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Greg Noll, South Bay surfer and legendary big-wave rider, dies latimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from latimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
May 21, 2021 by Craig Phillips in Behind the Films A Los Angeles native, Alice Gu began her career as a Director of Photography, working with renowned directors Werner Herzog (on his fascinating Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World) and Stacy Peralta. Take Every Wave: The Life of Laird Hamilton, a documentary directed by Academy Award-nominated director Rory Kennedy, was vividly, beautifully shot by Gu as the cinematographer. But now she’s taken the lead with The Donut King, Alice’s feature directorial debut. The film captures the rollercoaster of a life’s journey of Cambodian refugee Ted Ngoy, who arrived in California in the 1970s and, through a mixture of diligence and luck, built a multi-million dollar donut empire up and down the West Coast. ....
11 real-life entrepreneurs with lives so crazy they deserve their own movie The stories of these founders are anything but ordinary. Roger Cusa FacebookTwitterEmail Hollywood has always invested money in actors who dramatically tell how the origins of companies that have changed the world came about. Mark Zuckerberg , Steve Jobs, and Ray Kroc are just a few of the entrepreneurs whose stories can put you on the edge of your seat. Here are 11 business men and women who deserve their own feature film. 1. Nick Woodman, GoPro David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images After launching and failing with two startups at the age of 27 - and losing millions of investor dollars in the process - Woodman decided to go on a surf trip to Australia and Indonesia. In order to film himself on the waves, the entrepreneur developed a device with a rubber band, a piece of broken surfboard and a Kodak camera . ....
Print When Vans cofounder Paul Van Doren died last week at age 90, one particular shoe a slip-on sneaker with a waffle-bottom sole and a black-and-white-checkerboard canvas upper took centerstage. This is understandable; it’s the shoe that almost singlehandedly make that singlefootedly set the company on its way to becoming a multibillion-dollar action sports brand and it’s as instantly identifiable as a piece of branding as Nike’s swoosh is. It also does a disservice to the handful of silhouettes, and countless pop-culture collaborations in the last 55 years, that have earned the Costa Mesa-based, VF-owned brand a place in the hearts and shoe closets of millions of fans around the globe. ....
Paul Van Doren, cofounder of Vans shoes, dies at 90 Paul Van Doren, who cofounded the action-sports brand Vans, died May 6, just days after the publication of his memoir. (Vans) Print Paul Van Doren, cofounder of Vans, a shoe brand that became a multi-billion-dollar action-sports empire thanks to the SoCal skate community and a focus on custom kicks, died Thursday at 90. His death, confirmed Friday by Costa Mesa, Calif.-based Vans, comes just nine days after the publication of Van Doren’s book, “Authentic: A Memoir by the Founder of Vans.” No cause of death was given, but, according to Vans, Doren died at home surrounded by his family. ....