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Where did that footage end up? Was it in “life in the fast lane”?
"there a video of a skateboarder named nyjah huston destroying your property on the internet"
I’m no lawyer, but couldn’t a case be made that when a big company like Nike commissions a skate video which it uses to help sell their stuff, doesn’t that kind of make them responsible in some way?
Quote from: SneakySecrets on June 21, 2018, 07:14:13 PMExpand QuoteI’m no lawyer, but couldn’t a case be made that when a big company like Nike commissions a skate video which it uses to help sell their stuff, doesn’t that kind of make them responsible in some way?[close]Ask the guys at 35th North in Seattle...
I’m no lawyer, but couldn’t a case be made that when a big company like Nike commissions a skate video which it uses to help sell their stuff, doesn’t that kind of make them responsible in some way?[close]
Since it seems many of you want to destroy the skate industry there is a very easy way.As Don Brown tells it: "The company that owns this building saw the @themuska @esskateboarding ad in @transworldskate and sued éS for damages to the marble handrail... I believe it cost is around $30k to settle ... but a photo of #TheMuska is priceless... we got a bargain price ...Front 5-0, 180 out"So, have every property owner and company sue or threaten to sue every sponsor for damages and it will all be done.i hate you and everything you're about...are you the guy that invented the skate stopper? You would even get a little percentage of each settlement.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rihgt-CYYJU