Antwuan Dixon — 20 years after Baker 3, Carson’s cursed prodigy is back
Some people should never have picked up a skateboard. And then there’s Antwuan Dixon. The kid from Carson, California, who at 16 brought everyone to their knees. Who then lost everything. And who, in April 2026, lands the Thrasher cover and drops the part of his life.
⏱ Reading time: 4 min

The kid who changed everything
2005. Baker 3 drops. And in this film that would redefine street skateboarding for a generation, a 16-year-old kid catapulted the bar of what was possible to heights no one saw coming. Antwuan Dixon filmed his entire part in three months. Nollie heelflip on El Toro 20 stair. Switch tricks everywhere. An ease that made you uncomfortable, it seemed to come from nowhere.
Carson is a city south of Los Angeles where gangs are part of the landscape. Antwuan grew up in that. Baker decks were his only escape. He saw the board as a way out. At 16, he proved that ticket was valid.
Baker Has a Death Wish, the Deathwish years, back-to-back parts — Antwuan was building a legend. The kind of skater they say if skateboarding were a religion, he’d be its prophet.

The fall — prison, addiction, silence
What Baker 3 didn’t film was the environment Antwuan grew up in. And that environment caught up to him. Cocaine. Heroin. Alcohol. The classic spiral of a kid too talented, too fast, without the tools to handle what that entails.
In 2013, justice caught up to him. An altercation in a convenience store escalated. Battery, vandalism, child endangerment. Probation violation. Sentence: three years in prison. He served five, until March 2018. During that time, Jenkem Magazine published his letters from his cell. The community didn’t forget him. Baker didn’t forget him.
Out in 2018, in a skateboarding world that had moved on. Social media had accelerated everything. New names dominated the feeds. And Antwuan had to rebuild everything — at 29, with five years of prison behind him.
His fight against addiction shaped him differently. He doesn’t hide it. Like Joey Brezinski, whom we recently mentioned on Nosk8, pro skateboarding holds trajectories no one anticipates. The difference with Brezinski: Antwuan doesn’t let go of the board.
The rebirth — FTP, sobriety, Thrasher cover 2026
On April 3, 2026, Thrasher Magazine posted on its YouTube channel: « Antwuan Dixon’s FTP Part — now playing. » Four minutes. Filmed by Ryan Ewing. FTP Skateboards, Straye Shoes, Thunder Trucks on his feet. At 36, Antwuan is skateboarding better than he ever has. That’s not an opinion — it’s the consensus of the entire community.
Two weeks later, issue 550 of Thrasher Magazine landed in mailboxes. The cover: Antwuan Dixon. Switch frontside kickflip. Photo Atiba Jefferson. The kind of image that silences everyone.
Over five years of sobriety. The College Skateboarding Educational Foundation named him an honorary member of the class of 2026. In Tempe, Arizona, at the Slow Impact Conference, hundreds of people lined up to hear him speak — not just about skateboarding, but about what it means to fall and get back up. « Nothing changes if nothing changes. » He said it. And he lived it.
With his new Straye shoes on his feet, he proves that raw talent doesn’t disappear — it hibernates. It just waits for you to be ready to find it again.
What it says about skateboarding
Skateboarding doesn’t forgive easily. It’s a culture with its codes, its cycles, its icons that fade fast. When you disappear for five years, you might think it’s over. Yet, the community had saved a spot for Antwuan. Baker didn’t drop him during his incarceration. FTP brought him on board unconditionally.
Skateboarding values absolute talent. And there haven’t been many in history who reached this level of purity in execution. You think of Mark Gonzales and the poetic inventiveness of the pioneers — Antwuan, he’s raw power elevated to art.
This comeback isn’t a story of Hollywood-style redemption. It’s simpler and stronger than that: a man who found his purpose again. With Thunder trucks under his feet and an FTP board, at 36, Antwuan Dixon tells the kids of Carson — and everyone else — that some stories don’t end until you decide they should.
In 2005, Baker 3 blew us all away. In 2026, the Thrasher cover does it again. Some people get old. He gets better.






















