Bridger Bowl is putting out ski videos that feel nothing like ski videos. No pros throwing double corks in perfect light with a cinematic score. No perfectly groomed corduroy at sunrise. Just normal days, flat light, regular skiers, people laughing on the chairlift. And they’re connecting with audiences in a way that a lot of bigger-budget content isn’t. SlopeFillers flagged this trend recently, and I think it’s one of the most important content conversations happening in the ski industry right now.

The Paradox of Polished Ski Content
Here’s the tension I’ve seen play out at every resort with a content team: the production quality goes up and the authentic feeling goes down. You spend $10,000 on a shoot day with pro athletes, a cinema-grade camera package, and a drone. The result looks incredible. And somehow, it moves people less than that shaky iPhone clip from a Tuesday powder day that a lift operator posted on their personal account.
Why? Because most skiers don’t relate to semi-pro performance content. They relate to the guy on 5-year-old rentals having the best day of his life on a run he’s been skiing for twenty years. They relate to the flat light day where you make the most of it anyway. The aspiration that Bridger Bowl is tapping into isn’t “I wish I could ski like that” — it’s “I wish I was there right now.” That’s a fundamentally different emotional trigger, and it converts differently.
What “Real” Content Actually Looks Like
Real content doesn’t mean low quality — it means honest framing. Bridger Bowl isn’t posting blurry clips with terrible audio. The production is intentional. But the subjects are normal. The conditions are honest. The energy is unscripted. That combination — good production values applied to authentic moments — is the sweet spot that most resort content teams miss. They either go full cinematic and lose relatability, or they lean so hard into “authentic” that the content looks neglected.
What’s your resort’s ratio right now between aspirational pro content and relatable everyday content? If your feed is 90% send-it shots and 10% real moments, it might be worth flipping that closer to 60/40. And it’s worth checking what your community is actually engaging with — not just what gets likes from industry peers.

The Practical Content Shift
Here’s what this looks like on a budget. Your lift ops team is out there every day seeing incredible moments — first-timers who just figured out pizza-wedge stopping, a 70-year-old ripping groomers, a family all skiing together for the first time. That’s content. It requires a phone, someone paying attention, and a marketing team that’s given those frontline staff permission (and direction) to capture and share those moments.
For gear, a simple action camera setup on a resort employee can produce genuinely engaging content with almost no post-production. We’ve covered how to think about camera selection and mount strategy for resort content in our GoPro sensor size breakdown — but the gear matters less than the intention behind the shot.

The Bigger Authenticity Bet
NSAA participation research consistently shows that perceived accessibility — whether the mountain “feels like it’s for me” — is one of the top barriers for potential new skiers. Polished pro content, while beautiful, can actually work against participation growth by making the sport feel elite and out of reach. Bridger Bowl’s real-moment content is quietly doing participation marketing without trying to be participation marketing. That’s hard to manufacture, but easy to replicate if you’re willing to let go of the perfect shot.
What’s the most authentic piece of content your resort has published in the last 12 months? Not the best-produced — the one that felt the most real. I’d bet that one performed better than you expected. That’s where your next content brief should start.



