Author Topic: 'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL  (Read 3715 times)

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Offline puddin

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'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL
« on: December 21, 2004, 05:40:04 PM »
'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL

By DON KAPLAN
 
 
 
December 21, 2004 -- JONATHAN Baker — the foul- tempered, world-trekker on "The Amazing Race 6" who has scandalized fans with his berating abuse of his wife on the streets of Berlin — was so out of control producers told him to "chill out" before last week's infamous shoving episode.
"I had many conversations with him," executive producer Bertram van Munster told The Post yesterday. "I told him you've got to tone it down, you have to stop this kind of stuff, it's not cool — until then, I'd never given advice to a reality show player before to chill out."

On last week's edition of the show, Baker, 42, shoved his wife, former Playboy pinup Victoria Fuller, 32, in anger, and yelled at her as she tearfully struggled to carry both of their heavy backpacks across the finish line during a challenge. As a result, they came in second.

The Internet has lit up with talk among outraged fans who have turned Baker into the kind of reality-TV villain that hasn't been seen since bad-girl Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth turned up on "The Apprentice" last spring.

"I would have never believed anything could happen like this," says van Munster. "I had warned him over and over again, but if he doesn't want to listen, there's nothing I can do about it.

"I told him the camera can be used in many ways — it's a dangerous instrument and there comes a point where you can't change [what it sees] — I've been very fair with him."

Because the Bakers have not yet been eliminated from the series, fans of the show will find out tonight how low the husband might stoop.

"I had a very firm talk with him that night," van Munster says. "But he keeps on being Jonathan, although there's no more pushing and shoving, I can tell you that."

"The editing wasn't kind to me, was it?" Baker said in an interview with the Providence Journal last month. "Victoria and I are like any married couple, we fight sometimes, but not like that. . . . We do love each other. But the way we're represented, I'm abusing her."

"All of us have our faults," Baker wrote this week on his personal Web site. "Unfortunately for me, millions of viewers are getting to see mine each week. I do not abuse Victoria, what you see is a heightened version of stress and obsession mixed with medication for a sickness called Sarcoidosis."

 

Sarcoidosis is a rare disease that causes inflammation of the body's tissues and one that affects different people in different ways.

"We were not aware of it and whether this is fact or fiction I don't know," says van Munster.

http://www.nypost.com/entertainment/36884.htm

Offline puddin

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What are you looking at?
« Reply #1 on: December 21, 2004, 06:03:14 PM »
What are you looking at?

December 21, 2004

BY PHIL ROSENTHAL TELEVISION CRITIC


"The Amazing Race" (7 p.m., WBBM-Channel 2): Here's hoping contestant Jonathan Baker -- last seen making life physically, mentally and emotionally miserable for centerfold wife Victoria Fuller -- gets what's coming to him. Baker claims on his Web site, jonathanbakerandvictoriafuller.com, that the way he and Victoria are depicted on the show is not a true reflection of their relationship. "All of us have our faults," he writes. "Unfortunately for me, millions of viewers are getting to see mine each week. I do not abuse Victoria. ... Victoria and I are working on our relationship to better [ourselves] and learn from our mistakes. I am taking full responsibility for my actions on screen. ... I am deeply saddened by the story line that CBS went with. I am sorry for my actions, I am sorry to Victoria. Most all I am sorry to the fans of 'The Amazing Race.' " So he takes full responsibility but still blames CBS? What a guy!


http://www.suntimes.com/output/rosenthal/cst-ftr-phil21a.html


Offline gammonwoman2

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Re: 'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL
« Reply #2 on: December 21, 2004, 06:30:54 PM »
DICKHEAD!!! |:(   i hope tanbuns is right on about them getting the boot!! **:)**

Offline puddin

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Re: 'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL
« Reply #3 on: December 21, 2004, 06:52:17 PM »
Hiya Claudia ..get this , they were just on access hollywood ..defending ****head , he said it was for the camaras  ::) , anyway I wonder if them being on TV  is the kiss of death  ?  *()* Did you change your elimininated pick Claudia  ?:)? the games not locked yet ??

Offline puddin

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Re: 'RACE' WITH THE DEVIL
« Reply #4 on: December 22, 2004, 04:41:52 PM »
Race’ contestant has somebody to shove
Should Jonathan’s unnerving behavior be tolerated?

Tony Esparza / CBS file
Jonathan Baker's treatment of wife Victoria Fuller on "The Amazing Race" has disturbed some viewers of the Emmy-winning reality show. 
By Andy Dehnart
MSNBC contributor
Updated: 1:26 p.m. ET Dec. 22, 2004Over its six seasons, “The Amazing Race” has delivered stunning vistas and human drama.


 
Last week, it showed a scene of domestic violence.

Racing to the finish line in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, contestant Jonathan Baker dropped his backpack. Fearing his bag would be stolen in the crowded street, Victoria Fuller, his wife and teammate, grabbed Jonathan's pack and tried to run. The weight slowed her down, and another team raced by them, leaving Jonathan and Victoria to arrive in second place.

Right as they approached the mat where host Phil Keoghan stood, Jonathan grabbed his bag back and shouted, “How could you do that?” Then he shoved Victoria, and she stumbled, wailing, “Jon, stop it!” Phil told them they were in second place, and Victoria walked away, crying.  Phil broke with protocol and said to an unrepentant Jonathan, “I think you probably should go and talk to Victoria.”

Some viewers think Jonathan may have just pushed his wife's backpack, but either way, she clearly feels the impact, and nearly falls over.

  LIVE VOTE:
What do you think of Jonathan’s behavior?

Live Vote 
 What do you think of Jonathan's treatment of Victoria? 
 
 
  It's horrible, he should be disqualified 
 
  It's not acceptable, but he's under a lot of pressure
 
  No big deal
 
  VOTE LINK
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6746327/   

 
 


When the race resumed this week, it was unclear what, if any, consequence there would be for Jonathan’s behavior. The recap of last week’s episode showed the scene and the shove; host Keoghan explained in a voice-over, “Victoria tried to carry Jonathan’s backpack to the pit stop, costing them a first-place finish. And sending Jon into a rage.” As they took off on this leg of the race, Victoria dismissed the incident, saying in an interview, “The last leg, Jon was very angry at me. I don’t like anybody screaming at me. But that’s just Jon.”

And with that, the race continued. No penalty, no elimination, no 800-number for information about domestic violence.

Changing ‘The Amazing Race’
Before it was a ratings hit, “The Amazing Race” was a favorite of many, even those who weren’t normally reality TV fans. A race around the world between couples with pre-existing relationships, it is part travelogue and part soap opera. There’s certainly been bad behavior before; last season, a racer refused to pay a cab driver the agreed-upon fare because the cab broke down, and he ended up in a police station obnoxiously trying to argue his case.

With this shoving incident, though, the race changed. In the most recent episode, Victoria and Jonathan’s interaction carried weight that it didn’t have before. Jonathan’s verbal assaults and obnoxious behavior are expected; he’s been loud and overbearing and extremely frustrating since the first episode. His verbal abuse of Victoria was disturbing enough, but now, having witnessed his anger turn to violence, every one of his outbursts seems much more consequential.

The couple continued to bicker and Jonathan continued to blame Victoria for their woes (“I guess it’s my fault, as usual,” she said at one point). Even during lighter moments — like when Jonathan screamed at his bungeeing wife, “Victoria, you’re a superhero! You’re a rock star, baby!” — it was difficult to be amused.

And the question lingered: Why was he still participating in the race? If Jonathan had shoved any other contestant like that, he’d almost certainly be out of the game. Shouldn’t he be removed for shoving his wife, never mind arrested for battery?

Contestants have been eliminated for less on other CBS reality shows: During the second season of “Big Brother,” an apparently drunk Justin held a knife to housemate Krista’s throat and said, “Would you get mad if I killed you?” She was amused, but he was removed from the house a few hours later. During the fourth season, contestant Scott was removed for freaking out and throwing chairs.

Presumably, there are rules against physical violence, or even threats of violence, on “The Amazing Race,” too. Even if there aren’t, how can producers of one of the best, most well-produced shows on television let this pass?

Defending Jonathan
Executive producer and “Amazing Race” creator Bertram van Munster told USA TODAY that Jonathan “is actually a nice guy,” and explained to the New York Post, that “I had many conversations with [Jonathan]. I told him you’ve got to tone it down, you have to stop this kind of stuff, it’s not cool — until then, I’d never given advice to a reality-show player before to chill out.”

But none of this was on camera. Van Munster also said that he had “a very firm talk with [Jonathan] that night” after the shove. Van Munster said that he “warned him over and over again, but if he doesn’t want to listen, there’s nothing I can do about it.”

Of course he can do something about it; he can do anything from kicking Jonathan off the show to instituting some kind of penalty. And he should have, if only to make Jonathan accountable for his actions on the race. Throughout this season, Jonathan has consistently blamed others for his own errors and refused to take responsibility.

This week, another team secured the last available tickets on a flight before Jonathan and Victoria, and that infuriated Jonathan. After getting tickets on a later flight, he went back to the ticket counter and said, “…you made us lose the race,” slamming his tickets down on the counter. Later, he hounded contestant Gus at every opportunity, demanding to know how Gus had taken Jonathan and Victoria’s plane tickets. In fact, Gus and his daughter simply had made their reservations first, from another location inside the airport. But in Jonathan’s mind, apparently, it was the agent’s fault and Gus’ fault, never his own.

Earlier in the season, Jonathan defended his obnoxious but not-yet-physically-violent behavior by, naturally, blaming the editing. He told TV Guide, “Victoria and I are like any married couple, we fight sometimes, but not like that. ... We do love each other. But the way we’re represented, I’m abusing her.”

Now, in a message posted on the couple’s Web site, he blames “a heighten[ed] version of stress and obsession mix with medication for a sickness called Sarcoidosis.” He also writes, “I am taking full responsibly [sic] for my actions on screen. Please allow me to make the effort. I am deeply saddened by the storyline that CBS went with. I am sorry for my actions, I am sorry to Victoria.  Most all I am sorry to the Fans of the Amazing Race.”

Three days later, Victoria also posted to the couple's site: “Don’t worry, I am fine. Its [sic] a TV show and not a true reflection of our relationship. We both over reacted.”

Some have argued that CBS should not have shown the shove. Should we hide that which makes us uncomfortable? Or should it have been kept off because there was no consequence for his behavior?

If Jonathan and Victoria now win the race, will that victory serve as endorsement of his behavior, rewarding it with $1 million?

Is casting the problem?
During the last two seasons of “The Amazing Race,” it seems apparent that producers are making an effort to cast over-the-top personalities. And the behavior of those contestants hasn’t been pretty. Last season brought us, among others, Colin and Christie, who will forever be remembered for Colin’s constant freak-outs and verbal harassment of his partner, Christie. During last night’s episode, an angry Aaron punched a post in a parking lot; later, he said to his partner Hayden, “You’re psychotic.” Next week’s preview shows Freddy saying to a group, “one of you, I am going to break in half.”

On reality TV, villains are always fun, but Jonathan is not a villain, not a character that we love to hate. In an earlier episode, Jonathan, angry once again, lifted his arm rapidly as if to backhand Victoria, but stopped, although she recoiled.

And everything viewers are seeing has occurred in public, with camera crews standing close by.

This isn’t “Big Brother,” where viciousness and pettiness are expected. The human drama on “The Amazing Race” is generally a result of stress, either situational or relationship-related. Certainly, throughout the six seasons, we’ve seen ugly reactions, from ignorant, culturally insensitive comments to awful interpersonal interaction. Now, it seems producers wanted loud, obnoxious contestants who’d get people talking, and people are definitely talking. But at what price?

This “stunt casting” dilutes the show’s quality. It misses the point that the fun of the show was always watching ordinary people in these situations. And when producers refuse to take action when their cast goes too far, the show suffers.

Also during last night’s episode, Jonathan jumped into a cab in Budapest and, as usual, started screaming. “Go! Go! Go! Go!” he yelled at the driver. “Oh, come on — come on!” The cab driver finally had enough, and said, “Finito.” He opened his door, climbed out, opened Victoria’s door, and waved them out of his cab.

For once in the race, Jonathan’s behavior had a consequence besides wounding Victoria. Somewhere in Budapest, there’s a cab driver who “Amazing Race” fans and producers need to thank.

Andy Dehnart is a writer and teacher who publishes reality blurred, a daily summary of reality TV news.

 © 2004 MSNBC Interactive

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6743532/