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==Subculture== {{Essay-like|section|date=February 2025}} The snowboarding way of life came about as a natural response to the culture from which it emerged. Early on, there was a rebellion against skiing culture and the view that snowboarders were inferior. Skiers did not easily accept this new culture on their slopes. The two cultures contrasted each other in several ways including how they spoke, acted, and their entire style of clothing. Snowboarders first embraced the punk and later the hip-hop look into their style. Words such as "dude", "gnarly", and "Shred the Gnar" are some examples of words used in the snowboarding culture. Snowboarding subculture became a crossover between the urban and suburban styles on snow, which made an easy transition from surfing and skateboarding culture over to snowboarding culture.<ref name="Heino, Rebecca 2000">Chaisson, Bill (2019). "[https://www.eagletimes.com/lifestyles/snowboarding-its-own-culture-and-the-crossovers/article_23cad806-2992-11e9-bbe0-fb2dd62ff2ad.html Snowboarding]: Its Own Culture and Crossover". Retrieved October 4, 2022, from Eagle Times.</ref> In fact many skateboarders and surfers snowboarded in the winter months and were the early snowboarders.<ref name="Heino, Rebecca 2000"/> The early stereotypes of snowboarding included "lazy", "grungy", "punk", "stoners", "troublemakers", and numerous others, many of which are associated with skateboarding and surfing as well. However, these stereotypes may be considered out of style. Snowboarding has become a sport that encompasses a very diverse international based crowd and fanbase of many millions, so much so that it is no longer possible to stereotype such a large community. Reasons for these dying stereotypes include how mainstream and popular the sport has become, with the shock factor of snowboarding's quick take off on the slopes wearing off. Skiers and snowboarders are becoming used to each other, showing more respect to each other on the mountain. "The typical stereotype of the sport is changing as the demographics change".<ref>[http://newsnet.byu.edu/story.cfm/57510 BYU NewsNet β Snowboarder stereotype squelched] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080705181908/http://newsnet.byu.edu/story.cfm/57510 |date=2008-07-05 }}</ref> While these two subcultures are now becoming accustomed to each other, there are still three resorts, in the United States, which do not allow snowboarding. [[Alta Ski Area|Alta]], [[Deer Valley]], and [[Mad River Glen]] are the last skiing only resorts in North America and have become a focal point over time for the remaining animosity between snowboarding and skiing.
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