I think it’s important to remember that what you, personally, perceive as sneering or a cheap shot may not have been what the author intended - and as you know, she responded to some of those perceptions/ questions in the comments. I think that when we react strongly to something, though, it’s hard not to say, I don’t care what she says or how she explains it, I know how her words made me feel so I know what she really means, and it’s not what she says.
The other thing is, people are drawn to different things, opposite things. I think it’s good to accept that without feeling like it somehow diminishes you or what you believe.
I’m guessing, though, that if she’d watched that FS performance of Max’s at 4CCs - which I don’t think she would have done before her deadline - she would have found something admirable there even though he’s a “jumper”, because there was something transformative in his performance that was beautiful and moving in a different way than Jason’s - and she seems to be interested in transcendent experiences. JMO.
Totally, totally, totally, and thank you
@Tavi!!!
The writer obviously follows and enjoys figure skating, and she has something interesting and provocative to say about the sport and her experience of it. None of us are going to agree with each other 100 percent of the time, and especially not when it comes to figure skating.
The point is it's cool to see someone analyzing figure skating and figure skaters in a unique and different way that's edgy and modern. As I said earlier, I could tell by some of her observations that Lockwood is a young person and thereby she has not been around to witness earlier decades of the sport. But it's important to live and breathe and document the now that you are witnessing and living in. It makes a difference.
I think the article is a cool love letter to Jason Brown. Jason deserves his full share and then some of Love Letters!

Moreover, Jason deserves mucho support and encouragement to continue on finding a way to be his best self and to realize his artistry and athleticism in unique and uncompromising ways. He can land the quad in practices and warm-ups, so he should not be discouraged from continuing to work on it with reasoned determination, rather than drastic desperation.
I chose not to think Lockwood was dissing Ross Miner. Shame on her if she was even approaching such a slight.

Ross is a skater's skater, with a huge heart.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQiSzKF9M8s sp 2018 Nats
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kvuR1yP9h5I fp 2018 Nats
ETA: Thank you
@Bookseller for your interpretation of Lockwood's 'amnesia-inducing' reference to Ross' skating. As I said earlier, from the context Lockwood's phrasing certainly did not seem to be an outright diss. Indeed it seemed to somehow be a complimentary 'accolade,' not a 'brickbat.'
In my previous post with past clips of skaters, I neglected to include fond memories of a number of skaters I also respect including Scott Williams, Hamilton, Browning, Stojko, Plushenko, Lambiel, Buttle, Urmanov, Joubert, et al. And indeed Max Aaron, so here goes (Max killed it with his eyebrows too that season):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVm1sNlgMQo sp 2013 Nats
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SBCCjgMG9LI fp 2013 Nats
Max's running commentary in the kiss 'n cry before his marks is sweet...
So for all Max's ups-and-downs since then, especially in recent seasons, this performance is indeed a victory:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Djcl9Gx9-oY 4CCs 2018 fp
Max's skating has improved. Maybe he will come back for another season just for himself and have fun, focusing on more that reflects the character and personality of his own skating, and not trying to live up to some lofty 'artistic ideal.'
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xllG3fSUAOw Or whatever it might be Max!
