- Joined
- Sep 23, 2020
IMHO iconic has nothing to do with clean skates or errors, TES, scores, and other objective quantifiable factors. Iconic is what is widely admired and loved by the general public as superb, outstanding and better than everything else.
The winner is decided by the judges and they should be expert, objective, unbiased, attentive to details, take it all into account and so on (if they are is another matter but let's leave it here).
Iconic is decided upon by the public that admires this and not care much about that, stubbornly enough to make it valid in long term. And the public does not bother to calculate points, it is in for a storm and loves to be taken for a ride. It may call a "save" iconic and like it better than 5 clean quads, and dgaf. Sue them!
I know, it may be frustrating if you think the popular crown goes to unworthy hands. But tough luck. That's the way it goes.
And the general public loves the Olympic Seimei madly and crowned it the most iconic Olympic program of the recent decades, like it or not. It loves its wild energy, its amazing musicality, its beauty, but also its little imperfections. They add to the tension and the fun reminding everyone how amazing this Olympic win was, what the circumstances were. People love it.
It is the most watched skating video on the Olympic site, and not by an inch, but by a mile to the second place (Savchenko / Massot 2018 OGM), and by a landslide to everyone else (the difference to the third place is more than 21 million views). Hardly a season goes by without a kiddo coming to a rink to compete in an obviously Seimei-inspired costume (Ilia Malinin was one of such kids, btw, remember?). Yuzuru's opening pose is iconic in Japan to the extent that it is used as a cultural reference in movies, music videos and TV shows, having nothing whatsoever to do with skating. It's recognizable, it's a code. It was one of the images projected upon Milano-Cortina ice. Etc etc. Luckily, it is also the gold winning Olympic programme allowing Yuzu to win back to back OGM which no man did in 66 years before him, or ever since.
If that's not iconic, then I don't know what is.
The winner is decided by the judges and they should be expert, objective, unbiased, attentive to details, take it all into account and so on (if they are is another matter but let's leave it here).
Iconic is decided upon by the public that admires this and not care much about that, stubbornly enough to make it valid in long term. And the public does not bother to calculate points, it is in for a storm and loves to be taken for a ride. It may call a "save" iconic and like it better than 5 clean quads, and dgaf. Sue them!
I know, it may be frustrating if you think the popular crown goes to unworthy hands. But tough luck. That's the way it goes.
And the general public loves the Olympic Seimei madly and crowned it the most iconic Olympic program of the recent decades, like it or not. It loves its wild energy, its amazing musicality, its beauty, but also its little imperfections. They add to the tension and the fun reminding everyone how amazing this Olympic win was, what the circumstances were. People love it.
It is the most watched skating video on the Olympic site, and not by an inch, but by a mile to the second place (Savchenko / Massot 2018 OGM), and by a landslide to everyone else (the difference to the third place is more than 21 million views). Hardly a season goes by without a kiddo coming to a rink to compete in an obviously Seimei-inspired costume (Ilia Malinin was one of such kids, btw, remember?). Yuzuru's opening pose is iconic in Japan to the extent that it is used as a cultural reference in movies, music videos and TV shows, having nothing whatsoever to do with skating. It's recognizable, it's a code. It was one of the images projected upon Milano-Cortina ice. Etc etc. Luckily, it is also the gold winning Olympic programme allowing Yuzu to win back to back OGM which no man did in 66 years before him, or ever since.
If that's not iconic, then I don't know what is.
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