Jamie Thomas — The Chief Who Risked Everything to Invent Zero
In 1996, a kid from Alabama left Toy Machine, started his own company with zero money, and filmed a video that would terrify a whole generation of skaters. This isn’t a metaphor. Welcome to Hell literally changed what the word « commitment » meant in street skateboarding.
⏳ Reading time: 5 min

Before Zero: Learning the Ropes at Toy Machine
Jamie Thomas grew up in Dothan, Alabama. Not the kind of place where you’re taught to dream big. He learned skateboarding alone, without a crew, without a legendary spot nearby. What that gave him was a hunger that the guys from San Francisco or Los Angeles never had to develop in the same way.
He joined Toy Machine in the early 90s, under Ed Templeton’s wing. The crew was artistic, weird, a bit punk. Thomas absorbed everything — video as narration, the board as a manifesto. But something didn’t click. His skateboarding, it was visceral. Brutal. He wanted scary spots, not boards with conceptual paintings.
In 1996, at 22, he left. No safety net. No deal waiting. Just the conviction that someone had to create a brand that felt like what skateboarding had always made him feel in his gut.
Welcome to Hell — The Film That Changed the Rules
Video Days reinvented aesthetics. Welcome to Hell, it reinvented the relationship with pain. Released in 1996, it’s Zero Skateboards’ first film. Thomas skates in it as if every trick could potentially be his last. Not out of bravado. Out of necessity.
The sequence that sticks in the minds of everyone who’s seen it: Thomas going down a massive stair set, not once, not twice, until he lands it. The falls aren’t cut from the edit. It’s a deliberate choice. He wants you to see the cost. For you to understand that the trick you’re watching isn’t talent — it’s a decision made in pain.
The rest of the team in this film — Jamie Reyes, Rodney Mullen in an appearance — contributes to a cohesive whole. But it’s Thomas who sets the tone. His part in Welcome to Hell will remain one of the ten most important parts in the history of street skateboarding, period.

The Zero Philosophy: No Compromises, No Excuses
Zero Skateboards isn’t a brand. It’s a point of view. The name itself is a mission statement: zero compromises, zero excuses. Thomas doesn’t sign riders for their popularity. He signs guys who skate as if consequences aren’t part of the equation.
The Zero roster of the 2000s speaks for itself. Jamie Reyes, Chris Cole in his sharpest period, Dane Burman, Garrett Hill. Each rider profile calibrated to the same frequency: guys who skate impossible spots without trying to negotiate with the physical reality of the place.
Thomas also co-founded Fallen Footwear in 2003 with Don Brown. Fallen shoes became the go-to gear for power skateboarding — thick sole, lateral support, designed to withstand repeated impacts on unprepared concrete. An industrial project built around the same principle: if you’re going to fall, you might as well fall equipped.
In 1999, Misled Youth confirmed that Zero wasn’t a fluke. In 2002, Dying to Live became the brand’s absolute benchmark. Each film built on the previous one, each film rested on the same conviction: skateboarding isn’t a performance. It’s an act of faith.
The Legacy — Why Thomas Remains Irreplaceable
There’s a precise moment when you realize what Thomas brought to the table. It’s when you watch current videos and you look for that feeling. That tension before the trick. That silence just before impact. You don’t find it often. Production constraints, sponsor deals, the smooth aesthetic of social media — all of that has smoothed out something Thomas had cultivated by hand.
Thomas understood before anyone else that a skateboarding brand isn’t a leisure company. It’s a promise. Zero promised raw truth. Thirty years later, that promise still holds. Zero decks still bear the same skull logo — simple, uncompromising, immediately recognizable at any skatepark.
What makes Thomas unique in the 90s generation is that he’s not an artist-skater like Mark Gonzales, not a technician like Rodney Mullen, not a performer like Reynolds. He’s an entrepreneur in the most brutal sense of the word. He took a real risk, with his own savings, on a product he believed was necessary. And he was right.
Perhaps that’s The Chief’s most underrated legacy. Not the tricks. Not the films. But the fact that he demonstrated you could build something lasting in skateboarding without ever betraying why you started.






















