U.S.Women [#9]: Now That's What I'm F*@&%!$ Talking About!

I’m a total fan of her personal aesthetic. I think it’s great.

How Alysa Liu’s signature halo hair came together.

 
My 73 year old mother was talking to me about Alysa & how much she enjoyed her skate, and said "I think I like her hair now". I joked that it's stockholm syndrome after listening to me talk about skating for so long, but I think it's just something about Alysa!
 
You could see how everything changed immediately after the Russians were banned after the Olympics a month later at Worlds in Montpellier when Kaori, Leona and Alysa were on the women's podium after the ladies event and how they were laughing, smiling and giggling with each other and no one was off to the side crying and pouting or being let alone with no coach supporting them.
Kaori was just crying these Olympics, LOL.
 
A celebration was held at Winter House for all U.S. skaters who competed at 2026 Olympics, and in the latter part of the video package linked below, each of the sixteen skaters gets called individually to the stage before a toast to/with the group.
(I assume that USFS hosted the celebration -- I believe the video shows glimpses of USFS CEO Matt Farrell as "emcee".)

I'm putting the video in this thread because in an earlier part, I think a clip shows Alysa presenting Order of Ikkos medals to Phillip and Massimo (starting at approx. 0:34).


(3:43, published Feb 21 by NBC Sports)
 
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It has begun!!!

And this one is pink, and I kind of like it

 
Alysa Liu and Her 'I Don't Give a Damn' Aesthetic Has Captivated The World


With her extraordinary style and carefree attitude, gold medal winning Alysa Liu has brought a breath of fresh air to the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics.



Everything Alysa Liu Has Said About Her 'Alternative' Style — And the Piercing She Did Herself


Per the Cleveland Clinic, a frenulum, also known as a frenum, is a "thin, ropelike piece of tissue that connects two bodily structures." In your mouth, you have two types of frenulums: a tongue and a lip frenulum. The lip frenulum is a piece of tissue that connects your lips to your gums.

In an interview with NBC, Liu said she pierced her lip frenulum two years ago.

"I did it myself. I had my sister hold up my lip and I was like looking in the mirror and I had my piercing needle and then, yeah, I just put it through," she said.
 
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Many thanks to @BittyBug for sharing this gift link to yet another excellent article by The Athletic's Senior Columnist, Bay Area's Marcus Thompson, in Alysa's fan thread:
I don’t think this NYT article has been posted yet (gifted link):
Excerpt from the end:
Liu understands who she is well before self-discovery tends to happen. She can’t legally purchase alcohol in the States, but she knows what she values in this world. She’s found freedom while being a young adult in an era of social media, which can operate as a predatory arm of forces manipulating minds. She’s choreographed peace in a sport that attacks it in its athletes. With its minuscule margin for error. With its relentlessly discerning eyes. With every tenth of a point.
With a gold medal on the line, with history in her grasp, with potential crushing disappointment looming, Liu wasn’t fazed. She danced on blades as if no one was watching, because she knew everyone was watching.
“I say it all the time,” DiGuglielmo said. “She’s not like us.”
And when that’s in you, may as well put it on you. So Liu commissioned the perfect dress for her perfect moment. Like her defining night, it was hella gold.
"Somewhere, Marshawn Lynch smiled."
Lynch's shout out to Alysa before her FS: https://www.tiktok.com/@nbcsports/video/7608285697895599374

KTVU Oakland's story Hella Oakland: Marshawn Lynch champions Alysa Liu to win gold. And she does: https://www.ktvu.com/news/hella-oakland-marshawn-lynch-champions-alysa-liu-win-gold
 
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Phil Hersh's latest article says Alysa is planning to compete at Worlds:
“No press tour right away, no nothing,” coach Phillip DiGuglielmo said Saturday via telephone from Milan, not long before Liu closed down the exhibition gala’s solo performances.
“We have to figure out how we are going to train (for worlds). We may have to ask the rink management (in Oakland, Calif.) to close the rink when she trains because of the attention she has gotten. “Dealing with that kind of attention is not what she wants now. She doesn’t want to be famous. She wants to be Alysa.”
After the World Championships, in which the women’s event is March 25 (short program) and March 27 (free skate), Liu will immediately go to Japan for eight shows in nine days with the Stars on Ice Japan tour.
Four days later, she will start the Stars on Ice U.S. tour, with 26 shows over six weeks.
“Alysa is going to have some time for herself, but it won’t be much, because we leave for Prague March 21,” DiGuglielmo said.
Once the shows are over, Liu will begin thinking of programs for next season.
“People are telling her, `You could skate four more years, be in another Olympics,’’’ DiGuglielmo said. “The sport could be very different in four more years.”
 

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