I. Has anyone seen the film
The Five Obstructions? If not, check it out. The basic idea is that limitations and restrictions actually enhance creativity, not limit it. The idea is that one director tells another director to remake one of his films, with particular restrictions. For example: “For the first short, von Trier decrees that Leth must film his remake in Cuba, without a set, and that there must be an edit at least once every 12 frames, or half second.” COP is like that.
II. COP, in my mind, has improved dance the most precisely because every element can be athletic and artistic/creative at the same time. Not merely the placement of the element, but the element itself. The restrictions are about how to achieve the most points while still being creative.
III. So a lift can be gorgeous, complicated, athletic, perfectly expressive of the music, and still achieve the highest levels. Using Virtue/Moir as an example – the final, rotational lift in “Mahler” is absolutely exquisite. It’s suffused with romance. It’s actually expressive and matches the music. It’s insanely difficult, with the movement and transition. And it’s a level four lift that earned all GOEs +3 at the Olympics and Worlds.
IV. Buttercup, if you’re telling me that I convinced you to like F/S without having convinced you about V/M, I might have to turn in my uber card

D).
V. Phantom vs The Immigrants: Here’s where creativity is diminished by a lack of expression. It never really occurred to me that D/W’s “Phantom” program was trying to tell the story of the music. Ignoring the fact that POTO is a blight on musical theatre (whereas The Godfather and its sequel are among the greatest American films ever), I never once bought Charlie as the Phantom. He can’t (at the moment) convey love, passion or obsession, imo, so that the lifts, despite doris’ assertion, don’t come off as metaphors for abduction so much as ungainly and unpleasing to the eye. Conversely, “The Immigrants” works because Massimo is so emotionally fluid on the ice (indeed, he blows Frederica out of the water there – she’s way too one note), so that his expression in the first lift really sets the stage for what we’re about to see (his arms outstretched, the look on his face, Frederica clutching onto him with all her power). I see that reading in the construction of the program because I see it in his face too.
VI. And the aforementioned is rather why I’m uncomfortable with an increasing weight placed on artistry. It’s so subjective! Yes, we can point out objective underpinnings, and yes – TES themselves are subjective as well (the range of GOEs on any given element in any discipline puts lie to the theory of objectivity), but the application itself is so specious and vague. There are a whole host of factors at play here. Buttercup, you mentioned that Bin Yao deliberately westernized Shen/Zhao in order to make them more palatable to the judges. There’s no denying that the culture of the judges would influence their perception of what is artistic, as an example.
VII. NorthernDancers, what about the current standard of GOE application and PCS do you feels is poorly structured? Using S/Z as the example (heh), they were considered to have “good” PCS. Not Very Good/Superior/Outstanding. Good. Were they “on” more? How would you compare the elements? Do you think the program (SD) was as well choreographed? Did they make any errors? More two-foot skating? Well, someone correct me, but isn’t the cha-cha more on two feet than the rhumba, and doesn’t it take up more of a program? If both teams were perfect, what would the ideal score separation be? They received no +3s nor anything in the 9’s for PCS (they got five scores 8.00 or higher, but four were from one judge ). You really do seem to implicitly be returning to the days of 6.0 (the top scores should be for the top skaters), an idea I find troubling, especially considering how you’re expressing it.
VIII. Mrs. P, I take your point about people not looking inside, but I don’t like Apple either. This is a very specific case where (a) what these talented skaters are doing isn’t in my wheelhouse and (b) ergo, their technical improvements don’t mean a whole lot to me because the whole isn’t more than the sum of its parts.
IX. NorthernDancers, one thing you’re neglecting to mention is that those skaters who stuck it out and developed as seniors simply didn’t have the junior grand prix circuit to develop on in the first place. Victor Kraatz was twenty when he paired with Shae-Lynn Bourne. At that point, V/M and D/W had already been together 11+ years. How many people in the top ranks of ice dance are in their thirties? Not many. No, of course not many.
X. I loved Dean’s choreography for Crone/Poirier. I never got the dated feel at all that jcoates mentioned in another discussion. If it didn’t entirely suit Crone/Porier, I’ll be completely honest – I’m not sure what program did.