Thank you for starting this thread! I would never leave figure skating fandom, and Golden Skate is my safe place where I can appreciate figure skating with fans all over the world. Having said that, I have been disappointed with some of the media coverage of the Olympics, and I can understand the OP's sentiment. As an American, I know our fans can get very nationalistic around the Olympics, or even Worlds. There is such an obsession over US winning or beating other countries, and I don't understand why, since I have always rooted for my favorite athletes regardless of country. I remember being at the 2016 ISU World Championships in Boston and the guy sitting in front of me was loudly proclaiming he hoped "the Russian girls all fell on their butts."

I gave him dirty looks the whole time and made sure to cheer extra loudly for all the Russian ladies. Having said that, I can think of some other countries that are just as nationalistic as the US, maybe even more so.
I was also incredibly uncomfortable and angry seeing all the hateful comments and coverage of Zhu Yi. Not only did she have to deal with the negativity on Weibo, but US media kept highlighting her falls and the negative coverage in China, I think to make a point that China is an evil country and why did she ever leave the US to represent China? Many US posters were calling her a traitor to the US, and she deserved to fail. It's not like she was even a major athlete who was expected to do well at the Olympics! They focused on her simply because of her China connection. I think because US/China relations are at an all time low, any athletes originally from the US who are representing China are going to have to deal with a lot of backlash, and it's not necessarily fair. They are just athletes (and in many cases, still children), not politicians expected to account for their actions. I have no doubt a big part of why Eileen Gu is representing China is for the lucrative deals she is getting, and yes, that is opportunistic. However, as an Asian American myself, I can understand feeling that connection to the country of your ancestral origin, especially since there is a history of quiet and not so quiet racism against Asians in the US, where we are often not made to feel we belong. So I think her identity as a Chinese-American is complicated and played a role in her decision, so why not represent her mother's home country, if she thinks that will get her the better deal? In any case, the amount of shade and semi-negative coverage she is getting for this is ludicrous. I really wish US media focused more on Nathan Chen and how amazing his short program was. Wouldn't that be a much more positive way to highlight Asian American contributions to the US sporting world? Instead, I feel like this is all being overshadowed by the politics of this Olympics, and that is very unfortunate.