Sign up to our newsletter and become a Club Huck member.

Stay informed with the cutting edge of sport, music and counterculture

Ed Templeton

Huntington Beach Top Picks — Artist and pro skateboarder Ed Templeton curates some skate 'Top Picks' from his Huntington Beach hood.

Innovator, inspiration, and true individual, Ed Templeton’s influence on modern skateboarding can’t be understated. When it was announced that he’d be the subject of a future series of Patrick O’Dell’s Epicly Later’d show on VICE, expectations soared, as fans of the Tempster anticipated a heavy story. Minutes into the first video, Templeton speaks candidly about his tumultuous upbringing, revealing details of his life that most interviews hadn’t explored, before going into his salad days of skating in Huntington Beach. What’s immediately apparent in watching episode one, is the impact that freestyle skaters, including Sole Technologies’ Don Brown, had on Templeton’s approach to street skating.

His crew sought out to perform the technical tricks Brown and others were executing on their standard street boards, most notably the ollie impossible, which Templeton mastered and took to every street obstacle possible. The innovation happening in Huntington Beach drew attention from all around the skate scene, eventually drawing Natas Kaupas and Mark Gonzales to the weekly jams they’d hold in an empty racquetball court. To learn more about the history of HB and how important it was to the skate scene in the late-‘80s/early-‘90s, we asked Templeton to give us some top fives detailing the little known history of Huntington Beach.

Top Picks

By Ed Templeton

Top Five Skaters From HB…

Jason Lee. Famous pro skater turned famous actor.

Tosh Townend. Pro skater with a legendary pro surfer father in PT Townend. PT has his feet in the HB surf walk of fame.

Mark Gonzales aka The Gonz. Lived in HB while he was the biggest pro in the world for Vision.

Jason Dill. Was pro for Alien Workshop, and now Fucking Awesome. He grew up down the street from me and we skated together in our formative years.

Chet Thomas. One of the best when we were kids. He starred in a Cheerios commercial and we all made fun of him. He went on to do the company Darkstar.

Top Five Skaters From HB You Never Heard of Unless You Skated In the Late-‘80s…

Steve Robert. Had a part in the famous World Industries video Rubbish Heap.

Skip Pronier. Was pro for Black Label, still see him around.

Marty Jiminez aka Jinx. Was pro for Vision. The first time I moved out of my parents house I rented a house from him. We still hang out.

Riky Barnes. Pro for Black Label and local legend when I was just starting. He was the teacher’s aid in my physical education class in middle school.

Edwin Carunguy. An am for Vision and even had ads in the magazines. He joined the Navy and is still around doing art projects.

Top Five skaters not from HB who lived in HB…

Geoff Rowley. Current pro. From Liverpool, UK, called HB home for years.

Andrew Reynolds. Current pro. From Florida, called HB home for years.

Tom Penny. Current pro. From England, called HB home for years.

Arto Saari. Current pro. From Finland, called HB home for years.

Don Brown. Pro for Vision in the 80s. From the UK, still lives in HB and runs Sole Technologies, the biggest skater owned skate shoe company.

Top Five skaters from HB you never heard of…

Erik Estrada. He was hands down the best skater in HB in the mid-80s. Early innovator of lots of today’s street moves. Blew out his knee and disappeared.

Jake Burns. Surprised he didn’t make it in skateboarding. Clean style. Heard he’s still around with kids. Surfs.

Aaron Devine. Was good buddies with Skip Pronier and skated together all the time.

Jamie Hart. My good skate buddy. We skated together every day for years. He rode for a company called Channel One and had some coverage in the mags.

Nyjah Huston, wait a second.

You can keep up with Ed’s adventures on his InstagramAnthony Pappalardo is an NYC-based writer and author who contributes to Vice, Jenkem, ESPN and more.


You might like

© Jenna Selby
Sport

“Like skating an amphitheatre”: 50 years of the South Bank skatepark, in photos

Skate 50 — A new exhibition celebrates half a century of British skateboarding’s spiritual centre. Noah Petersons traces the Undercroft’s history and enduring presence as one of the world’s most iconic spots.

Written by: Noah Petersons

Sport

On Marrakech’s outskirts, a skatepark reimagines possibility for local youth

Tameslouht — Built on the grounds of the Fiers et Forts orphanage, a new spot is providing space for connection and purpose, while incubating top-class talent. Ellie Howard reports from its banks.

Written by: Ellie Howard

Activism

Venice Biennale will not award artists from Israel & Russia due to war crime accusations

Art Not Genocide — Both countries will still be allowed to exhibit work at their respective pavilions, but be excluded from judging considerations, as they have leaders facing arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court.

Written by: Noah Petersons

Huck 83: Life Is A Journey Issue

“I didn’t care if I got sacked”: Sleazenation’s Scott King in conversation with Radge’s Meg McWilliams

Radgenation — For our 20th Anniversary Issue, Huck’s editor Josh Jones sits down with the legendary art director and the founder of a new magazine from England’s northeast to talk about taking risks, crafting singular covers and disrupting the middle class dominance of the creative industries.

Written by: Josh Jones

Sport

Eating concrete with London Skate Mums

Parental steeze — Founded during the pandemic, the group has ballooned into a community, giving mothers of various ages and abilities space to pull tricks, fall and express themselves. Sydney Lobe meets them at the legendary Southbank Undercroft.

Written by: Sydney Lobe

Huck 83: Life Is A Journey Issue

Joe Bloom’s View From a Bridge

More stories, more human — The artist and creator of the vertical video generation’s most loved storytelling platform explains the process behind creating the show, and the importance of bucking trends.

Written by: Isaac Muk

Huck is supported by our readers, subscribers and Club Huck members.

You've read articles this month Thanks for reading

Join Club Huck — it's free!

Valued Huck reader, thank you for engaging with our journalism and taking an interest in our dispatches from the sharp edge of culture, sport, music and rebellion.

We want to offer you the chance to join Club Huck [it's free!] where you will receive exclusive newsletters, including personal takes on the state of pop culture and media from columnist Emma Garland, culture recommendations, interviews and dispatches straight to your inbox.

You'll also get priority access to Huck events, merch discounts, and more fun surprises.

Already part of the club? Enter your email above and we'll get you logged in.