Joesitz said:
I just don't understand why from your point of view that Russians should demand more in the US. and get it. It's a business thing, and the Russian artists (as well as the American) want higher salariers, do commeercials, become glamorous, and for that they need a good agent.
Two things: Russians should, or shouldn't, depending on the point of view, demand more, and more in what sense (adoration, compensation, attention, renown, recognition for a task well completed...?) than
whom in the US? I find it sad that the hyperpatriotic mode that fans understandably (though not justifiably, IMO) get whipped up into during international competitions like the Olympics, where there's a East/West undercurrent that is taking longer than the actual Cold War to thaw out, in my eyes, has to carry over into exhibition skating, whether one is a fan of it or not. I say so from my recent experience at COI, where, aside from Plushy who obviously is top of his class at the moment, it took a LOT for people to get worked up and "make some noise" when a skater was from Russia...perhaps I saw something that wasn't there, but it seemed to me that the excited buzz in the crowd just died when the announcer would preface the skater's name with "from Russia".
It may be a business thing, but as far as I'm concerned (and I know I speak for many fans of the sport) it's also a skating thing, especially in exhibition skating where one would think we could get past the silliness of pitting nation against nation, though there is the sense that Americans in general (this is much less so, or should be, with figure skating fans who appreciate the sport as an individual sport as well and have favorite skaters from everywhere, in addition to patriotic sentiment) seem to have the opposite of a soft spot for Russians for historical, political, non-skating related reasons. It would be nice if show skating altogether stopped pandering to that national sentiment (though since show skating is obviously a business, it is easier and more profitable to cash in on it than it is to encourage love and fuzzy feelings for skaters of all nationalities) and attempted to sell instead on the enormous appeal that skating has among its many fans here and elsewhere. Is stuff like the famous Ice Wars, USA or North America vs. "The World"

, popular or prevalent elsewhere? Anyway, just my two cents and then some
Sarah