Who is rooftop bmx




















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Self - Pro BMXer. Self as Rooftop. At least I don't feel like it's embarrassing to watch now. Can you explain what happened with Nikki Sixx and Twitter? Kat and Nikki were dating. He'd come over and I'd give him a hard time about wearing spandex and makeup. But at the same time, it's such a different genre from where I came from, so it looked insane and ridiculous to me.

So I started Photoshopping the photos, and that's how it got started. And he retaliated by putting my phone number on the Internet, and that was the end of that.

It's no different than hanging out with anyone else. He's a normal guy. The coolest thing about it is that Nikki has a lot of really wild stories. It would be the same if you never met [Mat] Hoffman, and you were a fan, and you got to listen to stories from Mat. Did all of the other characters on the show know about your background as a BMX pro? Nobody did. At least that's what I thought. Halfway through the season, the one guy Dennis, who I became close friends with, he never told me this, but he was a big fan of mine growing up.

He had pictures of me on his walls growing up, and in one of the episodes, he got a Rooftop tattoo. And I ended up getting the same tattoo. That was on just last week, and I bought it off iTunes cause I was on the road. That was the coolest episode for me, cause they actually showed me as a bike rider. I think the general public, up until that episode, didn't really know who I was. I wasn't Mike Escamilla the bike rider. I was just some guy named Mike Escamilla.

That was a little hard to swallow at first, cause I felt like people might think I was some sort of monkey. Undeterred, he put together a sponsor-me video aimed at etnies, which at the time was a quickly growing skate shoe company with no BMX program. The company flowed Escamilla product and was sufficiently impressed with the coverage he received to make him its first BMX pro in He soon convinced etnies to assemble a team of riders with a common dedication to taking the sport beyond the established ramp-and-dirt contest venues of the time.

They, along with Escamilla, became the prototype for BMX just as action sports began its well-documented takeover of global youth culture. I definitely feel like I helped create that market. Escamilla's spectacular crash on the loop became one of the opening shots in his segment for etnies' first team video, 's "Forward. The response was strange because the level of riding was somewhere beyond the sport's cutting edge. Along with the complete dissection of a new wave of concrete skate parks, technically impressive ramp riding, and smooth lines through tight backyard pools, the segment included a series of crazy stunts.

Some were ballsy, like his backflip over a helicopter with its rotors running, or the custom-built grind rail designed to backflip him into a ditch. Some were just bizarre, like the shots of his biking through the Snow Summit terrain park in the middle of winter, or the mini-ramp session where both he and the ramps were on fire.

I was doing what I wanted to do. Between a circle of friends that included few BMXers and large crossover sponsors like Hurley and Nixon, he found himself with opportunities to do things like snowboard in Alaska or surf in Fiji.

In addition, he began doing stunt work for commercials and Hollywood features. He developed a reputation for having unrealistic expectations when it came to the money he felt companies should invest in him and his teammates, which was compounded by the fact that he went through three bike sponsors between and When he received a small windfall for his participation in the original Mat Hoffman Pro BMX video game in , and then bought a flashy Cadillac Escalade, it fed rumors that Escamilla was all about the money.

So I spoke up. A company owner who is both a former sponsor of Escamilla with Volume Bikes and a current sponsor with Demolition Parts , Castillo has known Escamilla since they were teenagers.

He wants to go above and beyond. I don't blame him, but we're a rider-owned company. There's only so much we can do. By the end of , BMX was very much shaped in Escamilla's image. Hard-core street riders like Van Homan and Edwin Delarosa had taken the spotlight from high-profile vert riders like Dave Mirra and a tougher, DIY aesthetic began to prevail.

But after more than 10 years of groundbreaking video parts and dominating magazine coverage, Escamilla was less visible within the sport and more visible outside it. Katherine von Drachenberg resulted in several appearances on her show "LA Ink. After years of being considered disparate from BMX, it increasingly looked like he in fact was.

Then he made a move that might dwarf all his other contributions to the sport, combined. In addition to his status as a skateboard icon, Hawk's Huck Jam brand is dedicated to promoting skateboarding, BMX and Motocross to mainstream audiences. For years, they built bikes for mainstream brands with no BMX involvement at the core level and no clue what a real bike would look like. Built to explore. Built Ford Proud. Learn more at ford. Search Search.



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