The Amazing Race > The Racers
Marianna Ruiz and Julia Ruiz - TAR12
TARAsia Fan:
They seem like winners to me. I'll be rooting for them.
puddin:
INTERVIEW: Marianna and Julia Ruiz talk about 'The Amazing Race'
By Christopher Rocchio, 11/19/2007
Marianna and Julia Ruiz stopped playing the game for only a moment.
But that brief mental lapse ended up costing the Los Angeles-based sisters, as they became the third team eliminated from The Amazing Race's twelfth season during last night's broadcast of the CBS reality series.
On Monday, Marianna, a 25-year-old art gallery manager, and her older sister Julia, a 26-year-old office production assistant, talked to Reality TV World about why a misunderstanding with one of the others teams ruined a potential alliance; how their maps mysteriously vanished between legs; what stopped their donkey from moving and their camel from giving milk; and how a friendly gesture directly led to their ouster.
:lol:
Reality TV World: What approach did you take in eventually mobilizing your donkey?
Marianna: I basically shoved my hand up its ass, and it went running. :lol:
Reality TV World: You took a longer route to get to Shannon's airport at the beginning of the second leg, causing you to be the only team to take a later flight to Dublin. Where did you get the directions for that longer route?
Marianna: I don't know if that's something we can talk about...
Julia: Well basically we had maps before the [first leg's] Pit Stop, then after the Pit Stop, we didn't have maps. Somehow, those maps disappeared...
Reality TV World: Okay, but you can't say how they disappeared?
Julia: Well, I mean whatever. It was a fault in production. Somebody confiscated our maps and our written directions, and they're not going to air that obviously. So we ended up at 3AM with no maps to get to Ireland airport! They show me saying, "I don't remember if this is the route [to the airport]," because I didn't photographically memorize the maps. They didn't really take the maps from the other teams, so we basically honestly went by photographic memory of how we got there (laughing). We took the route that we used to get to the harbor to take the ferry to get to Inis Mor...
Marianna: I thought that we even made it back to that airport is unbelievable...
Julia: That was so amazing to us! We stopped along the way -- finally -- and found out that there had been a quicker route, but it was already too late.
Reality TV World: How long did that Roadblock actually take?
Julia: I would say about four hours... They didn't show it, but that whole sandstorm that came through to the other [teams], came to us. It was insane, insane, insane intensity. It was like a wall of sand coming at us. It was rain, and then lightning, and...
Reality TV World: So I'm assuming that made the Roadblock even more difficult for you?
Julia: The camels would like scrunch up. They would go down to the ground to keep their body temperature high. So you couldn't even get them to stand up to milk them! It was pretty intense...
Reality TV World: So once you finished that Roadblock challenge, what was your reasoning in offering Lorena Segura help by suggesting she try to milk a nursing camel? Did you every consider that offering the advice could come back and bite you like it did?
Julia: At that point in the game, I'm going to say I really, really wasn't thinking about the game anymore. At that moment in time, it was really about taking care of another human being. Because one of the trees during the sandstorm where one of the camels had been tied up got struck by lightning, and I'm like, "You guys! For the sake of the game, it's really not that important!" So I honestly was telling her... After Ireland, we really started liking Lorena and [her partner Jason Widener] a lot because they took us in. So it was really more like... It's not about the race. Get the milk! It's not worth dying for the milk!!
Reality TV World: A couple of teams mentioned lack of sleep as a reason to pick "Teach It." How much sleep had you guys had before the Detour?
Marianna: You're sleep deprived. You haven't had anything to eat. You're basically... It's really intense. It's a really intense race. Even when you do sleep -- you're so in race-mode -- that you would wake-up with nightmares. It's like, "Oh! We've got to go!" You don't realize it's 2AM and you're sleeping on the ground under a mosquito net and you really don't have to be anywhere for another four hours. You're definitely, definitely sleep deprived.
Reality TV World: How far behind Lorena and Jason were you in reaching the third leg's Pit Stop?
Marianna: Just over a minute... :o
more here http://www.realitytvworld.com/news/interview-marianna-and-julia-ruiz-talk-about-the-amazing-race-6119.php
georgiapeach:
Buddy TV Interview
Sometimes, camels are dry. This is what happened to the sister team of Marianna and Julia on The Amazing Race 12, in the small village of Bingo in Burkina Faso. Julia tried to milk her camel, but it took over four hours and when she was done the sisters found themselves in the back of the pack. Marianna and Julia were fierce competitors, drawing the ire of a number of their fellow Amazing Race teams. The sisters stopped by earlier today to discuss their time on the show.
Below you will find the full transcript as well as the mp3 audio of the interview.
Can you talk a little bit about how you ended up on The Amazing Race. Were you big fans of the show beforehand? Was it your first time applying?
Julia: It was our first time applying, but we've been watching since season one. My sister and I, it's the first time ... actually there's four of us. Two older brothers and two younger sisters and we all wanted to do it with each other. But it's the first time within our adult lives that we were old enough to, that we lived together in the same city and were able to, you know? And we made an application and we got it.
What was the most surprising thing that you hadn't anticipated once you got on the race?
Marianna: I think all the different aspects to the race. How it had so many ... you know it's not only based on your physical ability but also on your mental ability and a lot of other factors that are out of your control. You're expected to walk into this race being able to control everything. Like relying on yourself mostly for how far you get. And a lot of the things are out of your control and it makes it tough and it makes it so that anybody can pass up and no matter who you are or what you can do or what you've done, it's anybody's game really. And that kind of surprised us a little bit I think.
Like the camels last night, do you think any part of that was the milking technique that you guys were using? Or was it more the camels you had to use were dry?
Julia: My camel was dry. So there ya go. Like I said when there's milk, you can milk the camel because until I got to move camels, there really was not a drop coming out of my camel. And at first I was like: ‘Okay maybe I'm screaming and scaring the camel,' but in reality there was just not milk. Finally the guy that was holding my camel, the farmer said to me: ‘Yeah, no milk.' And I was like: ‘Oh yeah, thanks.' We weren't allowed to change until all the other teams were done anyway.
Do you regret helping Lorena out with the camel as you guys left?
Julia: I don't regret anything. I mean karma is how karma is and I thought that you know, after we had been out there through a rainstorm with it raining, crazy wind storm, sand storm ... we had been, I mean they didn't show the extent of that. We were there probably about four or four and a half hours out there trying to milk camels and when the rain came, they all lowered their bodies to the ground. It's just something they did ... and you couldn't even milk them for a good amount of time because they were all laying on the floor. So when we were leaving she had been through that whole struggle with me and at that point, you know, to me it's about trying to help other people out at the same time. The race wasn't what was so important at that point in time. After four hours of struggling it was just like, let me just not have to see someone else struggle for another four hours.
How far did you actually finish behind Lorena and Jason last night on the show?
About a minute and 25 seconds.
Was there anything over the first three episodes that you guys wish they had shown of you that they had edited out?
Julia: What don't we wish (laughter). There were a lot of really big things going on, we had issues with Ron and Christina. With the other teams, none of them liked us from the get-go, but we tried to make alliances and we tried to make friends, but for some reason after we didn't exchange euros the entire extent of the island life, all the other teams thought we were lying about it. Like it automatically became we'll lie about anything if not we're just making stuff up. So I don't know what happened or how it happened, it must have been we were so aggressive and so competitive and we're always so driven and just focused, other teams just didn't warm up to that. They're like: ‘There are ten other teams in the place.' So we didn't really hit it off with the other teams and I wish they would have showed that a little more. Why we were having such struggle at the back of the pack, because we were basically on our own while all the other teams were just helping each other out.
What did you think of Donald's comments about you guys last night?
Julia: I think he's great. I think it's funny and whatever I'm not going to take offense to somebody calling me bitchy. I love grams. We love gramps. Gramps was just like everybody's dad in the race. Except he was like the dirty old dad that you don't bring around your friends.
He has no problem taking all his clothes off or anything, right?
Julia: Yeah. I was like: ‘Come on gramps.'
Is there anything in your guys' future that you'd like to talk about? Just back to normal? Or what?
Marianna: I'm debating going to New York for a little while and seeing what I can pick up out there. If not ...
Julia: We take it day by day, you know? I'm writing. I'm not actually writing right now because the WGA is on strike, but I'm actually writing a screenplay that was a vision of mine since I was a little girl. So I'm really excited about it.
-Interview Conducted by Oscar Dahl
puddin:
I have to comment that the music during the sandstorm was outstanding! One of the best episodes ever!!
Also, not a spoiler, rather speculation, sounds like the sisters never made amends with Ron & Christina in sequesterville.
georgiapeach:
One more! Reality Wanted Interview
--- Quote ---A. Marinna, The Amazing Race 12: We did point out the camel and it ended up helping her out. I have been getting calls from family members asking why we did this. We felt like we were all in a war of sorts. At the time I cared more about Lorena than I did the race. I wanted to help her get out of there and it’s what my gut told me to do at the time.
Q. Mark: RealityWanted.com: Did they end up thanking you guys after you were eliminated?
A. Julia, The Amazing Race 12: At the time they did not, but we actually watched last nights episode with Jason and Lorena and they did say thanks.
--- End quote ---
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