CBS kicked off the 26th edition of its Emmy-winning competition, "The Amazing Race," on Wednesday. And TheWrap was on-set at the starting line.
Allow us to set the scene. Helicopter rotors replaced music swells, hot blind daters and a "New Kid" elbowed out parent-child frumps of the past, and the husband-and-wife creators/executive producers produced and directed the season opening segment without a wall of monitors.
"The Amazing Race" took off from Castaic Lake north of Los Angeles at 2:46 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 12, two weeks before Thanksgiving. (Fun fact: NBC's generation 1.0 reality show "Fear Factor" used to shoot at that same lake.)
After meeting the cast for exclusive pre-race interviews, I went to watch five blind date couples meet for the first time on the starting line and head off for Tokyo. Here's what I learned:
1. "Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh"
The first thing you notice at the starting line is how different it sounds without music. Without the thumping score, you also hear the helicopters shooting aerials of the start from above. "Left behind" at the starting line after the teams departed, you could track the progress of the teams towards the airport for a bit by the helicopters flying south.
There are also "chase vehicles" on the ground, cars without teams in them that presumably are shooting exteriors and relaying real time tracking information to producers and production coordinators trying to time out what is going to happen next.