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 <title>Podcast Journal, l'information internationale diffusée en podcast</title>
 <subtitle><![CDATA[Podcast Journal, journal international diffusé en podcast sur mobiles, tablettes, applis et web

]]></subtitle>
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 <updated>2026-04-04T08:59:06+02:00</updated>
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  <entry>
   <title>Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink — Travel: Milano Olympic Games, Five Facts from the Figure Skating Women’s Free Skate and Alysa Liu’s Alysa Liu’s Golden Joy</title>
   <updated>2026-03-09T18:08:00+01:00</updated>
   <id>https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Women-s-Free-Skate-and-Alysa-Liu_a29673.html</id>
   <category term="CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE" />
   <photo:imgsrc>https://www.podcastjournal.net/photo/art/imagette/95180568-66635331.jpg</photo:imgsrc>
   <published>2026-03-14T10:00:00+01:00</published>
   <author><name>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</name></author>
   <content type="html">
    <![CDATA[
Stepping into the Milano Ice Skating Arena for the women’s free skate felt like arriving at the final chapter of a story that had been quietly building all week. The short program had drawn the first hierarchy, with Japan’s Ami Nakai leading and Kaori Sakamoto close behind, while Alysa Liu sat in third place within striking distance. But the final night promised something larger. In Olympic figure skating, the free skate is where the competition expands, more time, more elements, more room for ambition, but also more space for pressure to surface. Yet when the decisive moment arrived, the story of the night moved in another direction.    ]]>
   </content>
 	<enclosure url="https://www.podcastjournal.net/podcast/2b8c90.mp3" length="2658764" type="audio/mpeg" />
 	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
 	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Stepping into the Milano Ice Skating Arena for the women’s free skate felt like arriving at the final chapter of a story that had been quietly building all week. The short program had drawn the first hierarchy, with Japan’s Ami Nakai leading an...]]></itunes:subtitle>
 	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Stepping into the Milano Ice Skating Arena for the women’s free skate felt like arriving at the final chapter of a story that had been quietly building all week. The short program had drawn the first hierarchy, with Japan’s Ami Nakai leading and Kaori Sakamoto close behind, while Alysa Liu sat in third place within striking distance. But the final night promised something larger. In Olympic figure skating, the free skate is where the competition expands, more time, more elements, more room for ambition, but also more space for pressure to surface. Yet when the decisive moment arrived, the story of the night moved in another direction.]]></itunes:summary>
 	<itunes:author>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</itunes:author>
   <link rel="alternate" href="https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Women-s-Free-Skate-and-Alysa-Liu_a29673.html" />
  </entry>
  <entry>
   <title>Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink — Travel: Milano Olympic Games, Five Facts from the Figure Skating Women’s Short Program</title>
   <updated>2026-03-09T18:07:00+01:00</updated>
   <id>https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Women-s-Short-Program_a29670.html</id>
   <category term="CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE" />
   <photo:imgsrc>https://www.podcastjournal.net/photo/art/imagette/95067737-66589029.jpg</photo:imgsrc>
   <published>2026-03-12T10:00:00+01:00</published>
   <author><name>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</name></author>
   <content type="html">
    <![CDATA[
Stepping into the arena for the women’s short program felt different from the men’s night. It was the final discipline of the Olympic figure skating schedule, and the audience was still carrying the plot twists and emotional aftershocks of the previous day. After dramatic shifts in the men’s event, debate in ice dance, and a comeback victory in pairs, Milano Cortina 2026 had already proven that nothing on Olympic ice was predictable. The women’s short program opened under that uncertainty. Now the spotlight turned to a tightly packed field led by Japan’s 17 year old Ami Nakai, followed closely by Kaori Sakamoto and Alysa Liu of the United States. With Japan placing three skaters inside the top four and Adeliia Petrosian looming as an unpredictable contender competing as a neutral athlete, the margins heading into the free skate were really tight.


Here are five facts from the women’s short program in Milan, the segment that set the tone for the individual event and revealed the first fractures in the Olympic narrative.    ]]>
   </content>
 	<enclosure url="https://www.podcastjournal.net/podcast/2b8877.mp3" length="2827201" type="audio/mpeg" />
 	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
 	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Stepping into the arena for the women’s short program felt different from the men’s night. It was the final discipline of the Olympic figure skating schedule, and the audience was still carrying the plot twists and emotional aftershocks of th...]]></itunes:subtitle>
 	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Stepping into the arena for the women’s short program felt different from the men’s night. It was the final discipline of the Olympic figure skating schedule, and the audience was still carrying the plot twists and emotional aftershocks of the previous day. After dramatic shifts in the men’s event, debate in ice dance, and a comeback victory in pairs, Milano Cortina 2026 had already proven that nothing on Olympic ice was predictable. The women’s short program opened under that uncertainty. Now the spotlight turned to a tightly packed field led by Japan’s 17 year old Ami Nakai, followed closely by Kaori Sakamoto and Alysa Liu of the United States. With Japan placing three skaters inside the top four and Adeliia Petrosian looming as an unpredictable contender competing as a neutral athlete, the margins heading into the free skate were really tight.  Here are five facts from the women’s short program in Milan, the segment that set the tone for the individual event and revealed the first fractures in the Olympic narrative.]]></itunes:summary>
 	<itunes:author>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</itunes:author>
   <link rel="alternate" href="https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Women-s-Short-Program_a29670.html" />
  </entry>
  <entry>
   <title>Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink — Travel: Milano Olympic Games, Five Facts from the Figure Skating Men’s Free Program And The Coronation of Mikhail Shaidorov</title>
   <updated>2026-03-09T18:06:00+01:00</updated>
   <id>https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Men-s-Free-Program-And-The_a29667.html</id>
   <category term="CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE" />
   <photo:imgsrc>https://www.podcastjournal.net/photo/art/imagette/95020866-66566576.jpg</photo:imgsrc>
   <published>2026-03-10T10:00:00+01:00</published>
   <author><name>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</name></author>
   <content type="html">
    <![CDATA[
Stepping into the arena for the men’s free skate felt like crossing a threshold into the decisive heartbeat of the Olympic Games and into the moment where Olympic figure skating defines its legacy. With the final flight bringing together Ilia Malinin, Yuma Kagiyama, Adam Siao Him Fa, Daniel Grassl, Mikhail Shaidorov, and Junhwan Cha, the six leaders after the short program, the competition revealed not only its intensity but its capacity for upheaval. At its center stood Mikhail Shaidorov, whose performance became one of the most exceptional and historically significant victories of the modern Olympic era, rising from fifth after the short program to deliver a free skate defined by composure, technical authority, and competitive resilience, securing Kazakhstan’s place at the summit of men’s figure skating and extending the legacy forged by Denis Ten. What began as a contest expected to confirm hierarchy transformed into a night of reversals, pressure, and historic consequence, where the outcome remained uncertain until the final blade mark. Here, in this article, I share five facts about the men’s free program, the segment that concluded the Olympic event, determined its final result, and delivered one of the most dramatic plot twists in the evolving identity of modern men’s figure skating.
    ]]>
   </content>
 	<enclosure url="https://www.podcastjournal.net/podcast/2b8509.mp3" length="3193334" type="audio/mpeg" />
 	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
 	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Stepping into the arena for the men’s free skate felt like crossing a threshold into the decisive heartbeat of the Olympic Games and into the moment where Olympic figure skating defines its legacy. With the final flight bringing together Ili...]]></itunes:subtitle>
 	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Stepping into the arena for the men’s free skate felt like crossing a threshold into the decisive heartbeat of the Olympic Games and into the moment where Olympic figure skating defines its legacy. With the final flight bringing together Ilia Malinin, Yuma Kagiyama, Adam Siao Him Fa, Daniel Grassl, Mikhail Shaidorov, and Junhwan Cha, the six leaders after the short program, the competition revealed not only its intensity but its capacity for upheaval. At its center stood Mikhail Shaidorov, whose performance became one of the most exceptional and historically significant victories of the modern Olympic era, rising from fifth after the short program to deliver a free skate defined by composure, technical authority, and competitive resilience, securing Kazakhstan’s place at the summit of men’s figure skating and extending the legacy forged by Denis Ten. What began as a contest expected to confirm hierarchy transformed into a night of reversals, pressure, and historic consequence, where the outcome remained uncertain until the final blade mark. Here, in this article, I share five facts about the men’s free program, the segment that concluded the Olympic event, determined its final result, and delivered one of the most dramatic plot twists in the evolving identity of modern men’s figure skating.]]></itunes:summary>
 	<itunes:author>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</itunes:author>
   <link rel="alternate" href="https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Milano-Olympic-Games-Five-Facts-from-the-Figure-Skating-Men-s-Free-Program-And-The_a29667.html" />
  </entry>
  <entry>
   <title>Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink — Travel: Living the Olympic Experience in Milan, Five Facts from the Men’s Short Program</title>
   <updated>2026-02-28T08:25:00+01:00</updated>
   <id>https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Living-the-Olympic-Experience-in-Milan-Five-Facts-from-the-Men-s-Short-Program_a29665.html</id>
   <category term="CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE" />
   <photo:imgsrc>https://www.podcastjournal.net/photo/art/imagette/94870410-66497152.jpg</photo:imgsrc>
   <published>2026-02-28T10:00:00+01:00</published>
   <author><name>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</name></author>
   <content type="html">
    <![CDATA[
Stepping into the arena for the men’s short program felt like crossing a threshold into the true heartbeat of the Olympic Games and into the world of Olympic figure skating. With figures such as Ilia Malinin, Mikhail Shaidorov, Yuma Kagiyama, Adam Siao Him Fa, Canada’s Stephen Gogolev, Italy’s Daniel Grassl and Matteo Rizzo, South Korea’s Junhwan Cha, and the arrival of newcomer Petr Gumennik shaping the early narrative, the competition immediately revealed both its intensity and its depth...    ]]>
   </content>
   <link rel="alternate" href="https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Living-the-Olympic-Experience-in-Milan-Five-Facts-from-the-Men-s-Short-Program_a29665.html" />
  </entry>
  <entry>
   <title>Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink — Travel: Italy, On Site at the Olympic Games, Milan–Cortina 2026</title>
   <updated>2026-02-16T08:22:00+01:00</updated>
   <id>https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Italy-On-Site-at-the-Olympic-Games-Milan-Cortina-2026_a29658.html</id>
   <category term="CÉLÉBRITÉS, MODE ET LIFESTYLE" />
   <photo:imgsrc>https://www.podcastjournal.net/photo/art/imagette/94286485-65764321.jpg</photo:imgsrc>
   <published>2026-02-16T10:00:00+01:00</published>
   <author><name>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</name></author>
   <content type="html">
    <![CDATA[
Between the industrial heritage of Turin, twenty years after the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, and the architectural elegance of Milan, Italy is now living to the rhythm of the Milan–Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. In the piazzas, avenues, and arenas, sport intertwines with culture, design, and the spectacle of the city itself. More than a sporting event, these Games feel like a collective experience in which figure skating converses with history, art, and Italian identity. It is within this vibrant landscape that my Olympic immersion begins.    ]]>
   </content>
 	<enclosure url="https://www.podcastjournal.net/podcast/2b6ab7.mp3" length="1641869" type="audio/mpeg" />
 	<itunes:explicit>no</itunes:explicit>
 	<itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Between the industrial heritage of Turin, twenty years after the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, and the architectural elegance of Milan, Italy is now living to the rhythm of the Milan–Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. In the piazzas, avenues, and arenas...]]></itunes:subtitle>
 	<itunes:summary><![CDATA[Between the industrial heritage of Turin, twenty years after the 2006 Winter Olympic Games, and the architectural elegance of Milan, Italy is now living to the rhythm of the Milan–Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics. In the piazzas, avenues, and arenas, sport intertwines with culture, design, and the spectacle of the city itself. More than a sporting event, these Games feel like a collective experience in which figure skating converses with history, art, and Italian identity. It is within this vibrant landscape that my Olympic immersion begins.]]></itunes:summary>
 	<itunes:author>@sarahaerial.ice I Wanderlust Ice &amp; Ink</itunes:author>
   <link rel="alternate" href="https://www.podcastjournal.net/Wanderlust-Ice-Ink-—-Travel-Italy-On-Site-at-the-Olympic-Games-Milan-Cortina-2026_a29658.html" />
  </entry>
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