Luckily I already live in Hollywood and have an additional career outside of skating. Yay!
Good for you! :thumbsup: And if you are really hot in Hollywood, perhaps you should use your picture as the avatar instead of Lambiel?
But I'm not trying to be outlandish for the sake of it (please never again compare me to the disgusting Donald Trump).
Oh really? Between this gross exaggeration today and all others this past week, it's very hard to distinguish what exactly you were trying to accomplish by trying to split hair and attempt to be Pasha Grishuck as well. Therefore, the only logical explanation I can think of is that you are a Donald Trump wannabe. Sorry if that offends you but given
SkateFiguring and others are investing in a Sour Grapes farm in your name, it's safe to say my sentiment here isn't alone.
Miki Ando did a 5-Triple program with unremarkable spins, average footwork, and very little choreography or care for the music. Why on Earth should I feel that such a program deserves to be placed higher than the 5-Triple programs of Carolina Kostner, Alissa Czisny, or Yu-Na Kim when they all had actual CHOREOGRAPHY and were superior in other areas to boot (Kostner on her footwork and spiral, Czisny on her spins, and Yu-Na on the spiral, footwork, and quality of the Lutzes).
You honestly believe you can BS your way through with me like this quote above? :sheesh: For one thing, dear
BoP, the so called
5-Triple program are not all born equal. We are talking about Figure Skating 101 (Senior) here you know,

5-Triple could mean a base value of 21.7 or as much as 37.73, with the latter worth 74% more in value or
a whopping 16 points in difference. When Patrick Chan opened a lead of just less than 12 points in the Men's SP over his closest rival, it was largely considered a lead that was too large for anyone to catch up and that was
Men's skating. A difference of 16 points would have been fatal in Ladies' skating in 99% of cases, yet such difference can be achieved when two skaters both complete a 5-Triple program. So sorry,
BoP, I have to debunk your red herring completely, because I just can't take your BS anymore as you are this close of becoming either a Donald Trump or Pasha Grishuck.
In the context of today's competition, among the ladies you mentioned, Czisny, Kostner, Kim and Ando; while they all had 5 Triples (to be exact, Czisny had 6, with one fall, though the BV is still based on 6 Triples, not 5),
clearly not all the executed Triples were equal, hence their values fall between the wide theoretical range of 21.7 to 37.73 calculated above, some closer to the floor value than others and vice versa. Everything considered, Ando had 4.99 points higher BV than Kim, that's about the value of an extra Triple Loop. Looking at the spins and step sequence, while they all had the same levels on non-jump elements, Ando also racked up an extra 0.5 BV for making her Flying spin a flying change foot combination spin, which in my experience, I notice that almost only Japanese skaters do that in their LP. Very few other skaters take the time to maximize the value of their spins, which is exactly what Kim did as well. She could have gone the same route and upgrade / maximize the value of her Flying Spin. So why didn't she? It's not as if she is incapable of doing that. So 4.99-0.5, Ando's "5 Triple Program" still adds up to a good 4.49 points in difference, which is a little more than the value of a Triple Salchow. Hence, in reality, we can qualify by saying that Ando's 5 Triple Program really is a 6 Triple program and change vs. that of Kim's. Even if we accept your claim that Kim's GOE is better overall, clearly the panel also took that into account because after the GOE is considered, Ando's lead in TES shrank below the difference in the base value. However, with 2 obvious execution errors on the part of Kim vs. 1 from Ando, Kim shot herself in the foot by limiting her own GOE potential. Ando certainly didn't make a hole on ice so that Kim would fall into it. :sheesh:
As for the other ladies you mentioned, Kostner's 5 Triple Program had zero Triple Lutz whereas Ando has two. It's self-explanatory as to why Kostner's "5 Triple Program" is going to be very unequal vs. that of Ando's, again referring back to the wide range posted above. Czisny had a bad fall plus an edge call and her step sequence is graded as Level 2 only. Given how much you have advocated that Chan wasn't penalized enough for his error on his jump, which was only a step out, yet you claimed his negative GOE should be the double of what he actually received (and so that our readers know the number, it would add up to a wopping -3.18 for only a step out) - yet somehow you think Czisny splashing on the ice on a Triple shouldn't be serious enough to place behind Ando who didn't fall? Using your own standard that you suggested in the Men's LP thread, we should also double Czisny's negative GOE: -3.1 X 2 = -6.2 That's in addition to the edge call on her Triple Flip. So how do you justify that Czisny should be placed above Ando with your own customized deductions - not to mention, all things considered, Czisny's total BV is still below that of Ando before GOE?
Boy, I think I am having a little too much fun cutting through all your BS so I'll stop right here. I'll just let
SkateFiguring feed you with the Sour Grapes she will be growing for you and hopefully, once you are on that diet 100% of the time, you will not be turned into a Donald Trump.
