This should be re uploaded every 5 years so the younger generations don’t forget where skating came from.
@Έμποροςθανάτου6 жыл бұрын
yesiah suprees Amen Brother. Natas and Gonz were the catalysts for sure.
@drpantz77326 жыл бұрын
Totally. Back then when the weather wouldn't allow for skating we would watch videos and Natas was the king!
@1nf3c7-tious6 жыл бұрын
Dont forget Frankie Hill....Ollie Japan.
@Lugh4445 жыл бұрын
It's funny , I was born in 85, got my first board in 92, and skated the most in the late 90s. Anything 80's was uncool, anything "old school" like bonelesses was OK but old school haha. But now weird shape boards and plastic rails are coming back into fashion... I love it, but 1995 me would have thought it was so lame haha
@furnondoemcslicebearg50025 жыл бұрын
yesiah suprees
@beobe996 жыл бұрын
I'm 42 y/o and feel like a kid again now!!! Thank you for this!!!
@TransWorldSKATEboarding6 жыл бұрын
Rad!
@The_Angry_BeEconomist6 жыл бұрын
exactly, turning 41 in 3 months and I still feel like 13
@beobe996 жыл бұрын
Yup, I can remember rewinding the Tape over and over just to watch his part.. Then I'd hit the Streets singing one of the Songs from his part - "WHY! tell me what to wear when it changes every day WHY!".. I think it was Eight Dayz.
@justinkasey10586 жыл бұрын
45 and this is bringing back so many memories. that wheels of fire part 🔥💯
@RyanCrase16 жыл бұрын
beobe99 I forgot how many tricks I nabbed from Natas. Layback 540 slides on banks, wallies, hurricanes and the list goes on.
@81casperflip4 жыл бұрын
Until I just stumbled upon this video I only knew him as the guy who spun around on the hydrant. Turns out he's one of the most influential skaters of all time
@Nosh_Feratu2 жыл бұрын
damn. this was some beautiful, emotional watching. Natas is the godfather of my youth growing up in 1980s UK, Streets on Fire and Ray Barbee in 'Ban This' on repeat VHS. . the mindset, the flow, the lifestyle, the look...carved in stone forever in my mind, still permeates everything I do.
@andrewferguson8032 Жыл бұрын
Natas went to my high school. I don’t think we fully grasped how influential he was
@johnm39464 жыл бұрын
I use to write companies when I was a kid and Natas and I wrote back and forth like 3 times. So cool to see that 101 letter in the mail box. " Natas wrote me back again!"
@gotvipers1 Жыл бұрын
Awesome.. I called his house way back in the day 1987, 88 . Only caught him at home a couple times.. his mother was really cool to talk to. Good memories.
@jeremiahlukejohnson17309 ай бұрын
I remember taping quarters to letters that I wrote to Santa Cruz Strange Notes, requesting stickers as a kid. LOL. Aw, good times.
@shannonandsheila14036 ай бұрын
@@gotvipers1Lol i used to call and talk to her too
@gotvipers16 ай бұрын
@@shannonandsheila1403 after all these years phone number is still the same. Natas still lives in the same house as far as I know. Fraser ave.
@museic015 жыл бұрын
Natas’s innovation within skateboarding has influenced so many skaters. Between his various creative endeavors and willingness to take risks to push the norm of the way skateboarding is viewed is unparalleled. Much appreciation for this mans talent and general demeanor. Oh and that smile...
@keendnb6 жыл бұрын
I watched streets on fire everyday when I was a kid, Natas was the king to me and friends growing up skating, he did everything BIG!
@whitestunna57735 жыл бұрын
me to lol. I started skating in 1982 in Florida. I think i started seeing photos and footage of Natas in 1985. I copied anything i could from him. I actually got his home number and used to call him and listen to his voice message daily. He would change his message everytime he went somewhere like movies or whatever. what a little kook i was lol its funny how you idolize your heroes as kids. I think so many fans were calling him that he changed to an unlisted #. I always rode a SMA NATAS board with thunder trucks. Im thinking of starting back skating if i can find a decent old school setup. Im only 49yo so i can still have fun.
@troybranson49215 жыл бұрын
Natas,Gonz,Guerrero . My 3 childhood heroes! This video rules!
@dylbre37735 жыл бұрын
He's not human.
@tucko114 жыл бұрын
So ahead of his time
@darrenlawson49094 жыл бұрын
Yeah, same here.
@jfncho6 жыл бұрын
its crazy how much high-quality content was in each 411 On Video. a series so far ahead of its time.
@StanleyKubick15 жыл бұрын
transmission too
@hogie12595 жыл бұрын
This man shaped everything we did at Embarco... all the EMB heads compared Big Dirt to Natas cause he had the same kinda snap to his ollies way back then. All of us trying to be Natas after that first video part. Only one kid could afford that video. That thing went through everyone's hands. The tracking was so f**ked up hahaha. And When Gonz cleared the Gonz channel...holy shit, that changed everything! Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
@LarryCooney5 жыл бұрын
Watched his video parts endlessly in NJ. As a result for about 4 years all I skated was Natas decks. Just recently copped 2 of the reissues to make my 44 year old ass feel like a teen again. Thank you good sir. I am also embarrassed to say I had no idea what a prolific artist he is. A true legend all around.
@gpshouse459 ай бұрын
I was a poser by trade but back in 88-93, I skated a Kevin stab and Natas. Now at age 47, just bought a brand new sapient deck and got my toes working over time not to bust My ass. 🙏🏻🙏🏻
@darthvaderginsburg46945 жыл бұрын
The stoke was so real. We found Kenner Elementary School on these huge maps my buddy Davie's Mom had. I literally quit my job, grab my 4 buddies, and we headed there from Oxnard. We skated Kenner all day. Went down to Venice Beach. But, what I will never, ever forget is driving by his house later that day in 1988. Natas and three other dudes were chillin on his porch. We just yelled his name, he waved and we totally fan boied out like the kids we were. Great times!
@DFunct9054 жыл бұрын
Darth Vader Ginsburg that’s a fantastic memory
@Shakester715 жыл бұрын
I remember Natas being able to ollie higher than I've ever seen. He was like the ollie god for me.
@erikh54394 жыл бұрын
Shakester71 I could give him a run for money on that but his style was way better i think his surfing helped his style, very smooth cat!
@villiantwo2 жыл бұрын
@@erikh5439 yeah ok buddy.. upload a video of you doing a ollie over a trash can on ANY old school deck.
@sevenmilewhite14072 жыл бұрын
@@villiantwo lol yea.....I think he got the point that he ain't got no height on an old school deck
@secretskater8552 жыл бұрын
Him and TG had huge Ollies for riding 10inch wide tanks
@crazyralph6386 Жыл бұрын
@@secretskater855 TG was hardly a big Ollie guy, compared to skaters like Gonz, Vallely and Natas.
@JorgeReyes-mk9gd5 жыл бұрын
Talk about a trip down memory lane. He was so ahead of his time. That was an amazing video.
@mr.surprise23416 жыл бұрын
Natas was really just ahead of his time. Street skating definitely wouldn't be as rad without him pioneering it!
@JadenJahci4 жыл бұрын
He was perfect for his time. Sincerely, The Write Brothers
@AUTOPSY6663 жыл бұрын
Plus Rodney Mullen
@Flexb1232 жыл бұрын
@@AUTOPSY666 YES, Rodney invented over 500 tricks. Including flat land ollie. The shit Rodney was doing even as a kid was insane and nobody comes even close to his freestyle or land tricks. Natas was more known for huge ollies though. GReat skater to but Rodney is the GOAT of street tricks and freestyle.
@xOGxSE7ENx5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Natas!! Street Skating saved my life!!
@gvts91326 жыл бұрын
0:41 the Gonz casually being the Gonz with a sweater on his head
@danielbaugher8263 жыл бұрын
He’s a character lol
@jamiemoffatt503 жыл бұрын
Looks gay
@theheartofablackbird21095 жыл бұрын
I remember we wore out the Natas part on the Wheels Of Fire VHS
@jarnold34154 жыл бұрын
Damn bro I thought I was old lol
@steekmoerjr96004 жыл бұрын
Man....when I saw the hellipop on the Fire hydrogen I freaked out. I remember us all trying to land that trick....Wall ride king. At the time we used to say Natas could Ollie higher then anyone else in the World. You are a legend.
@rockinbobokkin78313 жыл бұрын
The one main guy that made me want to get my first board. This is THE man that first inspired me. Nobody else. This guy. Many came after, but this is The Dude.
@mikeymercure4 жыл бұрын
So thankful for TWS, I don't think skateboarding would be where it is with out you. Thanks for sharing all the stories.
@mc540flip6 жыл бұрын
Vallely you’re name will carry on as well! I’m honored to have met Natas.
@civilsavage63374 жыл бұрын
Never heard of him until just now!!! It was always Mullen, Hawk, Song, Way and many others that held the spotlight. Glad to see this pop up on my feed!!!!
@CM-du5qh2 жыл бұрын
Watched him skate at Derby Park in Santa Cruz in the early 80's. Was by chance. Solidified my desire to continue skating till this day. Great video.
@chetrok15 жыл бұрын
My favorite skater growing up thank you for the upload, wallrides are still the best looking trick
@thebaconsandichon5 жыл бұрын
fIREHOSE - Brave Captain...such nostalgia
@tomskate19704 жыл бұрын
Every street skater wanted to be like NATAS! What a great era to grow up in...
@jayfunk5988 Жыл бұрын
The most legendary thing ever said,"You are the skateboard Team"
@zanesworlds6 жыл бұрын
i met Natas last year and he opened my eyes to many things... he dislikes what skating has become and says "surfing is way better than skating"
@esperanzatolentino3726 жыл бұрын
What does he dislike in skating in particular?
@meticulousdetail51405 жыл бұрын
it’s definitely changed with more money in it but no different than the new money back then.
@incontruth41165 жыл бұрын
Esperanza Tolentino probably the fact that most kids can’t relate to the tricks just like I couldn’t relate to vert skaters when I was growing up. Natas, Lance Mountain and later Vallely changed that.
@jimbobruh55065 жыл бұрын
Well now we got Andy Anderson who is bringing much of the 80's feel back to skating, but I'm ofc only talking style wise and not the industry and culture as a whole.
@bobbybeausoleigh77785 жыл бұрын
I'm not surprised he said that at all
@kins7494 жыл бұрын
Legend. Tales of his ollies were legendary back in the day (late 80s) in the UK.
@adamturrisivideo6 жыл бұрын
Every single day, it was mandatory to watch this video for me before skating. The Natas section just made you wanna go fuckin' hit your local neighborhood and just push and stall curbs. So inspirational...thanks Kirk Dianda!
@Airik1111bibles4 жыл бұрын
Changed my world .....I freaking mimicked everything he did skating . He made street what it is today and honestly his style is still legit 😁
@The_Angry_BeEconomist6 жыл бұрын
a really beautiful documentary on a beautiful skater, as a kid I watched that streets of fire clip on VHS over and over and over
@danielbaugher8264 жыл бұрын
I seen Natas and the Cadillac tour in Harrisonburg va and there’s a clip in this video , it was amazing watching Natas in person man he skated like a force of nature 😂 and the other guys rocked as well good time great 👍 memories God bless
@freemij3 жыл бұрын
Love this film, I still have a Natas 101 board kicking around my house, Natas was a huge influence on UK 🇬🇧 Street skating. Bought back loads of memories.
@majesticuncasual1866 жыл бұрын
Great to see this HQ rerip online. Hopefully this will help start a trend of getting better versions of classics online. A million thanks!!
@alanphalen27216 жыл бұрын
What an excellent biography and summary of Natas mindset, skill set, and contributions to skateboarding, art, and their associated cultures. Natas personifies what skateboard culture was and should be, skating and creating for the love.
@THX-vx6ei6 жыл бұрын
Natas changed my life forever.
@coleberggren13462 жыл бұрын
Love this! As a kid growing up skating in the mid 80s, Natas was my favorite from that first pic. I rode all his boards, from the first SMA to the Santa Cruz ones (that panther motif).... And what a weird board shape/style. Big, wide, pointy... like a surfboard. He's a legend. The highest ollies, the wall rides, rails... and that fucking hydrant spin. We lost our shit when we first saw it (the tracking is so messed up on my VHS tape from rewinding it!). His style, his art, his skating, hair, hell even his voice in the videos! He just seemed like the coolest, laid back dude. AND the music. He more or less boosted the band fIREHOSE into an "official" skate rock band... Pretty cool for a quirky band like them. Videos always played similar hardcore music for all the parts. Natas introducing fIREHOSE in his parts was another first. Now skaters use all kinds of music for their parts. Thanks for the good times, Natas, and being an absolute pioneer.
@stillridingstrong6 жыл бұрын
I have almost all the on video on VHS you should put them all on youtube. Its history that all the young skater need to know and see
@Tony-Jabroni5 жыл бұрын
dizz hupe has this been done yet?
@shakascloset17006 жыл бұрын
I grew up in northeastern Ohio, in Sept 1989 I finally got my first board, after 2 years of my friends talking about natas,hawk,gonz,etc. Even with crappie technology back in the day, we still felt the skate seen even in a little no name town in Ohio. To the legend's that were. 👍✌
@chriskunce33315 жыл бұрын
I loved streets of fire. Especially the Natas parts. I’d love to see some of the skaters today try to pull of tricks on an old school 80s board. The boards now are so technical , but Natas was doing that stuff on a wide board with fairly big wheels and almost no curve on the nose , or even much concave to the deck itself.
@jimmytgoose476 Жыл бұрын
Skateboards were shit for 15 years . Wheels too small and too hard, fragile decks , trucks that didn't turn ...."yeah man, I'm a street skater !" No , you are a street walker . Freestyle took the fun out of it .
@lazerskunk3026 Жыл бұрын
Thank god these still are accessible. The world thanks you
@hendrikvanleeuwen91106 жыл бұрын
Impossible to say just how influential Natas was. You would watch his videos or stare at photosequences trying to work out wtf was going on. Then you would go skate and it was like you could see for the first time.... new terrain, new lines, new possibility. He made it seem like anything was skatable if you had the brains and the balls.
@powerp12825 жыл бұрын
1988 sma bullet wheels gull-wing trucks,hawk claw board toxic wheels, vision street wear,best childhood memories
@darkmonohue29465 жыл бұрын
HELL YES
@meaganjanekelly77115 жыл бұрын
Pink Jeff gross Santa Cruz board bullet wheels cockroach trucks first board omg sk8 n back then was fierce but sos relaxed always wanted to pull off a CHRIST AIR Christian hosoi style.. mm never did.🍻🍻🤣🤣
@tomwatson24305 жыл бұрын
I had some toxic secret wheels, death box Pete dosset board and venture trucks , Nsk bearings !. I am from the United Kingdom and I was born in 82 so I think that I got the best years of mid 90s skateboarding
@powerp12825 жыл бұрын
simpler times, late 80s toxic wheels,were the bizness, vision street wear t shirt,deathbox tea pot sticker, you had made it,
@leehigh39185 жыл бұрын
Slimeballs dude!
@bennyshambles4 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite skate mini-documentaries of all time. "Strictly Brute."
@bassfishingwiththeantichri29215 жыл бұрын
The last photo of Natas sitting on his board thinking is awesome! I picture him dreaming of snapping an Ollie out of a Santa Monica cargo plane, then just spinning like an ice skater with the board until he grabs it and pulls the chute. As he skims above the ground he holds the nose and hops on the board before slapping down at a speed he can barely control. Then he looks back and smiles to see that you witnessed the whole thing. I still got my Pipeline card, too!
@donaldmctonic84204 жыл бұрын
Nice! Got to meet Natas at a demo in Milford CT back in the late 80’s. Met Mike Vallely around the same time in Westport, CT.. Both took time to talk and just hang out. Mike gave me a poetry book he wrote called “Burn madonna burn.”
@carlitomendez46584 жыл бұрын
..i have spent so much time practising wall rides,then one day i suceeded..it was like..Fuck!god is jerkin' me!..i'm a super hero!!!....just because of you Mr NATAS....THANK YOU SO MUCH for these amazing & unforgetable moments..the best ones,so far...i'm 48 now and still watching skateboard,bmx & fmx videos everyday...better be dead than doing anything else!!
@AllhailtheUS5 жыл бұрын
Man...feels like 87 all over again...I'm an old fart now but man...when you saw Natas and Gonz skate, it was magic. The 360s and kickflips that are the norm now were JAWDROPPING back then...most of the reason I walk with a limp now was trying to get like them...up til that time the street was just what you had to deal with on the way to the ramp. Natas and Gonz made it cool to forego the ramp altogether and see what you could do in the parking lot. Straight history....respect.
@scottjahlove80405 жыл бұрын
Advertisers Beware: I will not buy your product if you interrupt.
@jmpsthrufyre5 жыл бұрын
What if it's an add created by Natas?
@JohnDoe-zq1ho4 жыл бұрын
Bor it's not the companies doing it lmao. It's the uploader of the video. And shit, a 5-15 second commercial isn't the end of the world. Hosting and streaming a crazy amount of data like KZbin does ain't free. AND Transworld gets a cut of the profits (which really isn't that much at all. Like fractions of a single cent.), so just cool it haha.
@Michael_000014 жыл бұрын
Adblock
@MrGundi696 жыл бұрын
Met him in 89 at a demo, I was so stoked.... Natas kept us skaters scratching our heads in awe and amazement as he progressed.... a natural on a board, Legendary Skateboarder....
@Stanley.773 жыл бұрын
"Wheels of Fire" (1987) was one of my very first skate videos! My "heyday" was mid/late 1980s-2000, or so.
@tomf4087 Жыл бұрын
So influential. Big reason why so many kids got into real street skating. Not just a ramp skater skating the street to the next ramp, park. An actual magician on a board. The tricks, the style, the look, the name, and the iconic board graphics. He showed kids street skating was the future. He was the future. He was reason I skated from 80s all through 90s until wrecked backed finished me in 04. But thanks Natas.
@sysop007 Жыл бұрын
I was a street only skater too back in those days as a kid and Natas blew my mind and totally inspired me. Definitely had a few of his decks and skated thunders.. He and the Gonz set the ground work for what street skating is. Lucky to have lived in those times with all the greats.. 🙏🏼🤙🏼
@Hotsauce-cj7kj Жыл бұрын
I had the Natas ‘Mini’ deck back in the 80’s. The only thing rumored about him then was he was the highest Ollier in the world. NOW I finally get to appreciate what he’s actually done for skateboarding. Natas is TRULY a legend in boarding.
@jasondecorah12272 жыл бұрын
One of the best documentaries I ever seen! Everything about Natas is inspiring!
@holgerscharfenberg28283 жыл бұрын
This was the best time in my life,i watch Videos like public Domain and at next i goes skate whit some guys and had some scars but big Emotions.
@scottfederoff3534 жыл бұрын
Damn the memories. I wore out the Natas section on Wheels of Fire and tried to copy everything he did. Wish I had that style. We started back in the day before videos so you had to wait for Thrasher or Transworld to come in the mail to see new tricks. Remember ordering boards from SMA since we did not have a skate shop in the early 80s and it seemed like decades before UPS would deliver them. Not sure how many Natas boards I went through. Wish I still had one. My daughter goes to USC so I may have to pick up a reissue to bring with me next time I go out to visit and go skate Santa Monica.
@Noob_2_toobs4 жыл бұрын
Natas and the Gonz will always be who we admired as kids and as adults for being themselves.
@RyanCrase16 жыл бұрын
So sick. Mike V said it. Perfectly.
@christopherhale61625 жыл бұрын
One of my Favorite Skaters from way back when...
@John_D23 жыл бұрын
I had a Natas board back in the day. Mike Vallely also. When I saw the first Natas video , it floored me , never had I ever seen anybody that could ollie that high ,and ride street like that.
@lostinlust15 жыл бұрын
natas was my first board. bullet 66 whheels. those were the good old days
@theheartofablackbird21095 жыл бұрын
Bullets were rad.
@wiremuwaapu40825 жыл бұрын
Natas was my first board also...with venture trucks.....bullets for wheels....but have the new release one again...love it...out on the pavement AGAIN
@erikh54394 жыл бұрын
Wiremu Waapu Mine also, fav skater at time but i think street style probably mike v!
@itswaaaay2ez6 жыл бұрын
At a demo in my hometown, circa 1988, kids chanting and yelling in unison, "OLLIE NATAS!!!". As cool as he seems, that had to bug him; you could see this exhaustion on his face. After that demo he hit a few spots and mini-ramps in my town and stayed at a friend's house. All the pros did that when they went there but Natas was the coolest.
@tyylurr6 жыл бұрын
“We were trying to be smooth like ruff” what a great quote from gonz.
@jdc83524 жыл бұрын
3rd time watching this. I'm an 80's kid /skater. Good watch
@prestonbushman47904 жыл бұрын
Dude even though I’m not from that time period this is still such a enjoyable documentary, makes me wanna skate one of those shaped boards...
@Stanley.774 жыл бұрын
I was 10 years old when *Wheels of Fire* came out... That was one of my first skate videos... I was around when skating went from old school decks (small nose & big, wide tail... bowed-out sides), and more vert/halfpipes, or at *least* involving quarter-pipes and launch ramps... then, gradually including more street skating, etc, to the "new school" era, where decks (somewhat inspired by the "freestyle decks" of the 80s, minus the flat edge of the nose & tail), took on the shape that is still around today, except in the very early stages of the "new school era," we all had tiny... and I mean *TINY* little wheels, (jelly rolls and jelly balls are a couple brands I remember), which made the highly technical tricks of the era a lot easier... The few major problems with such wheels were: a) They got "flat spots" REALLY quick... If any younger skaters wonder what that "d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d-d" noise is, in early 1990s skate videos, when someone is skating on a clearly smooth surface, it's the flat spots on wheels, or 'bearing covers, as we called them, that are over a month old! b) Even *before* you got flat spots, it was tiring when skating from one skate-spot to the next, as you had to put 4× as much effort into *just skating!* Not the tricks, but just riding your board! Then, once you had flat-spots, it was tiring to just skate a few blocks... no joke! By the mid-late '90s, they got it right; the wheels were still smaller in diameter, than those of the 1980s, but not ridiculously small. I think the main thing is they got rid of *width,* rather than diameter, thus making for a lighter wheel, but without the aforementioned problems. Oh, and the style of clothing changed drastically. Lots of skaters got into tagging/graffiti art, and wearing huge baggy pants... Especially "Jnco," at least here in Chicago. I remember it was not uncommon for a 5'9" lean dude to buy jeans meant for a 6'7" man, with a 40" waist, and just cut the cuffs of the pants off, and obviously wear a good belt... That was like the "poor man's Jncos!" Looking back, the trend was pretty goofy-looking, but we thought it was cool at the time. Hahaha
@bvdatech16 жыл бұрын
Just got the 40th anniversary Natas deck cant wait to skate it
@TransWorldSKATEboarding6 жыл бұрын
sick!
@theshamanarchist54415 жыл бұрын
30th!
@rollbrettvm59306 жыл бұрын
yeah, on video was sick! nice to see it in good quality!
@brentmarks_diy6 жыл бұрын
Skated with natas and julien in 92. That’s what keeps me going to this day
@chrisgardiner22154 жыл бұрын
I hope people watching this video (not skaters) can appreciate not only the beauty but just how physically and mentally challenging it is to do a 50/50 rail slide ☺☺☺ The courage it takes to even decide that you are going to push yourself in order to fit a rail slide into your skating "bag of tricks".. is mind blowing 🤕🤕🤕😭😭😭 😚😚😚
@carlo_cali2 жыл бұрын
This brought back some nostalgia that I couldn't believe. When I saw that clip of the demo in NY I said to myself, damn that looks familiar. Then they showed it again and I realized I was there. From the spot they were filming from I was behind a fence with like 4 new wave girls and I didn't know where any of my friends were. I think it was $20 and it was crowded and we were kids. It was in Nassau County. I did not remember that Gino was there so that part was crazy. I'm pretty sure that I was the first person to film Gino. We went out to his house, we were all about 16, me, Pete Deller, a bunch of the fella's. My parents had a VCR camera and I brought it and I had 2 VCR's and figured out how to edit, but couldn't get my own audio. Gino's friend was the first one in a magazine though; I think his name was Eric. Then I heard that Gino went out to California and the rest is history. By that time I was testing the boundaries of life & death...I don't know why. I should be dead, but some how I overcame the B.S. I met some young guys in the city down by Chinatown and asked them where a skate shop was. I asked them if they ever heard of Gino and they told me he was a legend ! I asked them about Harold Hunter because I had met him too way after I had stopped skating. It was right up stairs and I didn't know. My gf had found a complete board in a fountain and it was in good condition and she gave it to me. I got some new screws and learned real fast that skating is not like riding a bike. I just wanted to see if I could use it for short transportation, but I had a difficult time. I was too old for this b.s. and I would come back to my apt. f#%ed up and my girl would patch me up. I refused to accept that I could not ride this thing. I eventually got the hang of it, but I definitely hurt my knee on a hill in the city by bailing. I'm really happy for Gino's success, he was a really cool kid and funny as hell back then.
@fallingjeff5 жыл бұрын
I was 13 when I saw Natas ollie a trash can in 88, and realized I needed to do more... broke my arm twice, but it was fun trying to reach for more and more.
@pbn14 жыл бұрын
8:55 "this is me going down the street...oh, dirt.." sweet jaysus I wasn't ready for that memory. F**king brilliant.
@GZAndrew2 жыл бұрын
My first skateboard I ever had was a Natas deck. Of course at the time, I didn’t know who or what ZzNatas even was. I was like 9 years old. After watching this I’m stoked it was the first deck I rode because this man is an absolute stud
@jasonbauer81595 жыл бұрын
When I first saw that ad of NATAS riding the wall and then the next of him ollying from truck bed to truck bed I switched from my Jeff Kendall to riding a NATAS Kaupas SMA black panther 2nd gen. The tail was not as extreme as the Kendall and it helped my skating tremendously and my Ollie skills. I rode those till the switch to the skinny two sided models started. Then I surfed.
@diyfreediver2 жыл бұрын
Got back into skateboarding in 1984 as a college student needing a quick way to get around UCLA. And immediately got hooked on Thrasher and the Bones Brigade videos at Rip City in Santa Monica. Eventually found the Venice High School banks and had the mind blowing pleasure of watching Natas ollie over the tops of huge trashcans when everyone else I knew could only clear them on their sides. He was always destroying the curb at the top of the banks or doing something creative/crazy with the LAUSD benches they’d drag up onto the banks. Still remember learning how to wallride on the low cafeteria wall just across from the banks. I wish I could say it was Natas who taught me, but I’m pretty sure it was just some skate rat who taught me the trick of boosting wall time by grabbing and pushing off the top of the wall. So great to see Paul Revere Jr. High, Kenter Canyon Elementary, the Federal Building in Westwood, and all of the other classic Westside (L.A.) skate spots. After they bolted curbs to the bottom of Venice High banks, I never saw Natas again until this video came out. Great to see he made it and didn’t get caught up in the whole trap of young fame.
@diyfreediver2 жыл бұрын
And Natas, if you ever read this, I was the Asian guy who was always boosting every variation of boneless I could think of on the banks including a varial 180 boneless and a two-handed board-over-the-head boneless. You probably won’t remember this, but the greatest boost to my wannabe great skater ego was when you clapped after I pulled off what I called an alley-oop to fakie grind on the bank top curb. Thanks, man.
@BeachBumsk84 жыл бұрын
Natas all time favorite... legend, master of disaster. We need a major Natas interview on the Nine Club....yewww🤟🏻
@tonyvillanueva31045 жыл бұрын
Damn! Just turned 44 today and saw this in my feed. As I was a knucklehead kid back in the day shredding the streets I still often look at sk8 videos on here. This video just brought back all the sk8ing memories and all the greats as well as trying the crazy shit Natas would do. Feel Invincible again....... Up untill the point we're I get on a board now try a kick flip and bust my ass. 🤣🤣 Ok not that young nut anymore.
@simonvance80542 жыл бұрын
Get on a board anyway and just have fun...jst turned 48 and started skating again...it's like re learning everything but I'm having fun...
@GeneBrodeJr2 жыл бұрын
Natas and Matt Hensley were my heroes. I had most of the Thrasher and TWS pages plastered on my bedroom walls. Phew, I step on a board today and I'll get hurt instantly. But I can still do a decent ollie.
@timrobertson13075 жыл бұрын
amazing docu always loved natas such a cool spirited carefree dude with a great mind heart and soul a true pioneer of street skating, he will be forever remembered
@andywalker86454 жыл бұрын
That’s the dude right there, me ,personally I feel he should be getting as much recognition or if not more than the gonz ,but I feel he’s way more legit , Hence he’s way more underground , awesome dude, humble . No bullshit oh look at me I’m a crazy , eccentric wacky artist guy , he’s none of that . Natas than julien stranger , straight up real dudes ,
@poppamic Жыл бұрын
47 now and me and my mates used to hire "streets on fire" out from local skate shop all the time. Mainly to watch Natas then try and copy him. Great great days 👌 Thank you Natas 👏👏👏🔥
@stephenloflin99846 жыл бұрын
I had an early SMA Natas. I wish I had bought 2 of every board I had to collect one and ride one. Thousands of dollars...….Oh yeah that Natas deck ollied awesome of course! I rocked freestyle wheels back in the day which helped.
@TheKitchenerLeslie3 жыл бұрын
I came up in an east coast bumfuck town in the 80s and I could never get one of his boards, you lucky bastard!
@markmccullough69216 жыл бұрын
Such a trip seeing these video parts that inspired me and everyone I used to skate with (back in the 80's+90's). It kind of annoys me that skaters these days seem to think everything street skating was invented by Mullen (I aint hating, the dudes a genuine legend) but Natas, Gonz & Vallely pushed street skating to a whole different level back when there were only 5 or 6 (decent) board companies. Long live expressive skating, where, who or however it's done.
@falconrymorocco90715 жыл бұрын
As well as Tommy Guerrero and Ray Barbee...
@Airik1111bibles4 жыл бұрын
Agreed, Nata's literally gave all of us small town skaters across the country new eyes. Instead of looking for a half pipe to appear our streets and curbs became our parks. The dude inspires me to skate even now at 46 , I just bought a new board and am starting to skate again. I also found out my home town has designed a park and hopefully will break ground soon. My plan is to be ready and fit enough to go there and skate it opening day. Maybe old skate buds that I lost touch with will show up 😁 That would freaking be rad.
@stevebean12343 жыл бұрын
Jees honestly I don’t even think many skateboarders credit Mullen, just Tony Hawk. There are so many people who influenced the sport in big ways. Idk if many people even know who Christian Hosoi is. I was an 00s skater and never heard him mentioned. Nor the Pappas brothers. Nor many guys who were great even if they didn’t push the boundaries of the sport (I always loved Kerry Getz). Anyway, glad to see these videos exist at least :-)
@seventhskin12 жыл бұрын
I must have watched Wheels of Fire and Streets of Fire a thousand times, every day after school, Saturday mornings...I don't think there was ever a time when my knees and elbows weren't skinned to the bone. Natas was the man. I had the board, my best bud had his Gonzales and we dreamed skateboarding for years. Damn, great times!
@jeremiahlukejohnson17309 ай бұрын
GOAT. Need this on DVD.
@jpotter77164 жыл бұрын
Natas is my 2nd favorite of all time right behind Mullen!
@terrancepinkney7775 жыл бұрын
This guy and many others were a reason as a young black kid from waaaaay down in the projects of So. Georgia got into skateboarding. Powell Peralta, Vans, Vision St.Wear, Santa Cruz, World Industries, TWS and Skateboard magazine were all apart of my youth. Skating kept me out of trouble except when we got kicked out of a place lol! Natas Kaupas and Matt Hensley, Jeff Kendall, Mike Vallely and of course Ron Allen just to name a few. All the videos all the posters and all the fun. How old school am I.......google Savanah Slamma! Skate contest!
@buckodonnghaile43095 жыл бұрын
Skateboarding kept me and most of my friends out of trouble also, gave us something to focus on but being up in Canada we had to find parking garages to skate in half the year because of the cold/snow so we were constantly getting kicked out of everywhere. Savannah Slamma was great and it's crazy to see how much skating has evolved since then. YOU should check out the KZbin channel BS with TG where Tommy Guerrero interviews everyone from Natas,Hensley Ray Barbee to Mark Gonzales.
@jeremystark33503 жыл бұрын
Natas was my hero in the 1990s. What a rad dude who killed every street he saw. I had the shaved head with long bangs, loved everything about this dude. Basically formed my life after his every move in wheels of fire and streets on fire. I still have both VHS to this day.
@racerx36692 жыл бұрын
This was basically who I wanted to be in 1987 when I bought a Nash skateboard at toys r us. Respect to a legend. I’m wearing a sma Natas shirt right now. Street school.
@christco1204 жыл бұрын
I remember when Wheels of Fire came out; I knew it was the future instantly. Vert was dead after that whether it knew it or not. I could see these guys doing stuff on streets just like the ones outside my house. I didn't know anyone with a vert ramp, or even where to find one. Natas was way ahead of his time.
@The_Dustin_B4 жыл бұрын
I had a Santa Cruz SMA Natas Deck when I was in middle school. Mowed lawns all summer to get it!
@ca99683 жыл бұрын
I was always a fan of Powell decks in the early 90`s but when Santa Cruz and SMA brought out that first line of Everslick decks curiosity got the better of me and I bought an Eric Dressen "Hands" model, when I snapped that doing late shoves down a drop I got an Alan Petersen SMA everslick, blue with the plane logo in black and purple and I LOVED that board! many great memories with SMA products, nice to see how it all started...
@quezlark78754 жыл бұрын
Natas and Mark have got to be 2 of the most influential skaters ever
@kevindemattia4 жыл бұрын
Also Mullen and Hawk
@sevenmilewhite14072 жыл бұрын
Such a huge influence on my skatestyle and ambitions on a board.
@aslanbc4 жыл бұрын
Natas was COOKED in his interview parts
@Boric783 жыл бұрын
One bong too many. Worse ways to speand your time...........
@TheCiaMKultra3 жыл бұрын
All smiles ☺️😁🤠
@aztro.995 жыл бұрын
love the soundtrack for this doc
@SolidTryThough6 жыл бұрын
"We were trying to be smooth, like Ruff."
@bassfishingwiththeantichri29215 жыл бұрын
TuneLow PlaySlow - His dad knew he wouldn't be around to teach him how to be smooth so he named him Ruff.
@SlickRick4EVER5 жыл бұрын
Billy Ruff....
@ThunderboltWisdom4 жыл бұрын
We used to idolise Natas back in 1988 or thereabouts when we were skating in Scotland cos he was the ultimate street skater. We could relate cos we had no (or very few and far apart) skateparks so we just skated the street and so Natas was the man. He could skate any random piece of street furniture and skate it well. Peace to Natas and all the original skaters. You know who you are! Ps... Remember Quarterback stores and Local? Ha, that's a while back! 🏴
@sebastianrodriguez29322 жыл бұрын
I chanced on a chunk of Wheels of fire on a local tv channel in my country when I was 14 y/o. I did not know who the rider was at that time, and I could tell from the deck that It was a bit further back. I was crazy about it. It was Natas Kaupas, and I thought it referred to something not someone whenever I saw that name some years later on on stickers. Mandatorily, I went to try some Natas tricks that I could commit to visual memory (specially that boneless!!), since I did not own any recording device. What and amazing rider! Now I have wheels of Fire on YT and of course Natas footages are my faves. Timeless Natas Kaupas.