How To Make It In America Season 2 Premiere
We are very grateful to see that HBO has picked up the relatively new comedy-drama ‘How to Make it in America’ for a second season. The long awaited first episode in season 2 premiered last night on HBO!
If you haven’t heard of How to Make it in America before, it basically follows Ben Epstein (Bryan Greenberg) and Cameron ‘Cam’ Calderon (Victor Rasuk), who are two young entrepreneurs trying to make a living in New York City. Ben’s character is more reserved and cautious, where as Cam is a money mogul who will try anything to be successful. Together they start a brand called CRISP with much struggle in the first season. You see them hustle to get their CRISP line off to a good start by making denim samples, then graphic t-shirts, and then it ends with the chance of a (potentially) lucrative trip to Japan. Ben and Cam are always on the lookout for new opportunities and connections in the city to make it big. You get a certain feeling of ‘realness’ when watching this series, as you can see the producers and directors did a good job of representing the New York fashion and culture lifestyle. What makes this series even better, is that it is backed by well known producers such as Stephen Levinson, Rob Weiss, Edelman, Julian Farino, Jada Miranda and Mark Wahlberg.
The second season promises to deliver even more excitement then the first, because the first season seemed to just get the ball rolling with nothing substantially dramatic in the plot. We left off with them going to Tokoyo, as their t-shirts were picked up by a Japanese fashion company. Then the first episode of the second season continues to follow Ben and Cam in the New York fashion industry. It starts off with energy, as the guys return from their trip from Tokyo full of optimism, but will their drive for success last? Watch the first episode of season 2 to find out!
Trailers:
Watch more videos here.
Show times:
| Episode | Next Showing | |
| How To Make It In America 2: Ep. 201 – I’m Good | Oct. 4 – 7:30PM ET / MT | |
| How To Make It In America 2: Ep. 202 – In Or Out | Oct. 9 – 10:30PM ET / MT | |
| How To Make It In America 2: Ep. 203 – Money, Power, Private School | Oct. 16 – 10:30PM ET / MT | |
| How To Make It In America 2: Ep. 204 – It’s Not Even Like That | Oct. 23 – 10:30PM ET / MT | |
| How To Make It In America 2: Ep. 205 – Mofongo | Oct. 30 – 10:30PM ET / MT |
Interviews:
Also check out this interview by Barrics on Javier Nunez, who plays the legendary NYC skater Wilfredo Gomez:
You’re from New Jersey, how did you get started skating originally?
My older brother skated, I got into it pretty much through him. He was the guy that motivated me to jump on a skateboard. I stole his skateboard. I want to say I was probably about eight years old when I did my first ollie on the Have You Seen Them board – the Missing Children board, what was that H-Street?
It was Think.
Yeah Think – exactly.
Karl Watson, Sam Smyth…
Yeah, Nick Lockman, all those fools, that was the first board that I ever set foot on and it was my brother’s board. I pretty much jacked my brother for his board and then when I came home later that night he yelled at me, but I remember doing my first ollie when I was eight years old.
You had a 411 Wheels Of Fortune skating the Brooklyn Banks at eleven, which is pretty impressive being that you were so young. That was just three years after you started skating, how did that work out?
I was lucky enough to come into the city and get accepted into the crew. You know how it is, if you’re an out of towner and you come into the city, you’re gonna get checked or regulated. I was lucky enough to be around people that took me under their wing. That first year that I started going into the city, which was like ’93, that’s how I came up on 411. I was just skating and the dude, I believe his name was Dave Schubert – he filmed a lot with Pepe Martinez, both of those guys were up in New York from D.C. and they were like “dude, you wanna film a 411?” I was like “sure, let’s do it” and pretty much filmed all of those tricks in like ten minutes.
Who were some of the guys that were skating downtown that were sponsored when you were a little kid?
I would see Huf, I would see Huf shredding it. I would see Harold (Hunter), Steven Cales, Jeff Pang, just the old Zoo crew. I would see them skating through the city and like I said, I was lucky enough for them to accept me into their crew and they took me under their wing. But yeah, those were the guys. My first pro was Fred Gall, he was the first pro that I ever saw at Brick Town Skate Park in New Jersey. Before I was even going to New York, I remember going to Brick Town and Fred Gall was there, I remember fanning out on him.
How Did sponsorship come into play, who was your first sponsor and how did that work out?
It started off with me getting sponsored at this Flushing contest that Dead End put on… remember Dead End?
Yeah
Vinny Raffa, big up to Vinny Raffa – he threw a skate contest at Flushing Meadow park in maybe like ’93. Vinny Ponte was already on Dead End, but me and Supa were skating the contest over the grate. I was doing my tricks, Supa was doing his tricks; we were skating so good that Vinny Raffa was like “you guys are on the team!” Me and Supa got on Dead End on the same day. That was awesome cause Vinny used to take us in this crazy old school Cadillac to D.C. and Philly, we did some ghetto ass tours with Vinny. I give him repect, he took us out and pretty much showed us a good time when it came to skateboarding and being sponsored.







