Well, the main highlights of about half of the interview...
They talked a bit about Dexter, their dog. Tanya told the interviewer that she got him as soon as she came to Russia, and that he is 5 years old. The interviewer asked if it's difficult for them to keep a dog, as they travel so much, go to competitions etc. They said that if they have to go somewhere abroad they often have to leave him with their moms or with Tanya's sister. But in general Dex likes very much to be with them, they usually take him anywhere, even to the movies, for example, because he climbs into the bag and sits there quietly, and nobody would even notice that they have come with a dog.
The interviewer asked how they came to skate together, how they got to know each other for the first time.
They told that many people were talking even back in 2006 that it would be a very interesting and strong pair if they come to skate together, but it didn't happen that year, that happened only after the Vancouver Olympics.
They met each other for the first time in 2003 at the junior competitions, Max skated with Maria Mukhortova, and Tanya skated with her first partner, Petr Kharchenko. It was Maria who introduced them to each other, Maria and Tanya were friends at that time.
Their relations were developing little by little. They liked each other since they began to work together, when they had to make a lot of documents and go around a lot of offices, when Tanya was getting the Russian citizenship. They liked to talk to each other, were spending much time together, though at that time they were just good friends and partners, and Max wasn't even thinking then that they could be a couple. Their personal relationships began about two years after their skating together. But even before that it was constantly rumoured by fans that they had personal relations, even at that time when they hadn't.
Max was saying the same things that he said at the commentary of the Worlds, that the pair skating nowadays tends to be not really "pair", and focuses too much on side-by-side jumps and side-by-side skating, and the top pairs now don't pay enough attention to complicated lifts and other pair elements. He also said that in general the pair skating is often disregarded nowadays, though it's the most technically complicated discipline of figure skating - for example, at the Euros the pair LP was put to the Sunday morning, after all the other skaters had already had the closing banquet.
Max also said that he doesn't have such a habit to keep some memorable things from the competitions and so on, for example, he threw away the skates in which he was skating at the Olympics, and he was not planning to keep them as 'keepsakes'. He even keeps all his medals at his mother's, because he feels that it should kind of make him more 'hungry' for the new medals, if he doesn't focus on the medals that he already has.
Tanya goes to the University now, she studies sports management. The interviewer asked if they are planning to be coaches. Tanya said that she would rather prefer being a manager, doing some organizational stuff. Max also said that he doesn't feel like being a coach, but rather a choreographer or a coach assistant. He said that to be a coach it's necessary to know many things that he hadn't studied - biomechanics, biorhythms - he discribed how Nina Mozer plans their trainings taking all this into account, and said that he doesn't know these things thoroughly enough to be a coach.
They were asked what they want to do, but putting away for later, they said that it's having a baby, they would like to, but as they are planning to compete till the next Olympics, they can't afford this yet.
They are also preparing a house to live, though they often don't have enough time. Tanya oversees and manages the furnishing of the house and arranging everything, Max doesn't go into it too much, he said that he fully trusts Tanya to do it.