Jerry's bag of suck part was pretty fucking unreal, and I haven't watched it recently, but I bet it holds up in 2020.
I completely agree about Koston's part in Menikmati. Dude was way ahead of his time in that part. However, I loved his Chomp on this Part. Casually killing it. Grinds to manuals. Parking lot manual marathon. Chompin hubbas, and flickin down double sets. No complys in a time they weren't that cool. It was like a precursor to "instagram" parts.
Mccrank's part in Menikmati had a pretty big influence on me too.
PJ's whl. Dude, that was like coming across some random instagram profile where the guy kills it more than most pros and you've never heard of him. That was unreal. I remember buying even more Accels after seeing his part.
Also, Sus has a pretty good point. Videos as a whole typically had more impact than just one part. However, most of the parts that have been stated are typically the best parts of those vids.
Jerry's Bag of Suck is one of my favorite parts of all time. Forgot who it was on Enjoi (think it was Louie), who was like that part made us a legitimate company (an exaggeration, but a great comment).
I agree with the whole video part, especially when it comes to Menikmati. I felt Koston captured that point the best, but Arto, McCrank, and Koston changed what people thought was possible on rails, similar to how Duffy and Jamie Thomas took it bigger previously, Arto, McCrank and Koston took it tech on large rails. While very few think of Koston as a defining rail skater, in many ways, he redefined what people thought was possible on rails between Menikmati, Chocolate Tour, and Yeah Right.