The anticipation of waiting for scores to flash is still there: athletes cannot see the real-time judging during the skate, and coaches do not tell them their technical scores when they come off the ice; they hear the final number when everyone else does.
FYI, Hamilton, Ashley Wagner, & Brian Boitano are doing commentary for Peacock for the main competitions.
As for Gilles & Poirier's orange costumes, all I can say is that you know you've gone beyond the bounds of reason when Johnny Weir, of all people, says your costumes are distracting! (I'm also amazed that Piper wore her hair loose again, after she got it caught in Paul's costume at the Canadian championships last time out.)
FWIW, I'd like to introduce you to the real "team" athletes of US Figure Skating. Synchronized Skating is figure skating's actual team discipline. There are over 600 active teams in the US; it has been competed nationally here since 1984, and on the world level since 2000, but it is not yet included in Olympic competition. The United States fields 5 teams in international competition at the Senior level and another 8 at the Junior level; last week US junior competitors swept the podium at the Mozart Cup in Salzburg, Austria. As a sample, this is our defending national champion Synchronized Team USA 1, the 28-time US Champions, Boston's Haydenettes:
and this is the current World Champion team, Russia's Team Paradise: