Himself
Steve Rocco, the controversial godfather of street, led a cultural revolution during the early 1990s topping the corporate giants who controlled the skateboard industry and ushering in the most degenerate, savage, innovative & entertaining era in the history of skateboarding. For better or worse his legacy shaped skateboarding as we know it today like no other.
Himself
Blind Skateboard's 2nd video since the release of the 1991 film "Video Days"
From the makers of Adio Footwear, One Step Beyond is a stunning visual and action masterpiece. Directed by Josh Stewart (Static), the video features the entire Adio team in their best video parts yet! Smooth, stylish skateboarding, incredible technicality and some of the gnarliest stunts ever performed are combined with amazing graphic effects (by Jose Gomez Andre Stringer) to bring you one of the most original skateboard videos ever made!
Skaters: Daniel Shimizu, Ethan Fowler, Jon West, Judd Hertzler, Justin Roy, Justin Strubing, Kris Markovich, Mike Rusczyk, Omar Salazar
Himself
Video #11″As skateboarding falls into the limelight of mainstream society skateboarders are adapting to the evergrowing restrictions and adversities placed upon them From patching cracks to building personal skateparks ie explores the experience of pushing the boundaries of skateboarding in a world full of limitations” Anthony Pappalardo, Caine Gayle, Daewon Song, Diego Bucchieri, Mark Appleyard, Rob Dyrdek
A video by Transworld SKATEboarding
Video #2 Andrew Reynolds, Jeremy Wray, Jerry Fowler, Kris Markovich, Max Schaaf, Reese Forbes, Rune Glifberg, Steve Berra, Tom Boyle
The 20 Shot Sequence video brought us amazing parts from the Blind, 101, Menace, Prime and World Industries teams. Starring Jason Dill, Clyde Singleton, Gino Iannucci, Billy Valdes, Eric Pupecki, Joey Suriel, Fabian Alomar, Chris Lambert, Jason Maxwell, Shin Okada, Caine Gayle, Mike Santarossa, Mike Crum, Quy Nguyen, Kris Markovich, Marcelle Johnson, Sam Devlin, Maurice Key, Shiloh Greathouse, Daewon Song, Kareem Campbell, Henry Sanchez, Keenan Milton, Lavar McBride and Ronnie Creager.
In the beginning skate and snowboard videos were, for the most part, simple displays of talent. The Whiskey videos changed all that. No it wasn't because of flashy editing, top industry pros, or huge production budgets. These videos were made by a couple of third rate pros. All they had were a few shitty cameras and enough gas money to get to Whistler.