Everyone has its views etc, the conversation V/M and T/D is really interesting though. Because it just shows how these were 2 different eras in terms of everything.
T/D won OGM in 1984 and turned professional. And as we all know, the competition system was very different. I always said that artistically there's a massive gap between those 2 because we're obviously not going to see V/M in professional competitions, letting creativity all out instead of "IJS choreo"... because it just doesn't exists anymore. I regret it, because I imagine some skaters skating professional like Meryl&Charlie did after Sochi in shows, and it allowed them to go further, and I like their numbers even more now. Putting on a show for figure skating popularity would be great... and needed these days. But then, V/M will skate in shows for years and have different numbers, it will be great. After 2014 and before their comeback in 2016 what has changed the most to me is their confidence and abilities to connect with the audience because they toured for 2 years. I do think Show skating is necessary because it gives another layer to your performance (and why it's harder for some younger skaters but they will learn !).
Today it is full-on about competition. Some skaters (V/M are prime example) have a massive team around them. Javier, Yuzuru, Yuna too. The judging did evolve, even the skaters agree. You just couldn't see in the past a Shibs, V/M or P/C case. It pushes the skaters more to competition and to fight for those spots, it has become more interesting IMO, especially for the younger ones. So your federation can (or should!) invest in you, maybe more skaters can get more sponsors, etc.
These parallels could be done with other disciplines. Irina Rodnina vs Aljona Savchenko ? Dick Button vs Yuzuru Hanyu ?
I would really like to know how these skaters were managed at the time, it could make an interesting subject.
I wonder how it was during the Grishuk/Platov era... all the documentaries I found were about drama, scandals, bar fights and divas. I don't like when the skating is put aside.