Frost's best friend and traveling partner
Tuff Hedeman won his second PRCA bull riding world championship at the NFR in 1989. He successfully rode his last bull for the full eight seconds, and rode him an additional eight seconds in memory of Frost. After Frost's death,
Cody Lambert, another one of his friends and traveling partners, created the protective vest that professional cowboys now wear when riding bulls. Later, in 1996, the
Professional Bull Riders (PBR) made protective vests mandatory, and subsequently all bull riding organizations did as well. In 1994, the biopic based on Frost's life,
8 Seconds, was released.
Luke Perry played the role of Frost,
Stephen Baldwin as
Tuff Hedeman, and
Cynthia Geary as Kellie Frost. Since 1996, the PBR has awarded the Lane Frost/Brent Thurman Award; presented to the bull rider who scores the highest-marked single ride at the PBR World Finals. It was named for Frost and
Brent Thurman, who died six days after suffering serious injuries at the 1994 National Finals Rodeo. The Lane Frost Health and Rehabilitation Center in Hugo is dedicated to his memory. Country music star
Garth Brooks paid tribute to Frost in the video for his 1990 hit single "
The Dance". Rodeo announcer Randy Schmutz wrote the song "A Smile Like That" about him. The 1993 song "Red Rock" by the
Smokin' Armadillos is about Frost, and he is mentioned at the end of the video for
Korn's 2007 song "
Hold On".
Aaron Watson's 2012 album,
Real Good Time, included the single "July in Cheyenne".
Kings of Leon's 2013 music video for "
Beautiful War" pays homage to Frost. In 1994,
Billy Dean wrote and sang "
Once in a While" which appears on the
8 Seconds soundtrack. Frost's parents have authorized
Cowboy Bible: The Living New Testament, with a sketch of him on the cover. A documentary titled "The Challenge of the Champions: The Story of Lane Frost and Red Rock" premiered in 2008. It covers the match between them. After surviving an accident on the last lap of the 2015
Coke Zero 400 at
Daytona International Speedway,
NASCAR Cup Series driver
Austin Dillon waved to the crowd with a similar gesture to that of Frost's; he later stated that it was in tribute to Frost. A 2023, the documentary
Lane: Life | Legend | Legacy premiered, interviewing Frost's parents, Kellie, Hedeman, Lambert, and others close to him. It also included those inspired by him, such as
Cody Johnson and
Lane Johnson. American bull rider J.W. Hart idolized Frost. He attended Frost's bull riding school as a child and also befriended him. During the first few years of his professional career in the mid-1990s, while competing in the PBR and PRCA, Hart rode in a pair of pink
chaps that were once owned by Frost. In 2024, Brazilian bull rider Cássio Dias, who also idolizes Frost, won the PBR world championship while riding in those same chaps, which were gifted to him by Hart. Frost's cousin Shane Frost is a former professional bull rider himself. Shane's sons are Joe and Josh Frost, who started their professional bull-riding careers in the 2010s. Both have qualified for the National Finals Rodeo and PBR World Finals. Joe retired in 2021 after a series of injuries which resulted in blood clots. In 2024, his younger brother Josh won the PRCA bull riding world championship. They both now run the Frost Legacy bull riding school in
Randlett, Utah. ==Honors==