
Kolohe Andino grew up surrounded by pro surfers
02/23/24 • 10 min
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As a kid, Olympic surfer Kolohe Andino was surrounded by professional surfers. His dad, Dino Andino, came up in nascent era of professional surfing in the 1980s and worked in the surf industry thereafter. Kolohe's a part of a special cohort of current pros who as young kids showed immense talents out in the water. Kolohe’s earliest memories are of joining his dad at competitions around the world. Once Kolohe entered the pro circuit himself as a teenager, the expectations mounted—only recently has he been able to put less pressure on himself. In this bonus episode of the Family Crest podcast, Kolohe speaks about seeing the bigger picture in life, that there’s so much more to life than winning and losing, and how much he respects his dad’s legacy.
@KoloheAndino24
@RedBulletin
@RedBullSurfing
@RedBullUSA
As a kid, Olympic surfer Kolohe Andino was surrounded by professional surfers. His dad, Dino Andino, came up in nascent era of professional surfing in the 1980s and worked in the surf industry thereafter. Kolohe's a part of a special cohort of current pros who as young kids showed immense talents out in the water. Kolohe’s earliest memories are of joining his dad at competitions around the world. Once Kolohe entered the pro circuit himself as a teenager, the expectations mounted—only recently has he been able to put less pressure on himself. In this bonus episode of the Family Crest podcast, Kolohe speaks about seeing the bigger picture in life, that there’s so much more to life than winning and losing, and how much he respects his dad’s legacy.
@KoloheAndino24
@RedBulletin
@RedBullSurfing
@RedBullUSA
Previous Episode

Carissa Moore on being present and spreading the love for surfing
For more than 25 years, Carissa Moore has been showing us what it means to surf from the heart. With five world titles, an Olympic gold medal and years of milestones and accolades, the 31-year-old surfer recently announced that she will be stepping away from the WSL Championship Tour.
In this bonus episode of the Family Crest podcast, Carissa Moore shares how her approach to competition has evolved over the years, how the Olympic games allowed the surfers on Team USA to bond, and what she loves most about surfing (spoiler alert: it has nothing to do with winning).
Family Crest is a podcast by the Red Bulletin magazine. This episode is hosted by Peter Flax and written and produced by Melissa Saenz Gordon—engineering by Full English Post.
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Next Episode

Caroline Marks on her ambitious goals and the progression of women's surfing
“I'm also not going to stop pushing forward and not going to stop working towards those goals. So why not say it out loud and go for it?”
In September 2023, Caroline Marks arguably reached her potential by winning the world championship title on the World Surfing League’s championship tour. At just 21 years-old, and with seven years on the pro circuit clocked, it seemed like clinching the world title was only a matter of time for the young goofy-foot.
In this bonus episode of the Family Crest podcast with host Peter Flax, Marks discusses her ambitious goals (“I'm here to go to as many Olympics as possible and win a gold medal”) and how keeping her brothers around her keeps her grounded (“They humble the sh*t out of me, and I'm grateful for that”).
Family Crest is a podcast by Red Bull and the Red Bulletin magazine. This episode is hosted by Peter Flax and written and produced by Melissa Saenz Gordon. Engineering by Full English Post.
@Caroline_Markss
@RedBulletin
@RedBullSurfing
@RedBullUSA
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