What's So Amazing?
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
  The Amazing Race Family Edition Finale
Thank God that’s finally over.
By Team Joisey

Really, do I need to write another word? If you didn’t watch this contemptible show, consider yourself blessed. If you did watch, then you’d rather not resurrect the whole thing. This abortion – excuse me, “family planning” – season was a litany of failed ideas – a communion of idiots crucifying the one decent reality show left.

We can blame the whole debacle on two people: Jerry Bruckheimer, whose very name reveals he is both a Nazi and a Jew; and Bertram Van Munster, whose very name reveals he is both a Romanian vampire and a kitschy TV sitcom character. And they did it all just to save a little Jew Gold on plane tickets.

Back when this show was good, contestants went around the world to visit fascinating, photogenic and exotic locations for 40 seconds. Not this time.
Oh, hell no. This time they towed campers through fucking Utah.

For weeks on end.

And it sucked.

Really sucked.

Really. Sucked.

And the finale? Sucked the worst of all.

The final challenge, the very moment that decided the winner of the one million dollars, was a kindergarten Colorforms puzzle of North America. It all came down the the fingernail sliver that is Rhode Island.

Rhode Island.

Shit.

Previously on The AbsolutelyNotAmazingInAnyWay Race…

Phil blathers on for 10 minutes or so, recalling all the loathsome halfwits eliminated in prior episodes, and the brainless mistakes that led to their doom. The words “wandered aimlessly” are used more than once.

Despite having suffered through every dismal episode of the season, I can’t remember half these people. Tony Aiello and his daughter-fuckers are a complete blank. There were two families from Louisiana – but only one Nazi Stasi bitch who was eliminated when Herr Schroeder got lost 40 feet from home.

Those other Cajun cretins, the Brocks, were eliminated when the teenage son delivered a big million-dollar passive-aggressive “fuck you” to his domineering asshole dad, knowingly driving 1800 miles toward elimination just as Dad insisted – even when he knew Dad was wrong.

There was a Black family named The Black Family. There were the Paolos, a family of Noo Yawk Eye-talians who lovingly threatened homicide each quarter-hour. There were four shrieking harridans who share Godlewski DNA, and a deep dislike for each other, and one of them burst in to uncontrollable tears each week.

And there was Twee.
Sweet innocent Caressa. An eagle-eyed sprite who ran the race with her musically gifted older brother Bully and their loving, nukular fambly parents, "Mom" and "Dad." But perfection only takes you so far. The Gaghans were eliminated when an opponent's pleas to the Lord sparked a miraculous appearance by the Blessed Holy Red Bean of Antioch.

God smote the Gaghans, and Caressa's tears were inconsolable. Yes, Phil Keoghan makes babies cry. And not just because his bulging mammaries don’t lactate.

No more Nazi, no more "Shut up, Ma."
No more "Coming 'Round the Mountain."
No more Miss Lousiana Assfuck Princess.

Sigh. All the interesting and likeable folks are ... OK they were never cast.

But a lot of shitty teams are gone, and we are left with these three teams:

The Beavers. Tired old Wally Bransen is “running” the race with his Stepford daughters – all lithe young blondes so eager to rut that they’ve taken to displaying their pudenda to passing motorists and/or testosterone-laden opponents. Except for those uncontrollable sexual cravings, they have been completely focused on the race and avoided squabbling with the other teams. They've made very few mistakes – other than that "Let's bring Dad" decision. The team survived a non-elimination last place finish, and rebounded quickly by playing "Flash Gash for Cash" in a parking lot. Thanks to a key sponsor, British Petroleum, these slick little Beavers have a lifetime supply of gas.

The Lints. Twenty-something siblings from Cincinnati, they also have a lifetime supply of gas – this family is seemingly powered by methane. They’re full of vim and vigor; plus vinegar and perhaps slightly overcooked pinto beans. They survived a sprint to the finish and avoided elimination in the very first leg, but have been competitive in every leg since. They've won one leg, finished second five times, and third twice. While no one could have predicted these four steroid-laden simians might outmuscle a 35-pound, nine-year-old girl, their real advantage has been an ability to outthink… uh... umm… well, they are pretty muscular, after all, ain’t they?

The Beleavers. In the beginning, God created the universe. When that was finished, he went right to work creating religious hypocrites. The Wicked Widow Weaver, her clothes-bulging, pustule-laden daughters, Sausage and Stay-Puft, and their faithful pup Collie have often turned to the Lord for divine guidance in their quest to eradicate good will in the name of Jesus. Their arrogant duplicity has made them outcasts among the racers, which works well with their perceived moral superiority.

They’ve been playing the role of Persecuted Christians, and mourning the untimely death of Ray Weaver. Daddy was a worker at Daytona Speedway, and one day he darted out onto the track – only to have his body parts thoroughly dispersed by a 100-mph racecar. Probably driven by a Christmas-killing Jew. Some would say it was horrible accident. Some would say devastating tragedy. Others might say it was a suicide quest to escape the sight of the ever-tightening Pink Hot Pants of Jesus. Only the Lord knows, and the Wicked Widow Weaver knows to trust the Lord in such things, because the Lord has been so darn helpful so far.

When this final leg begins, we are stranded in eastern Montana, where cattle and sheep outnumber people by the millions. That's a lot of hot cowboy sex. We’re on some anonymous ugly shithole ranch, undoubtedly rented with a measly handful of Bruck & Bertie's damnable Jew gold. We see a few scenes of the "mandatory rest period" during which the Beavers and the Lints enjoy a robust "card table and folding chairs" banquet. The Beleavers sulk nearby. Adding to the horror of the ongoing Christian Persecution, the Lints and Beavers make several sacireligious references to The Last Supper.

The final leg of the race-that-isn't-a-race-and-isn't-by-any-stretch-of-the imagination-even-remotely-amazing gets underway with the departure of the Beavers at 3:04 a.m. They are told to fly to Montreal, a large settlement in a vast arctic archipelago previously ignored by reality TV. This is the low-budget, boring-as-possible iteration of The Amazing Race, so a trip to the Great White Wasteland sure is fitting.

While visiting this latitudinally challenged wilderness outpost, our racers might encounter French words, or even worse, a Canadian accent. That qualifies as a monumental language difficulty in this worst of all possible seasons. But to Bruck & Bertie, it comes at a significant cost savings over an actual visit to actual France where actual smelly French people might spit on actual arrogant Americans.

At this point in time, France is currently on another continent, currently hostile to American foreign policy, and thus not currently eligible for The Amazing Race: Extreme Xenophobia Edition. (The French only love us when the Germans drive tanks into Paris.) As a clear example at how travel-challenged this season has been, one of Wally's lovely little Stepford Beavers is intrigued by a trip to Can’tada. ... Until Dad points out the language difference.

“French?” she says, “Crap.”
See? Already she’s translating the nouns.

When teams arrive in Montreal, they will have to look around a subway station for their next instructions. (I’m going to dispense with the “clue” label, because this show stopped giving “clues” years ago. These are printed instructions no more cryptic than the instructions distributed with Ikea bookshelves.)

The svelte Beavers set off, towing their ever-present grimy trailer, affectionately called Wally. They review the provided plane tickets. Teams will be allowed to search for faster plane connections, so expect much faux drama over that.

The Lint Family departs at 3:08 a.m. amid a flurry of words, all sports-related clichés about trying the hardest. And a fart joke.

The Beleavers get rolling at 4:02 and inexplicably taunt the teams with a one-hour lead. Faithful Collie declares his team the underdogs. Wicked Widow Weaver extols Collie for managing to achieve some level of pubescence, and for tolerating the nauseating sisters without yet rushing headlong into high-speed traffic. In this smug family so convinced of imminent Rapture, young Collie may be the only one worth saving.

The first two teams arrives at the "international" airport in Bumblefuck, Montana and begin to shop for another plane. Preferably one with those newfangled jet engines. And time is ticking away. Luckily, Our Lord and Savior Jesus hand-delivers the Beleavers to the airport in time to make that first flight, and we are all off to Minneapolis.

Yeah. Fuckin’ woo hoo – Minneapolis.
Did I mention this season sucks?

When the group lands, the Beavers split. They locate a quicker connection to Montreal. The Lints and the Beleavers find an even better connection through Toronto, and fly off together. When that plane arrives, both teams sprint for the next airline counter. After a long run through the terminal, Phallic Lint and Collie Beleaver collide at the counter and collapse together on the floor. They get up laughing over the incident, and Phallic helps Collie "get up" and claps him on the back good-naturedly.

Among rational humans, this would be a moment for laughter, a break in the tension, a small respite in the heat of competition. But from across the airport the Wicked Widow Weaver shrieks that some man is touching her son. She summons Homeland Security, the Anti-Gay Alliance, Rev. Wildmon and the entire Vatican Swiss Guard. She later explains to her family that Phallic was "pushing" Collie.

Leaving Mom to fabricate tales of persecution, Big sister Sausage congratulates aggressive little brother Collie for “getting down and dirty.” (Ick. The thought of any incestuous relations here is downright nauseating, and I’m not going to make that joke. Not me. Unh-uh. I’m not that twisted. But I’m sure Collie has noticed his size 14 sisters bulging out of their size 5 clothes, and if the Pink Hot Pants of Jesus have inspired nocturnal emissions, well then I’d rather not even bring that up. So to speak. If Collie wants to hump their legs, well, that might be the best Sausage ever gets.)

Over at the Lints camp, Phallic is angry over Collie’s illegal tackle. Upon further review, it is easy to see that Collie deliberately pulled Phallic’s backpack, causing Phallic to stumble to the ground while Collie attempted to sidestep a collision. “They suck,” says Phallic. (Can't be true. The Beleavers are far too uptight for oral sex.) “They’re rude and obnoxious,” says Makin' Lint, “and its getting personal.”

We cut to Commercials, which normally I would discuss, but we’ve got two hours to cover, and frankly, my time is more valuable than any advertising on this piece of crap television show. The sponsors are BP, which gave away a lifetime supply of gas; AOL, which appeals to the sort of moron who needs Internet training wheels; Sears, where selfsame morons purchase cheap appliances; Chase, Toyota and T-Mobile. There’s no more Roaming Gnome because Travelocity got the word that this particularly crappy version of the show would not actually involved travel of any sort above hauling grimy campers through Utah for weeks on end.

When we return from commercials, we begin to understand what’s become of The Amazing Race. In a moved copied from the reality-killing editors at Fox, we are shown the exact same two minutes of footage we saw before the commercial break. Yes, this is CBS, but not every viewer has Alzheimer’s or ADHD.

The Wicked Widow Weaver, once again displaying her ignorance of something as simple as air travel, approaches an airport employee who pities her stupidity. The woman ushers the Beleavers into some back office, where the fat, pimply daughters are sold as whores to strapping lumberja… oh, no. That’s what I hoped for. Instead, a secret society of Radical Christians arranges for the Beleavers to be whisked ahead of the others, transported by Gabriel’s Silver Winged Vessel of Superior Morals. The Lints? They have to settle for a human conveyance, also known as the very same exact airplane.

Up in the sky, The Beavers rub themselves contentedly, blissfully ignorant that the other two teams found a better flight. We get another Alzheimer’s recap, where Phil describe the subway tunnel challenge.

Lints and Beleavers arrive in Montreal, and search for minivan taxis capable of hauling all four teammates and the cameraman. It’s a difficult moment that requires much pointing and shouting, and in the case of Collie, some pidgin Spanish in a French speaking province.

The Lord sayeth: Let there be Ted.
And there was Ted.


The Beleavers pile into a minivan taxi, and instruct the driver to take them to the subway station. The Wicked Widow Weaver asks the driver’s name and he responds, “They call me – Ted.” The Beleavers respond by chanting his name, flashing cleavage and winks, and butchering basic French phrases.

Haaave you met Ted? Ted is an Archangel – not in the Gabriel's golden trumpet, first lieutenant of God's Army mold, but more in the earthbound John Travolta, loose feathers in my windbreaker mold. Ted's the scruffy Archangel. And the Beleavers just latch on to Archangel Ted like he was that last bottle of communion wine.

The Lints, meanwhile, find a driver with a Caribbean accent whose name is not as important as his desire to see a big tip. He's black, which is a metaphor for absolute evil. When the Lints ask him to drive fast, he asks if they have "big money" for him.
Battle of the Network Cab Drivers: Greed versus Faith.
(Not that those things have ever been mutually exclusive.)

Somewhere over Saskatchewan, the loose Beavers tense up when they get the word from the pilot that their landing will be delayed. This adds to the suspense, I suppose.

Archangel Ted’s Silver Chariot of Redemption delivers The Beleavers to the subway station in the center of Montreal. The Wicked Widow Weaver hypnotizes Ted to wait for them while they fetch their next cl… instruction.

Each with its own pros and cons.

Phil reveals a Detour called Slide It, or Roll It.

In Slide It, teams have to travel aboot 20 miles to an ice rink, and try curling, which is basically shuffleboard on ice. In Roll it, teams have to travel aboot 20 miles to an aboretum, where they have to use lumberjack tools to roll four logs along an elevated course.

Both of these tasks look incredibly simple, not the least bit scary. Boring, cheap and stupid. This is the final episode? Can’t we have something a little more dangerous, like in previous seasons? Hang glide into caverns? Leap off a cliff? Climb atop a bridge? Fellate a homeless guy? (Oh wait. Tara did that for fun.)

The Beleavers emerge back on the street, and Archangel Ted appears before them with his Silver Chariot of Redemption. He assures them he knows where he is going, and the Beleavers, um… believe. Foolish Christians.

The Lints arrive at the subway station and run through various tunnels, passing the unseen clue box despite an 11-person production crew scrunched into the corner. The Beavers arrive in Montreal and begin looking for a taxi. Oh my Heaven! Archangel Ted has taken the Beleavers to the wrong arena. The Lints are lost in the tunnels, and retracing their steps. Oh the drama.


Commercials.
Not gonna mention the new GMC, or King Kong, or Alka-Seltzer, or Hallmark moments that can turn a mature young woman into a small child. I will mention Poppin’ Fresh the Pillsbury Doughboy only because if heredity has any validity, Collie Beleaver might as well get a big hat right now. And despite this marketing, biscuit dough probably makes really, really bad tacos. Febreeze is here, but there’s no insipid Family Moments. Probably because there’s no one still alive who wishes well for the Beleavers.


When we return, the wandering Lints stumble into the instruction box and the Detour. They chose “shuffleboard on ice,” but their driver is completely ignorant as to the location. The well-groomed Beavers hail a cab and head for the subway station.

Archangel Ted uses a cell phone to get directions to the correct arena, which is on the complete other side of the city, miles and miles away, and probably a waste of a good hour. Inexplicably, the Weavers cheer this news. During the ride to the correct rink, Archangel Ted gives them tips on curling. God intervenes again when the Lints ask someone on the street to direct their driver to the arena, and they are sent off in the wrong direction.

Finally, the Beleavers arrive at the correct ice rink, and with the help of Lord Jesus, they Walk On Water (subzero version) for the first time. Master curlers assist, Archangel Ted observes, and we get a nauseating crotch shot as Sausage throws the first puck, called a “stone” at the target, called a “house.” This is a challenge fit for our charming Beleavers: Throw stones at houses.

The Lints arrive at the wrong rink, and stand around puzzled. The Beavers arrive at the subway, and run past the instruction box, then find it as they retrace their steps. Like good little Beavers, they choose the logs.

Wicked Widow Weaver throws a stone. Stay-Puft throws a stone. Collie throws a perfect bullseye, proving again that he, and not Jesus, has been the one force keeping this team alive. Unfortunately, he can’t read. Collie, Montreal is NOT pronounced “Montel.” Makes you wonder how this team would do with a challenge that involves geography.

This “clue” tells them to drive to the American Pavilion from the World Expo of 1967. The next instruction box is on the fifth floor of the exterior staircase. The Beleavers climb in the cab, and Archangel Ted is already phoning for directions. Yes, the man is a professional cab driver, and he has to phone for directions to one of the most recognizable landmarks in all of Can'tada. Weavers again cheer this hopelessly lost driver, because he is, after all, Archangel Ted.

Lints arrive at the rink. Begin the task. Despite some clowning, they fail to fall on their asses. Beavers interact with logs. (Code for something, I’ll have ask the Weasel.)

Archangel Ted finally gets un-lost, and mutters, “Thank God.” The Beleavers latch onto this comment as if Ted were delivering them from Israel. They grill Archangel Ted about his love of the Sweet Baby Jesus, and share their belief that God has truly guided them into Ted's hands. Pfft. If God were truly guiding Ted's hands, he'd bitchslap them all before driving headlong into 100 mph traffic.

Tummy Lint gets stoned, and his brother shouts, “Go, Boner!” Prick Lint throws his stone. Wally and the Beavers complete their first log.
Beleavers find the geodesic dome of the American Pavilion, and stupid little Stay-Puft says, “that’s pretty crazy they built something that cool back then.” Once again, Archangel Ted prays to God that he’s found the right place. What the Beleavers don’t understand is that even an angel would be happy to push these lunatics out of his cab for the last time.

Makin' Lint throws her stone into the house. She does fall on her ass.

The Beloved Beleavers get lost, but eventually climb the right stairs and retrieve their next instruction, which directs them to an industrial warehouse. Another exotic location for Bruck & Bertie. Nice job dudes. The challenge here is to find the instruction box at La Porte J and get the next envelope. The Beleavers go back to the Silver Chariot of Redemption, and provide more metaphoric handjobs for Archangel Ted.

The Lints are looking for the American Pavilion, and one of the indistinguishable brothers tells the driver to “Andale.” Makin' Lint suggests asking old people for directions to this famous building (constructed in 1967) because “those ol corpsefuckers were around at the time.” You know, ancient times.

The Beavers can't get the log up, and the Beavers are getting frustrated.

Commercials.
Verizon’s V wireless camera/phone/web browser with keyboard … Kmart … Citizen’s expensive watches, with a racecar-themed commercial designed to make the Weavers cry… Nestle prepackaged cookie dough in holiday shapes. Snap off a piece with your kids today … animated spiders zonk out on cough syrup… Jim Carrey gets to boink Tea Leoni … a bunch of CBS promos… send flowers or we’ll kill Christmas… Lord of the Rings onstage. Huh?


Back to the Beavers, and those uncooperative logs. Ever-helpful Wally coaches two of his lovely Stepford Beavers through their first “log” experience.

Archangel Ted’s Silver Chariot of Redemption is humming along the highway, and the Beleavers are having a prayer session to sing Ted's praises. The Lints ask their driver to pull over – again – to get directions to the American Pavilion, which is clearly visible from where they are. The Stepford Beavers finally complete the log thing, and head for the American Pavilion. Archangel Ted and the Beleavers find the warehouse, and break out in a gospel revival.

Detour.
This Detour involved a trapeze school located in the industrial park. One member of each team must swing upside down on a trapeze, and then catch on to the hands of a professional trapeze artist swinging on another bar. Since neither Sausage or Stay-Puft can actually be held aloft by anything other than heavy cranes, faithful puppy Collie is drafted and gets his instructions.

The Lints eventually find the instruction box at the big golf ball, and head for LaPorte J. The Beavers steam toward the ball. Collie succeeds at swinging amid shrieks of delight from his over-inflated siblings. The next envelope directs them to Stade Olympique where they have to drive a golf cart through the single open entrance. Archangel Ted whisks them away, while the Wicked Widow Weaver praises Collie, and give him a biscuit and a belly rub.

Lints arrive at the trapeze task, and Makin' Lint gets all excited at the chance to swing with someone other than her brothers. Phallic Lint declares he will do the task, and Makin’s enthusiasm is quickly crushed. Naturally, Phallic fails. Repeatedly. But this is a determined Phallic, and he's still straining when the Beavers come.
Arrive. At the trapeze place. For the swinging.

Speaking of the Big O, the Beleavers arrive at Olympic Stadium and spend most of the rest of the day driving around the place in a golf cart looking for the entrance.

And now that Blonde Beaver #3 is ready to swing, Phallic Lint is overcome with performance anxiety.


Commercials.


Nope. Don’t care.



Back to the show, and Phallic overcomes his problem and hooks up with the swinging man. Off to the stadium! Of course they get lost, and have to ask for directions when they are only 200 yards away from a massive stadium.


Blonde Beaver #3 completes the trapeze task in one try, and they are off to Olympic Stadium as well, catching up with the Lints outside. Meanwhile, the Beleavers are attempting to drive the golf cart through metal elevator doors. Now everyone is in a golf cart and looking for the door.

Beleavers get on to the field first, and find they will need to search the 50,000-seat stadium for one of three boxes. Each box has a staggered departure time for a charter flight to a mystery location.

All three charter flights leave within a 10 minute period the next morning. An inconsequential difference, yet we spend 9 minutes of airtime looking for a stupid ticket. There’s no fucking way it matters which flight you are on. Bruck & Bertie are gonna bunch them up again a mile from the finish line. They know it. We know it.

But Bruck needs these racers to look busy in order to fool the few remaining viewers, so he places these useless envelopes behind three random seats. Much drama ensues as the teams wander aimlessly through the seats. Wicked Widow Weaver falls asleep on a cot. Sausage and Stay-Puft decide to stop looking, and Collie squats by the cots, panting and licking himself. We get a hint that perhaps the Beleavers have lost contact with Heaven and are about to quite the race. No such luck.

Commercials.
GMC is promising a webcast challenge unworthy of even this dismal broadcast … Dogs get lost, let's inject them with an ID tag … Sasha Cohen, hot enough to melt ice, and I'd buy whatever she was selling but I really never saw what it was … BobbyJon Thornton in Bad News Bears … some power tool toothbrush … and Pepcid AC, which would have been advisable before this broadcast began … a buncha CBS promos … aw fuck this let’s go watch the Beleavers wrestle with a crisis in faith.


When we return, Collie's incessant whimpers manage to annoy his crybaby family to a level where they get off their ever expanding asses ... and go stand around while he fetchs the last charter plane ticket. The Beleavers decide to skip those restful midfield naps and go straight to the airport. When they arrive, they moan about being on the last of the three flights. Maybe you should have looked a little harder for the ticket instead of that staging that weepy drama, you fat little shits. Burn in hell for making me watch that.

Eventually the three planes take off nearly simultaneously, and each team makes a little speech about giving their all, final day, team to beat, a million dollars, yada yada brak brak brak.

The secret mission planes soon land in ultra secret location. Toronto, of course, the only other major city in Frozen Mooseland. This place is easily identifiable by the big needle of the CN Tower. Sure enough, teams have to ride to the observation deck of the world’s tallest building, and use binoculars to find their next location somewhere on the ground.

Both the Beavers and the Lints deduce that "Le Tower CN" is probably that big pointy thing visible for hundreds of miles. The Beleavers have to stop at QuikeeMart and prosteltyze until Apu gives them a map to shut them up.

The Beavers mount the pointy thing, and Wally tells them to spread. I suspect this is an attempt to distract the Lint team. Soon all three teams get to the top of the tower, and stand around staring out the window. Yes, we're getting close to the end, and this is an action challenge. The Beavers complain about getting sweaty, and the Lint brothers immediately train their binoculars on the sweaty Beavers.

When The Beleavers arrived at the tower, Collie made a little small talk with the elevator operator.
“How long have you been in your job, Adam?”
“Three years.”
“Do you enjoy it?”
“It has its ups and downs.”
“Literally.”

Does anyone else think this was scripted?

First the Beavers, then the Lints, spot the big yellow banner at the go-cart track next to the river. The Lints run for the elevator. The Beavers stick around and use the view as a life size map to plot the course to the next stop.


Despite watching he other two teams cluster together, whisper excitedly and point at a single specific location, The Beleavers have no idea where to look. Luckliy they are now alone at the top of the tower, nearer to God than all other people on earth. They drop to their knees and beg the Lord to help them.




Bzzt... You have reached the Jesus Hotline. Our Lord and Savior the Sweet Baby Jesus can't take your call right now because he is currently occupied with the New York Giants. If you'd like, you can leave an Angelus after the bell. If you are calling about the New York Mets, please be advised that franchise has exceeded the allotment this holiday season. From all of here at the Sweet Baby Jesus Birthday Hotline – Happy Holidays!



Commercials.
... but who can wait? We need to know if Sweet Baby Jesus will return to Earth as Savior and Lord!


When we return, the Lints are pressing up against the Beavers in the elevator, and both teams hope that The Beleavers screw up. Sure enough, up at the top of the tower, Stay-Puft is using the reflection in the glass to examine her zits. Collie is looking out the window, and Mom is looking at the wall while imploring Jesus, or Collie, to save them. Surprisingly, it is Sausage who actually spots the flag.

Off we all go the the instruction box by the river. sigh. When the three teams arrive, they find another Detour.

Pros and Cons, ya know.

Phils says this is something unique to Toronto. “Ship” involves sailing across the harbor to a restored old boat. Yup, that’s unique to Toronto all right. Never seen the “old boat in the harbor” thing before. How clever of you Bertie. This season, when they get to the old ship, someone needs to climb the mast to retrieve a flag.

The other choice is Shoe, which involves traveling to The Bata Shoe Museum. They must choose a pair of shoes, and then search through 100 barefoot women to find the one woman who fits the shoes. I don’t buy a lot of women’s shoes (most of mine were gifts), but this seems pretty odd. In a crowd of 100 women, a random pair of shoes will fit only one of those women? And is this challenge here because Bertie has a foot fetish?

Lints aren’t completely stupid – they choose Sail. The Beavers, veteran shoe shoppers, pick Shoe. The Beleavers, who are incapable of purchasing clothing that fits, wisely choose Ship.


While the Lints and the Beleavers raise the sails and move across the river, the Beavers go off and find the shoe museum. And are immediately certain they chose the wrong task.

The Lints arrive at the other ship, retrieve the flag, and the next set of instructions. They are off to find a boat ramp in Queenston, Ontario, near Niagara Falls.

The next event-that’s-not-really-a-challenge is a ride in a jet boat into the Niagara whirlpool, where they have to snag an envelope off a buoy.

As the Lints run off, the Beleavers approach the docked ship, confident they are in second place. Cut to the shoe museum, where The Beavers are struggling with a tight fit. Wally: “we’re getting screwed.” Such is the plight of Beavers.

Commercials.
BP reminds us they’re still a benevolent and loving megamonolithic oil company … Victoria’s Secret models in their sexiest underwear selling perfume, I believe (I’ll go back and check) … And how to follow a wank-worthy VS commercial with an ad for “The 40-Year-Old Virgin.” … AOL … Chase, with twins, but not those nasty Olsen skanks … Mr Goodwrench will keep you safe if Jumani elephants run down Main Street … Ghost Whisperer is STILL ON? Jennifer Lovetodoit in a haunted comedy club … a few other shows no one watches … Julie Chen … news blurb on the NYC transit strike … Lexus … and a travel commercial for Ontario, Can’tada, what a coincidence!


Back to the shoe museum and the Beavers finally locate Cinderella. She gives them a lovely yellow envelope, and they are off to the boat ramp. Along the way one of the girls actually asks, “Isn’t Niagara Falls, like, a huge waterfall?” *sigh* I supposed when you are a blonde Beaver, cute has to be good enough.

Back at the river, Collie is sent to fetch the flag atop the mast. “Go on Collie, go get it! Attaboy Collie!” … which he drops as he climbs down. Miraculously, it falls onto the dock. The Beleavers head for the boat ramp.

The amazing race to the boat ramp. The Lints are driving along, headed for Queenston, when Tummy "Boner" Lint makes this observation: “We just did a complete circle around the United States.” If you are wondering why they call this brother “Boner” … well, check out the lump in his pants!

The Beavers are driving along the same stretch of road, taking the Queenston exit and hoping that the Beleavers don’t win because “the Mom is a wacko. “

These two facts, perhaps more than any other, are why no one is watching at this point.

Now off to the Beleavers car, where we see them in the same stretch of road. Stay-Puft has to remind Mom which way to turn to get to Queenston. Mom doesn’t think they are going to Queenston. Huh? With one million dollars on the line, and a finish line probably less than 100 miles away, Mom has forgotten where she is supposed to go! How does this imbecile ever get home from work each day?

Once they arrive in Queenston, the Lints ask a jogger for directions to the boat ramp. Once they arrive in Queenston, the Beavers ask a jogger for directions to the boat ramp. “Yeah,” he answers. “I already told your friends.”


The Lints arrive at the dock and board a boat just as the Beavers drive up. The boats zoom up the river, through the rapids and into the whirlpool. The Beavers are soaking wet and so excited they are screaming.
The Lints retrieve the last envelope, and it directs them to find the finish line in Lewiston, New York.

Lewiston, New York, that hotbed of vibrant culture. A center of global commerce, modern art, technological marvels and international relations. Yes Ilse, we’ll always have Lewiston.

Lewiston, New York. Population: 16,257. Land Area: 41 square miles. The town does not even have its own high school. Oh, but they are six miles away from Niagara Falls – which might have been a nice place for a finish line. There are several parks with a nice view of that little waterfall thing. Spread a little Jew Gold, and you have the best visual finish line in TAR history. But no. We’re gonna finish on a local bike path 10 minutes down river from one of the great American natural wonders.

Bruck & Bertie, you cheap rat bastards. I hope you choke on that Pagan Jew Gold!

Lints and Beavers head for the shoreline and Lewiston, and the Beaver girls are pleading with Dad to run fast when they hit dry land. Beleavers arrive at the dock and take off in their jet boat, which is probably faster than walking on water in this case. Unfortunately for the viewers, the Niagara whirlpool is downstream of the famous falls.

Lints arrive at the dock in the park and open the last envelope to find a Roadblock. In case you’ve forgotten what I wrote 5,000 words ago, the final challenge is a big jigsaw puzzle. There are 71 pieces, representing all 50 United States, however many states there are in that hockey-lovin wasteland, and a few Central American countries that may or may not have been visited by The Amazing Race.

A million dollars is at stake, and it is a stupid kindergarten geography puzzle.

The Lints head for the puzzle, with Beavers hot on their tail. Only one team member can work on the puzzle, so we have a final Rand McNally challenge pitting Prick Lint against Wally “Just hold on a minute” Beaver.

Tense music build. The Beaver girls are nervously cheering – “Dad, we love you.” The Lint siblings are nervously cheering – “C’mon, Shorty!”

Both teams have half the puzzle completed, and we cut away to watch the Beleavers zoom around in the boat. Collie collects the last clue, and they head for the park.

Puzzle building… tension building. Cincinnati’s Prick Lint can’t locate Ohio. Makin’ Lint does a little dance, or perhaps that was a seizure. Damn kids today.

Eventually, all the big pieces are in the puzzle, and both boards are down to the stupid little annoying states like Vermont, Connecticut, Delaware, NooJoisey. Eastern Liberal Shitholes that oughta be pushed off the map anyway in George Dubya’s America.

Prick puts in his last piece, and slaps the board. Nova Scotia falls out. Wally thinks he’s completed the board, then realizes he somehow lost Rhode Island. While he reaches for Rhode Island, the Lints grab their packs and sprint for Phil and the finish mat.

The seven previously eliminated teams whoop and holler as the Lints and Beavers come running down the path. The Lints have separated and are screaming at each other. The Beavers are all holding hands and telling Dad how proud they are. And we are supposed to be fooled into thinking that there is an actual footrace going on? Ha!


The Lints sprint on to the mat, and Phil is there to greet them.

Twenty five days, 50 cities, and more than 600 consecutive hours together as a family, Lints Family, you are the official winners of The Amazing Race.

The Lints cheer, they cry, they kiss and hug. They wave the Beavers onto to the mat.

Phil congratulates the Beavers. No one pays attention. Phil asks the Lints what this feels like. No one pays attention. Makin’ Lint says she’s done running, never gonna run in her entire life. No one cares. Phil talks about Wally. No one cares, except Twee, who cheers from the crowd.

Brak brak brak. My girls are great. Blah blah blah We love you dad. La la la Lots of integrity. WE DON’T CARE. The only thing America wants to see right now is this: The Wicked Widow Weaver and The Geometry Puzzle.

And sure enough, in a season full of miserable disappointment and missed opportunities, we are denied even that small pleasure. The Beleavers come trotting to the mat, undoubtably skipping the puzzle because the Lints had already finished.

Phil welcomes the Beleavers, and the applause is underwhelming. Brak brak brak, Dad is dead, Mom is great… Mom say “Collie wouldn’t give up, Sausage is made of steel, and Stay-Puft has kept her eyes on the Lord.“ Personally, I thought she was keeping her eyes on the Krispy Kremes. But the Lord works in mysterious ways.

A few more maudlin quotes about the wonders of family, lots of milling around hugging each other. Caressa leaps into the arms of Stay-Puft. That last pose on the winner’s mat. A last smirk from a Lint brother.

*Poot*

And at last, we are free. Free of the festering stench of The Amazing Race Family Edition.


******

Good news.
Phil returns to say:
"Coming this February: Five continents, 60,000 miles, and 11 teams of two."

The real Amazing Race will return.



Praise Jesus.
 
Comments:
You, know that news article actually made me more sympathetic to the Weavers, and explains a great deal about why they might have an "everyone is against us" mentality.

Oh, and nice use of Beaver jokes. And Bobby Jon Thornton.
 
This is me, respecting The Rat. Who, I respectfully note, has this completely wrong at the functional level. I do not begrudge him his aesthetic, though. Oh no. I respect his aesthetic.

But let that not detract from my admiration for TJ and his summary, which admiration could only be increased if the Giants weren't playing the Redskins on Saturday.
 
BJ Reed, are you fucking kidding? The Weavers insulted Americans on national television for 12 weeks running. Persistently, consistently, and without a trace of remorse or irony.

You should feel ashamed of your inability to perceive satire, which is the entire point of this blog.

Bloody whatever the fuck nationality you are.
 
Thank you so much for your nice uplifting comment Bj Reed. You're so right and your kindness means so much!
-Rebecca season 8
 
Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]





<< Home
A collection of writings by a circle of friends about The Amazing Race

Archives
September 2005 / October 2005 / November 2005 / December 2005 / March 2006 / April 2006 / May 2006 / September 2006 / October 2006 / November 2006 / December 2006 / February 2007 /


Powered by Blogger

Subscribe to
Posts [Atom]