BTW, I don't know which "High Art magazines" have published things about ice shows, and it's difficult to debate with things that haven't been sourced (and are unlikely to be). However, High Art and Fine Art, if we are talking about them seriously, are not subject to mass appeal. Many times, time is the greatest determinant of their value, and their role is not to seek pleasure, or to become some moral compass aiming for popular aesthetics, but very much of the subjective expression from the artists above all else and does not seek mass consent from a general audience.
Unless such a criticism happened in these so-called High Art Magazines, it is not particularly useful to peruse them. Just to point out, though, this has never been where figure skating is, whose entire point is to drawn an audience.
Same applies to philosophies. There are many thirty year old men online and offline, I'm sorry to say, who fancy themselves philosophers. Philosophy, unfortunately, is meant as a critique of society and humanity (among other things). Of course people will debate others. Point is whether anything meaningful has been said, not whether dialogue simply happened.