The sounds of surfing at JAWS – Ep 3 – Red Bull Soundwave

Big wave surfers Ian Walsh and Carlos Burle team up and ride the massive waves at the infamous JAWS beach on the North Shore of Hawaii. Ian Walsh goes down hard… Soundwave gives us an inside look at what really happens as surfers risk it all while riding 50-foot waves. Stay tuned as we follow surfers Ian Walsh, Carissa Moore, Carlos Burle and Maya Gabeira as we get a unique perspective on the action. paddle out to RedBullSurfing.com

Surfing English Bulldog

Gracie, the surfing English Bulldog. Come visit Gracie at the Ty Gurney Surf School in Waikiki, Hawaii. www.tygurneysurfschool.com

Clay Marzo: Just Add Water Extended Trailer

Go to www.quiksilver.com/justaddwater for premiere dates and tour and onsale info.

God Went Surfing With The Devil

Since the year 2000, over 4300 Palestinian and 1000 Israeli lives have been claimed by the escalating conflict in the region. The situation grew markedly worse in 2006, when Israel responded to the election of Hamas by sealing off the borders, ending the free-flow of people and goods. Palestinian militants reacted to the siege by targeting Israel’s civilian population with deadly rocket strikes; the Israeli Army countered with air strikes, targeting militants but often claiming the lives of innocent residents. In 2007 it emerged that a small group of young men were surfing in Gaza, sharing battered surfboards they had attained prior to the siege. Word traveled north to Israel, and that same year, a mixed group of Israelis and Americans delivered a dozen boards to their Palestinian counterparts. In the spring of 2008, they would attempt to deliver another 23 surfboards into Gaza. By this time the situation in Gaza had deteriorated further, the border still sealed, with military activity a near daily occurrence. “God Went Surfing With the Devil” charts the difficulties and dangers encountered by surfers in the region. Along the way it speaks to Israelis, Arab-Israelis, and Palestinians affected by the violence, charting their daily struggle to supersede the conflict through the joys of surfing.