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Born Wright
A prodigious aerialist and front man for the Goons of Doom, Oscar “Ozzie” Wright’s influence in wave-riding modernity is not to be understated. But cut through the marketing campaigns and one comes to find it’s his personal life, and more specifically his family and the death of his father on Christmas Day in 1995, that's really shaped who he is today.
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Rubbermann: Larry Bertlemann has Been There and Done That
Profile on Larry Bertlemann’s rise to surf stardom in the 1970s and then his disappearance from the scene. Kampion tracks him down in Honolulu. His childhood in Hilo is covered, where he got his first wave from a board rented by Rabbit Kekai in Waikiki, to his early contest career. In the 1980s he was partying lavishly and racing bikes, leading up to an injury that almost left him paralyzed.
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Normcore
How Floridian Justin Quintal smokes the brand names over and over and over and…
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Melt That Clock
Time is money, as they say, but it’s really worth even more. That’s where surfing comes in.
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The Enduring Legend
Early big wave surfing pioneer Peter Cole talks about his experiences growing up in the Santa Monica/Malibu surf scene in the 1940s with friends Joe Quigg, Matt Kivlin, Buzzy Trent, and Bob Simmons. Gaining some big wave experience at Steamer Lane while attending Stanford, Peter transferred his acquired skills to riding big Sunset and Waimea during the 1960s.
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The Plural Island
A single Bardados, a couple of coasts.