Colorado Front Range | Active Public Record: 2014-present | Known for: Eggxit, LINE Traveling Circus, Daycare, Jiberish, street skiing, Pete Koukov Un-Invitational | Current: LINE and Jiberish-backed creative ski projects
The Timbers Hike Park at Woodward Eldora had the right kind of early-season noise: skis scraping rails, friends yelling from the side, phones filming twenty-second edits, and Pete Koukov walking through the crowd with the loose energy of someone who wanted the day to feel open instead of exclusive.
Koukov, known across ski media as Egg or Eggxit, is not built from a World Cup résumé. His public story comes from Colorado parks, summer camp road trips, LINE Traveling Circus episodes, street films, Jiberish clothing projects, and a community contest with his name on the flyer. He represents a version of freeskiing where style, humor, crews, filming and access matter as much as the trick itself.
FREESKIER describes Koukov as born and raised in Colorado’s Front Range, and that detail helps explain the shape of his skiing. The Front Range is close enough to Eldora, Copper, Keystone and other Colorado terrain-park hubs to build a life around frequent laps, but far enough from the polished resort bubble to keep a street-minded, local-hill edge.
Newschoolers’ older “Boulder High School” video listing gives another piece of that early identity. It calls him a Boulder High School alumnus and connects him to a backyard-style junkyard park at BHS, where local skiers could ride when snow covered the city. That kind of setting fits Eggxit’s later personality: DIY features, friends, jokes, rails, and a preference for making skiing happen wherever the snow lands.
In 2018, LINE published Koukov’s own road-trip writeup, An Egg Out West. He introduced himself as Peter Koukov from Colorado and described a June trip with the LINE crew through Woodward at Copper, Woodward Tahoe and Windells. The story is casual, but it shows how he entered a wider freeski network through summer camps and crew travel.
That trip matters because LINE’s culture has long been built around skiers who mix park skill with personality. Koukov’s writing focused less on podium ambition and more on magic-carpet laps, van travel, skating, campers, lakes, rope tows and the people around him. It reads like the start of a creative skier’s public role: not just landing tricks, but helping carry the atmosphere of a traveling crew.
LINE Traveling Circus gave Koukov a recurring media home. Season 11 included the episode Pain In The Butt, where the crew took a summer road trip through the Rocky Mountains searching for snow and rails. LINE’s own season page says “Petey ‘Two-Holes’ Koukov” ended up in the emergency room after an unfortunate rail-related impact.
The nickname is absurd, but it also explains why Koukov fits Traveling Circus. The series has always blended technical skiing with comedy, road-trip chaos, local spots, bad ideas, good tricks and strong personalities. Koukov’s skiing works in that format because he does not need a clean contest arena. He can be part of a rail pile, a summer camp session, a strange stop on the road, or a joke that somehow becomes part of freeski memory.
Daycare, released in 2023 by Will Wesson and Patrick Ring and presented by LINE Skis, placed Koukov inside a dense modern street-skiing cast. The project featured Wesson, Ring, Reagan Wallis, Kale Cimperman, Tucker Fitzsimons, Bennie Osnow, Andy Parry, Pete Koukov, Taylor Lundquist, Dasha Agafonova, Mitchell Brower, Ross Imburgia, Jed Waters, Liam Baxter, Kevin Merchant, Paddy Flanagan, Kevin Salonius and Dickie Styza.
That roster matters. Daycare sits close to the LINE street lineage: handrails, odd landings, low-budget problem solving, quick ideas and a crew that values personality as much as conventional difficulty. Koukov is not framed as the single star of the film. His value comes from being part of that network and from fitting naturally into a group where skiing is edited, joked about, repeated and shared between friends.
Koukov’s video record also runs through projects outside the Traveling Circus lane. Prime Skiing lists him in Welcome, a 2019 movie by Andrew Mildenberger and Gavin Rudy under the Strictly name, with Benny Smith, Parker Norvell, Sam Zahner, Carson Kerr, Ethan Swadburg and Calvin Barrett. That places him among a North American park-and-street group active before his later event-hosting visibility.
In 2024, Downdays listed Koukov in Headache, a Hazard Network street video featuring Jed Waters, Tito Jenkins, Liam Baxter, Cayden Wood, Sam Zahner and others. The video was supported by Jiberish Clothing and LINE Skis. That credit keeps his archive current and reinforces the same lane: street spots, crew filming, sharp trick selection and a culture where the cast list tells you as much as the official title.
Koukov’s public skiing should be read through street and park creativity rather than formal slopestyle scoring. The technical frame is rail-heavy: fast approaches, stable slides, compact body position, playful transfers, odd feature use, and the ability to make a small or strange setup feel worth filming. His clips often live in the space between good skiing and good timing.
That is why his skiing travels well through LINE and Jiberish projects. A contest run asks for difficulty inside a controlled course. Koukov’s best environment is looser. He can turn a summer camp rail, a Colorado park feature, a street setup or a DIY build into something with character. The trick matters, but the idea behind the trick matters too.
Jiberish gives Koukov one of his clearest brand markers. FREESKIER’s 2024 Q&A described Eggxit as one of the more visible names in freestyle skiing and covered the Jiberish + Eggxit capsule, which included pieces such as a Canvas Field Jacket, Sheep or Wolf tees, a Most Gutter 5-Panel Hat and a Cinch Belt.
In that interview, Koukov said he had been skiing for Jiberish for about six years and emphasized the brand’s community of friends and athletes. That relationship fits his public image. The capsule was not just a logo placement. It connected skiing, clothing, humor, art direction and the way modern freestyle riders build identity outside official competition structures.
The Pete Koukov Un-Invitational became the strongest proof of his community role. FREESKIER’s 2025 announcement described it as a free, open park video contest at Woodward Eldora, where riders and snowboarders could film a twenty-second edit and post it with the event hashtag. Cash prizes, an Ikon Pass, pop-up contests, giveaways and an after-party at Good Times in Boulder built the weekend around participation.
The recap described the event as a gathering of local riders, young skiers and established pros, with no gatekeeping and hours of collaborative skiing in the Timbers Hike Park. The men’s podium was Cal Carson, Reagan Wallis and Wyatt Dorman, while the women’s podium was Bella Bacon, Rylie Warnick and Niamh Dedecker. For Koukov, the event moved his role from rider to host, connector and scene-builder.
Pete Koukov’s profile is not about medals. It is about a long creative trail: Boulder and Colorado park culture, LINE road trips, Traveling Circus episodes, Daycare, Strictly, Hazard Network, Jiberish, and a community event at Eldora that invited beginners, local crews and pros into the same space.
That makes him valuable for a video-focused ski archive. He represents the layer of freeskiing where personality and output are inseparable. Eggxit is a skier, but also a tone: funny, loose, rail-focused, DIY, community-minded and deeply tied to the crews that keep street and park skiing moving between major contests.