- Joined
- Jul 26, 2003
Johnny also did not like the landing of the first 3a 

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Jason's 4th is the second highest debut of a US male at worlds in the IJS era, behind only Evan who finished 3rd at his first worlds and ahead of Johnny who finished 5th at his first worlds.
It is worth nothing he is only the third skater from the USA to crack top four at all under IJS. Only Johnny and Evan have done as well or better - Jason on his first attempt is the third highest placing American man at worlds under IJS. Jeremy Abbot has not been higher than fifth. Really his showing is very good for the USA right now. The whole thing was just silly frankly. He did do well. Hell, even Phill Hersh was more kind than these two, and I am no fan of Philly boy.
I guess standing ovations for Jason are now taken for granted. At least they like the costume. I did notice Johnny specifically said his body looked better. A slightly more enjoyable and positive subject.
I wonder if Johnny sees things that remind him of himself (A bit "different" does things their own way, more of a spinner than a jumper, popular with fan, they have things in common) but is bitter at what he perceives at better treatment. Jason's differentness sorta is embraced (gee, I wonder why). He still gets good scores without a quad, and USFSA seems to have surrendered and let him do what he wants. Maybe Johnny feels like Jason gets away with (for lack of a better way to put it) more than he could have.
It's very odd. At times Tara and Johnny have sounded very supportive of Jason. But this time, I don't think they said a single positive thing about his skating, nor did either of them give him credit for handling the pressure of skating last at Worlds much better than he did in Sochi and placing much higher. In contrast, they said at least some positive things about each of the other skaters.
I dont know if it's been a long season and they're tired or they have a different expectation now that he's the US champion and not just the kid with potential or if it's sour grapes because he did much better than anyone expected him to do without a quad, no less, or what. But if they're trying to build an audience for US figure skating, I think they won't succeed this way. Honestly, I really hate that they already know the results before they tape the show and try to "prepare" the audience for the eventual winners. With Jason they set up a narrative that he could possibly medal, which was really not realistic even if he skated clean. So given the lack of positive comments, he ended up appearing to have failed to medal rather than placing very very well without a quad, which subtly undermines him. Yes he could have scored higher had he skated clean, but it would have been almost impossible for him to overtake D10, as the British Eurosport announcer noted.
. With the top 3 skating the way they skated, Jason had no shot at the podium. Period. And setting up the narrative to make it look like he had a shot at medaling may add suspense for those who know nothing about skating, but it's a blatant lie of a narrative as well as being disrespectful to a very, very good performance and placement for Jason.I wonder if Johnny sees things that remind him of himself (A bit "different" does things their own way, more of a spinner than a jumper, popular with fan, they have things in common) but is bitter at what he perceives at better treatment. Jason's differentness sorta is embraced (gee, I wonder why). He still gets good scores without a quad, and USFSA seems to have surrendered and let him do what he wants. Maybe Johnny feels like Jason gets away with (for lack of a better way to put it) more than he could have.
Also, I'd like to that Jason's flight to Tokyo was not done to avoid NBC coverage and that was happenstance.
I doubt it had anything to do with it. It is presently Monday (on this side of the globe anyway), and the men's SP is on Thursday. Seems like a logical time to fly. I am however bummed at the lack of Jason-and-Max-goofing-on-the-plane pics like we got at Skate America, but maybe Jason's saving them for the end?
(And also those glasses?!) Somebody mentioned it earlier in the thread, so mainly responding to that.Yep, that's what I was thinking -- I was waiting for a Jason airport photo thinking they would be leaving today, LOL.(And also those glasses?!) Somebody mentioned it earlier in the thread, so mainly responding to that.
Alas, I confess myself not a fan of the red frames.
I haven't watched the NBC video of Jason (or any of NBC's broadcast from Worlds) but if they're going to set up a narrative already knowing the results in advance, at least make it a positive narrative. With the top 3 skating the way they skated, Jason had no shot at the podium. Period. And setting up the narrative to make it look like he had a shot at medaling may add suspense for those who know nothing about skating, but it's a blatant lie of a narrative as well as being disrespectful to a very, very good performance and placement for Jason.
I agree that knowing the results before providing commentary is very annoying as it allows them to pre-formulate a terrible narrative rather than just letting whatever happens shape the televised event. Does British Eurosport usually do commentary live and is that one of the reasons they're just so much better? How are commentators supposed to be excited about a performance and convey that excitement to the audience if they already know how everyone does? It makes me miss Scott Hamilton's yelling and he annoyed me for years.

