The Amazing Race 17 | |
---|---|
Season 17 | |
Presented by | Phil Keoghan |
No. of teams | 11 |
Winner | Natalie "Nat" Strand & Katherine "Kat" Chang |
No. of legs | 12 |
Distance traveled | 32,000 mi (51,000 km) |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | September 26 – December 12, 2010 |
Additional information | |
Filming dates | May 26 – June 15, 2010 |
Season chronology | |
The Amazing Race 17 is the seventeenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race . Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and ten countries and traveled over 32,000 miles (51,000 km). Starting in Gloucester, Massachusetts, racers traveled through England, Ghana, Sweden, Norway, Russia, Oman, Bangladesh, Hong Kong, and South Korea before returning to the United States and finishing in Greater Los Angeles. New twists introduced in this season include the Express Pass, which was awarded to the winners of the first leg and allowed them to skip the task of their choosing, and the Double U-Turn. The season premiered on CBS on September 26, 2010, with a special 90-minute premiere, and the season finale aired on December 12, 2010.
Anesthesiologists Natalie Strand and Katherine Chang were the winners of this season, while home shopping hosts Brook Roberts and Claire Champlin finished in second place, and dating couple Jill Haney and Thomas Wolfard finished in third place.
CBS renewed the 17th season of The Amazing Race on January 25, 2010. [1] The season spanned 32,000 miles (51,000 km) while racing across four continents with first-time visits to Ghana and Bangladesh. Teams also crossed the Arctic Circle for the first time in the show's history. [2]
Filming began on May 26, 2010, with the starting line at the Eastern Point Yacht Club in Gloucester, Massachusetts, [3] and finished on June 15, 2010, [4] in Los Angeles, California.
Prior to the season's broadcast, CBS posted a short preview video clip from an episode on the Internet, showing Brook & Claire competing at a watermelon launching challenge using an elastic slingshot. The clip showed Claire being hit in the face full-on with a watermelon after it failed to launch correctly from the slingshot, leaving her momentarily stunned but otherwise not seriously injured. The clip spread virally on the Internet. [5]
Two new game elements were introduced in season 17. The first was the Express Pass, which was awarded to the team who finished first on the first Leg. The Express Pass allowed the team to skip any one task before Leg 8. The other new element was the Double U-Turn, where two teams were able to use U-Turns in a single leg.
The cast included a team of home shopping hosts; Internet entertainer Kevin Wu (popularly known as "KevJumba") and his father, Michael; Cirque du Soleil director and choreographer Ron Kellum; Ivy League a cappella singers, and a birth mother and daughter who recently reunited following an adoption twenty years earlier. [2] There were also three beauty queens competing: Mallory Ervin, who competed in Miss America 2010; Brook Roberts, who competed in Miss America 2005; and Stephanie Smith, who was Miss South Carolina USA 2009.
Chad Waltrip proposed to Stephanie Smith during the eighth leg, and she accepted. They were married on November 20, 2010. [6]
Contestants | Age | Relationship | Hometown | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ron Kellum | 45 | Best Friends | Los Angeles, California | Eliminated 1st (in Ledbury, England) |
Tony Stovall | 42 | Tucson, Arizona | ||
Andie DeKroon | 43 | Birth Mom & Daughter | Atlanta, Georgia | Eliminated 2nd (in Accra, Ghana) |
Jenna Sykes | 21 | |||
Connor Diemand-Yauman | 22 | Ivy League A Cappella Singers | Chesterland, Ohio | Eliminated 3rd (in Riksgränsen, Sweden) |
Jonathan Schwartz | 22 | Cranford, New Jersey | ||
Katie Seamon | 23 | Beach Volleyball Partners | Rahway, New Jersey | Eliminated 4th (in Ankenesstranda, Norway) |
Rachel Johnston | 24 | Moorestown, New Jersey | ||
Michael Wu | 58 | Father & Son | Sugar Land, Texas | Eliminated 5th (in Saint Petersburg, Russia) |
Kevin Wu | 20 | |||
Gary Ervin | 53 | Father & Daughter | Morganfield, Kentucky | Eliminated 6th (in Muscat, Oman) |
Mallory Ervin | 24 | Lexington, Kentucky | ||
Chad Waltrip | 26 | Newly Dating (Legs 1-8) Engaged (Legs 8-9) | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | Eliminated 7th (in Dhaka, Bangladesh) |
Stephanie Smith | 23 | |||
Nick DeCarlo | 26 | Dating | Henderson, Nevada | Eliminated 8th (in Seoul, South Korea) |
Vicki Casciola | 26 | |||
Jill Haney | 27 | Dating | Marina Del Rey, California | Third place |
Thomas Wolfard | 30 | |||
Brook Roberts | 27 | Home Shopping Hosts | San Diego, California | Runners-up |
Claire Champlin | 30 | Reno, Nevada | ||
Nat Strand | 31 | Doctors | Newport Beach, California | Winners |
Kat Chang | 35 | Santa Monica, California |
Gary & Mallory raced again in The Amazing Race: Unfinished Business . [7] Mallory also returned on the second All-Star edition, racing with Mark Jackson from season 20 as a last-minute replacement when his original partner, Bopper Minton, was deemed too sick to compete. [8]
Outside of The Amazing Race, Mallory appeared on the Discovery Channel reality show Backyard Oil in 2013. [9] On May 25, 2016, Nat & Kat and Brook & Claire appeared on an Amazing Race-themed primetime special of The Price Is Right . [10]
The following teams are listed with their placements in each leg. Placements are listed in finishing order.
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nat & Kat | 2nd | 7th | 8th | 1st | 1stƒ [a] | 4th | 1st | 5th | 3rd⊃ [b] | 1st | 3rd | 1st |
Brook & Claire | 4th | 1st | 6th | 3rd | 5th | 2nd | 2nd | 4th | 4th⊂ [c] | 3rd | 2nd [d] | 2nd |
Jill & Thomas | 1st | 5th | 7th | 5thε [e] | 3rd | 1st | 5th | 2nd [f] | 1st⊃ [c] | 2nd | 1st | 3rd |
Nick & Vicki | 10th | 8th | 5th | 6th | 6th | 7th‡ [g] | 3rd | 3rd | 2nd | 4th‡ | 4th† | |
Chad & Stephanie | 8th | 4th | 3rd | 7th | 7th | 5th | 6th [h] | 1st | 5th†⊂ [b] | |||
Gary & Mallory | 6th | 9th | 2nd | 2nd | 2nd | 6th | 4th | 6th† | ||||
Michael & Kevin | 7th | 3rd | 9th‡ | 4th | 4th | 3rd | 7th† [h] | |||||
Katie & Rachel | 5th | 2nd | 4th | 8th | 8th† | |||||||
Connor & Jonathan | 3rd | 6th | 1st | 9th† | ||||||||
Andie & Jenna | 9th | 10th† | ||||||||||
Ron & Tony | 11th† |
Destinations | Air travel Rail travel Water travel Bus travel Helicopter travel Bicycle travel Gondola travel |
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Route Markers | Detour Roadblock Fast Forward U-Turn Speed Bump Pit Stop |
After elimination, the first five eliminated teams were sequestered at a villa in Cancún, Mexico, to await the finale. CBS posted short videos on its website after each episode aired in the Pacific Time Zone to show the eliminated teams interacting at the villa.
The Amazing Race 17 received mixed-to-positive reviews. Andy Dehnart of reality blurred wrote that it was "an average (at best) season, one plagued by a consistent lack of surprise, few actually challenging challenges, and a lot of stupidity." [18] Scott Von Doviak of The A.V. Club wrote that "the season has been somewhat less than amazing, exhibiting the same flaws that have plagued the last several editions of the long-running series: lackluster challenges, repetitive airport and taxicab drama, too many unlikeable teams, too many equalizing points along the route, and a distinct lack of suspense at the end of too many legs." [19] Luke Dwyer of TV Fanatic wrote that this season had "an unusually likable cast. Only a handful of contestants were the kind you actively root against and even those were tamed by The Amazing Race standards. Instead we were treated to a cast without a dominant group, but one that was easy to root for." [20] In 2016, this season was ranked 3rd out of the first 27 seasons by the Rob Has a Podcast Amazing Race correspondents. [21] Likewise in 2021, Jane Andrews of Gossip Cop also ranked this season as the show's 3rd best season. [22] Val Barone of TheThings ranked this season as the show's 2nd best season. [23] In 2022, Jason Shomer of Collider ranked this season among the show's top seven seasons. [24] In 2022, Rhenn Taguiam of Game Rant ranked this season as the eighth-best season. [25] In 2024, Taguiam's ranking was updated with this season ranked 13th out of 36. [26]
# | Airdate | Episode | Rating | Share | Rating/Share | Viewers | Rank | Rank | Rank | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Households | 18–49 | (millions) | Timeslot (Viewers) | Timeslot (18–49) | Week (Viewers) | Week (18–49) | ||||
1 | September 26, 2010 | "They Don't Call It The Amazing Race For Nothin!" | 6.3 | 10 | 3.7/9 | 11.54 [27] | #2 | #2 | #26 | — |
2 | October 3, 2010 | "A Kiss Saves the Day" | 6.2 | 10 | 3.4/9 | 10.67 [28] | #2 | #2 | #28 | #25 |
3 | October 10, 2010 | "In Phil We Trust" | 6.9 | 11 | 3.8/9 | 11.99 [29] | #3 | #3 | #20 | #13 |
4 | October 17, 2010 | "We Should Have Brought Gloves and Butt Pads" | 6.3 | 10 | 3.5/9 | 10.94 [30] | #2 | #2 | #21 | #21 |
5 | October 24, 2010 | "Tastes Like a Million Dollars" | 6.7 | 10 | 3.4/8 | 11.42 [31] | #2 | #2 | #20 | #19 |
6 | October 31, 2010 | "Run, Babushka, Run" | 5.3 | 9 | 2.6/7 | 9.09 [32] | #3 | #3 | (<#25) | (<#25) |
7 | November 7, 2010 | "I Want to Be in the Circus, That's Where I Belong" | 6.5 | 10 | 3.3/8 | 11.01 [33] | — | — | #20 | #23 |
8 | November 14, 2010 | "Ali Baba in a Suit" | 6.0 | 9 | 2.8/7 | 10.34 [34] [35] | #2 | #2 | — | — |
9 | November 21, 2010 | "There's a Lot of Nuts and Bullets" | 6.2 | 9 | 3.0/7 | 10.59 [35] | #2 | #2 | #24 | — |
10 | November 28, 2010 | "I Hate Chinese Food" | 6.3 | 10 | 3.1/8 | 11.07 [36] | — | — | #13 | #17 |
11 | December 5, 2010 | "I'm Surrounded by Ninjas" | 6.1 | 9 [37] | 3.1/8 | 10.34 [38] | #2 | #2 | #17 | #14 |
12 | December 12, 2010 | "Hi. I'm Sorry. I'm in a Race" | 7.0 | 11 | 3.7/9 | 12.12 [39] | #2 | #2 | #11 | #10 |
Canadian broadcaster CTV also aired The Amazing Race on Sundays at 8pm Eastern, Central, & Atlantic (9pm Pacific & Mountain).
# | Airdate | Episode | Viewers (millions) | Rank (Week) |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 26, 2010 | "They Don't Call It The Amazing Race For Nothin!" | 2.44 | #8 [40] |
2 | October 3, 2010 | "A Kiss Saves the Day" | 2.62 | #3 [41] |
3 | October 10, 2010 | "In Phil We Trust" | 2.30 | #7 [42] |
4 | October 17, 2010 | "We Should Have Brought Gloves and Butt Pads" | 2.99 | #1 [43] |
5 | October 24, 2010 | "Tastes Like a Million Dollars" | 2.72 | #2 [44] |
6 | October 31, 2010 | "Run, Babushka, Run" | 2.36 | #6 [45] |
7 | November 7, 2010 | "I Want to Be in the Circus, That's Where I Belong" | 2.67 | #4 [46] |
8 | November 14, 2010 | "Ali Baba in a Suit" | 2.79 | #2 [47] |
9 | November 21, 2010 | "There's a Lot of Nuts and Bullets" | 2.63 | #3 [48] |
10 | November 28, 2010 | "I Hate Chinese Food" | 2.51 | #4 [49] |
11 | December 5, 2010 | "I'm Surrounded by Ninjas" | 2.68 | #1 [50] |
12 | December 12, 2010 | "Hi. I'm Sorry. I'm in a Race" | 2.74 | #1 [51] |
The Amazing Race 2 is the second season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and eight countries and traveled over 52,000 miles (84,000 km) during thirteen legs. Starting in Pahrump, Nevada, racers traveled through Brazil, South Africa, Namibia, Thailand, Hong Kong, Australia, and New Zealand before returning to the United States, traveling through Hawaii and Alaska, and finishing in the San Francisco Bay Area. The season premiered on CBS on March 11, 2002, and ended on May 15, 2002.
The Amazing Race 3 is the third season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured twelve teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and thirteen countries and traveled over 41,000 miles (66,000 km) during thirteen legs. Starting in the Everglades, racers traveled through Mexico, England, Scotland, Portugal, Spain, Morocco, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam before returning to the United States, traveling through Hawaii, and finishing in Seattle. A new twist introduced in this season was the final memory challenge. The season premiered on CBS October 2, 2002, and ended on December 18, 2002.
The Amazing Race 5 is the fifth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited six continents and twelve countries and traveled over 72,000 miles (116,000 km) during thirteen legs. Starting in Santa Monica, racers traveled through Uruguay, Argentina, Russia, Egypt, Kenya, Tanzania, the United Arab Emirates, India, New Zealand, the Philippines, and Canada before returning to the United States and finishing in Dallas. New twists introduced in this season included the Yield, where one team could force another team to stop racing for a predetermined amount of time, and a new non-elimination leg penalty where teams that finished last where stripped of all of the money they had accumulated during previous legs and would not receive any money in the subsequent leg. The season premiered on CBS on July 6, 2004, and concluded on September 21, 2004.
The Amazing Race 6 is the sixth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and ten countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km) during twelve legs. Starting in Chicago, racers traveled through Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Senegal, Germany, Hungary, France, Ethiopia, Sri Lanka, and China before returning to the United States, traveling through Hawaii, and finishing in Chicago. New twists introduced in this season include uniting teams for a task, the double-length leg, and limits on team members' Roadblock performances. The season premiered on CBS on November 16, 2004, and concluded on February 8, 2005.
The Amazing Race 10 is the tenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured twelve teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and thirteen countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km) during twelve legs. Starting in Seattle, racers traveled through China, Mongolia, Vietnam, India, Kuwait, Mauritius, Madagascar, Finland, Ukraine, Morocco, Spain, and France before returning to the United States and finishing in the Hudson Valley. New twists introduced in this season include a mid-leg elimination; the Intersection, where two teams had to join up for a task; and a new non-elimination penalty, where the team who finished last in the previous leg had to finish first in the subsequent leg or else incur a 30-minute penalty. The season premiered on CBS on September 17, 2006, and concluded on December 10, 2006.
The Amazing Race 11 is the eleventh season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, ten returning teams from previous editions and a dating couple with members from two teams that had competed against each other, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited six continents and nine countries and traveled over 45,000 miles (72,000 km) during thirteen legs. Starting in Palmetto Bay, Florida, outside of Miami, racers traveled through Ecuador, Chile, Argentina, Mozambique, Tanzania, Poland, Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Macau before returning to the United States, traveling through Guam and Hawaii, and finishing in San Francisco. The season premiered on CBS on February 18, 2007, and the season finale aired on May 6, 2007.
The Amazing Race 12 is the twelfth season of American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and ten countries and traveled over 30,000 miles (48,000 km) during eleven legs. Starting in Los Angeles, racers traveled through Ireland, the Netherlands, Burkina Faso, Lithuania, Croatia, Italy, India, Japan, and Taiwan before returning to the United States and finishing in Anchorage. New twists introduced in this season include the U-Turn, which replaced the Yield and allowed one team to force another team to perform both Detour tasks on a leg, and a new non-elimination leg penalty called the Speed Bump, which is an extra task that the team who finished last had to perform on the subsequent leg. The season premiered on CBS on November 4, 2007, and the finale aired on January 20, 2008.
The Amazing Race 13 is the thirteenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and eight countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km). Starting in Los Angeles, racers traveled through Brazil, Bolivia, New Zealand, Cambodia, India, Kazakhstan, and Russia before returning to the United States and finishing in Portland, Oregon. The season premiered on CBS on September 28, 2008, and the season finale aired on December 7, 2008.
The Amazing Race 14 is the fourteenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited three continents and nine countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km). Starting in Los Alamitos, California, racers traveled through Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Romania, Russia, India, Thailand, and China before returning to the United States and finishing in Maui. New twists introduced in this season include the Blind U-Turn, which a team could use anonymously, and the no-rest leg, where teams immediately began the subsequent leg after finishing the previous leg. The season premiered on CBS on February 15, 2009, and the season finale aired on May 10, 2009.
The Amazing Race 16 is the sixteenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and nine countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km). Starting in Los Angeles, racers traveled through Chile, Argentina, Germany, France, the Seychelles, Malaysia, Singapore, and China before returning to the United States and finishing in San Francisco. This season also saw the return of the Intersection. The season premiered on CBS on Sunday, February 14, 2010, and the finale aired on May 9, 2010. In Canada, the show premiered on the A-Channel instead of CTV due to the 2010 Winter Olympics, but it returned to CTV after the Winter Olympics concluded.
The Amazing Race Asia 4 is the fourth season of The Amazing Race Asia, an Asian reality competition show based on the American series The Amazing Race. Hosted by Allan Wu, it featured ten teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, in a race around Asia and the Pacific Rim to win US$100,000. This season visited two continents and eight countries and travelled over 38,000 kilometres (24,000 mi) during eleven legs. Starting in Kuala Lumpur, teams travelled through Malaysia, Sri Lanka, the Philippines, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia and South Korea before finishing in Singapore. This season was the first time a season within the Amazing Race franchise was filmed and broadcast for high-definition television. The season premiered on AXN Asia on 23 September 2010 and the finale aired on 9 December 2010.
The Amazing Race 18 is the eighteenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each returning from a previous edition of the series, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and nine countries and traveled over 40,000 miles (64,000 km). Starting in Palm Springs, California, racers traveled through Australia, Japan, China, India, Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, and Brazil before returning to the United States and finishing in the Florida Keys. A new twist introduced in this season includes the automatic U-Turn for the last team to finish the first task. This season was also the first to be filmed and broadcast for high-definition television. The season premiered on CBS on Sunday, February 20, 2011, and the finale aired on May 8, 2011.
The Amazing Race 19 is the nineteenth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and ten countries and traveled over 35,000 miles (56,000 km). Starting in Hacienda Heights, California, racers traveled through Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malawi, Denmark, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Panama before returning to the United States and finishing in Atlanta. New twists introduced in this season include the Hazard – an extra task for the last team to finish the first task – and a double elimination leg. The season premiered on CBS on September 25, 2011, and the finale aired on December 11, 2011.
The Amazing Race 20 is the twentieth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and ten countries and traveled over 36,000 miles (58,000 km). Starting in Santa Barbara wine country, racers traveled through Argentina, Paraguay, Italy, Austria, Germany, Azerbaijan, Tanzania, India, and Japan before returning to the United States and finishing in Oahu. The season premiered on CBS on Sunday, February 19, 2012, and the two-hour finale aired on May 6, 2012.
The Amazing Race 21 is the twenty-first season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world. This season visited three continents and nine countries and traveled over 25,000 miles (40,000 km). Starting in Pasadena, California, racers traveled through China, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Turkey, Russia, the Netherlands, Spain, and France before returning to the United States and finishing in New York City. New twists introduced in this season include the Blind Double U-Turn and the Double Your Money prize. While the prize for winning the season remained at US$1 million, if the team that came in first in the first leg had also won the final leg, the prize would have been doubled to US$2 million. The season premiered on CBS on September 30, 2012, and the two-hour season finale aired on December 9, 2012.
The Amazing Race 22 is the twenty-second season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited five continents and eleven countries and traveled over 30,000 miles (48,000 km). Starting in Los Angeles, racers traveled through French Polynesia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Botswana, Switzerland, Germany, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and England before returning to the United States and finishing in the National Capital Region. A new twist introduced in this season includes awarding the winners of the first leg two Express Passes, one for them and one to give to another team. The season premiered on CBS on February 17, 2013, and the two-hour season finale aired on May 5, 2013.
The Amazing Race 23 is the twenty-third season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited four continents and nine countries and traveled over 35,000 miles (56,000 km). Starting in Santa Clarita, California, racers traveled through Chile, Portugal, Norway, Poland, Austria, the United Arab Emirates, Indonesia, and Japan before returning to the United States and finishing in Juneau. The season premiered on CBS on September 29, 2013, and the two-hour season finale aired on December 8, 2013.
The Amazing Race 24 is the twenty-fourth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, ten teams returning from previous editions and a composite team with two members that competed on separate seasons, competing in a race around the world in order to win US$1,000,000. This season visited three continents and nine countries and traveled over 23,000 miles (37,000 km). Starting in Santa Clarita, California, racers traveled through China, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Italy, Switzerland, Spain, England, and Wales before returning to the United States and finishing in Las Vegas. The season premiered on CBS on February 23, 2014, and the season finale aired on May 18, 2014.
The Amazing Race 33 is the thirty-third season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured eleven teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around Europe to win US$1,000,000. Though filming started in February 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused production to be placed on hold for over a year and a half. The race resumed in September 2021 with most of the original teams and a modified route. This season visited two continents and seven countries and traveled over 22,000 miles (35,000 km) during eleven legs. Starting from the racers' homes in the United States, racers traveled through England and Scotland before production was suspended. After reuniting in St. Gallen, racers traveled through Switzerland, France, Greece, and Portugal before returning to the United States and finishing in Greater Los Angeles. An element of the show that returned for this season was having teams start from their homes instead of a centralized location. The season premiered on CBS on January 5, 2022, and the season finale aired on March 2, 2022.
The Amazing Race 34 is the thirty-fourth season of the American reality competition show The Amazing Race. Hosted by Phil Keoghan, it featured twelve teams of two, each with a pre-existing relationship, competing in a race around the Euro-Mediterranean region to win US$1,000,000. This season visited three continents and eight countries and traveled over 11,000 miles (18,000 km) during ten legs. Starting in Munich, racers traveled through Germany, Austria, Italy, Jordan, France, Spain, and Iceland before returning to the United States and finishing in Nashville. Much like the previous season, this season also used a chartered plane rather than commercial airlines to facilitate travel between countries due to the COVID-19 pandemic. New twists introduced in this season include the Scramble, where teams could perform the first leg's tasks in any order, and eliminating a team in every leg. The season premiered on CBS on September 21, 2022, and concluded on December 7, 2022.