Culture The Alysa Liu Effect - She proves that an Olympic gold-medalist figure skater can be strong, warm to her competitors, and salty all at the same time.

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By Sally Jenkins
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February 21, 2026, 9:27 PM ET

Begin with the hair—which, after all, Alysa Liu invites us to do. It’s hardly the halo of an ice angel. Her dyed-blond and black circlets have a welcome element of scornfulness, a taunting of judgement. The hair says: Figure skating submits young women to continual verdict, assaults their self-esteem over a toe point or pound of weight, but here is someone who will not comply, who has found her own ebullient, levitating, and self-approving form.
Liu takes all the tears in the kiss-and-cry zone—where so many skaters have suffered fierce whispers from unforgiving coaches and devastating appraisals in the form of “judge’s marks”—and dries them. She repudiates an austere, traditional training system that breaks tiny dancers into pieces. At the Milan Cortino games she skated on her own terms to seize America’s first Olympic women’s figure skating gold medal since 2002—and became a new kind of icon, one who eats and wears whatever the hell she wants. “I don’t know how I’m going to deal with it,” she said of the increased attention that was coming her way after her euphoric, spinning mirror-ball free skate to Donna Summer’s version of “MacArthur Park on Thursday. “Probably wigs. I’m gonna wear some wigs when I go outside.”
Her performance proved that a 20-year-old woman can be strong, feathering, free, warm to her competitors, and salty all at the same time. Cloaked in a dress that looked like it was made of gold coins, and which seemed to give her a jauntiness on the ice, Liu completed a strenuous seven triple jumps. Her effort was all the more extraordinary given that she had retired in 2022 at the age of 16, because she didn’t want to become a sulky, overtrained arthritic with the emotional disposition of burnt toast. “The last time I was skating it was so rough,” she said in a press conference after her gold-medal win, “I genuinely cannot even begin to start on it.”
During her sabbatical from the sport she went skiing, hiked to the Mount Evert base camp, and enrolled at UCLA, where she studied psychology: “side quests,” as she called them in an interview with NBC this week. “It keeps me curious.” Liu returned to skating in late 2024 after two and a half years, with the clear-headed intention to be a performance artist, not a medal-seeking desperado. “No one tells me what to do,” she said of her attitude after her time away.
Who is going to argue with a gold medal? Or with the athleticism she showed in her jumping performance? Coaches around the world will now have a harder time pushing their charges to the breaking point. Four years ago, the world watched aghast as a clutch of young Russian champion skaters, led by the accused 15-year-old doper Kamila Valieva, emotionally disintegrated under the grim-jawed watch of their coach Eteri Tutberidze. Liu’s tremendous exhibition of skill, combined with her carefreeness and her warm embraces of her teammates and competitors, seemed the perfect antidote.
As NBC commentator Tara Lipinski, the 1998 gold medalist, said of Liu, “It’s like she is just playing on the ice, not even performing anymore.” Lipinski added, “She’s figured out how to compete without carrying the weight of it.” According to the NBC Olympics figure-skating expert Philip Hersh, Liu has not fallen since the first event of her comeback in September 2024. She has landed 221 jumps without hitting the ice. When she finished her free skate, she mimicked dusting her hands off, as if to say, job done, that was easy—and then hollered above the roaring standing ovation, “That’s what I’m fucking talking about!”
And she did it all with raccoon head. That’s not an insult; it was her original intention when she went to the hair salon a few years ago, seeking “an optical illusion.” She let her hair grow out, and added one new ring of bleach every year. “I thought, I kind of want to be a tree,” she said in January. The remark was no more or less quirky than her explanation of why her Instagram profile photo is a picture of a bowl of Lucky Charms, with just the pastel marshmallows. “I think it’s super aesthetic,” she said. “And I think it captures kind of my personality, my essence a little bit.”
The audience is only beginning to meet this personality-essence, who seems to have perspective as well as humor and social courage. The gold medal is “a physical object,” she said. “I could just lose it.” What she really sought from her skating, she told a reporter, is “human connection.” She added, “And damn, now I’m connecting with a hella ton of people.” Figure staking, a sport that has historically demanded jewel-box princesses, may yet sour that connection. But for now, bleached, studded, and exuberantly frank is the new fashion.

About the Author​

Sally Jenkins
Sally Jenkins is a staff writer at The Atlantic. Previously, Jenkins was a Washington Post columnist and feature writer for 30 years.
 
>Goonerbait is when a woman
FTFY
I don’t blame her but we all know this is ripe for a bunch of saturation in advertising deals and sponsorships to monetize horny losers and it’s tiring for everyone who isn’t invested and still will be unable to avoid it.
 
Don't sweat it, folks. Let's be glad she won the gold. Seems to be a good American. Gu doesn't make a pimple on Liu's ass.
 
FTFY
I don’t blame her but we all know this is ripe for a bunch of saturation in advertising deals and sponsorships to monetize horny losers and it’s tiring for everyone who isn’t invested and still will be unable to avoid it.
Ban dating apps.
She seems nice for a woke young girl. The other chinese lady is worse (I forgot her name).
Eileen Gu. She looks a lot like a blonde mean girl in a 2000s movie.
 
It irritates me a bit when I find obvious headcases like this hot. Oh well.

What's the deal with the weird inner upper up lip piercing? That seems like maybe the stupidest place to get a piercing I've ever seen. I thought it was some new type of braces or something, but nope. It's apparently some type of signaling feature like her racoon hair.

Still wood.
I wouldn't. I can smell the herpes and HPV through my screen.
 
"Coming from a family of immigrants"

Girl, your Chinese single father who created you in a lab is a political refugee. That is not the same thing as economic migrates not bothering to legitimize themselves.


Aside from that, eh she's alright. Gold for America is always good, and I like how she retired at 16 from her father's Chinese industrial training only to come back later on her own terms better than ever.
 
I just think she is pretty when she smiles and is clearly happy. Does that magically make me a gooner or something?
 
I think she's pretty and great but.... Inner lips piercings? Holy mother of god, wtf is wrong with these people??!

Mental issues/abuse for sure.
 
What's the deal with the weird inner upper up lip piercing?
I've literally seen this only once in the wild and that chick was a complete headcase and had it done by a friend who was locally notorious as a hobby tattooist/piercer. At least she had the good sense to sterilize the needle in a pressure cooker.
 
I think she's pretty and great but.... Inner lips piercings? Holy mother of god, wtf is wrong with these people??!

Mental issues/abuse for sure.
It could be worse. We have seen what can happen when a father really fucks their precious Chinese daughter raising and the minute she turns 18 before…or at least, some of us have.
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She's 20. That's a bit young to be a bitter, nigger-hating cynic and "I don't trust the government, people should have rights" is hardly the communist manifesto.
I think the real issue is deranged leftists expecting people on the right to hate her and want her dead, because that's how they react when someone doesn't agree 100%.
Instead everyone is just saying "Hey, that happy girl with the quirky hair won a medal. Nice", and that is an alien concept to them.
 
Remember when our figure skaters used to beat each other in the legs with truncheons instead of try and out-woke each other?

Good times.
 
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