Speaking of Gracie and interviews, Robert Brodie has some interesting reflections on interviewing her in his Substack that came today.
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All of this got me thinking about the time, back in 2015, when I did a lengthy phone interview with Gold for
International Figure Skating Magazine. Reading over that story a few days ago, it’s clear that Gold, then 20 years old (she’s 28 now), came across as a driven, confident skater who believed she could be the best on the planet. Worlds was in Boston that season (in the area of the U.S. where she was born) and the idea of winning the women’s title was clearly front and centre in her mind. And entirely possible.
“It’s Boston, it’s my town and I want it to be my year at Worlds.” she said back then. “It sounds like I’m talking big … but I want to win Worlds, not just be on the podium. I feel like, why don’t I just go out and win it?”
(That kind of honest talk always made Gold a dream interview).
The other thing I remember about that interview was, when our conversation was done, Gold saying “that was really fun.” (hey, we spent 20 minutes talking about her and Taylor Swift. How can that not be fun, right?). So it was for me, too (Gold came across to me as someone very likeable and cool to talk to), which was why it was, as her struggles with mental health and eating disorders in the years that followed came to light, that I kept wishing that “fun” could be a part of her world a little more again.
With Four Continents wrapped up, the World Championships are the final destination for an elite group of Canadian skaters. Some of whom stated their case in Shanghai.
rwbrodiewrites.substack.com