Jenny was a "shredder", a skateboard phenomenon who easily defeated the boys in competitions and had an online following of over a million subscribers. Until the day she rode her scooter through a cloud emanating from a traffic accident involving a couple tanker trucks. Over the next few weeks, she began to shrink, inches a day, while doctors tried to find a cure. She continued with her skateboarding videos, using smaller and smaller skateboards until even a child's board was too large. As she got smaller, she tried doll skateboards, but they had such poor performance, she was unable to do even the simplest tricks. She had shrunk to about 5 inches, when the doctors were able to isolate the chemical compounds that cause her to shrink. Her shrinking was stopped, but not reversed.
Unable to compete in her beloved sport, she began to sink into a dark depression. She had to stop making her videos, but her followers stayed and poured in support for her. Then one day, she got an idea. She pitched it to her parents, who were willing to try anything to cheer her up. Her dad, who was a craftsman who had made miniature items for high end doll merchants, developed a three-inch-long skateboard that performed as well as an actual board and built a miniature skateboard park. Her mother had made clothing for her dolls when she was a child and developed a line of miniature clothing and shoes that fit on a person's fingers.
Jenny found that with less body mass to fight gravity, she was not only able to complete her former techniques, but she was able to perform aerobatic stunts never before accomplished by other shredders. Her father took videos of her boarding in the miniature park and when she posted them online, immediately demand for the tiny skateboards and parks came pouring in and soon her parents started a business fabricating and selling the boards and parks for the newest teen fad, "Finger-shredding".
