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Rodney Mullen

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Johnny Rodney Mullen (born August 17 1966 in Gainesville, Florida) is a professional skateboarder, and widely considered to be one of the most influential skaters in the history of the sport (Weyland, 2002, p.276). He is credited with inventing many tricks introduced throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, including the flat-ground ollie (Mullen, 2004, p.115), the Kickflip, the Heelflip, the 360 flip, the Gazelle flip] and the Impossible which are regularly performed in modern street, freestyle, and vertical skateboarding.

Early career the 1970s and 1980s

placing third in the Boy's Freestyle event. Mullen, then 11 years old, attracted the attention of Walker Skateboards who became an eunusco subsystem-->ly signed him to a contract.

For the next 10 years, Rodney placed first in every contest he participated in.

Later career - the 1990s to 2000s

His tenure at World Industries marked the beginning of a shift in his skating career from freestyle to street skating. Throughout this period Mullen developed a highly technical version of street skating based on his freestyle experience. This approach was first seen in the 1992 Plan B video ‘Questionable.’ Mullen has continued to develop his skating style based upon a fusion of freestyle and street. Mullen skated for various companies during the 1990s, all of which were under the World Industries umbrella. As well as being a professional skater, Mullen started to design new products including the Tensor truck in 2000 [1]and helping to design and engineer various World Industries pro decks.

In 2002 the World Industries companies, under the holding name Kubic Marketing, were bought out by Globe International for $46 million. Kubic's management remained intact and Mullen began working for Globe International under the Dwindle Distribution brand with a pro model on Almost Skateboards [2].

2004 saw the announcement by Dwindle that it has been producing skateboard decks in China under the direction of Mullen. A Dwindle spokesperson explained that the move was “to better control our current product quality and develop new advanced products. All this, while simultaneously lowering the price on existing skate-deck products.” [3]

Mullen also penned an autobiography in 2004 with the help of Sean Mortimer, entitled The Mutt: How to Skateboard and Not Kill Yourself.

Video Appearances

Mullen has been featured in many skateboarding videos including, inter alia:

  • Powell Peralta: Skateboarding in the '80s (1982)
  • Powell Peralta: The Bones Brigade Video Show (1984)
  • Powell Peralta: Future-Primitive (1985)
  • Powell Peralta: The Search for Animal Chin (1986)
  • Powell Peralta: Public Domain (1988)
  • World Industries: Rubbish Heap (1989)
  • Plan B: Questionable (1992)
  • Plan B: Virtual Reality (1993)
  • Plan B: Second Hand Smoke (1994)
  • Plan B: The Revolution (1997)
  • World Industries: Rodney Mullen versus Daewon Song (1997)
  • World Industries: Round 2: Rodney Mullen versus Daewon Song (1999)
  • Globe Shoes: Opinion (2001)
  • Almost Skateboards: Round Three (2004)

References

  • Brooke, M (1999). Concrete Wave: The History Of Skateboarding. ISBN 1-894020-54-5.
  • Mullen, R. & Mortimer, S. (2004) The Mutt: How to Skateboard and Not Kill Yourself, HarperCollins, New York. ISBN 0-06-055619-6
  • Walker, Bruce. Rodney's sponsor and coach from 1977 to 1980. oceanave@aol.com, http://www.floridaskater.com/floridaskater%20bruce%20walker%20profile.htm
  • Weyland, J (2002) The Answer is Never: A Skateboarder's History of the World Arrow, London. ISBN 0-09-943186-6