Sports writer - Grant writer

Is the Sports Media Turning Shawn and Nastia Into the New Michelle and Tara?

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Shawn Johnson and Nastia Lukin at the 2008 Olympics

Two weeks ago, the Los Angeles Times published a pair of articles contrasting the current careers of U.S. gymnasts Shawn Johnson and Nastia Lukin. The Times spoke to the “graceful” Lukin about the three Marta Karolyi run training camps she has attended since the Beijing Olympics, and her agent about the offer she turned down from Dancing with the Stars. They then profiled a Dancing with the Stars rehearsal that Johnson, not necessarily renowned for her artistic ability as a gymnast, was participating in, quoted her mother as saying as Johnson never wants to leave the Left Coast, and mentioning that serious gymnastics training doesn’t seem to be in the cards at the moment.

The short, less artistic little kid looking to take advantage of her 15 minutes of Olympic provided fame.  The lankier-only-by-comparison, more artistic, older teenager who looks to stay in the sport.

One would think we were back in 1998.

Tara Lipinski and Michelle Kwan at the 1998 Olympics.

Tara Lipinski and Michelle Kwan at the 1998 Olympics. (Photo: Jamd.com)

Following the 1998 Winter Olympics, similar articles were written about Michelle Kwan and Tara Lipinski. Graceful and lankier-looking Kwan, disappointed by her Olympic silver medal, had not made a concrete decision about whether or not to remain figure skating, but kept her options open and continued to train. Lipinski, the gold medalist at the Nagano Games, the shorter, less artistic and younger one, was seemingly led by her mother and agent to take advantage of every professional opportunity afforded her due to her medal finish, and stopped training for Olympic competition. (Years later, the figure skating community would learn that Lipinski had quietly battled serious hip injuries, which would eventually end her ability to skate on even the show circuit, during her Olympic season as well.)

Led by such articles, many jumped onto the Kwan bandwagon, thinking of Lipinski as the less-talented, less-determined, less-serious athlete. Kwan was persistent and continued on, while Lipinski seemingly let the promise of a payday determine her next steps. If Dancing with the Stars was around in the fall of 1998, and both skaters were offered the chance to join the cast, one could surmise that it would be Lipinski competing for the mirrored ball trophy and Kwan declining the invite in order to attend training camps.

But a decade later, both athletes are nearly unknown and having to pursue other areas outside of their sport – Kwan, the field of international relations (although according to the Washington Post, she may consider a comeback), and Lipinski, acting and voiceover work. Taking advantage of the time immediately following the Olympics, in either way they did, gave them a cushion to fall back on once their time as athletes ended.

And now we are in 2009, and the two teenage stars of the Summer Olympics find themselves beginning to be portrayed in a similar light. Is Johnson wrong for taking high profile mainstream media opportunities while she can? In a report this week, it was reported that Dancing with the Stars participants make $200,000 for the season.  Is Johnson, a 17 year old who doesn’t know a world outside of gymnastics and probably can not even think about what she could have a career in as an adult that does not involve the sport, wrong for earning that while she can? Is Lukin, who has also taken advantage of a few lesser profile mainstream media opportunities (modeling and a small appearance on Gossip Girl) right for continuing to subject herself to the svengalis that are the Karolyis and continue on a path towards the World Championships later this year? Both paths take into consideration that these girls are in the “twilight” of their competitive careers,  but one has decided to continue on the known path for at least one more year to boost her resume a tad more, while the other realizes that her time as a gymnast is winding down, and that it may be prudent to take advantage of what she can while she can.

Essentially, aren’t Johnson and Lukin, like Kwan and Lipinski before them, just two teenagers who are taking advantage of the comparative variety of opportunities available to them, given the limited scope of their life experiences and the lack of relative choice in their opportunities at other points in their life? Although the paths may vary, both take advantage of the limited amount of time they have to either compete in their sport or cash in on notoriety gained from their sport. And when you’ve been doing the same exact thing since you were three, training for a singular goal since you were three, and dreaming of stardom from that activity since you were three, can you blame them for taking advantage of the opportunities available to them while they can?

4 Comments

  1. fetch

    Wow nice job. I’m just barely old enough to remember Lipinski and Kwan (Nagano was the first Winter Olympics I remember and Atlanta the first Summer).

    But as far as I’m concerned there can be a profile on Shawn Johnson every day of the week.

  2. SCOTT

    Nice piece Kat … In light of the news of the last day or so, it is a scary world and these people have to make smart choices while still cashing in on the opportunities that present them. And that does not in any way mske them sell-outs, just humans tslented and dedicated persons who are using these skills to mske the most of the opportunities that their training has presented. Another sport with a limited shelf life, NFL Football (avetage career length of those who make it to the league < 4 years) and I can tell you right now that if I had told my friend and former college roommate Warren Sapp that in three quarters score years he’d be giving up the shoulder pads and knee braces and the macho atmosphere of the football clubhouse for Ballroom dancing on National Television he would have laughed in my face and then kicked my rear, or maybe first kicked my behind and then laughed, but the fact is these persons along with having a special athletic gift have become their own corporations of celebrity, in which the product is his or herself. There is nothing wrong with that no matter how unsavory it seems. I believe it is still in a way the essence of pursuing the American Dream.

  3. SCOTT

    One other thing about the difference in Shawn Johnson and Luskin is bloodlines, legacy and lineage. In Johnson you had a girl who still was going to public schools and having crushes on boys from her own hometown High School right up through the Olympics, whereas Luskin had a father who fled the European block countries so that he could ideally provide the type of life and training that he dreamed up while growing up a world class athlete himself. Surely Luskin HAS A DISPROPORTIONATE amount of pressure, at least in comparison to her teammate Johnson, to continue in the sport that has for two generations defined her family to a large extent.

  4. Rachel brown

    i think nastia and shawn were great and all but one looks snobbier than the other no offense NASTIA

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