OH Good Lord.. I can't wait to see this little treasure throughout the years!
Natasha Mishkuteniok

Hmmm, no relation to Natalia eh? Anyway, aside from her uber amazing limberness, it was Natalia's partner who was more of the 'diva on ice.'

And, even should the new young Natasha have amazing talent, she'll be lucky to maintain a viable partner and make it upward successfully through the musical pairs land maze that is U.S. pairs figure skating.
Are some of these young U.S. pairs, the sons and daughters of Russian emigre fs coaches/former skaters? I know that's not an unusual thing, what with the Torgashevs, the Kuliks, the Ponomarenkos, et al.
I found Alexandria Yao/Jacob Simon's debut from last week's Broadmoor Open ("Clair de Lune" Senior SP, choreo. by Alena Lunin):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Z8Vmt38DLU&t=3m30s
Thanks for posting. Yao/Simon look good together, and I'm glad to see Simon with a new partner after it didn't work out all the way with Lindsay Weinstein. I wonder how long will Yao/ Simon will last ... hopefully they will 'cement.'

I'm boycotting the term, 'gel,' that I coined many moons ago to describe the process of a pairs team clicking and melding. 'Gel' seems a little too fluid (for current state of U.S. pairs) and way too much overused these days in figure skating terminology.
But pardon me, what happened to Austin Hale (Alexandra Yao's former partner)? Does Austin have another partner, or is he out of the sport after he and Alexandra placed third in Juniors at 2017 U.S. Nationals? I realize there are a variety of reasons why partnerships don't work out, and that young people often decide to leave the sport, or their family moves out of state from their training site, or the grass looks greener with a different partner, or ________ fill in the blank.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fx9WLhnSlb8 sp
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8g9kw3S6fDU fp Yao/Hale looked good together too
Reminds me of the novice pair newcomers Erin Coleman/ Derrick Griffin, who proceeded to split after their blitz novice pairs title win in January. Austin Hale had at least two other partners before he and Alexandra Yao nabbed bronze in juniors. Austin's other partners were Olivia Allan, and Alicia Bertsch (with whom Austin won the Intermediate pairs title in 2013).
I know none of this ubiquitous partner-switching is new for U.S. pairs, but it does beg the perennial question: 'U.S. pairs, U.S. pairs, wherefore art thou U.S. pairs ... on the international podium, consistently???'

It takes a village to raise a child. And it takes sticking together for a pairs team to evolve 'forever two as one.' Just ask Tai and Randy.
ETA:
From an IceNetwork search, I see that Austin Hale skated with Meiryla Findley in 2016. Austin and Meirlya also landed in bronze medal position, that year. It's not just Austin, but his career does seem to be a microcosm of a switcheroo-itis problem. Does this switching around actually help matters? Or it's just, 'well if you're not doing anything else this season, why not give it a go?' If you ain't Chinese fed, musical pairs switching seems iffy in connection with long term success. Unless longer term success is not the aim.