Showing posts with label Shaun White. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shaun White. Show all posts

Friday, October 23, 2009

ESPN.com- Grail Boot Featured

ESPN.com posted their Mid-October Insider Report that includes a review of the Burton Grail Boot. The review, called “Burton’s Quest for the Holy Grail”, likens the advances in the boot to determining “the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow,” and goes on to describe some of the unique features behind the Grail Boot. In the report, a photo of Shaun in his signature Hi-Fi helmet is also included and captioned “if a helmet is cool enough for Shaun White, then it’s cool enough for you”.

ESPN.com receives 45,476,410 views per month.


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Thursday, August 27, 2009

LA Times - Shaun White World Cup Coverage

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Los Angeles Times receives more than 6,000,000 views per month.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

NY Times Mentions Burton Riders in Olympic Training Article

Spring Training For Snowboarders

New York Times

05/03/2009

Great painters never see a blank canvas, only the possibilities.

That same principle holds for athletes. And for a snowboarder, there is no stage more suited for pushing the realms of possibility than the 500-foot-long superpipe at Buttermilk Mountain outside Aspen. It is snowboarding's Mecca, given the crowds it attracts each year for the Winter X Games and the reverence with which some of the world's best halfpipe riders view it. Which is why, less than a year from the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, U.S. Snowboarding officials worked out a deal with the Aspen Skiing Company to hold an exclusive two-week camp for top riders last month after the lifts had stopped running for the season. There were no TV cameras, crowds or bright lights, only a blank canvas for experimentation. The early feedback was promising. Gretchen Bleiler, a silver medalist in the halfpipe at the 2006 Olympics, worked tirelessly one day on a combination that had never been done before in women's halfpipe competition. The series of tricks, an inverted 720-degree spin known as a 720 crippler followed by a cab 720 off the opposite wall of the pipe, is the realization of years of progression. To Bleiler, the process of getting the combination down felt like one long headache. ''With any new trick, I'm always frustrated because it takes a lot more energy to do it than an easier, simpler trick,'' she said. ''It's frustrating in a good way, though, because I am pushing myself.'' She added, ''This is when you kind of just need to keep going, keep plugging away, keep pushing past your boundaries and then all of the sudden it's just natural.'' That line of thinking is prevalent among snowboarders during the spring. Once the competitive season winds down and the temperature begins to rise, the race heats up among the sport's elite athletes to come up with the next wave of tricks. To facilitate that process, Mike Jankowski, U.S. Snowboarding's halfpipe coach, said the team camp was the obvious next step. At Buttermilk, the riders not only had the huge pipe to themselves, but also the services of two snowmobile drivers to ferry them up the mountain. There were also staff members on site to salt the snow when it got too soft or to add blue dye when the lighting was flat, as well as to recut the walls of the halfpipe each night. Although the setting was ideal, Jankowski said advances in the sport were fostered not by the pipe but by the riders. Already motivated individually, they also pushed each other to do more. Riders got as many as 25 runs a day during the camp. Among those filtering in and out of the daily sessions included Steve Fisher, a two-time Winter X Games champion, and Kevin Pearce. Both have beaten the sport's star, Shaun White, in competition. And to keep up with White, both were hard at work on tricks that were once seemingly pipe dreams before edifices like the one at Buttermilk came into being. One trick Jankowski said to watch for next winter was a double-corked 1260, a spin cycle of three and a half rotations and two off-axis flips. The last two Olympic champions in women's halfpipe, Hannah Teter and Kelly Clark, were also training in Aspen, leaving White as the only noticeable absentee, despite invitations from the United States team. He certainly had a good excuse. While his competition was trying to keep in step, White was reportedly taking a break after his camp at perhaps the only pipe in the world that could rival Buttermilk's: a private halfpipe built on the backside of remote Silverton Mountain in Colorado. Red Bull reportedly contributed $500,000 to the halfpipe's construction. Among other things, the pipe was reportedly accessible only via helicopter or snowmobile and featured a foam pit at the base of one end to allow White to try whatever new tricks he could dream up. Jankowski did not want to speculate about what those were, but he did say tricks like the double-corked 1260 would probably be much more prevalent during next winter's Olympic qualifying Grand Prix, much the way back-to-back 1080s were the must-have combination before the 2006 Winter Olympics. Although the addition of another revolution showcases evolution, Jankowski said the real progress was in the subtle way tricks were refined to look natural. It is not about the spinning so much as how it looks. And to get it down perfect, it takes a lot of practice and snowmobile trips back up the mountain. ''There's the obvious progression from a 10 to a 12 or from a 12 to a 14, but one of the key things our guys and girls have done is make sure that we're not upping the ante and we're not upping the rotation level unless we're grabbing and it's smooth and it looks good,'' Jankowski said. Jankowski said he hoped the effort would pay off. The United States took four of the six medals in halfpipe at the last Olympics in Turin, Italy, but Jankowski said he expected stiffer competition next winter in Vancouver. ''We don't take anybody lightly, but we definitely want to maintain our position as the ones to beat, as the ones who set the bar,'' he said. ''We don't want to be playing catch-up.''

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Shaun and Kelly are featured in Sports Illustrated’s 2010 Olympics!






The article, “Good’n’Ugly” by Austin Murphy, takes a look at the recent World Cup at Cypress Mountain in Vancouver and goes in depth on the challenges facing the 2010 Winter Olympics Halfpipe venue.

The piece describes the competition as underwhelming, but reinforces Shaun’s “near-perfect run”, claiming his “fourth win in six events”, and Kelly as the “low-key, high-flying Vermonter” who is on the journey for another gold. Both Shaun and Kelly are quoted in the article. Kelly is quoted as she describes her training, focusing on the little things, and looking forward to the Olympics. Shaun is also called out on the cover of the issue.

Sports Illustrated has a circulation of 3.2 million.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Canada's Largest National Newspaper Features Jake and Shaun in Olympic Preview


VANCOUVER 2010: ONE YEAR OUT: CAMERA READY: SHAUN WHITE
U.S. snowboarder at top of fame mountain

DAVID EBNER
February 12, 2009

Forget about downhill skiers, hockey players and figure skaters. The most famous - and marketable - athlete expected to go for gold at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver is a snowboarder.

It's much more likely you know him, and his mop of long, curly red hair, from magazine covers or Hewlett-Packard Co. commercials than for his seemingly impossible 1260s - 3½ full rotations, picture a spinning top - as he explodes from the steep walls of a snowboard halfpipe at the X Games.

Shaun White, already a star before gold at the Turin Games in 2006 launched him to mass-market fame, is a rare athlete. Fiercely competitive, yes, but bursting with personality, unlike golf's Tiger Woods (selling luxury watches and Nike products) or swimming's Michael Phelps (who hung out with Tony the Tiger on cereal boxes until his "regrettable" bong hit).

Consider White as version 4.0 of what's become Snowboard Inc. - fun, yes, still raw and a bit reckless, certainly, but big money, without doubt. Endorsements bring him an estimated $10-million (U.S.) a year.
Print Edition - Section Front

"Take away the trappings of fame. Do you want to be Shaun White or Michael Phelps?" asks Max Valiquette, president of Y Syndicate, a group of youth-marketing companies in Toronto. "Who's more fun, who has cooler friends, who do you want to hang out with? It's all Shaun White."

White, 22, the dude you'd expect to be smoking weed, never comes off awkward or weird.

Whether it's on the cover of business magazine Fast Company, or Rolling Stone, or in a new film about his visit to the remote Hokkaido backcountry in Japan for sponsor Red Bull, the energy drink, White is casual and never stiff, a relaxed Southern California style, where he grew up and lives, a guy you'd actually like to hang out with. Never mind that he's a ridiculously amazing halfpipe rider, and is a double threat - a top-tier skateboarder in his spare time, with an eye on the 2012 Summer Olympics in London if skateboarding, as speculated, enters the Olympics.

It's marketing gold, harder to find than the metal itself.

Skip the superficial equation of snowboarding equalling cool, and jump to why, Valiquette says. It's creative. It's kind of wild. It's fun. Most of all, it's not just about being really, really good at something.

Valiquette hardly needs to add, alluding to the new Shaun White Snowboarding video game by Ubisoft: "No one's playing a swimming video game."

If White is the fourth wave of snowboarding, the first iteration was certainly Jake Burton Carpenter, who had an instinct, a dream and an economics degree in hand. He hacked together the earliest commercial snowboards in a barn in Vermont in the late 1970s, when the sport was in outlaw territory, not allowed on any ski mountains.

The second emerged in the 1980s with the sport's first hero, Craig Kelly, sponsored by Burton Snowboards Inc.

The third starred Terje Haakonsen, another Burton rider, perhaps the best in the sport's history and the gold-medal favourite in 1998 in snowboarding's first appearance at the Olympics. But he spurned the event, likening the International Olympic Committee to the mafia.

White, a Burton rider since he was a kid, is at once ingrained by, and freed from, the past.

"He's become a superstar and plays that role better than anybody ever has," says Carpenter, owner of privately-held Burton. "Craig was big, Terje was huge, but Shaun's on a whole other level. Those guys were never on the cover of Rolling Stone. And a lot of that is attributable to Shaun."

Like the smartest of business people, White is careful to keep his commodity valuable by limiting its supply - and choosing partners with caution. He has a tight coterie of corporate sponsors and, after his gold in 2006, didn't blurt yes to the hundreds of offers as they poured in.

"Every week," his agent says, "we get presented with a big opportunity from someone. Shaun turns down a lot of money."

The way sponsors such as computer maker HP use White in commercials and campaigns - and how they use him sparingly - is another telling marketing tale.

HP, in 2005, was getting pounded, as usual, by Dell Inc., on the assembly-line side of computer selling, and by Apple Inc., on the creative side. In a slow but sure corporate reimagination, HP did what it barely ever did, sponsor an athlete, White, then not even 20 and mostly unknown outside snowboarding.

Not long thereafter, two things happened. White won gold - and was on magazine covers and television talk shows. Famous. Around the same time, David Roman, former Apple marketing executive, after some in-between work, joined HP. He coined the phrase: "The computer is personal again."

Another idea came up: hands. How a computer is used. Take marketing photos of celebrities - "achievers" in HP marketing parlance - without using their faces. First up, White, a lover of technology, games, photos, videos, music, a MySpace.com page. He loved the idea. And even after subsequent achievers such as rapper Jay-Z, tennis star Serena Williams and comedian Jerry Seinfeld, White's was still the biggest hit.

And, yes, HP sold more computers, and reused the spot last summer - two years after it first aired, almost unheard of - for a back-to-school campaign. But it doesn't use White much.

HP learned it wasn't about wallpapering a star on a billboard on every interstate in the United States. It was about something much deeper, and thus something potentially much more valuable.

"HP is an old brand, we've been around forever, and our weakest area was the youth space," says Roman, an HP marketing vice-president. "Shaun is such a great ambassador, the way he connects with kids, but at the same time, the way he uses technology."

It's all about real personality.

"Shaun has a much tighter link with his generation than I would suspect Michael Phelps has," Roman says. "We know Phelps for eight gold medals. You don't know him."

***

The hit chart

Snowboarding, in a single decade, has gone from Olympic oddity to marquee event - and it boasts the Winter Olympics' most famous competitor. Shaun White of the United States looks to defend his gold medal in the men's halfpipe in Vancouver in 2010. Here, based on google.com hits, is a list of athletes ranked by online popularity:

6.58 million Shaun White, U.S. snowboarder
5.05 million Lindsey Vonn, U.S. alpine skier
2.66 million Kim Yu-Na, South Korean figure skater
1.92 million Jenny Wolf, German speed skater
1.74 million Nicole Hosp, Austrian alpine skier
1.62 million Sidney Crosby, Canadian hockey player
1.47 million Brian Joubert, French figure skater871,000 Bode Miller, U.S. alpine skier
632,000 Alexander Ovechkin, Russian hockey player
623,000 Jennifer Heil, Canadian freestyle skier
390,000 Eric Guay, Canadian alpine skier
64,300 Cindy Klassen, Canadian speed skater
25,100 Pierre Lueders, Canadian bobsledder

Beyond sports, for comparison:
293 million U.S. President Barack Obama
92.5 million U.S. singer Britney Spears
4.05 million Prime Minister Stephen Harper

The Globe and Mail

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Shaun graces the cover of the February 2009 issue of Fast Company!














The ten page cover story reveals how Shaun’s creativity and authenticity have allowed him to become a success in the youth market. Senior Editor, Mark Borden, outlines how Shaun’s performance at the Olympics and his decision not to follow in the footsteps of previous Olympic success stories paved the way for his unique business strategy, allowing him to regulate his image and only work with companies he truly connects with. Shaun’s relationship with Burton is a key element to the story and it highlights how Burton allowed him to begin designing his own gear, opening the doors for him and Jesse to create a solid line of outerwear and hardgoods. Specific products from the men’s and women’s White Collection are pictured and Jake and Greg D are both quoted in the story. The story is highlighted in the table of contents as well as in the letter from the editor.

Fast Company has a circulation of 742,000.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Kevin’s feature story in ESPN Magazine’s X Games Preview is on stands!












The print edition is a six page spread along with a full page picture of Kevin in the Contents page. We also learned that there will be another sidebar on Kevin on ESPN.com that will include Jake’s quotes from Alyssa Roenigk’s interview.

Hannah, Danny, and Luke are also included in the issue in a piece entitled ‘Comeback Kids,’ a story on Winter X Games athletes that are coming back this year after injury. Hannah talks about how her injury enlightened her to think up additional ways to fund Hannah’s Gold including donating all of her contest winnings to the cause. Danny and Luke are pictured and talk about their excitement for the season.

ESPN The Magazine has a circulation of 2 million.

Monday, November 24, 2008

The December issue of Men’s Health features Burton all over a ten page package edited by Matt Bean entitled ‘Your White Hot Winter’.







To start things off, Jake is included on the contributor’s page introducing the section. In the opening page of the section, a Fix as well as C02 EST Bindings and AK 2L Stagger Pants are featured on a model. Inside, a collage by Jesse White combines snapshots of Jake, Shaun, and other riders to give a first hand visualization of what the US Open is all about. A quote from Hannah, regarding ‘mingling’ on the mountain, is included next to the collage. Featured at the end of the piece is an essay by Jake, speaking about the elements that go in to a great winter. This coverage comes with an approximate ad value of $184,000!

Men’s Health has a circulation of 1.9 million.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

USA Today includes Shaun’s interview with Sal Ruibal in a story entitled ‘Snowboarder White adding Merit to Medals.’

Shaun’s signature Burton boards and outerwear are called out along with a great shot of Shaun competing decked out in ‘The White Collection.’

USA Today has a circulation of 2.3 million. The article is also featured online; USA.com receives 16.4 million views per month.

http://www.usatoday.com/sports/action/2008-11-12-snowboarder-white-clothing-line_N.htm

Thursday, November 6, 2008

The November issue of BestLife features an interview with Shaun in a piece entitled ‘The Trip that Changed My Life.’


Shaun talks about his visit to the genocide memorial in Rwanda in the ‘Confront Evil’ section. Shaun discusses his life altering experiences in Rwanda and how it was ‘one of the heaviest places’ he has been to. BestLife has a circulation of 495,000.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

(UK) Shaun White Snowboarding at the London Games Festival





It's not often you see someone snowboarding in East London, but then Brick Lane is full of surprises. The Truman Brewery hosted the London Games Festival, of which the Shaun White Snowboarding game was undoubtedly the pick of the bunch. If it gets more people into riding then so be it. By any means necessary....