Eli Olson’s Fall Guy: wipeouts, risk and a winter to remember at Pipeline
Eli Olson’s short film Fall Guy drops you straight into the kind of Pipeline sessions that split opinion — jaw-dropping lines, white-knuckle escapes and wipeouts that read like stunt reels. The video is raw, unvarnished and, importantly for Steepline readers, useful: it’s a reminder of how thin the line is between pushing for the wave of the trip and taking a ride you won’t forget.
Watch the short film here, heavy wipeouts included.
Credit: Fall Guy — Eli Olson / YouTube
What the film shows
Fall Guy stitches together powerful Pipeline sessions with a clear throughline: Olson committing to heavy-bodied, critical waves and taking consequential falls. The cinematography alternates tight, skill-first surf clips with slow-motion and wider perspectives that let the wrecks breathe — which makes the film as much about impact management as it is about performance.
For readers who follow Pipeline coverage, some of these sequences land during the exceptional winter swell window widely documented in Surfline’s 2024–25 Pipeline reports. That season produced multiple days where experienced local chargers and visitors alike were incentivized to take higher risks for the reward of scoring barrel sections few other breaks offer.
Olson: surfer, stuntman, risk manager
Olson’s public profiles and video catalog show he wears two hats: high-level surfing and stunt work. That crossover isn’t just an attention-grabber — it explains a lot about his approach on big days. Stunt work teaches you to plan for impact and to control what you can in a chaotic moment. Surfing at Pipeline asks the same of you.
See more behind-the-scenes content on Olson’s social channels:
Injuries and recovery — handled carefully
The film documents heavy falls; Olson’s social channels and past posts reference knocks and time spent recovering. The wipeouts and subsequent posts make clear that big-wave surfing and physical career work (like stunt work) come with tangible costs and recovery needs.

What this should teach surfers — practical takeaways
– Respect the line: Pipeline rewards commitment but punishes mistakes. Know your limits on peak days.
– Train for impact: breath-holding, duck-dive strength, board control and neck/shoulder conditioning matter. Cross-training that simulates impact resistance is worth the time for heavy-wave surfers.
– Recovery is part of the season: plan time off, follow progressive rehab and listen to medical advice after big impacts.
– Learn from footage: slow-motion replays like those in Fall Guy are schooling. Study wipeouts for mistakes you can correct (line choice, posture, speed control).
– For photographers and filmmakers: capture the line, but respect the rider — never pressure surfers into taking a risk for the shot.



