Steve Olson, the legend behind the creation of Skate Punk, skated the sidewalks along route 66 freeways in California. The 1980’s journey of skateboarding and punk rock united on the Pacific Ocean sidewalk, joining entities to create an everlasting identity, now known as skate punk. With his punk rock attitude, Steve Olson was top of his game on the skate scene, a profound influence in the world of punk rock, he endeavoured in a recorded interview in 1978 with America’s ‘skateboard magazine’, after winning the noble prize of skateboarder of the year, to shock the media world of this new raw energy of danger found within the punk rock scene. With an attitude of aggression, Steve Olson collaborated with the skating world and punk rock music. Dick Hebdige published subculture in 1979 making history in the music world with this creation a subgenre of punk rock, now popular amongst skaters. Throughout the early 1980's skate punk grew and softened into a melodic genre of punk rock. When you stepped on a skateboard in California in the early 80’s you were known as an outlaw, the same as punk rock and the anarchies against the rules of political change around the world. Profound dubbing of the skate punk music scene bought the bands Sex Pistols from the UK and the New York Dolls to the world of skateboarding with both reeling off the adrenal rush that the base and energy of the mix subculture formed in the 1980’s. They skateboarded and they were punk rockers a mix of power and freedom from the drum and base behind the scenes. Trash talk came to light in 2010 by reignited the 80’s skate punk bands and influence by reminiscing of the old punk rockers, and the skaters that thrive off the new emergence of Balzy bringing the raw energy back to life.