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In this episode of The Temple of Surf Podcast, we sit down with Joey Buran, one of the most powerful and uncompromising surfers to emerge from the 1980s professional surfing era. Known for his raw approach, fearless tube riding, and deep connection to the North Shore of Oahu, Joey shares stories from a time when surfing was less polished, more dangerous, and driven purely by commitment.
Joey Buran came up during a transformative period in professional surfing, when competition, free surfing, and personal style collided in heavy Hawaiian waves. Raised in Southern California but forged on the North Shore, Joey earned respect not through hype but through performance — charging Pipeline, Sunset, and Waimea when lineups were ruled by consequences, not cameras. His career reflects a generation of surfers who balanced competition with survival, ego with respect, and ambition with humility.
In this conversation, Joey looks beyond trophies and results to talk honestly about what it meant to surf at the highest level during one of surfing's most intense eras. He reflects on the mindset required to paddle out at Pipeline when fear was real, reputations were earned wave by wave, and mistakes carried lasting consequences. Joey also discusses how power surfing shaped his identity and why commitment, positioning, and instinct mattered more than style points.
The episode explores the realities of life on the professional tour in the 1980s — long before social media, analytics, and corporate storytelling. Joey shares insights into the brotherhood, rivalries, and unspoken codes that defined that era, as well as the mental and physical toll of competing in heavy water year after year. His stories offer a rare, unfiltered look at what professional surfing used to demand from those willing to push themselves to the edge.
Beyond competition, Joey Buran talks about longevity in surfing, the importance of adapting with age, and staying connected to the ocean long after the spotlight fades. He reflects on how surfing shaped his values, his approach to life, and his understanding of respect — for the ocean, for fellow surfers, and for the culture itself.
This episode is not just about a single victory or moment in time. It's about what it meant to be a surfer when surfing was raw, when the line between success and failure was razor thin, and when commitment mattered more than image. Joey's voice represents a generation of surfers whose stories deserve to be preserved and shared.
If you're interested in North Shore history, power surfing, and the mindset required to survive heavy waves — this conversation with Joey Buran offers rare perspective, honesty, and depth straight from the source.
#JoeyBuran, #NorthShoreSurfing, #Pipeline, #PowerSurfing, #SurfHistory, #SurfCulture, #ProSurfing, #SurfPodcast, #TheTempleOfSurf, #HeavyWater, #SurfingLegacy, #80sSurfing, #HawaiianSurfing, #SurfStories, #SurfLife
By The Temple of Surf4.9
1414 ratings
In this episode of The Temple of Surf Podcast, we sit down with Joey Buran, one of the most powerful and uncompromising surfers to emerge from the 1980s professional surfing era. Known for his raw approach, fearless tube riding, and deep connection to the North Shore of Oahu, Joey shares stories from a time when surfing was less polished, more dangerous, and driven purely by commitment.
Joey Buran came up during a transformative period in professional surfing, when competition, free surfing, and personal style collided in heavy Hawaiian waves. Raised in Southern California but forged on the North Shore, Joey earned respect not through hype but through performance — charging Pipeline, Sunset, and Waimea when lineups were ruled by consequences, not cameras. His career reflects a generation of surfers who balanced competition with survival, ego with respect, and ambition with humility.
In this conversation, Joey looks beyond trophies and results to talk honestly about what it meant to surf at the highest level during one of surfing's most intense eras. He reflects on the mindset required to paddle out at Pipeline when fear was real, reputations were earned wave by wave, and mistakes carried lasting consequences. Joey also discusses how power surfing shaped his identity and why commitment, positioning, and instinct mattered more than style points.
The episode explores the realities of life on the professional tour in the 1980s — long before social media, analytics, and corporate storytelling. Joey shares insights into the brotherhood, rivalries, and unspoken codes that defined that era, as well as the mental and physical toll of competing in heavy water year after year. His stories offer a rare, unfiltered look at what professional surfing used to demand from those willing to push themselves to the edge.
Beyond competition, Joey Buran talks about longevity in surfing, the importance of adapting with age, and staying connected to the ocean long after the spotlight fades. He reflects on how surfing shaped his values, his approach to life, and his understanding of respect — for the ocean, for fellow surfers, and for the culture itself.
This episode is not just about a single victory or moment in time. It's about what it meant to be a surfer when surfing was raw, when the line between success and failure was razor thin, and when commitment mattered more than image. Joey's voice represents a generation of surfers whose stories deserve to be preserved and shared.
If you're interested in North Shore history, power surfing, and the mindset required to survive heavy waves — this conversation with Joey Buran offers rare perspective, honesty, and depth straight from the source.
#JoeyBuran, #NorthShoreSurfing, #Pipeline, #PowerSurfing, #SurfHistory, #SurfCulture, #ProSurfing, #SurfPodcast, #TheTempleOfSurf, #HeavyWater, #SurfingLegacy, #80sSurfing, #HawaiianSurfing, #SurfStories, #SurfLife

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