoa. It was new to me, and I love being able to surf a new break. It’s the ultimate challenge to catch a big one at a new spot. So it’s a trade off.

11. Live commentary in the near future? That would definitely be more angles, and better quality. We’re just starting.

Like we said… legit:

Comments

Comments are a Stab Premium feature. Gotta join to talk shop.

Already a member? Sign In

Want to join? Sign Up

Advertisement

Most Recent

Parker Coffin + Dane Reynolds Saddle Up In Ch11’s ‘This Is Where I Am.’

Long-form storytelling refuses to die.

Jan 21, 2026

On Junior Surfers, Baby Turtles, And Surfing’s Hope Imperative

Dane Henry and Isla Huppatz won World Junior Titles. What does it mean?

Jan 21, 2026

Night Will Never Fall On The Rising Sun

Peep Billabong's new Andy Irons Collection, help kids in need.

Jan 20, 2026

SEOTY: Brody Mulik Stars In ‘fourteen.’

Homeschooled at The Box and Tombies, the fifteen-year-old might be Western Australia's best student.

Jan 19, 2026

Watch: Episode 01 of Stab In The Dark X Starring Kelly Slater

Who will the greatest surfer of all time crown the shaper of the decade?

Jan 17, 2026

What Was It Really Like To Hang With Andy And Bruce In The 90s?

The Stab Interview with Lost Generation filmer and poke sauce peddler, Patrick “Tupat” Eichsteadt.

Jan 16, 2026

Golfers v Surfers: Newport’s Wavepool Battle Rages On

The worlds biggest Wavegarden will cost you 3 holes, a driving range, and $250,000 per…

Jan 15, 2026

2025 Was The Year Of The Rat

Comment of the Year 2025 goes to...

Jan 13, 2026

We Had Eight World Class Surfers Blind Test 117 Surfboards From 37 Shapers

This is the story of Stab In The Dark, so far.

Jan 12, 2026

Do We Appreciate Creed McTaggart Enough?

GERAMANIA — ASIA DOWN THE LINE

Jan 12, 2026

The Year Of Magic Boards, Bare Thighs, Strong Chins & Euro Dominance Is Upon Us

Read Stab's 2026 predictions, and take our future-telling quiz

Jan 11, 2026

“One Of Those Forecasts That’s So Scary You’re Kinda Hoping It Goes Onshore”

The Gaelic swell that put three of the world's best big wave surfers on the…

Jan 9, 2026

SEOTY: Eithan Osborne Stars In ‘Lost Pinterest’

Two bionic shoulders, an extra $100,000 in the bank, and a lot of sand-bottom Mexican…

Jan 8, 2026

Revealed: The 5 SITD-Winning Shapers Listed In The Kelly Files

The nerve to throw in a swallow-tail...

Jan 8, 2026

Had A Beer With A Stranger, Ended Up In A War

How a pleasure-seeking Indo trip became a tour of duty in Ukraine's frontline.

Jan 7, 2026

The Most Spectacular Waves Of 2025

Saltwater // chlorine.

Jan 6, 2026

49 Surfers Dead: A Dark History Of Brazil’s Southern Coast

The most lethal surf coast you've never heard of.

Jan 4, 2026

We Tracked The Board-Buying Habits Of 7,500 Surfers 

What, why, and how much are we buying? 

Jan 2, 2026
Advertisement