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georgiapeach:
October 24, 2010

'Race' host's travel nightmares

By LINDSEY WARD, QMI Agency

 

"Amazing Race" host Phil Keoghan.
Take the worst airport experience you've ever had, multiply it by 10, and you probably still haven't endured half the hardship that Phil Keoghan has in the past nine years.

Getting paid to travel the world isn't as amazing as it sounds, says Keoghan, whose gig as the globe-trotting host of The Amazing Race has been anything but glam.

"I've been held by immigration overnight in Ukraine and barely made it to the pit stop on time because I didn't have the right papers," says Keoghan, who we caught on the phone during a rare moment of relaxation in L.A.

"I've missed flights, and my bag's gone missing and been chewed up in some kind of bag dispenser machine and somebody picked through the bag and took a few things out of it. Inevitably, my bag goes missing about once a season. I've been a little sick every now and again, sunburned on the scalp from extreme heats and shivered my biologicals off in Poland once outside in the cold.

"I think a lot of people would be surprised about how we operate."

The shooting for Season 17 of CBS' still-popular Amazing Race (which also airs on CTV) was no different from the rest. Keoghan says the production crew and the Racers didn't get to a hotel for the first six days of the 23 they spent travelling and taping.
 
 
"The schedule was brutal -- our sleep came from being on planes," says Keoghan, who became accustomed to washing his hair on the side of the road that week.

And then there was the watermelon incident. While completing a Leg 1 slingshot challenge with her partner Brook in England, home shopping host Claire launched her melon backward. Oops.

"Not in a million years did we see that watermelon was going to somehow reverse trajectory and fly back in her face," Keoghan says. "We test everything over and over again. We're not about wanting to injure people; that's the last thing we want to do. And it just so happened that she got a good smack in the face with that watermelon."

Thankfully, there are no other accidents to report so far this season, though Michael (partnered with his YouTube sensation son Kevin) suffered from heatstroke in Ghana, and the teams are going to freeze their butts off on a future leg in the Arctic Circle.

"They fly literally from the furnace to the freezer," Keoghan says. "Those kinds of shock treatments for them always work and always create great drama ... That's what is so much fun to document for us, because some of them just can't cope."

And the fans eat it up. Since its 17th season premiered last month, The Amazing Race re-assumed its spot in Canada's Top 10 for most-viewed TV shows, with last Sunday's Sweden episode pulling in an impressive 2.99 million viewers.

Like those who watch from the sidelines, Keoghan can't get enough. Despite the fact he has travelled to more than 100 countries, he says he still has much to see ("You would think I'd been to Nepal ... but I have not.") -- even if that means more lost luggage, bad weather and customs holdups.

"Put it this way: When you go on a vacation, and everything works perfectly, you talk less about that trip than you do about the trip where the hurricane came, and you had to huddle in the hotel and it was getting flooded and you met all of these people and you had to band together to survive.

"How boring would it be if I was to tell you that everything was perfect every single time and, 'Oh yes, I have a makeup person and a wardrobe person and the flights are always on time, the weather's always perfect and we have no hardships at all.' It wouldn't make for a very good story.

"If you get three hours of sleep a night, you think that's luxury. And if you do that for a month, you lose 12 pounds, you come back and you're exhausted mentally and physically ... And I wouldn't have it any other way."

lindsey.ward@sunmedia.ca


http://jam.canoe.ca/Television/TV_Shows/A/Amazing_Race/2010/10/22/15789236.html

DrRox:
Peach,

I have looked and looked. I cannot find anything about anticipated pit stop dates. I even checked previous races and couldn't even find dates of their pit stops.

At the moment, 4 of the 5 boats are scattered between 2 degrees south latitude and 9 degrees north latitude, approaching Natal Brazil. The 5th boat got started late is off the coast of Morrocco. They started at 46 degrees north latitude and Capetown is at 33 degrees south latitude...

Today is 14 days racing, so I would expect arrival in Capetown in about 2 more weeks.

georgiapeach:
Phil Keoghan arrives on the red carpet at TV Guide Magazine's 2010 Hot List Party held at Drai's at the W on November 8, 2010 in Hollywood, California;



http://www.americansuperstarmag.com/pics/phil-keoghan-pictures-tv-guide-magazine-hot-list-party-2010-photos-and-pics

DrRox:
The lead yacht should reach Capetown this weekend. Only ~1300 Nm to go. They seem to be traveling about 300 Nm a day. American yacht in lead by 300Nm, 2nd is Polish yacht at -300Nm, 3rd is Canadian @ -1200 Nm, 4th is English yacht @ -1300 Nm.

Since the next pit stop after Capetown is Wellington, I wonder if maybe Phil is doing voiceovers for reports. They could have a crew filming and then have Phil do the voiceovers. I have seen zero about Phil on the Race website.

Plaidmoon:
Thanks for the update, Dr. Rox. I was wondering if the yacht race was over yet. It sounds like another 4-5 days of racing for the leader barring bad weather or stops at a port. I imagine Phil would have to do voiceovers about all the yachts including the trailing British yacht too, so it could be another 10-14 days before the last yacht is done. Therefore, I imagine the start of the race is a minimum of 2 weeks off and possibly longer than that. But we should be vigilant, this is all guess work and we don't want to be caught by surprise.

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