With Olympics behind him, Adam Rippon is ready for his second act

Rippon has found himself in the role of LGBTQ advocate not only because he is out and gay, but also because he hasn’t shied away from politics.

Prior to competing, he made headlines by publicly clashing with Vice President Mike Pence, who was selected to represent the United States in the official Olympic delegation at Pyeongchang.

Rippon said he would rather not meet with Mike Pence, due to his alleged support of conversion therapy, a contentious practice that claims to be able to change someone’s sexual orientation.

“You mean Mike Pence, the same Mike Pence that funded gay conversion therapy?” Rippon said in an interview with USA Today. “I’m not buying it.”

Pence hit back, with his press secretary telling NBC News Rippon’s statement, “is totally false with no basis in fact.”

 U.S. Vice President Mike Pence addresses business leaders at The InterContinental on April 22, 2017 in Sydney. Adam Rippon stands on the medal podium for the Men’s Championship during the 2018 Prudential U.S. Figure Skating Championships on Jan. 6, 2018 in San Jose, California. Brendon Thorne, Matthew Stockman / Getty Images file,

Now, however, Rippon is more open to a meeting, albeit with some conditions. He said he didn’t want to meet with Pence before the games because it would have been a distraction.

“I felt it was in my best interest to not take the meeting at that time,” he said. “But now that the Olympics are over, if that opportunity were still available, I’d like to take advantage of it. I think it’s important to speak up for those people who feel they don’t have a voice.”

Rippon added, however, that he would like to bring people with him who are most affected by the Trump administration’s policies.

“If I were to have the opportunity to meet with Mike Pence, it is not a conversation just for me, it’s a conversation for so many people,” he said. “If I had that opportunity, I would like to go with people whose lives have been affected.”

“I think everyone deserves to have the full human experience,” he went on. “To get married, to join the military if they are a trans man or a trans woman to serve their country, and I think that if I were to have that opportunity, I’d really like to share that.”

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The future isn’t clear for Rippon, who is in the midst of a whirlwind press tour that has landed him on every couch from “Ellen” to “Watch What Happens Live” with Andy Cohen.

At the moment, he is spearheading a campaign with LGBTQ advocacy group GLAAD on a youth engagement program.

“GLAAD is helping get all of these young kids get together, and we give them the tools to go back to their communities and give back and be role models, be ambassadors, be leaders for their communities,” he said.

“I know if I had a young role model, someone I looked up to, someone I related to growing up, my life would have been so different,” he said. “I think I would have gone through a lot less self-hating.”

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Rippon has played coy with any grand plans he might have ahead of him. Perhaps he doesn’t have any, and perhaps that’s part and parcel to why so many people, LGBTQ or not, find him easy to relate to. He’s an authentic, kind, funny person, who is also gay, and also an Olympian.

As for his present popularity, Rippon said he is trying not to think about it too much.

“I’ve realized that all of this doesn’t matter,” he said. “Fame is relative, success is relative, what really matters is what do you think of yourself. Are you proud of the things you’ve done?”

But for now, he has our attention. People continue to watch, spellbound.