So much happened in a short time. The Urethane wheel reestablished skateboarding in California in the mid 1970's. I started Skateboard City along with Cliff Savage and Ron Buckels in the summer of 1975 at a 100 sq ft store on Auburn Blvd in Sacramento's north area. What a trip. We had a lines out of the store leading up to Christmas that first year. We were joined by other Skate Shops, Skateboard Etc, Cal Skate and Cal Pro about the same time. Kids then couldn't get enough of it. They poured through every edition of Skateboarder Magazine to read about the So Cal guys and what they were doing and also to get the low down on the Skateboard Decks, Wheels and Trucks. Back then we assembled everything in the store. We didn't sell cookie cutter decks, wheels and trucks from one manufacturer. It was a great time for innovation and there was a huge market to support it. A year or so later pay to ride skateparks started popping up all over California including the Sierra Wave at Reuter Rd and Folsom Blvd in Rancho Cordova. Many of the highlights in the movie were somehow captured and saved from those days. Unfortunately the profit from those endeavors wasn't sufficient enough to justify keeping the park open. Not long after most skateparks in the state were bull dozed to make way for more profitable use of the land. Including Sierra Wave which turned into a Condominium Complex. The N Men were well known back in those days. Their ranks grew and who knew that they stayed true to the heart of skateboarding and have lasted to this day. Randy Karen was really Nor Carl's preeminent skater. He ripped the half pipe at Sierra Wave. More power to them. This documentary is a true piece and part of history both for skateboarding and Sacramento.