
Issue one was deemed to be a failure by Rocco and was given away with a warning sticker 'warning: test copy. Due to the fact that no-one here had any idea what in the hell they were doing this issue has been declared a total failure. Therefore we have decide to give it away for free'.
Early writers included Sean Cliver, Earl Parker (Thomas Schmidt), Jeff Tremaine

The magazine soon established itself at the cutting edge of skateboarding - love it or loath it everyone read it. Issues 1 to 8 were full of Rocco's marketing gimmicks; No2 came in an extra large format, No3 was spiral bound, No5 came with trading cards, No6 came in a serial box, No7 had eight different covers and No8 came with an audio tape. After No8 Rocco had no more direct involvement in BB but allowed it to continue on.
Content was highly controversial and no subject was taboo, as well as skating there was a lot of sex, nudity, drugs and rock n roll not to mention religion and midgets. Articles such as 'how to kill yourself' in No3 and 'field trip to Hustler' in No9 gained the magazine 'outraged' media exposure and a spot on several news broadcasts. Despite all of this the mag was instrumental in publishing video sequences of the newest tricks and covered many rising street skaters. It's coverage of skating was very much 'tell it how we see it' - not always the policy of other magazines. As with World Industries the magazine caught the feel of the times.



