 In 1929, Czech daredevil Otto Berar was seen sending it off of the roof of this hotel. The photo was iconic. I wanted to recreate it and pay tribute to the pioneer a hundred years ago. Good afternoon. I'm really excited. Great. Jiri wanted to pair up on the project. When he reached out to me about doing it, I was so stoked and I was already on a plane to Europe. Hey, what's going on? Next. How was the journey? It was awesome. I saw the photo a thousand times and then I thought, why not try it with the same technique as Elnino did? So I decided to come here in the middle of the format camera from 1931. We'll see if we can have a similar look. I'm scared. We're going to do a little construction, right? Yeah, okay. The skier who jumped off the roof of this chalet were guessing probably didn't stomp the landing. Maybe he did. I'm guessing there was 20 feet of powder and he just just exploded. Now when we recreate the image, I want to land the jump. Yeah, right there. That's fine. Well, it's a lot higher than it looks from down below, but I'm really excited to get working on this landing. Man, it's crazy to think that Otto sent it off this roof on a pair of wooded skidges. I was a little stressed about the weather. You couldn't see your hand in front of your face and then just almost like that amazing blue sky and sun and you could see all the way to Poland. It feels really cool to be part of history. We're making history every day with the things that we do and the things that we're a part of, that you can come to this hotel and see this photo from 1929 right before World War II and then do the same thing and try to make it better. I think that's pretty awesome.