Back to business of PR... A longish interview at Onda Cero (although a lot of it is quite familiar, there are bits I would like to see translated should any of our Spanish speakers have the time...)
http://www.ondacero.es/programas/tr...hermana_2016122058586f520cf27b766cecc43b.html
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He was coming from Viella (where Nationals took place). They said he doesn’t look tired but he says that he is quite tired on the inside. The interviewer said that winning Nationals by duty must be tiring, Javi said he still needs to skate well and there’s been more than one occasion in which he’s lost Nationals because he fell all over the place.
One of them said he watched him skate at COR and TDF and was amazed by him. He really enjoyed it and he felt like he wanted to skate as well

They asked him if he was still living in Cuatro Vientos, but atm they are living in an apartment someplace else (Fuenlabrada) because his parents are doing some remodeling to their house. He was actually the one who bought that apartment. They asked how he deals with the fame, he says some people do recognize him in the streets and he takes pictures and such, it hasn’t gotten to the point of being overwhelming. So he can go out without any trouble. They asked about Japan, he said people do recognize him a lot more, but they don’t go to them to ask for pictures/autographs, etc. They asked if he spoke or understood Japanese, he said he only gets a little because he speaks in English with everyone, including Miki. They asked Javi if he knew his in-laws, he knows his mother in-law and Miki’s grandparents and they get along quite well but they can’t really communicate and he said that may be the reason they get along
They kept talking about Miki’s mom. He said she is great, but a strict mother because Miki’s dad passed away a long time ago and she has been both mother and father. But she has a big heart. They thought he was just saying it because she is his girlfriend’s mom, but he said he really meant it.
He spends his holidays in Spain, of course. And on the 24th he has dinner in Jaca, because he has en exhibition on the 23th with other Spanish skaters. His family will be there, as well as Miki…but not his in-law
The go back to him saying he’s lost Nationals because he’s fallen all over the place. The interviewer can’t picture Javier in that position. But he said he’s had some terrible competitions in which he would have rather stayed at home. They asked him to talk about one. He said that when he was 12-13 y/o on his first JGP event. His family was there and a skater before him had a total meltdown, so someone from the Fed told him his father said he would die if his son did something like that. And he went out and fell 5 or 6 times. Now with his experience, he thinks that if he falls over 3 times, he would stand up, apologize to everyone and go home.
They start talking about how his book came to be. It was because the people around him advised him to do it. He said it was actually written by a journalist, friend of his manager, who is about the same age as him (I guess that explains some inaccuracies in some chapters). It was done in about two months and it wasn’t a very formal thing. They talked for a while in his house or the journalist’s house, and he took notes.
They talk about how he started skating and then one of the interviewers said that, ever since his daughter saw Javi for the first time, she decided she wanted to be a skater, too. He said his mother wanted him to be a gymnast and he doesn’t know why. they talked about that IKEA furniture anecdote in NJ, he actually still uses them in Toronto. The practice sessions in NJ started around 11am-12pm and they were done around mid-afternoon. He said the first big victories came after he moved to Brian.
They started talking about his parents and how proud they must be of him. Javi said that, after one competition, the security guards didn’t let her mother through to see him and she was crying saying “but he is my son” and then he came over and said it was his mom. He said this as a rather amusing anecdote even though it might not sound like it.
The interviewers said he is doing something similar to what Alonso did with F1, he is making the country understand what his sport is about. Javi said he feels very proud when kids go up to him and say they want to be like him and do what he does, which happen quite a lot at the rinks. They asked him what would he do if he was out in a club and suddenly music from any of his routines played. He said it has happened before, most recently when he went out with some other skaters after Nationals, and he sort of performs his programs
They ended up talking about RevolutiON Ice. They told Javi he should have at least schedule it for two days. And it seems like one of the singers is a very good friend of one of them. Javi says that, if the show goes well, he would like to have more dates and expand it to Barcelona.
They asked what he’s going to do if he wins the Olympics in N. Korea (yeah, I know…). They asked him the same thing in Sochi and he didn’t know what to say so he gave it some thought, and he is going to let his hair grow until he can pick it up in a ponytail. They say they don’t picture him like that, he said he doesn’t either
Javi was also featured in a video showing the
50 athletes who have made history for Spain.
And this is another
interview by Vodafone Yu. Unfortunately, it's geoblocked, so you need a VPN set to Spain to watch it

But here is a
small non geoblocked clip and which they talk about Yuri on Ice and how Leo de la Iglesia could be based on him.