Monday, October 30, 2017

USA news on Youtube Oct 30 2017

Hey everybody this is Randy Santel "Atlas" with Atlas & Zeus Promotions and

proud owner of foodchallenges.com! This morning I'm going to be going for

overall win number 466 and my second win in the state of Utah I am again in Ogden,

Utah on that No-Frills Diner I'm taking on their Ultimate King Omelet Challenge!

Now I love omelets and this looks freaking

delicious! It's a 12-egg omelet filled with they've

got onions, jalapenos bacon, peppers, cheddar cheese, ham, tomatoes sausage, and

mushrooms along with a whole bunch of hashbrowns there's basically four

servings of omelet, four servings of hashbrowns, along with this one pancake

topped with some butter, but I've got only 20 minutes to finish this thing so

I'm gonna have to shut up and eat and if I win I'm gonna get the $20 meal for

free I'll get a Sweet No-Frills Diner t-shirt and I'll be added up on their

Wall of Fame let's get this challenge started!

All right now I forgot one thing you also have to finish a large beverage and

because eating all these calories I got a Diet Coke but let's get another

win in Utah then we move on to Wyoming 1, 2, 3. . . Boom! Alright the record

for this challenge is like three minutes so we'll just make sure we beat it in

under 20 plus I ate that big burger last night but we'll get it today

Combining the hash browns with the omelette very good idea!

a lot of jalapenos in here it's spicy!

seven and a half minutes in two-thirds through the omelet and the hashbrowns know

idea how somebody did this in under three minutes

it wasn't even Molly I know she's done this challenge but it wasn't that fast

but let's get all this down and then we'll move on to the pancake, awesome

challenge so far very very flavorful!

13 minutes 45 seconds in I've got all of the omelette and the hashbrowns gone

awesome awesome delicious very very good but I just had a little bit of Diet Coke

left before they refilled it so I'll just have to finish a little bit more

that'll count as finishing that but now I just got to get this pancake and then we

will get the win!

Sixteen minutes in two seconds not the official record but a delicious

challenge definitely my favorite omelet that I've had in a long time!

Everything in there the cheese's the meats the veggies everything was

fresh and just delicious even the hash browns were great too but yeah 16

minutes and 2 seconds I got the delicious Ultimate King Omelet Challenge

for free which would have been 20 bucks I'm gonna get a sweet t-shirt to add to

my collection and I'll be one of the few people up on the wall of fame if you're

interested in trying a challenge here there is a burger challenge you can

check out too but yeah thank you to No-Frills Diner

here in Ogden, Utah it was win number two in the state of Utah and overall win

number 466, thanks for watching!

For more infomation >> ULTIMATE KING 12-EGG OMELET CHALLENGE!! - Duration: 6:25.

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Polyvance's Nitro Fuzer Line of Nitrogen Welders - Duration: 4:52.

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This welder comes with its own Nitrocell Nitrogen Generator.

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It also features a fully assembled 16 gauge USA manufactured welding cart,

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It also comes with three Welding Rod Organizer Cases, a large selection of welding rods,

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No matter which of our nitrogen welders you choose, it will be sure to get the job done.

For more infomation >> Polyvance's Nitro Fuzer Line of Nitrogen Welders - Duration: 4:52.

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Dr. Pyckle and Mr. Pryde(1925) - legendado - Duration: 19:43.

For more infomation >> Dr. Pyckle and Mr. Pryde(1925) - legendado - Duration: 19:43.

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The Legend of Tom Penny | Retro Rippers - Duration: 15:22.

Tom penny is basically a mythical

character in skateboarding. There's so

many urban legends and stories about the

crazy things that he's done. A lot of

them actually being true, which we'll

talk about. But Tom had one of the best

skateboarding styles of all time, of

anyone who put wheels to pavement. And a

lot of people actually consider him the

best skateboarder, in general, of all time.

So let's take a look at the career of

Tom penny. Welcome back to Rad Rat Video,

the channel you can learn something new

about skateboarding three times a week.

Every Monday Wednesday and Friday, we

take a look at something in the

skateboarding world, from tricks to

culture to your favorite skaters like

Tom penny. And Tom penny is a religious

or cult figure in skateboarding. You hear

about the cult of Tom penny, you hear

about his legends, you hear stories about

how he showed up at a park, did

something incredible and unheard of, and

then just faded away into the ether,

never to be seen again. All kinds of

really crazy things about Tom. From

his style to his demeanor, the way he

held himself on a skateboard,

he is absolutely a legendary

skateboarder and that we should take a

look at his history and where it came

from.

Tom is from England, and he started his

career with the radlands contest over

there. Although he mostly grew up skating

alone, or with a small group of friends, his

first few appearances were pretty

heavily influenced by what was going on

in skateboarding at the time, like the

tech stuff, the multiple flips, and that

kind of thing, but you can see a glimmer

of what he would become. There's some

style under there, and there's some

switch and some nollie stuff, which was

still pretty new in 1994. Tom got 6th

place, but the following year in 1995 he

actually got 1st place, with a single run.

There were all sorts of stories even

from that, where he showed up, did his one

run and left halfway through the comp.

When he won, they had to call him to get

his mum to bring him back to find out

he'd won. Soon after that win, Tom moved

to the US. His original UK sponsor death

box, they had transformed into flip, and

they had moved headquarters over the US,

and Tom went to join them over there and

he also got on Etnies, where he got his

first full length, legit, video part

in High 5. Let's take a look at that.

There's a few standout tricks in here,

like that switch frontside flip over the

rail. Doing tricks over handrails was

still new, and switch frontside flips

were pretty new. This trick alone

would have been an ender. Also, his switch

flip was perfect. Not a lot of people

could do them just as well as their

regular ones, but Tom could. Or how about

this? The

flip back tail stall was sick enough, but

how about this ultra casual frontside

flip over the vert hip? A few years after

that, when I was first starting skating, I

saw that video part and I was not very

impressed because it looked so easy.

I couldn't even comprehend how hard that

stuff was supposed to be because of the

way that he does it so casually. But

think about who has the best frontside

flips you can think of. Did you think of

Andrew Reynolds? Because he went and he

tried that same frontside flip on the

hip, and this is what he said. I went to

chickens pool this one time to skate, and

just thought like, I want to try and

frontside flip where he got that little

hip, you know. He did the kickflip back

tail and then he just went down and did

that kickflip, stuck to the wall over the

hip. I figured I could frontside flip in

a quarter pipe, so I should be able to

frontside flip this little hip, right? I

tried it, and seriously, every time the

thing would just shoot me out to the

flat bottom. Like, completely out of

control. There was just no way I could do

it. After that, I was just like, "I don't

get it." He was just as delicate little

thing, just stuck to that wall. Flat

ground and vert are like the same thing

to that dude." Look, we're 20 seconds into

his video part and it's already

legendary, but his actual ender is a

switch frontside flip down this double

set, which is pretty crazy, because he did

a regular frontside flip, and that was

good enough to make it in Transworld.

He also switch frontside flipped

Carlsbad. Twice. The first time, he went

there alone, and the second time he

actually had to bring a filmer to

actually record it. He didn't even think

of it at the time, which you'll find

happened a lot over his career. Around

that time, there is also an industry

section in 411 issue 11. Tom only

has a few tricks, but just watch this

line. Every trick is perfect or better.

His tricks that are a tiny bit sketchy

are actually better looking than his

perfect ones. Everything is super clean.

And just watch how he ends it. A lot of

people probably could have done this

line, but just look at the way he does it,

the way that he just goes with the flow

of the spot. He doesn't push, he doesn't

do speed checks to try to get ready when

it's time to hit that rail, he just kind

of does it. He just goes with the flow. It

looks like he just made up that line on

the spot, and given the other things that

I've read about him, it's possible that

he did. But even if that one was planned,

there are a lot of stories about him

doing crazy stuff. There's this one from

Transworld in 2007. There's no

actual footage from this event, though.

"Outside of his ridiculous footage during

his early days in the States, one example

of the types of urban myths penny spawned

was one that I happened to experience

firsthand. In early 96, West LA's hot rod

skate shop had rented a warehouse

downtown, built a pretty decent mini ramp,

and threw a party to inaugurate/

celebrate the whole thing. With

jam-packed platforms and anywhere from

two to four skaters dropping in at the

same time, the session was extremely

heated. With his trademark beanie pulled

well below eye level, Penny embarked on

his run-of-the-mill tranny destruction

run, miraculously dodging the likes of

Mike Carroll, SAD and others. As he

casually cruised the ramp until he was

alone, pretty much at that very moment,

every light in the warehouse blew a fuse

and the entire party was left in pitch

black. However, through the darkness the

discernible noise of Tom's trucks

hitting the coping did not stop for

nearly a full minute, until someone found

the fuse box with the help of a lighter and

some luck.

Penny kept skating, either unaware or

simply unaffected by the lack of vision

on the ramp. Precisely as a lights came

back up, a stunned crowd watched in

disbelief as Tom's frozen, mid frontside

flip, floating over the ramp, completely

undaunted by either light or dark. Sixth

sense indeed." Also in 1996, Tom appeared

in Transworld UNO video. He only has a

few tricks at this bank spot, but even

that is a crazy story.

So if you want to see the whole video

watch Transworld Anthology. There is some

music in the beginning, so I can't play

it for you for copyright strike reasons,

but I'll try to summarize it. So the team,

being rob dyrdek and some other skaters,

took him to this spot and it's a really

crazy spot. It's really steep, it's just

the right length that it can shoot you

right onto your face if you mess up, and

they figured they'd get some basics out

of him: his switch flip, his frontside

flip and stuff like that. But what

actually happened was pretty ridiculous.

So he did that basic stuff they were

expecting, but he just didn't stop. He did

a nollie backside flip, going in blind

and fakie, and after that nobody else was

skating because they were just watching

this guy do whatever he wanted. Within a

couple of tries, he does a bunch of stuff,

and then he sealed the deal with a

switch backside flip. "Don't come back

here, the bank is definitely closed."

"That was the final time I feel like

anything was ever done there. I don't, I

can't even imagine, like, especially in

Southern California, like, when one

individual just shuts a spot down, like... I

don't think... nobody goes there. Not even

to this day, like, you can't go there

because you know, like, no matter... it

doesn't matter what you do, like, it just

will never compare to the one man

destruction session that he just put

down, and like, blessed skateboarding with."

Absolutely crazy, but also in 1996, Tom

got his first Transworld cover doing

this front blunt is completely

unbelievable... because he didn't actually

land it. Kind of weird. These days, you

would never consider publishing a trick

that wasn't landed, but apparently that's

what happened. But tom was always super

casual. If he was trying the trick and

just didn't feel it, then he would have

walked away and not even bothered with

it. I found a ton of stories about just

how ridiculously casual he was, like this

one from Chad Muska.

"That was pretty much the craziest part

of it all. It was almost like he didn't

know he was doing anything special. None

of it was conscious. Nothing he's done

has been conscious. It's just all natural.

His whole life is like that. Anywhere you

went, he would just bust something. No

cameras, nothing. None of it was ever

planned in any way. It was never like, "I'm

gonna do this, and I'll get this cover and

be a superstar." It was just, "Oh, there's an

obstacle in front of me, and I want to do

this down it." Boom. "I'm just doing it." Tom

was one of the biggest skaters in the

world in 1996, and then he suddenly just

disappeared, and even his disappearance

was casual. I remember even when I first

started skating a few years later, I

started 2001, there were always these

stories about Tom sightings. People

would see him somewhere, "he showed up at

my skate park, he did a giant nollie flip,

and then he's gone." There would be ads

published of him where he would be doing

a trick, and it would just say 'somewhere

in Europe.' You wouldn't know where, and

you wouldn't know when it was shot or

anything like that.

He was completely gone from the public

eye, and even his sponsors had a hard

time tracking him down, like Sole Tech.

They wanted to give him a pro shoe, and

they kept asking what he wanted his pro

model to look like and he just never got

back to him. Apparently, he had been

skating around Europe in Timbaland

boots for a year, the same

boots, and so they kept asking him 'what

do you want you shoe to be like?' Over and

over, and he eventually just sent them the

boot so that they could do some sketches

based on it, and they got it. And it

wasn't actually a Timbaland boot,

that's kind of the urban legend version

of the story. It was actually a Colombia

hiking boot, but still. Either way, this

dude had a shoe sponsor, he had enough

money to buy skate shoes, and yet he was

just skating around in hiking boots, you

know. It just didn't matter to him.

Something else that didn't matter to him:

I found this story where he lived in

Europe and he -- in France I believe -- and he

was right next to a filmer, and they

lived right next to each other, and they

also lived by this park. Well there was a

bunch of cool stuff to skate. Sometimes

he would call up the filmer and they

would go do stuff, sometimes he wouldn't

even bother. So one day, he went there, he

found the biggest gap that was in the

whole park, and he kicked flipped it, and

he didn't bother to call the guy. It just

didn't matter to him. But why did Tom

actually leave? There was always a lot of

talk about how he wasn't happy with the

skateboarding industry or how things

were going in the US and stuff like that.

But here's a quote from Tom himself: "I

never really made any decision to leave

the states or the spotlight. Right before

I left, I was living with Shawn Sheffy for

a couple of weeks, and he was like, 'you're

not coming back.' I was like, 'yeah I am.

I'll be back in two weeks. I'm just going

to the contest and then I'm coming back.'

He was like, 'no you're not coming back.' I

went to all the Euro contests and just

ended up in London I saw all my old

friends again and ended up staying there

for a while. It just happened." Of course

he just kind of wandered over there and

it just kind of happened. Completely

ridiculous. Well there's a ton of really

crazy things that happened while he was

over there in Europe. For example, he shot

this ad in 1998,

although the ad ran in 2000. He's doing

an Indy 540 on vert. Tom had skated pools,

a lot of transition and stuff like that,

but he was never known as a vert skater.

And yet, here he is doing a legitimate

Indy 540, with a legitimate amount of

vert skater level air. Completely crazy.

And even more crazy is the fact that he

had never tried a 540 before. He just

kind of got the idea and did it. And he

never bothered to call up a filmer, even

though he was filming for menikmati at

the time, and he actually made it pretty

tough on himself. He said, "I would drink a

beer between every try. I think I drank

something like 18 elephant tall boy

Carlsberg beers before

I finally landed it. I manual rolled the

flat bottom and manual rolled up the

other side. It was pretty crazy." Yeah,

there was a lot of drug and alcohol use

around this time too, but he says he

cleaned his life up around 2003. But

here's another crazy story from the time

in France. This is that same park I was

talking about earlier. He does a 5-0 shove

it out. It's basically like a one set,

like a stair height. I could probably do

that trick at that spot. Just picture how

that would look if you or I did that.

Okay, but now this is Tom doing it.

Transworld wrote a whole article about

the invisible shove it. It kind of looks

like he does a 5-0 and he's gonna go

to tail side, then he just doesn't. His

feet never look like they leave the

board, but somehow it ends up rolling

away backwards. It's completely crazy.

That was just his style though, it was

just so fluid and natural. You could

barely even see when things happened.

Here's another crazy one: this is a 360

flip to fakie that he did in Copenhagen.

Here's the story: "there were not many tries,

it's only a few as I remember it. The guy

is such a natural, it's insane. That roll

in he's skating is no joke.

It's a gnarly place to do those tricks,

and the way he did them, it was hard to

comprehend. I'm not sure he even noticed

Jesper shooting. Jesper got two great

photos: the 360 flip for the es ad, and a

frontside flip that I don't remember if

it showed up somewhere. As far as I

remember he made a couple of them (the

360 flips), maybe two or three." There's

actually a rumor that he was really

upset when he saw that ad because he was

there shooting the frontside flip for

TSA ,and that 360 flip was just poached,

like he wasn't planning on using it for

anything. But that's completely

ridiculous,

like he was just doing those anyway. He

didn't care if it was documented, and

someone just happened to take a picture

and shoot an iconic ad that's completely

amazing.

But his skating, it really makes me think

of how I skated back in the day, you

know, I was the complete opposite. I was

always trying to film for video parts. I

wasn't on any kind of Pro videos, I was

just shooting for YouTube, but every time

I went out, I would always push myself a

lot further than what I could do and

I just get more and more angry, just

trying to force this trick that I just

couldn't do. I would finally land it

really really sketchy and that would be

good enough, and I would just go home

angry. But that's not what Tom was like,

you know.

He would just do it. He was skating at

video part quality all the time.

Completely crazy. So after all that time

in Europe he came back and he shot for

Menikmati, which is one of my favorite videos ever

made. He was also in Sorry, Really Sorry and

Extremely Sorry. He moved back to the US

with a permanent residence visa in 2006,

and the parts that he put together

during this time were amazing, as were

his board sales. This Cheech and Chong

graphic sold like crazy, and flip ended

up having to pay Cheech royalties when he

found out about it.

Geoff Rowley said it was one of their

best selling boards for 13 years

as of 2009, but it's actually been

re-released more since then. After a few

years in the US, it seems like he ended

up back in Europe. You start to see his

footage and pictures coming from over

there.

In 2015 Lucien Clark mentioned in an

interview that Penny isn't allowed in

the US anymore. I don't know the story

there. Maybe his visa got revoked or

something. I'm not really too sure, but in

2014 he was in a UK video called Albion.

It was shot on a VX but it's actually

pretty new. He's 37 here and it looks a

lot like his signature style is kind of

faded away over time. Although, because of

his cult-like status, you'll see people

arguing in the comments that this is the

best skateboarding has ever looked in

all history. I'll let you decide for yourself.

Last year, he filmed some stuff in Chile.

You never really know where he's gonna

turn up. It looks like he's still rocking

boot style skate shoes. His Supra model

which is called the Bandit, looks like

this. He also had a small section in the

Supra video 'Oscar and Friends.' At this

point is more about cameos than full-on

video parts. And a couple of months ago,

he shot this ETN ad in Copenhagen. Maybe

he's staying there now. I don't know.

He's 40 years old now, and whether he

comes back to the US, or if he ever cares

to come back to the US, time will tell.

But that is what I was able to find

about Tom penny. Share your favorite Tom

penny stories below. I know there's a lot

more. I wasn't able to cover all the ones

that I found, but in the meantime, until

my next video, here are a couple more

videos you can check out. There's also a

big logo right in the middle of the

screen that you can tap to subscribe, and

that way you can keep learning new

things about skateboarding three times a

week. Thanks for watching.

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