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Who's Rad? Sally Roepke.

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Photo: Olga Aguilar
Photo: Olga Aguilar
Photo: Hector Martinez
Photo: Jessica Basset
Photo: Mashall Reid
Photo: Olga Aguilar


We saw this rad black & white pic on Juice Magazine's site of a girl totally shredding like she was on fire. Turns out it was Sally. She skates hardcore, going full "balls to the wall" on each run. Gotta love that commitment. Check out the pics above to see what we mean. Looking forward to her next trip to Butlers pool and seeing her shred it in person. Now that will be EPIC.


Who's Rad?      Sally Roepke

Age:     29

Home is?      Seattle, WA.

How Long Have You Been Skateboarding?     14 years

What do you enjoy the most about skateboarding?

Because skateboarding takes so much focus it requires one to act one-mindfully. That kind of pure, in-the-moment participation is emotionally, mentally and spiritually beneficial like nothing else in my life. Skating teaches one how to deal with and accept pain and frustration, push through fear, and live in the present moment.

I can’t leave out the community around skateboarding. I have it to thank for the majority of my friendships right now and it’s truly amazing. I can travel anywhere and connect with skateboarders easily. It’s a rare place where multigenerational friendships are common, which is incredible.

Girls Who Skate that inspire YOU:

The women I skate with locally are my biggest inspiration because we push each other during our sessions. There’s a solid women’s skateboarding community in the Northwest, really too many to name, but some of my best skate pals are Jessica, Anna May, Gretchen, Rachelle, Colette and Chrissie.

Julz Lynn is really inspiring because she’s such a savage pool skater. She embodies the style that I’ve always strove for.

Some other professional skateboarders I admire are Amelia Brodka and Kristin Ebeling, both of whom in addition to being sick skaters do a lot for women’s skateboarding with their projects. Brodka with her Underexposed documentary and associated contest and Ebeling with her work with the non-profit Skate Like A Girl organization and Wheels of Fortune women’s contest.

I also admire Peggy Oki for being an OG skater on the Zephyr team, pioneering surf style in skateboarding and her current anti-whaling activism.

Favorite place you’ve ever skated?

There are a lot of great spots I’ve had the privilege to skate; Orcas Island, Chanel Street, Butler’s Pool and Marginal Way are my favorites.

Favorite Trick of maneuver?      Frontside carvegrind on pool coping.

Sponsors:    Tasty SkateboardsBlackmarket Skateshop  

Three Things You Don’t Know About Me

1. A Harry Potter soap-flavored jellybean was one of the best things I’ve ever eaten.

2. I work as an infectious disease researcher at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

3. I’ve played guitar since I was 12 and played in Jazz ensemble in middle and high school. Now I just play rock music with my band Sycorax.

What’s Next?

I’m an evening and weekend skateboarder in a city where it rains a lot so my first priority is to just skate whenever I can. Whenever I have a vacation I plan it around where I can skate. I’m hoping to make it to the East coast and Skatetopia next summer to celebrate turning 30. I like contests because they give me a goal to work towards in my own progression, but I’ll probably always be a casual contest entrant at most. I’m not a professional skateboarder--I’m a recreational skateboarder!

My other life goals include finishing my research on memory T cells for my first author paper and to record an album with my band.

Follow Sally at:    Instagram  @sallydressing


GN4LW x XS Helmets Collab.

Skating Cali With Chauntae.

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Check out this rad little video from Chauntae from Silly Girl Skateboards, showing us that skating ditches is old school & rad.  Happy Friday - get out and SKATE!

International Day of The Girl.

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Photo: Christine Benedetto

  Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word team rider Zoe Benedetto representing!


Two years ago the UN declared October 11 "International Day of the Girl" It's a day where organizations and groups come together to highlight, discuss, and take action to advance rights for girls everywhere. Something we firmly believe in.

Our mission on this site is to highlight girls every single day that get out there and do something - we encourage you today, and always to tell a girl that what she does matters. It's amazing how far support and kind words can go to helping a girl achieve her goals.

Today we highlight Zoe - click the drop down link in our Team Rider section at top of this page to learn more about her.  Zoe is 9, she surfs, skates, and encourages other girls to get out there and do what they love. Now that's RAD.

An Indoor Skatepark Like No Other.

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all images via House of Vans London

Heading to London anytime soon? Maybe you should. The House of Vans London is London's only indoor park and it looks pretty amazing to say the least. It's not just a rad skatepark, there are cool art instillation throughout, a theater with plush seats, a music venue for concerts, a cafe, and bars - all housed underneath London's Waterloo station. Looks amazing!!




Brighton Zeuner Coming To Exposure!

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We always keep an eye on what little Brighton Zeuner from the OG Betty team is up to - check out this rad pic of her flying high on the vert ramp. Can't wait to see her skate at Exposure on November 8!

Who's Rad? Ava McGowan.

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Photo: David Turko
Photo: Kenneth Carver
Photo: Chris Beeman
Photo Chris Beeman

It looks like Florida is raising some pretty rad little female surfers lately. We heard about mini shredder Ava McGowan from GN4LW team rider Zoe Benedetto - turns out they are best friends, surf together and push each other to be the best they can be. Ava has been surfing for 4 of her young nine years and loves to compete & does a bit of surfer girl style modeling when she's not in the water. We think we will be seeing a lot more on this young ripper in the years to come!  Read on to see who she looks up to in both surf & skate and what's next for Ava!


Who's Rad?       Ava McGowan

Age?    9

Home is?     Deerfield Beach, Florida

How long have you been surfing?     I've been surfing for 4 years

How long have you been skateboarding?   I've been skateboarding for 2 years now

What got you into these 2 sports?

Well my brother was competing in ESA/Nssa and a Grom surf series here on the East Coast and I just one day decided I wanted to do it too, it looked fun, and I wanted to be a part of what was happening, mostly I really wanted the trophies, lol Now I really want to just do well, and keep having fun!

Skateboarding is something I started doing to help me with my surfing! It is also a great way to surf when the waves are flat!!!

What do you enjoy most about both surfing and skateboarding?

I really love the way both make me feel! They are progressive sports/activities that make you want to keep trying to do something new, and when you get something new down it is so exciting! For surfing, each wave is a new opportunity, it is different from the last! Plus I get to surf and skate with awesome people!

Do you enjoy competing in contests or do you prefer free riding?

I love competing in Surfing, It makes me a better surfer, I learn something new each time! I have only competed in one Skateboarding Contest and it was a bowl contest and I actually won, that was crazy, I didn't think I would, but I am not really looking to do that right now!!!

Girls Who Skate that inspire YOU?    Alana Smith

Girls who Surf that inspire YOU?

Lakey Peterson, Carissa Moore, and Tia Blanco, she is a goofy footer and I love to watch her surf and learn!

Favorite place you've ever skated?     Ramp 48 and NSB Skatepark

Favorite place you have ever surfed?

I love Hermosa in Costa Rica and of coarse Puerto Rico there is this place called Bridges and I had the best couple of days surfing there with my dad and brother!

Favorite Trick or Maneuver - skateboarding?

Tail slide, but most of all I am a bowl skater, because I feel like I am surfing!

Favorite Trick or Maneuver - surfing?

I love to do a roundhouse cutback

Sponsors:   Roxy flow, Dakine flow, Bird Surfboards, Island water sports in Deerfield Beach and Billy Lush Brand






Three Things You Don't Know About Me:

1. I'll put Terryaki sauce on just about anything
2. I always sing super loud in the shower
3. I'm addicted to Coca Cola Slurpee's from 7 eleven

What's Next?

Well the new season has started, and I'm surfing in Nssa and Esa and am just trying to surf as much as I can, learn as much as I can and have fun! I am only 9, so I have a lot of time to compete! I do however want to be consistent, and make it through my heats and have good results! Like I said, I love competing, so I am very competitive!!

Follow Ava on: Facebook and Instagram

Exposure Skate Is Coming!

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 Stoked to share that  Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word is now a proud sponsor of EXPOSURE: A Women's Skateboarding Benefit Event .

Come out on November 8 to support all the female Pro & AM skaters who will be competing, get autographs from your favorite skaters, & learn to skate in a clinic sponsored by our collab helmet partner,  XS Helmets.

This event is the largest all female skate contest of the year and raises money for  victims of domestic violence.

Hope to see you there!

OPEN Premiere is Tonight!

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The second Longboard Girl Crew trailer OPEN is here and the premiere of the full length movie is TONIGHT in Madrid!  We wish we could be there to see this rad movie from start to finish because we know it's going to be BADASS!

Cheers to female powerhouse Valeria Kechichian for once again making things like this happen for women in skateboarding!

"Like You Do" With Tia Blanco.

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Check out pro surfer Tia Blanco in this new rad music video by the Wheeland Brothers. We love the music and the visuals. Perfect Thursday mid day break! Good job Tia!

Rock & Roll & Skateboarding.

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Photography Lew Robertson / Styling Anne Ross

We are stoked to have the Dusters California x GN4LW board featured in this room set shot by photographer Lew Robertson and styled by the talented Anne Ross. This amazing crew took a white desk and styled it various ways to show it's versatility, and we were so excited to see that we were featured in the "teen" version of the room.

Thanks Lew & Anne!

Dogtown's Peggy Oki in "No Swag" Video.

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So frigging STOKED to see the final video for the song "No Swag" by Emil & Caroline featuring our very own Dogtown Legend, and badass girl, Peggy Oki. We knew it was going to be good but this seriously made our Friday!

Many thanks to director Daniel Borjesson for keeping us updated on every step of this amazing project - we have been dying to share it with you!

Here is some info on why Emil and Caroline wanted to do a video with a female skateboarder & why Peggy was chosen as the perfect skater girl to do this.

"As a kid, I felt pretty powerful when I held onto the tram that squeaked into the Opaltorget stop, I had managed to stand on the skateboard for about 200 meters. Peggy Oki was the reason for all my nagging of how I wanted a skateboard, Mom and Dad was pretty tired of me. It feels a little unreal that Peggy is in the video, a true legend, says Emil"

"No swag is really a diss of the eternal quest for status, gadgets, beauty and body image. I am as much out there, and as everyone else. I'm lost, says Caroline"

The video was shot at Salton Sea, California and features skateboarding legend Peggy Oki. Peggy was one of the original members of the skateboard team Z- boys.

Congrats Peggy!!



The Girls Of Instagram - What Happened?

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So I woke up this morning to a text message. Popular nine year old, Florida surfer/skater, Zoe Benedetto's instagram was GONE it said. Gone, as in deleted as if it never existed. No warning, no notification, no "nothing" according to her mom. Just a "user not found" on the screen where post after post of her surfing & skating photos & videos once were.  Zoe competes up and down the Florida coast and is a top ranked amateur surfer.  Now Zoe was gone, and so were her photos, videos and 4,000+ followers. All of her friends and her major sponsors, like Billabong and Go Pro (and us here at GN4LW!) were left in the dark wondering "what just happened?"

Then we received a text from Jason who runs The Pink Helmet Posse in California - well known eight year old skaters Bella Kenworthy with 2,000+ follwers & Sierra Kerr at 10,000+ followers, also gone from instagram. The Pink Helmet Posse had recently been featured in Sports Illustrated Kids Magazine, had their documentary movie premier at the New York Film Festival to rave reviews, and now 2 out of 3 of the core team were deleted from instagram .  Why??

Then the calls & texts came fast and furious. It wasn't just these 3 exceptional pint sized female athletes that were deleted. Nope, there were more.

Sabre Norris, age nine who was featured in the new Kid Mac video, and was the first Australian girl to do a 540 on a vert ramp, was missing from instagram. Like the other girls, Sabre had 12,000+ followers. She also has over 1,230,000+ hits on her Youtube video of her 540 posted by The Berrics.

Minna Stess age eight from Northern California, also had her account deleted today. Minna had 4,010 followers as of last night before she went to bed. You might remember Minna from the video of her dropping in on the 28 foot high mega ramp at Woodward this past summer. The girl is incredible! She has been busy at the skate park practicing hard & preparing her "A" game to compete in Exposure Skate - an all girl skate contest being held in San Diego in November. This unwanted distraction was not something she or her parents needed.

Last but not least at the time of this posting, was little Quincy Symonds age six, also known in surf and skate circles across the world as The Flying Squirrel. Quincy had just been featured on a TV show about how she has overcome tough medical odds to become an amazing surfer and skater. Her followers also numbered in the thousands.

You may be thinking, "it's only social media, who really cares"?? Well, a lot of people do apparently. It is the talk of the action sports community, and it should be. These young athletes work hard to be the top tier in their respective sports. They are also all under the age of 10 and have multiple sponsors that they post for and those same sponsors share their posts. But more importantly they are all positive role models for girls of all ages. These girls are not showing skin or talking about boys and posting risque photos - they are surfing and skateboarding and making strides in the action sports community like no other generation has done previously.

If Instagram took their profiles down with out notifying them or their parents (all the accounts above are run/monitored by the parents) it was a major disservice to all young girls out there. It also left a lot of people in the dark as to what instagram's policy's really are.


New updated  info as of 10/19 - Some parents saw the account was deleted - then tried to "sign" in - when they did they received a screen that came up saying you must verify your age to be over 13 - since the parents ran these accounts (and said so in bio) they sent in their info. No word yet on action instagram is taking to reinstate accounts or not.

New info as of 10/18 : * Or was it hackers as people have speculated? If so, it would be great for instagram to publicly address the issue.

* Is it because they are under 13? If so, why wasn't a notification sent before deleting double checking their ages? (some did get this , some did not)

* Was it someone who clicked that dreaded "report to instagram" button and employees at Instagram noticed no pattern with the reports and just hit delete?

* Why were these kids singled out and why specifically skaters and surfers?

New info as of 10/18: * We have now heard that there are some boys who were deleted as well, and other athletes whose pages are "locked" pending verification from instagram, but when parents responded with answers, nothing happened to "unlock" the page. 

* And last but not least, why is instagram so hard to get hold of?  Online forms were filled out and Instagram was contacted by all these girls parents -  and has yet to respond.

When you have girls out there like Zoe, Bella, Sierra, Minna, Quincy & Sabre that are such positive role models for other young girls,  this whole thing just doesn't make much sense.




We'd appreciate you all sharing this post, & talking about this topic on social media.  Hopefully by working together, we can get instagram to respond, find out what happened, & get these girls accounts back.



Why Do Kids Need Instagram?

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Minna, Bella, Zoe, Quincy, Sierra & Sabre - all their profiles have been removed from instagram

I've been asked this question quite a bit in the last 24 hours. And while I can't speak for all kids, I can speak for kids who are athletes & who are at the top of their game.

First a little info on why I am speaking out about all of this & my background. Besides running this GN4LW site for girls in action sports,  I have also been a wardrobe/fashion stylist for over 20 years, which means I work on advertising shoots & commercials for companies like Gatorade, Nike, Adidas, Cocoa Cola, Sports Illustrated, ESPN,  etc. So I get to work with exceptional  adults, teens, tweens, and kids, who are simply the best athletes in the world. (Reference - http://www.cindywhitehead.com) As most of you know,  I was also a pro skateboarder in my teenage years, so I have been on both sides of what I am going to talk about.

Perhaps the average kid really doesn't need to have instagram account,  but the kids I have posted about (Zoe, Minna, Bella, Sierra, Sabre & Quincy) are all kids who have accomplished major milestones in the action sports community, and are visible, high profile, athletes.

Second, all the kids I have mentioned in the previous post do NOT run their own instagram - their parents manage it, post for them and monitor all comments.  Much like a underage actor or actress would have his or her management team do on instagram. Therefore, it's really more akin to an "Athletes Page" on Facebook.

Zoe showing her sponsor GoPro how that waterproof camera is working for her

All these girls have sponsors for their given sport. In this day in age when you have a sponsor, you are expected to post pictures of you excelling at your sport while using the sponsors product and in turn, the sponsor is supposed to promote you on their brand page. You also typically place your sponsors stickers on your boards, helmet, etc where they are viable in photos. Sponsors in turn help parents off set costs at the amateur level by providing product - that can mean expensive surfboards, skateboards, shoes, wheels, contest entry fees, and apparel - and these kids can go through a lot when training and competing.

Some of you will ask, "why bother, what's the point"?

Let's look at an athlete like top ranked 13 year old pro snowboarder Chloe Kim, who qualified for the Olympics last year but wasn't allowed to go, because she was slightly under the age requirement. She has a full roster of top sponsors like Burton Snowboards and Monster energy drink, and heading into the 2014/2015 winter season she has 7,000+ followers on instagram, 1,750 on Facebook and is featured on various websites. That means her popularity in general will most likely continue to grow moving forward, and with contests results combined with her social media reach, it all makes  her a very attractive package to future endorsement deals and sponsorships at a much higher level. This in turn enables her to make a living from doing what she loves. How great is that?

Chloe Kim at the X-Games

Top ranked amateur skateboarder, Poppy Starr Olsen age 14, is another great example. Instagram has enabled her to show off her amazing art work & jewelry that she creates, which she sells to fund her travel from her home in Australia to the USA for comps, as well as being  a place to showcase her skating skills. She has spoken at Google Headquarters about being a top young athlete and entrepreneur, and she is giving her first TEDx talk this month! Yes, she is a very exceptional kid, and social media has helped her grow and showcase her talents to become an even bigger source of inspiration to others.

Poppy skating here in the USA at the Vans US Open and some of her her beautiful  jewelry line




In my day, we had magazines that we were profiled in. I was expected to shoot with photographers, do my best in contests, and project a good image publicly for my sponsors. Social media has replaced a lot of that and there is really no turning back.  So now the expectations are a bit different for teh athletes. We like to know minutes after a contest "who won"? We know when someone has left their sponsor and moved onto to another. We also know quickly, when milestones have been reached, like Sabre Norris landing a 540 on a vert ramp. How inspiring is that? Especially when you see Sabre's face light up with excitement when she lands it - all via her instagram page.





Good or bad, it is the world we now live in.

I know for a fact that these young girls I have mentioned are role models and inspirations to many other young girls out there, and to adults like myself. The whole idea of "if she can do, I can do it"comes into play when you see 7 year old Bella & Sierra launch huge airs at the Vans US Open (which was not on a live feed - so yeah for instagram!) or Zoe Benedetto throwing both fins out of a wave with a big old "off the lip" while smiling and having the time of her life.  And who can forget Minna Stess dropping in from the top of the 28 ft tall mega ramp at Woodward?  I saw all these awesome milestones by these young girls on instagram - before they were picked up and posted elsewhere.





Quincy Symonds,  also known as "The Flying Squirrel" has gotten huge support from all over the world via instagram both for her rad surfing ability at age 6 and that a TV show that did a feature on her. We all learned that in addition to being an exceptional surfer, she has also been fighting medical issues her entire young life,  but is still out there smiling & ripping daily. To be honest, this is where I catch up with the parents and kids, and know daily who has broken a bone (bummer!), who won a contest, or who is just having fun shredding. 

Girls need role models and to be able to see other girls their own age doing exceptional things like this.  Yes, the GN4LW site also profiles these girls as often as we can, but their instagram accounts provide that source of inspiration daily. They are also all friends via social media, even though a couple live across the world - its like having a pen pal back in my day.  Numerous times I have viewed their comments on each others pages cheering one another on - which I think is awesome - instead of being jealous or thinking that other girls are the enemy.

The Pink Helmet Posse - inspiring other girls daily. Sierra & Bella's instagram's are now missing

These girls are not showing off their bodies in risque clothing, they are not glorifying drugs or drinking, they are becoming champions at their sport and need to be celebrated not hidden away,  especially when all their parents are controlling their accounts, so they are safe from harm.

I'm hoping instagram will get to the bottom of why these girls were deleted and perhaps implement a policy that says, "if you chose to be on instagram and are 13 or under, your parents must sign a waiver, be responsible for posting and monitoring comments, and you must be projecting a positive image for others".

How about that for a solution?



Beverly Flood - The World's Going To Know Your Name.

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Woke up this morning to THIS. Beverly Flood's new video. We have been eagerly waiting to see this video since we saw the teaser on instagram a few weeks ago.

Absolutely stunning. Beautifully shot in black and white, edited to awesome music, and Beverly showing style and grace as she throws down trick after trick.  GREAT video!

This skater girl is making a name for herself, having moved from the amateur ranks to the pro's just a few short months ago. You can see more of Beverly in person when she competes at Exposure Skate Contest on November 8.

Beverly's sponsors are: Flood Kontrol, XS Helmets, Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word, Theeve Trucks, 187 Pads, LipZipz Lipbalm, Immortal Laces, Mission Belt Co, & Goodtimes Board Store.

Filmed by: Beverly's mom, Spencer Hanscom & Dakota Olave

Instagram - Is It Really a Case about Being Under 13? Proof That It's NOT.

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 Bella, Zoe, Sabre, Sierra, Quincy and Minna doing what they love



Instagram - The topic of the deleted young surfers & skaters won't stop, and we have been getting calls, texts, emails, and post after post, in support of these young athletes with huge followings who have had their instagram accounts deleted, shut down or hacked - whichever word you'd like to insert here is fine, because until Instagram issues a statement, who really knows which it is?

The point I have made before is if a parent runs the instagram and it says so on the bio, is that really a violation of the rules that state you have to be over 13 to have an account? If it is, why are many very popular kids instagrams (some with over 342,000 followers) still up and running?

We can't say instagram isn't aware of them because the kids I have looked into that are still there have been written up on websites like Business Daily which nicely provided a list awhile back of some of the most popular instagram kids and click through links to their sites.

We also can't say that if you have the tag line "run by management or mom" in bio you are safe - not all profiles that were deleted, or those still up, fit this scenario. Nor can we say it's because you listed your child's age in the bio and publicly admitted they were under the 13 yr old age requirement. Because once again I have seen and heard both scenarios that equaled deletion.

That leads me to this interesting bit of information that a concerned party was nice enough to share with me....

This info is part of an article in the Daily Mail out of the UKabout Pixie and her mom Roxy

"Instagram has reversed the decision to close an account run by Sydney PR star Roxy Jacenko on behalf of her daughter Pixie".

"The mother-of-two was outraged - and her daughter sorely disappointed - last week when Instagram disabled the popular @pixiecurtis account, claiming it violated the photo-sharing app's age restrictions".

"But after writing to Instagram headquarters explaining the account is not run by a two-year-old but in fact her social media savvy mother, the account - which has more than 18,000 followers - was re-activated".

"Roxy described the move as 'ludicrous' given it is she - a 33-year-old mother - running the account, not a toddler".  'It's all a bit silly really, a harmless account run by a 33-year-old mother to share funny content – it's hardly breaking any laws,' she said.

"The business woman wrote to Instagram demanding they reactivate the account, and told MailOnline she didn't understand why she'd been targeted when there are countless Instagram profiles that purport to authored by a child - but obviously are not"



Let's read that again. Two? Pixie is two? Well yes, it stands to reason to any sane person, that a two year old could not possibly run their own instagram, of this I am quite certain. But at what age are we saying that it could "possibly" be the child running it, which would make it a violation of the FCC regulations?  Five? Seven? Nine? Twelve?

If the parent agrees, as Pixie's mom did, to take full control of the account and signs off on that legally, why can't the account then be left alone or reinstated? We have all heard about companies computer servers holding on to all your information forever (remember the Snap Chat debacle?) so we know the info on these deleted accounts is stored somewhere.  Seems like in Pixie's case it was "recovered" so there is a glimmer of hope here for the athletes accounts that were deleted.

What about parents, teams & groups who continually post pictures of their kids under the age of thirteen that are still on instagram? How is that different, if in fact, the issue is the FCC being worried about child predators?  I have a few references of instagram accounts to back this up but I'm not going to out them, as I'm stoked they are still able to share these athletic kids photos to inspire others.

NEW INFO as of 10/20:  Here is a great article that was posted on Saturday "40 percent of moms aged 18 to 34 created social media accounts for their baby before the child’s first birthday — and another 7 percent made one before their kid’s second birthday" Yes, dedicated accounts FOR the child.  Right or wrong it bolsters the claim that children's accounts are on instagram and there is public knowledge of this phenomenon. You can read the well written article by Allesandra Dubin  HERE

What about the kids I know who are thirteen to seventeen and allowed full reign on social media? I worry more about people luring them into conversations online and bad situations, than I do with these six to ten year old athletes whose parents fully manage their accounts.  

There seems to be no rhyme or reason to all this  and I think that is what most people that have been affected by this find  maddening. That and the lack of communication and answers from instagram itself.

But the good part is that by evidenced by the info above on two year old Pixie, if you lobby, state your case, and ban together,  you may be able to have the instagram account reactivated. It obviously is not irreversible nor do you have to be 13 or over.  Remember that Pixie is two.

P.S. At the time of this post two year old @pixiecurtis has over 89,251 followers and counting - although I highly doubt that she even knows or cares...

6 Yr Old Sky. One To Watch

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This video of  little 6 year old Sky is SO inspiring.  Can't wait to see more! Watch all the way through, her tricks just get better and better.    #OneToWatch

XS Helmets x GN4LW (early release!) at Exposure Skate Event.

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 Photos Ian Logan


Guess what?!  We just heard some BIG news about the  XS Helmets x Girl is NOT a 4 Letter Word collab helmet. The helmets are not due in until end of November BUT we heard a rumor that the XS Helmet booth at EXPOSURE: A Women's Skateboarding Benefit Event on November 8 will have (3) available for early release/purchase AND pro skater Beverly Flood will be at the comp competing and can even autograph it for you.

So get there early, watch some awesome women's skateboarding, and get your helmet before anyone else.  Hey! I don't even have one yet - so you will get it before I do!  #lucky

Samarria Brevard on BET - Opening Doors For Female Skaters.

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Check out this awesome article today on BET on pro skater Samarria Brevard who just won the Kimberly Diamond Cup. Samarria discusses competing against the guys,  what it was like winning the KDC in South Africa, and how female skaters who want to go pro can achieve that.

Here are a couple of questions & quotes from the article - but jump over HERE and read the entire thing - it's pretty awesome!

BET.com: What does it mean for you not only to be the first African-American to podium at the Kimberly Diamond Cup, but to win as well?

Samarria Brevard: Winning the Kimberley Diamond Cup for me was definitely a confidence booster, as well as a door opener. It means that I can keep skating with the best of them in women's skateboarding and be a part of the progression for women's skateboarding.


What’s your advice to young female skaters who want to go pro?
My advice to any female trying to get in to professional skateboarding would be to put in work. You should be skating every day and putting out proof of your skating ability with pictures and videos to show the world how awesome you are.

The Girls Of Instagram - We're All Almost Baaack!

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Quincy, Zoe, Bella, Sierra, Minna, & Sabre - The Original Six


So the story and updates of "Where Are The Girls of Instagram?" continues, but as of last night, with some great news. Zoe Benedetto, Bella Kenworthy, Sierra Kerr, Minna Stess & Sabre Norris are all back on the social media site with all their photos and thousands and thousands of followers intact.

The only bad news is we are all still working hard on getting little Quincy "The Flying Squirrel" back up - everyone misses her and no one in this group feels like this has been a victory until she is there again too.  Fingers crossed!

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