The Amazing Race > The Amazing Race Discussion
No Speedbump?
Plaidmoon:
Watching it at the time, I thought Nick and Vicky looked really surprised that they had the right answer. I'm guessing they knew it was an answer they had already given before and were shocked that it was right.
Or perhaps I'm reading too much into it after the fact in light of the new revelations. :umn:
DrRox:
--- Quote from: Dånooky on November 08, 2010, 12:57:24 PM ---
--- Quote from: calibound234 on November 08, 2010, 12:38:16 PM ---So wouldnt people be able to ask Kevin what happened? Since he was around when this all happened?
--- End quote ---
Maybe an interviewer did, we'll have to wait and see, or if everything else fails, there's always TARcon
--- End quote ---
When teams do the media interviews after the elimination episode......they is a CBS handler there telling them what they can and cannot say.
apskip:
Let me cite this information from Andy Denhart's Reality blurred column:
Amazing Race’s missing task: there never was a speed bump for Nick and Vicki
The Amazing Race 17 »
by Andy Dehnart / November 8, 2010, 8:06 AM
comment »
The Amazing Race 17 has minor controversy on its hands, as last week’s episode ended in a non-elimination for Nick DeCarlo and Vicki Casciola, but the team didn’t complete the required punishment, a speed bump task, this episode.
The answer lies in last week’s episode: There never was a speed bump task. At the end of the episode, when Nick and Vicki arrive at the mat, Phil says, “This is a non-elimination leg and you will get to race another day.” That’s all he said.
Why didn’t he give them a task? Now comes speculation, because, annoyingly, the episode didn’t tell us, but it seems like they weren’t given an extra task probably because last week shouldn’t have even been a non-elimination leg—or if it actually was a pre-scheduled non-elimination leg, they were given a pass because of a production error. The rather ridiculous equalizer at the start of the leg plus the lack of start times in this week’s episode clearly suggests that production made sure that everyone was even at the beginning of this leg to compensate for a screw-up.
HitFix’s Dan Fienberg summarizes a theory from an IMDB message board discussion that says “Nick had posted on his personal Facebook page that in the Classical Music Detour in the previous leg, there’d been a judging error. Apparently they’d been giving a correct answer, but a judge had been telling them that they were wrong.”
Naturally, that person’s post is a summary of a summary of something someone else read. Why the hell can’t people, you know, include a link or quote from something they’ve read? It’s the Internet after all. Nick’s actual Facebook profile is locked down so his posts aren’t visible, and there is nothing of interest on their team Facebook page. Perhaps we’ll get more clarity later.
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