Politics won't keep Johnny Weir from making comeback

Feb 06, 2012 21:01




This is from a few weeks ago but this is the first interview I've read where basically he gives himself an out before the 2012/2013 season even starts. It has a lot of rehashing of old story lines and old controversies up front so I tried to liven it up with some pics. Enjoy. Critique. Whatever.


Politics won't keep Johnny Weir from making comeback

When he finished his long program at the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, Johnny Weir left the ice in tears, overwhelmed by the raw emotion over what he had just accomplished. Every elite athlete dreams of a moment like this, but only a lucky few ever get to truly experience one. The three-time U.S. national champion delivered the performance of a lifetime in front of the world at the Olympic Games. Yet even in a competition largely marked by flawed, shaky performances, the judges deemed Weir's perfect skate no better than sixth, triggering a controversy never yet put to rest. (omg move on...)



During a press appearance at last week's National Figure Skating Championships in San Jose, Weir recalled that night in Vancouver and what transpired behind the scenes shortly after his skate. His placement, he said, did not shock him. "I knew most likely an Olympic medal wasn’t in my future. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know who is liked by the judges." What stung the most was what he overheard backstage. A high skating official went up to his coach, Galina Zmievskaya, Weir recalls, and told her, "I wish we had know he was going to skate like that." The implication, Weir said, was that they would have marked him different had they realized that after a shaky season he still had it in him to deliver such a performance. "Why should it matter? They should judge what happened that day."

Such an experience would be enough to make most skaters hang up their competitive skates for good. And for a while that is what Weir did. In the two years since he set out to prove to himself and the world that he has what it takes to become a star without the benefit of Olympic accolades. From fashion runways and rubbing shoulders with celebrities, to starring in reality shows, writing an autobiography, and performing in ice shows worldwide, Weir maintained a higher public profile than most world and Olympic champions.



But now, the 27-year-old skater-turned-pop star is ready to come back. On January 19 Weir announced that he has resumed his early-morning practice routine and will forsake his red-carpet lifestyle in order to take another stab at Olympic competition.

During the 45-minute talk with the press last week, Weir explained his decision and shared his no-holds-barred views on every topic: the judging system, his gay marriage, and everything in between.

On his reasons for coming back

Now that I've given myself two years away from competition, given myself time to eat and be fat and be happy and get married, I'm coming back in a completely different mind frame. I've achieved so many things in my career. This is not for a medal, not for the judges. This comeback is for me. (Really? Because before you said it was to try and make your 3rd Olympic team, so you might want it to be for the judges if you hope to get to Sochi) I can come back and completely enjoy my skating because I have a life. I don't have the pressure of "You win the Olympics or you work at Home Depot."

Also, I'd like to push figure skating back in the public eye. We've been in a lull for a while. People don't watch. I have a high public persona and I hope to use that to attract public attention to the many talents in the sport. I want to try to put figure skating back on the map with pop culture



On the type of programs he plans to perform

I'm trying to find a way to mix Lady Gaga and Carmen. I don’t know if that will become something or if it's just a random idea.I'm trying to come up with ideas to combine on ice and off ice persona. On ice I'm this very elegant, balletic and classical skater. Off ice, I'm a train wreck of a fashion person with too much makeup on. (omg i didn't realize he was so self aware re: this) If I can tap into the enjoyment and creative vibes I get during shows, you’ll be seeing something different. It won’t be “now I’m doing this three turn because it gives me two-tenths extra points" and "now I’m doing this change of edge because it makes the level higher." It will be more free. (Sigh, this is a pretty standard Johnny answer, but will he really be satisfied being off the podium for the next 2 seasons as long as he felt "free"?)

On how confident he is of his comeback

If by the end of the summer or beginning of fall I feel I'm not at the level I need to be to compete, I'll know i's time to hang up my skates. But even the last two weeks I made great strides. I can now do all my triples and triple-triple combinations. But I’m not a dumb person. I'm not about to throw myself in front of the cameras of the world and be judged if in my heart I'm not confident enough to be there. I've been in the sport long enough to make that decision for myself.

On including the quad

The quad will definitely be in my competitive program. But Galina already informed that if I get pregnant I won't be able to do quads because I'll be too fat.

On his biggest strength

While I never materialized into the great world and Olympic champion I wanted to be, I think the biggest strength that I have is that no matter how hard I get knocked out, as hard as I fall, I can always come back and I come back stronger, smarter and better (except if I can't come back by September, then I'm not coming back at all).

On political judging today

Things come in and out of fashion. Patrick Chan can fall down four times and still win by 30 points. It's quite evident that there's still a lot politically going on behind the scenes that we're not privy to. The Russians were always vilified for politics and doing things behind the scenes, and people still don't trust Russian skating officials. But when you fall three or four times and you win, it's clear there's something else going on. No one has a fair shot if Patrick Chan is in the competition (300 is the score to beat!! He deserves every point!!). So it's not about the rules and trying a quad; it's about whether the judges like me. If they don't it won't matter what I do.



On the current judging system

The judging system to me is a lot of hot air. They're trying to make it as complicated as possible so you can't see what's actually going on behind closed doors. You can't actually see this person talking to a judge in the ladies' room. Things like that happen in figure skating. The judging system is just smoke and mirrors.

But to be competitive you have to play by the rules and I'm prepared to do that. I'll learn to do the whole footwork sequence on one foot and do a quadruple flip with my finger in my nose and have my costume do a complete change while I'm in midair and change from a swan to a deck of cards. Whatever I have to do, I'll try. But at the end of the day it doesn't matter. The judges like me or they don't.

(Srry, but the "the judges don't like me" argument doesn't fly if you're saying you won't do those little things that you know can make a difference in the standings so you can maintain your artistic vision. Even if the "every-4-years" viewer doesn't understand why PChiddy fell on each of his 15 quads and still beat your beautiful, perfect stake by 50 points, you know how this game is played. Either play it or don't, but don't deflect blame.)

On his honeymoon in the Dominican Republic

Actually the end of my honeymoon was strange, because I got stung by an algae. It was like man-eating seaweed. I'm terrified of the ocean, so I only go ankle- or knee-deep. I touched seaweed and within the hour my arm was blown up like crazy.



On his husband's support of his comeback

Victor is very supportive of my comeback. It's very important for me to have a happy, strong marriage, being a young gay couple. It's a very new thing for the world for gay people to be able to be married. I wouldn't have come back if Victor said no. But everyone is in my corner.

tldr; blah blah blah, So what's the over-under for Johnny actually skating in a Grand Prix next year?!? #swangoose4eva



Source: http://www.examiner.com/figure-skating-in-san-francisco/johnny-weir-to-return-to-competition-politics-and-all
Also, Johnny was on my local evening news the other week...clip here (sorry cannot embed):

http://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/entertainment/celebrity/PHI-NATL-Johnny-Weir-on-Marriage-the-Olympics--Controversy-139276348.html

ontd_skating

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