イ You tweeted us, there is an injury you suffered at an Olympic GALA and and you tweeted a picture that, it like, look pretty… look at that, pretty serious,
パ Was just for fun I just kind of put it up because it was funny happened the day of the gala, you know I wouldn’t call it an injury it is just little bit of a scrape
イ I call that an injury,
パ that looks wrong words,
イ may be not for you
パ looks wrong words
パ I wouldn’t realize it was going to be this much response to it, but it’s a, yeah, during the gala I got kicks; and the skater was
doing a butterfly which is kind of a aerial and his skate hit me because I didn’t’ expect him to do in that move we were kind of squeezed together; but that was OK, yeah that was ok
イ And you are OK now
パ Yes yeah Yeah, it’s a little bit of a scar but I’m good.
during the gala I got kicks; and the skater was
doing a butterfly which is kind of a aerial and his skate hit me
because I didn’t’ expect him to do in that move we were kind of squeezed together; but that was OK, yeah that was ok
during the gala I got kicks; and the skater was
doing a butterfly which is kind of a aerial and his skate hit me
because I didn’t’ expect him to do in that move we were kind of squeezed together; but that was OK, yeah that was ok
MOST TWEETED: You don't have to win gold medals to drive social media conversation.
Going into Sunday, Twitter said that the Winter Olympic athlete mentioned most in tweets
throughout the Sochi games was Japan's Mao Asada, who finished sixth in women's figure skating.
Second was Yuna Kim, the silver medal-winning figure skater from South Korea,
followed by American hockey player T.J. Oshie and snowboarder Shaun White.
The Sochi Olympics were mentioned in 38.1 million tweets since the beginning of the games, Twitter said.