Huck is inspired by DIY culture, featuring people who make you think, who challenge the system, who strike out on their own. Packed with intelligent journalism and stunning photography, it covers the people and the places that are shaping culture all over the world.
Huck
Editorʼs Letter
Enter the Wu-Tang • The spiritual leader of one of the most influential hip hop groups of all time explains why they won’t rest until their legacy is secured.
ASK RZA • As the ‘Life Is A Journey’ issue celebrates our 20th anniversary, we got Huck cover stars from the past two decades to ask RZA some philosophical questions.
VAMOS, LETICIA! • Brazil’s Leticia Bufoni has cemented her legacy as one of the greatest skaters of all time. Multiple X Games winner, Olympian, surfer and racing driver, she’s a bona fide adrenalin junkie.
Life After Death • Gorillaz co-founder and iconic artist Jamie Hewlett gets deep on how ends can be beginnings.
Going Hardcore in Saigon • Vietnam’s burgeoning hardcore punk scene is transforming youth frustration and anxiety into a cathartic roar.
From small streams, mighty rivers flow • From small streams, mighty rivers flow Staying humble, and influential, with DJ AG.
Radgenation • Huck brings two seemingly opposite people together. Because this exuberant 24-year-old from the UK’s northeast and this gruff Yorkshireman, a generation older, actually have a lot in common.
A View From a Bridge • How watching humans being humans makes us more human.
STARING DOWN THE BARREL • One of the world’s best big wave photographers and filmmakers, Sachi Cunningham gets closer than most for the perfect shot.
Start / Finnish • In Finland, “pilluralli” is a subculture of rural youths cruising around in cars, hanging out with friends.
Home Cooking • The Glasgow restaurant the African diaspora can call home.
Skate of the Nation • The concrete skatepark oasis in the Navajo Nation desert.
Syria’s Vertical Rebirth • The sibling climbers reclaiming mountains after Assad’s fall.
Legends of the Fal • Using only the power of the wind and centuries-old, traditional techniques, harvesting oysters in the last wild fishery in England is a sustainable, yet dying, practice.
Princess Julia