Login
PATTA
November 2007
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
    3
410
17
18202324
25 
2008
2007

Biography

Out of love and necessity rather than profit and novelty, the Patta store opened it's doors in 2004. Situated right in the city heart of Amsterdam, Patta literally became the center of attention by bringing new excitement to the Dutch sneaker and streetwear scene, making unknown or hard-to-find brands and items accessible for anyone interested. More ideas, concepts, product and collaborations with various brands and companies are soon to follow, as growth and expansion continues...


Blogs

The Man Who Souled the World


Posted by Patta on November 08, 2007 6:01 PM | Email


Finally got to watch this today with Fouad, all I gotta say is it's a must-see for anyone familiar or involved with skateboard-culture during the notorious early 90's. This documentary is, as they say, bonkers. Brought back a lot of great memories from the most fun and carefree period of my life. Fret Click, stand up!

--

He was skateboarding's most revolutionary figure. They were one of the most genius creative collectives of all time. Together they challenged every convention, declared war on the establishment, celebrated every taboo and broke all the rules. Steve Rocco, with a little help from his friends - Rodney Mullen, Marc McKee, Mark Gonzales, Jason Lee, Natas Kaupas, Jeff Tremaine and Spike Jonze - created a cultural revolution that changed the face of skateboarding forever.

To the uninitiated, skateboarding is typically viewed as a teenage triviality, a fad or 'a stage', but to more than 50 million people around the world it's a lawless religion to live and die by. The anti-authoritarian counter-culture surrounding skateboarding has had a far-reaching impact on society and generated some of the most unlikely cult heroes of the modern age.

This is the story of World Industries, the controversial skateboard company that transformed the subculture by utilizing tactics of manipulation, subversion and ambush to rewrite the rules, conquer the corporate giants who controlled the industry, and usher in a new era of skater-owned companies and skate-inspired entertainment.

Picking up where Dogtown left off at the conception of a movement, World Industries' legacy was to rear and deliver skate subculture to its finest moment. Not unlike cinema's spectacular coming-of-age in the 1930s, or the rise-and-rise of rock music in the 1960s, the 1990s were the definitive decade in the evolution of skateboarding.

Through the imagination, risk-taking and blind faith of World Industries' founding father Steve Rocco, a Pandora's box of irreverence, satire and mischief was unleashed. As a result, the products representing the attitude of this new world order were deliriously adopted by legions of emerging skateboarders around the globe, making the company and its founders some of the most powerful influences in skateboarding.

Despite their assertions that they were "just saying what needed to be said" and "never did anything unprovoked", the World Industries saga is littered with conflict, drama and dissent. In his quest to release professional skateboarders from the corporate cages built around them during the 1980s and promote uninhibited freedom of expression, ex-professional skateboarder Steve Rocco's livelihood and reputation was regularly threatened. From loan sharks and competitors to family and friends, World Industries was constantly under fire, precariously poised on the verge of total collapse, and endlessly demanding that everything be risked in order to survive.

By unashamedly espousing a "think crime" philosophy and satirizing Satanism, pornography, violence, suicide, profanity, racism, drug use and plagiarism in products aimed at kids, World Industries and its slew of spin-offs brands including Blind, Plan B, Bitch and Big Brother won more than their fair share of detractors. "We were just pushing the boundaries of things that hadn't been done before," defends Rocco. "And why not? I actually felt like we almost had an obligation to do it."

Battling corporate sabotage, media censorship and internal mutiny, World Industries ultimately prevailed, emerging from complete obscurity to fashion a new niche in the billion dollar skateboard industry that they could irrefutably call their own.

This is a story about the American Dream at its most volatile. A story about fame & fortune, scandal & rebellion, growing up & coming-of-age... but mainly it's about skateboarding, and what skateboarding is right now, and why it is the way it is. This definitive feature film is a must see for anybody interested in contemporary youth culture and proves that "in a mad world, only the mad are sane".

www.themanwhosouledtheworld.com



Share:            

Tagged: 101, big brother magazine, bitch, blind, plan b, steve rocco, the man who souled the world, world industries





Nick Walker Timelapse
Nuart is an annual Art Festival held in Norway, that coincides with the music festival…
Underfoot in Sao…
Brazilian Street Art is gaining more and more international exposure, and not…
Incase x DC…
High profile bag makers Incase continue to extend there reputation in the streetwear…
Teamworks Tee's.
After a number of previews and teasers, the much anticipated launch of Neal Santos debut…
Rime Magazine
Rime Magazine launched its’ new size and format at this years Magic Tradeshow in Las…
Uncommissioned Art: An…
Uncommissioned Art: An A-Z of Australian Graffiti, a spectacularly illustrated volume,…
Flight Club New…
As we mentioned last week, Flight Club's flagship NYC Store has moved to…

NEWSLETTER