Biography
Walter was raised by ski patrollers in a very normal mountain town that inspired a hit TV show called South Park. A childhood far from the streets of San Francisco, where he studied advertising and was mentored by the minds behind Got Milk?. When he wasn’t buried in homework or collecting parking tickets, he was working at production companies around the Bay Area, building pitch decks, and slating on film sets.
Before that, he spent summers working in construction to fund an expensive sport called freeskiing. That sport took him across the world for over a decade: X Games, two world championships, and over forty World Cup starts. He didn’t make it to the Olympics, but was part of a small athlete committee that made a lot of noise petitioning for the sport’s induction in 2014.
Somewhere along the way, he started filming, writing on the side for ski publications, and transitioning his sponsors into clients. Between film, design, and writing, it felt like the most respectful way to pay it forward short of donating his knees.
Long before broken bones and debates with the Olympic committee, he wanted to be an artist, a filmmaker, a creative, and, most importantly, a good person.
Walter is currently writing about himself in the third-person to lend a sense of importance to his biography. He suspects everyone actually knows this, which is why he is happy to confess to this.
Before that, he spent summers working in construction to fund an expensive sport called freeskiing. That sport took him across the world for over a decade: X Games, two world championships, and over forty World Cup starts. He didn’t make it to the Olympics, but was part of a small athlete committee that made a lot of noise petitioning for the sport’s induction in 2014.
Somewhere along the way, he started filming, writing on the side for ski publications, and transitioning his sponsors into clients. Between film, design, and writing, it felt like the most respectful way to pay it forward short of donating his knees.
Long before broken bones and debates with the Olympic committee, he wanted to be an artist, a filmmaker, a creative, and, most importantly, a good person.
Walter is currently writing about himself in the third-person to lend a sense of importance to his biography. He suspects everyone actually knows this, which is why he is happy to confess to this.
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