 My name is Eileen Gu. I'm from San Francisco, California. I'm a professional skier, but only on the weekends. I do it full-heartedly and wholeheartedly and happily and same goes for school, I guess. A lot of schoolwork on the plane. Let's just say that. I was eight years old. My mom was faced with a decision to put me either in race team or in free skiing. She thought that anything would be better than racing because racing was too dangerous. So she thought whatever this free skiing thing was, that's where we'll go. In January of 2019, I was at my third World Cup in Italy and I was wearing the number one bib for the first time, so this was a really big deal. And I had fallen both of my first two runs, but I was able to take a really deep breath and really think about why I was doing this sport and what I loved about it and turning point of being able to kind of manage my own stress and, yeah, I ended up landing my run and that was actually my first World Cup win, so a big lesson right there. Yeah, trauma, buzien, tight shot. Like, roughly translates to have a greater perspective of things that are greater than myself. It was really about inspiring younger girls who maybe didn't know what the sport is or didn't know what extreme sports in general were. Bobby has been a huge inspiration for me pretty much from my first time competing when I was nine years old in 2013. I remember he signed a poster for me. Hey, what's going on? I think I got a little surprise for you right here. Oh, my God. Welcome to the Red Bull team. When I was nine, you signed a poster and you said, Eileen Gu, you're going to crush it and you signed it. Honestly, it's a dream come true. It's so exciting to be able to represent Red Bull in 2022 in China as I'm competing for China actually, so on home soil and being able to do that with a brand that I really respect supporting me will be really exciting.