In a skate world dominated by perfectly lit, sponsor-heavy clips and pro athletes dropping 30-second hammer parts, one account has quietly (and then not-so-quietly) taken over feeds: @bbyyoshando.
He’s not the one landing the tricks in most of his viral videos anymore. Instead, he’s become the internet’s rawest skate curator — finding, reposting, and reacting to the wildest, most unfiltered clips from pros, underground rippers, old-school legends, and even celebrities who can actually skate. Lil Wayne kickflipping? Some 39-year-old dad still killing handrails? Random Japanese kids doing lines that look impossible? bbyyoshando is the first to surface it, slap a simple “WTF” caption on it, and watch it explode.
Over the last 5–6 months alone, his channels across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube have surged past 800K followers collectively — most of that growth coming from this new wave of content.
No talking-head commentary, no over-edited montages, no brand plugs. Just pure, uncurated skateboarding culture served straight to your For You page like it’s 2005 YouTube all over again.
What makes it work is the authenticity. While big skate media companies chase polished productions and algorithm-friendly trends, bbyyoshando operates like the homie who texts you a clip at 2 a.m. with “yo you seeing this shit??”
His feed feels like scrolling through the group chat of everyone who actually lives for skating — no gatekeeping, no hierarchy, just the dopest skating happening on the planet right now.
Fans have noticed the shift.
Comments are full of “this is the only skate account that still feels real,” and “finally, someone just showing good skating without all the extra BS.”
Even pros and industry insiders are tagging him and commenting on posts when they drop new footage, knowing it’ll reach an audience that’s hungry for raw talent over hype.
This new style of content creation — the hyper-curator who spotlights the culture instead of centering themselves — might be the future of skate media. In an era where every skater is trying to build their own brand, bbyyoshando flipped the script: he built a massive platform by relentlessly putting everyone else on.
The result? A digital hub where the entire skate community converges daily and ultimately his own skate brand “Sariah”.
After a mysterious hiatus (and plenty of rumors), his return didn’t come with a comeback part or a sponsor-me tape. It came with better clips of other people than anyone else is posting. And somehow, that’s been enough to make him one of the fastest-growing voices in skateboarding right now.
Whether he keeps filming his own L.A. street sessions or stays behind the screen as skateboarding’s most trusted curator, one thing is clear: bbyyoshando isn’t chasing trends — he’s creating the new blueprint for how skate culture gets shared in 2025 and beyond.



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