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vousviou

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Posts posted by vousviou

  1. One thing that crossed my mind is that the separated crew may have had an accident after the separation at the roundabout, and the rules may have said any problem with the crew's vehicle still meant the team had to wait.

    At least one of those roads was flooded, and Rod and Leticia's car got stuck in the mud - I could imagine that conditions could have been bad enough to cause an accident.

    I don't know why that wouldn't be mentioned, but it's possible some kind of litigation was involved and the corporate legal department wanted nothing on film.

    That wouldn't be the fault of Danny and Angie, of course, and possibly not even the crew's fault, just dumb luck, in the same way that sometimes teams have been cursed by equipment breakdowns that were out of their control but the rules still meant they lost time.

  2. I was surprised how bad the firefighters were at directions because that's a critical part of their job. 

    911 calls are notorious for incomplete information, and vets tend to have almost sixth senses for figuring out how to get places without knowing exactly where they are. Cutting a minute off a response time can be the difference between life and death when a fire truck is responding to a call for a smoldering basement fire or carbon monoxide leak.

    I realize they might not be the ones driving the trucks, but departments usually try to crosstrain personnel in case in these kinds of skills. 

    This isn't to say I could do better, to be clear. I can easily see myself getting lost in Latin America within five minutes and never getting back.

    • Like 1
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  3. 4 hours ago, Hera said:

    I didn't like that the alliance was able to box the firefighters and the girlfriends out of the meat detour, but that was more of an issue with how the task was constructed.

    That's a "beef" I have with some challenges (sorry about the pun).

    It's been noted before - a wrong attempt should always require a return to some starting point, and there really should always be a ticking clock. Otherwise teams can just sit in place and guess away by brute force until they get it.

    Especially in a challenge with limited stations, you need to have a ticking clock to force teams to either get it done or get kicked to the back of the line.

    • Like 8
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  4. It's been slow, but I'm actually starting to enjoy this season. 

    It seems to have taken longer than usual to get a sense of the teams, but they're finally seeming to snap into place.

    I can see scenarios where there are some big shakeups in the expected eliminations, and I hope the design of challenges lets that happen so it's not just a cakewalk. 

    • Like 4
  5. On 3/22/2024 at 9:57 PM, Johannah said:

    Wow.  I must be the only person enjoying this season. 

    I find the dude-twins to be goofy fun.  They were laughing while saying they didn't know who Elizabeth Taylor was, as if they knew they should have.

    I think it's too soon to say how good the season will be. It's not terrible though.

    I'm finding the people to be pretty genuine, and not loaded with reality TV personalities performing for the cameras. The challenges have been decent enough and the one location so far is good.

    I'll stick with it. So far I'm not seeing any really repellent personalities, and I'm seeing a lot of opportunities for teams moving up and down based on how well they perform. 

    • Like 8
  6. 1 hour ago, choclatechip45 said:

    I still haven't warmed up to this cast. 

    I think it will take longer than usual to get to a clear sense of the pack. I think there are some interesting teams, but at this point I'm not even sure if some of them, like the firefighters, will even get past the third or fourth episode.

    • Like 4
  7. 22 hours ago, WatcherUp2 said:

    Dang, I'd have liked to see more of Chris and Mary. She's got this calm but caring vibe that's really nice.

    I'm not surprised at all by the result, but she definitely came across as one of the most genuinely appreciative people I've seen. A lot say the right thing but it comes across as practiced. She never seem like she was performing for the camera.

    • Like 13
  8. First episodes are always a bit flat due to all of the introductions and camera time getting divided so much, but I'll say it was a really well-designed leg. The self driving added a lot of tension, the challenges were interesting and made teams work and think, and they took advantage of the location.

    Season 35 had a lot of well thought out legs, so I'm hopeful that will be true this season too.

    • Like 3
  9. 5 hours ago, KenyaJ said:
    20 hours ago, Lantern7 said:

    No way would I have walked out on the Space Needle. No way. I would've been making my own rough Express Pass to get out of that.

    I've developed a fear of heights in the past decade or so, so even just watching them up there made me sweat. The slope on the roof made it 100 times more terrifying to me.

    I didn't think I had a problem, but when I went to the CN Tower in Toronto, it has a section of the observation deck with a glass floor. You can see how thick it is, but stepping on it and looking down still gave me a serious case of the creeps. I can't blame anyone on the show who struggles.

    • Like 4
  10. 12 hours ago, dancingdreamer said:

    All three teams showed  respect  for one another,  no cross words, no anger, it was a pleasure  to watch the F3.  

    There was a little bit of gamesmanship when Joel was razzing the brothers about how they were going to hate the trapeze challenge, but even that was good natured enough that it didn't seem mean spirited.

    • Like 5
  11. 9 hours ago, Fukui San said:

    I really like these set of final tasks. Every one was tricky in its way. I thought that the final puzzle was too easy as they were running up to it, and yet it turned out to be decisive. I thought they would have added in a few extra decoy tasks that they'd have to figure out are fake. They've done that before.

    I had a bad feeling going into the Space Needle challenge that it was going to be a set of dumb rubber stamp challenges after that made it impossible for teams to switch places, but I'm really glad everything that folIowed showed I was wrong.

    • Like 7
  12. 1 hour ago, Netfoot said:
    19 hours ago, bunnyface said:

    Padraic has to have been one of, if not the very, nicest dance judge we've ever had.  What a nice man!

    I agree completely. We've had good and bad judges in the past, but this was absolutely top-hole! In fact, I'd go as far to say he's one of the top-tier judges we've had for any challenge in the race.

    He was a part of the Riverdance production, right? 

    I think one of the marks of really good coaches, teachers, and directors is their ability to deliver rejection in a way that inspires people to try harder. You could see the four of them responding that way after being told they needed to go again. 

    • Like 15
  13. 6 hours ago, joanne3482 said:

    If you know how to swim properly, it's very hard to swim with a life jacket on. Your buoyancy is thrown off and the bulk can impede your strokes. Their purpose is to keep you afloat in an emergency, not help you swim better/faster. 

    One thing I would add is if you're not used to really cold water, it can completely mess up your breathing, and a life jacket will let you always have your head up so you don't struggle.

    Although we don't know how cold it was, and how much of a factor it would have been.

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  14. 8 hours ago, PhD-Purgatory15 said:

    And really, it wasn't on his RB performance that they ultimately lost. It was there navigation (wondering if AL was unable to drive a stick at all, or if she just realized she would be better suited for the navigator role). They lost time getting to swimming challenge, the hurling RB, pretty much everywhere that required driving..

    That was my impression too. When they hit the mat they knew they had lost, and I don't think it was as close as the producers tried to make it appear.

    8 hours ago, PhD-Purgatory15 said:

     

     

  15. I was worried about this episode at first. The Newton bit seemed twee, but then they dumped it. Then having the Doctor and Donna alone seemed like it was headed toward a hopelessly introspective time, but then that turned out to be wrong.

    The pieces clicked together and it was a lot of fun even though there was horror too. And there were interactions between the characters on a personal level too. 

    The past two episodes have involved people behind the scenes who like the show and the characters and want everything to succeed. What a crazy concept! 

    • Like 1
  16. 22 minutes ago, Guiaoshi said:

    Again, beautiful places but the tasks for this leg tho? Not a fan, very mechanical, not much mistakes to make. the one with the dishes had the potential but one of them knows french and the other actually played very well (it helps to focus by not having other teams there).

    I agree having no other teams made it much less stressful. If this had happened about five legs earlier you would have seen teams throwing plates. Well, this season teams were too even keeled to throw plates, but you'd definitely see more flustered people.

    • LOL 1
  17. 1 hour ago, chaifan said:

    Dear Phil and TAR powers that be:  This season has been an absolute joy to watch.  This is what TAR fans want, not a race full of teams that are bickering and scheming and infighting and total assholes on the screen.  Please keep this in mind when casting TAR 37.  Thank you.

    I agree and I'd add the design of the challenges and the level of self-navigation has been really good overall. There haven't been a lot of slam dunk challenges. Most seem to have had something that someone could and often did mess up, even strong teams. 

    There been lack of drama due to one team falling far behind, but even then there has usually been some serious questions about who will place where.

    1 hour ago, chaifan said:

    I was a bit surprised how many teams - physically strong teams - chose the buoy task over the barnacles.

    I was too. The brothers mentioned it had a needle in a haystack setup, and doing that in kayaks if the wind kicked up a lot of chop would be even harder. It definitely looked at one point the water was getting rougher.

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  18. 1 hour ago, Tango64 said:

    The stairway looked narrow, so much so that the racers were spreading both arms out to the railings to help themselves up. If Rob and Corey were in that position, would Greg and John just forcibly push them out of the way? Are they allowed to?

    I've wondered about this - there have been other times when in theory one team or person could block another but it doesn't seem happen.

    I sort of assume for safety there's a rule that says slower teams have to give an overtaking team or person a chance to pass to avoid scuffles or people being knocked down stairs or off bridges, but I'd be curious if anyone knows.

    Come to think of it, I could see that happening in cars too, and I'd assume the producers would want to prevent teams from cutting off another team at high speed and other risky maneuvers, but I don't know if there are explicit rules.

    • Like 3
  19. 3 hours ago, Silver-hyren said:

    It was one of the beard guys that guessed 1199.  So yeah, he would have been old enough to know first-hand.

    Can't speak for anyone else, but I didn't learn about the fall of the Soviet Union in school.  Not for lack of trying, though.  We got to about day one of the unit on the Cold War in my Western Civ class then everything shut down for two weeks of mandatory state testing (where ironically I was asked questions about outcomes of the Cold War.  Good thing it didn't count for me).  I only knew 1991 was the answer because I had a co-worker a few years back tell us about her trip there.

    I'd say he was overthinking it, but in his defense the history of the former Yugoslav republics is wildly complicated. For example, nearby Montenegro has had multiple periods of independence and being a subject going back to the Middle Ages. I could see someone thinking back too far in history to some early time predating the invasions of the Middle Ages instead of just recent history. But like I say, that would be a case of overthinking a plainly stated question.

    • Like 2
  20. 13 hours ago, Fukui San said:

    I've cross-country skied quite a bit growing up, and I'm certain that I would have looked every bit the buffoon as anyone else on the race. I only liked skiing on mostly flat ground as I was only ever mediocre in skill. Those slight inclines are tough, and I might have had to resort to the full sideways shuffle climb technique. 

    I wouldn't be surprised if that artificial snow was also icier than most snow. 

  21. 7 hours ago, Hera said:

    I think stick shift drama is slowly going to become a thing of the past (at least in European legs). The EU voted to ban the sale of new cars with internal combustion engines by 2035. Electric cars, which don't need a manual transmission, are going to become way more common.

    Thanks, that's a good explanation. 

    But maybe the regs will have an exemption for vintage cars, and we can see teams racing 1968 Ferarris down the Autobahn! Or we can at least dream....

  22. 34 minutes ago, iMonrey said:
    23 hours ago, Netfoot said:

    I think that just trying every possible combination of coins should have come with a detraction. Possibly a time delay between attempts or having to do the rappel each time before getting another guess.

    Ooh! That's a good idea. For everyone, not just Chelsea. Any time someone presented the wrong number of coins, rappel and then start over. Would have made the task much more challenging. As is, I though it was ridiculously simple, and not likely to shake up placements. 

    There was a small version of this -- every time she gave the wrong number she had to go back to the sign with the conversions before she could make another guess. The first time they showed the gatekeeper sending her back.

    It's a fair question whether that distance was far enough. A couple of seasons ago Penn was basically making semi-random guesses of the number of columns in Portugal with repeat trips to give his answer. I think his eyes just weren't good enough to get more than an approximate number. The difficulty he faced was that he had to go back hundreds of yards for each wrong guess while he worked by process of elimination, and he ended up spending a lot of time and effort along the way.

    • Like 5
  23. I'm sorry to see M & A go, but that was a huge navigation collapse. If I somehow ended up racing, I think I'd skip practicing memory puzzles and dance lessons and just spend all of my time with my teammate navigating in strange places.

    I was a little surprised Team ZZ Top was sure they were last and didn't have some hope M & A might have been behind. Maybe it just didn't occur to them that they could be so lost.

    I was struck when they said the sausages were the first food they'd had since breakfast. Racing all day like that must be pretty draining.

    The cars were automatic, weren't they? I would have liked to ha e a little stick shift drama.

    • Like 10
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