An Oral History of Extreme Sports
In the waning decades of the 20th century, men from New Zealand began inventing new ways to injure themselves. They jumped from bridges with elastic bands attached to their ankles, ran class-five rapids without boats, and fixed themselves to large kites to achieve great speed. Soon enough, a culture had emerged—one that paired backyard engineering with the pursuit of adrenaline. Today, thanks to these pioneers, brave souls the world over may hurtle through the air, down mountains and up rivers and live to brag about it.
Survive the Zombie Apocalypse With Skills from Adventure Sports
21 Bunji Jumping ideas bungee jumping, extreme sports, adventure
It just all came down': An oral history of the Oso mudslide
Oral History Series, The Players' Tribune
Extreme sports can be both exciting and dangerous to do. This book is about many different kinds of extreme sports people like to do.
Extreme Sports
The Apple '1984' Ad Changed the Super Bowl Forever - The New York Times
Prince: The Oral History of 'Purple Rain' - SPIN
An Oral History of Extreme Sports Land sailing, Kite surfing, Kite buggy
Carolina Panthers: An oral history of 1995 inaugural NFL season - Sports Illustrated
Extreme Sports Medicine