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North American | European

Chris Preston chats to Neil Randall of if6was9 about his radical take on traditional board design, Noosa's retro vibe, and his love of vintage style. Photos Dane Peterson

Drift caught up with big-wave surfer Carlos Burle on home territory in Brazil to find out why he considers big-wave riding to be a playground for the few who have earned the privilege. Photos: Al McKinnon

When legendary longboard designer Bob McTavish came to Devon recently as part of TIKI's international shaper tour, Chris Preston couldn't resist the opportunity to quiz him about the technicalities of board design... Photos: Jamie Bott

The Mentawais have given a lot to surfers; now it's time to give something back. Kate and Luke Gerson celebrate the beauty of these islands and highlight the continued need for aid following the recent earthquake.

Flitting between awesome waves at Aileens and Nelscott Reef is all in a week's work for Ireland's big-wave master Al Mennie. Words: Al Mennie Photos: Al Mennie, Gary McCall, Larry Jansky, Richard Hallman

Championed by surfers in the know for over 30 years, but largely ignored by mainstream riders; has the time finally come for the Bonzer to shine? Words: Steve Croft & Mark Sankey Photos: Alexa Poppe

//end second call for randoms ?>

Speedo slip up

June 08, 2010 | Words By: Howard

speedo Anyone who receives the SAS magazine will have noticed Speedo’s response to the Return to Offender campaign. So we gave them a call to find out what was going on.


When the postman arrived at Drift HQ last week, we were quite staggered by the revelation that Speedo’s store manager had referred to Surfers Against Sewage as ’self-righteous twats’. In the interests of balanced journalism, we contacted the company to clarify what Speedo meant by that. After all, by inference, aren’t Speedo calling anyone interested in the ocean environment twats? Of course not, and this simply emerged as a case of one man’s views conflicting with his employer’s views.

We spoke with their VP for a while, who assured us that Speedo were determined to do as much as they can, as a company, to protect the environment. Speedo actually have a reasonable environmental policy. The views of one employee are not a blanket measure of a business, so you have to feel for them to a certain extent.

The SAS campaign Return to Offender is of course not suggesting that Speedo are responsible for their customers actions, the whole point of the campaign is to keep the momentum of a message in the forefront of the public’s imagination. Rooting around some of the Triathlon forums, readers seem to have misunderstood the point of the SAS campaign. Change only happens through consistent campaigning, so we’re right behind Return to Offender. But we’re also sympathetic to Speedo’s plight - the views of one employee have marred the reputation of the entire company.

If you want to read more about the debacle, have a look at The Guardian’s feature Speedo slips up and Coca-Cola wins out in beach litter campaign.

We gather Speedo are now one man short. Oops.


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