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To be honest, I think the skating copyright holders are missing their real chance to make a killing especially at competitions where there are only really one or two notable skaters like Broadmore. They should be selling downloads of each individual program skated after the fact for like 99 cents each. Saying that the copyright holders would have made however many thousands of dollars if each person who watched one youtube link had paid the $18 is kind of ridiculous- no one would pay $18 to watch one program, no one. But I bet many people who clicked the link would have been willing to pay 99 cents to see that program especially if it were a download and they could save it and watch it again. I bet many people who didn't know Mirai would be at the competition and now want to see her programs would pay 99 cents.
...
It was an order-of-magnitude reference.... But I also think it is totally fair and legitimate if the copyright holders take steps to get the copyrighted material taken down and attempt to protect their copyright. After all, why have the copyright at all if you are just going to let people watch whatever link some fan puts up? I support copyright holders in their efforts to protect their materials.
Oyyyy ... people are misunderstanding the reason that I brought up the hypothetical number of $18,000.It was an order-of-magnitude reference.
Not saying that the vendor should be entitled to collect that sum as a result of YouTube hits.
But as I did say above, if only a small fraction of the people who watched one of the YT videos had in fact paid the streaming fee, the total amount would have been five figures.
And I daresay that many of the people who watched one video of Jason Brown prob. would have viewed all three of his programs, not to mention Nagasu's and Cain's. So the hypothetical cost per program would have been just a couple of bucks.
You would not be laughing if you were the vendor who sold access to the live streaming of Broadmoor.
My understanding is that one of the Broadmoor videos received several thousands of hits on YouTube before it was taken down.
If the vendor were able to successfully bill even just one thousand of those viewers for the $18 cost of the streaming, we're talking about $18,000.
I don't mean to sound holier than thou. I myself have watched many a YT video of skating. But I cannot and do not object to copyright holders who try to protect the content that they own.
... I you and I agree generally.
It was never on YouTube was it? It was posted to Dropbox and and some people on GS saw it before it was taken down. Unless a tape of Mirai was the only reason people would pay, I don't think they lost much if anything. Part of what they were charging for was live access.
It was never on YouTube was it?
Although not filmed as well as the official filming, I was even more impressed by Mirai's performance of the long program in this version.
Mirai tweeted she'd been in Lake Placid show a couple of days ago. Has anyone seen any reports about it?
Here's a fan vid of her performance:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p819wCVDRBU
She skated to demons, also with a new variation on her I-Spin (is that what it's called?) REALLY impressive.
I love Mirai, but was that short program costume a practice unitard? What was that?

yeah i hope so. guess i overreacted. she skated beautifully in the long so she's not doing herself any favors by looking incomplete. a unitard is fine, if it makes sense like when Kostner did it, but i was just so surprised. it looked like she wasn't taking it seriously.
I love Mirai, but was that short program costume a practice unitard? What was that?