Right, exactly. There's no comparison between Alysa Liu and Michelle Kwan because times are different and these two phenoms are not the same and neither will be their separate arcs and journeys in the sport. That was my point, because earlier
@kwanatic was comparing the two as if their situations are very similar, but they are not. Even the media attention was different in a different time. The Internet phenomenon was certainly growing as Kwan's popularity began to grow, which is interesting in and of itself. But there was nothing like the Internet world and social media excess we have today. There was a confluence of events which precipitated the popularity the sport was receiving in the U.S. during the time of MK's rise circa 1996 and onward. Part of that attention had begun to accumulate post the whack heard around the world two years earlier (i.e., the infamous 1994 U.S. Nats and Olympics).
Just stating that MK had media attention and was named an alternate to the Olympics doesn't equate to the hype Alysa Liu is undergoing at the moment, what with being singled out for a trip to the GPF, and appearing on a night time network talk show. MK's rise in popularity and becoming a household name was gradual, not instantaneous and hype-driven.
As I previously pointed out, MK first received a lot of public attention when she defied her coach to take the senior test and compete at senior Nationals at the age of 12. She landed in 6th place that year (1993) at senior Nats, instead of having stayed in juniors to possibly win a junior national championship (in 1992, she'd placed 9th in juniors). So MK was very eager to move forward with high level competition, and she was definitely focused and driven. That's where Liu and MK may share some similarities, but it still took MK some time before she was rewarded with championships for her precocious talent.
When MK became highly visible among the public consciousness, she was viewed as simply a talented jumping bean, not as someone who was going to have the legendary career she ultimately achieved. Post-Kwan, there have unfortunately existed a slew of over-expectations and fruitless anticipations for someone else to take up MK's dominant mantle. It hasn't happened yet, neither in the U.S., nor internationally.