aftershocks
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Having said alllllll that, I'm not without ideas.
Mine is about growing the sport with more men (in both viewership and participation) and younger audiences and rebranding it as 'cool'.
How? let the old guard continue to tinker with this outdated skating/scoring paradigm while we build a sub brand of figure skating. The concept is skating XGames, like what happened to skiing and snowboarding.
Traditional (figure) skating is built off the language of skating skills - turns, edges etc. That's the vocabularly of figure skating. Once you master that, you can progress to spins, programs, jumps, etc.
Blow up everything you know about figure skating. Say you're an 8 year old boy (or maybe girl) who loves the ice and has a lot of energy. You watch figure skating. What turns you on about the sport? Patrick's SS? Heck no. You want to be in the air.
So XGames is about getting kids into the air asap. You learn a bunny hop and waltz jump before you learn a rocker. You may be doing backflips before a camel spin. Reverse engineer it starting with 'cool'/difficult stuff first and work backwards. Cartwheel/3T, lateral twist flying sit. Opportunities are endless. Small ramps on the ice to gain air, maybe?
No artistic 'programs'. Footwork, spins etc can all be built in but you bomb around the ice building technical content to energetic music (that you're not interpreting, just adds ambiance). Sort of like snowboard half pipe with music.
For those with interest and talent, you can migrate them to traditional skating if they want to do this. They can catch up by learning their SS and fundamentals later on when they are truly interested. Don't scare them off by forcing this boring stuff on them as they enter the sport. This happened to me taking piano. I wanted to learn to chord to be functional in a band in high school. After two years of doing scales I bailed.
Build at grassroots. Have them entertain during intermission at hockey games and skating events. Eventually build an IJS for this at a national level when it's big enough to integrate fully into the federation. Then develop this part of the sport internationally with a view to making it an Olympic event in 20 years.
That's what I'd do. Stat. Membership/sponsorship/audience/revenue opportunities would be substantial.
As @gkelly and @clairecloutier have already pointed out, it's fine to have ideas about turning the sport of figure skating on it's head, but having young skaters learn 'bunny hops' and 'waltz jumps' before basic skating skills will not address or solve any of the sport's real problems. Mastering SS and control of edges is how one learns to jump correctly and land successfully. I don't understand your emphasis on the need to 'blow up' figure skating through 'reverse engineering' everything we know about figure skating. You seem to be talking about extreme ice skating which is already a grassroots sporting event. With the amount of complex problems traditional figure skating faces at all levels, trying to reinvent the sport without destroying it completely will require a deeper understanding of fs and it's history combined with the skating community joining together to find consensus through patience, research, inclusiveness and good communication.
With the advent of the Freezer Aerial Challenge in Colorado, we already have attempts at infusing more excitement into the sport with strictly jumping contests: https://www.newyorker.com/news/sporting-scene/x-games-on-ice
If you're more excited about air action vs figure skating's necessary development of artistry and learning SS, then maybe you might like the extreme sport version of in-line skating: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DXI6ltBxdbw
Or, extreme sport downhill skating: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tso8RD_Onvs
Or, freestyle ice skating:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dwfa0xEZ0Hw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiYFT3mpz04
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7j_4ODrdO3U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECeIG0YgkYE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J4ABUECZKuI
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY7lnAEcdus
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhBKguQPzS8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DbH0_xqR26c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_VDSiNzJ0U
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yB0eu_fwOyc
And there are numerous other videos promoting freestyle ice skating. It's exactly the adrenalin rush 'air unbound' type of thing you seem to be talking about. Get hooked. Knock yourself out. It looks fun and exciting, and I hope this freestyle sporting development on ice grows. One thing to realize though, it's not figure skating. Hey but maybe the downhill skating and freestyle skating promoters can combine with forward thinking people in figure skating to generate ideas that might mutually benefit the promotion of figure skating and the growth of the extreme sport versions of skating on ice.
I personally would love to see synchronized skating be included in the Olympics, but it seems we are still faraway from that happening.
As far as attempting to make fs 'cool,' I think the sport needs to do more to promote the best of what the sport already has: it's skaters, coaches, choreographers, and fans. There needs to be an infusion of life into pro events, shows and television productions, IMO. And bringing everyone with ideas to the table. But I don't think you need to try and change figure skating into something it is not. There are lots of 'cool' things about figure skating. Good leadership is not one of them.
Speaking of air-bound excitement, watch this cool clip from the Rohene Ward-choreographed sp for the new pair of Calalang/Johnson: https://web.stagram.com/p/Bh-CL2Gl6U0

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