- Breaking is making its Olympic debut in Paris on Friday.
- Sunny Choi is one of two B-girls competing for Team USA.
- Choi spoke to Business Insider about the sport, her fitness routine, and her hopes for the Olympics.
The 2024 Olympics has a new sport: breaking.
More commonly known as break dancing, the sport originated in the Bronx, New York, in the 1970s.
"DJs started spinning vinyl a little bit differently and extending the break of a song, and then the people who were dancing to the break were called breakers; they were called B-girls and B-boys," Sunny Choi, a B-girl on Team USA, told Business Insider.
As the sport reached mainstream consciousness, it was dubbed break dancing and gained popularity internationally.
"And ever since then, it's like we've always had this street culture that's existed and this really, honestly amazing community," Choi added. "But then there's also been these high-level competitions, and so that kind of circuit has existed, so now that we're in the Olympics, it's just like taking that one step further."
Choi, 35, will be one of 16 of the world's best B-girls competing for Olympic gold on Friday, August 9.
But unlike some Olympic athletes who've trained day in and day out since childhood for a chance at making the podium, Choi's journey to the Olympics has been more unconventional.
Choi, who spoke to BI as part of her partnership with Blume, a wellness brand that creates "functional beverages with organic superfoods," shared details of that journey, including how she discovered breaking as a freshman at the University of Pennsylvania and why she quit her job as a director at Estée Lauder.
Here's everything you need to know about Sunny Choi.