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and well.. i didn't see anything that is at the core of the sport, just some superficial make-up. Correct me please, if I am wrongThey did say something about simplified rules,that's it ? LED and interviews ? sponsors visibility ? Did I miss something ? I read this fast because I was looking for other improvements like technology assisted judgingand well.. i didn't see anything that is at the core of the sport, just some superficial make-up. Correct me please, if I am wrong
There were also some painfully intrusive reporters hounding Nathan Chen after his SP at Pyeongchang. I actually think that they should think of having a gatekeeper, so it's not on the skater (especially the young ones or those under such intense pressure as Nathan then and Yuma now) to say no when put on the spot.As long as we don't have robots determining under rotations, I'm fineI would think skaters already have the power to decline an interview if they don't feel up to it. I just watched a clip where Yuma cried a bit when he was interviewed briefly by Japanese press after his Worlds free skate.
I like 1. I would like to see that implemented at the next World Team Trophy. Sounds like it would be lots of fun!I think ISU could do way better to engage fans. Just a couple of ideas:
1. Give everyone the same music and see what kind of choreographies they will come with.
And also seriously, I don't think I have EVER seen a program, not even in pros or exhibitions, where a prop contributed anything but a distraction. Not to mention dropping a cane, having a billowy swath of material fly up in your face, Akexei Urmanov tripping over his cape, Maxim Shabalin swinging Oksana Domnina around by a bungee cord at the Olympics, etc., etc., etc.2. Let them use objects in their programs. For example, a broom. It would be especially entertaining for pairs and ice dancers.

That's often done at smaller local competitions. For more advanced competitors, unless it was made an improv competition, they would have to be given the music with plenty of time to fit in choreography sessions and practice time, which means getting permission, getting a standard version cut, etc, even longer in advance. For dance tests where the same music is used for everyone, the music choice was made a long time ahead, years sometimes.I think ISU could do way better to engage fans. Just a couple of ideas:
1. Give everyone the same music and see what kind of choreographies they will come with.
Nononononono! Too hazardous for the skaters involved, and takes unnecessary clean-up time before the next skater, not just retrieving the object but making sure it didn't leave some bit of itself on the ice. The only time I've seen it work was Torvill and Dean's "hat program" where they kept switching the hat back and forth between themselves.2. Let them use objects in their programs. For example, a broom. It would be especially entertaining for pairs and ice dancers.
That's already being done and has for many years with the TV skater-celebrity elimination series of competitions. Some combinations work (usually figure skater/hockey player matchups), some.....don't.3. Replace one of the partners in pairs and ice dance by a celebrity. Imagine how it would be if Lewis Gibson danced with Beyoncé to her own songs ?!
I was gutted when Amber Glenn had to give an interview right after the short program in Boston, and the interviewer asked, :So, what went wrong with the triple Axel?" Amber was able (barely, it seemed to me) to mumble out something about not getting enough vertical spring to get in the rotations.I HATE post performance interviews, I just cringe for those skaters.

.how do they expect to grow the sport when youtube streams are geoblocked
See the crowd's mad dash for the exit as Roxanne gears up for the 16th time..... oh dear, and the final flight would be skating to an empty rink (or just a few people dozing at the back).I think ISU could do way better to engage fans. Just a couple of ideas:
1. Give everyone the same music and see what kind of choreographies they will come with.

He had his fingers crossed behind his back, you just know it.“'Skaters are the reason why this sport exists,' explained ISU president Jae Youl Kim"
But who would they get to perform? What sort of prize money can they offer? Look at the international prizes for competitive skaters let alone domestic prizes vis-à-vis training costs...USFSA needs to either bring back some sort of pro competition
($32.50 CAD)