U.S. broadcast and ratings Seasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of
The Amazing Race on
CBS. ;Notes During its first four seasons, even with extensive critical praise, the show garnered low
Nielsen ratings, facing cancellation a number of times. The premiere of the show aired six days before the
September 11 attacks, leaving the fate of the show in doubt. Producer van Munster stated that "Once we saw our billboards covered in dust from the 9/11 tragedy, we knew we had a problem". Low viewership of the show was also attributed to it being lost among all other reality television shows at the time and unable to garner similar numbers as
Survivor. A vice president of programming at CBS considered
The Amazing Race to be "a show that was always on the bubble" of being canceled. The
fifth season of the series, which aired from July to September 2004, had very high viewership numbers for that time of the year, averaging 10.7 million with a finale of nearly 13 million, doubling the viewership in the 18-to-34 demographic and won its time slot for every episode. A temporary setback struck
The Amazing Race after a
Family Edition that aired in the fall of 2005 was not received warmly by viewers, which resulted in lowered viewership. The change in format, with teams of four and allowing for young children to race alongside their parents, hampered the travel ability of the show. Keoghan, though pleased they had tried something different with the show, attributed the poor response to the Family Edition due to too many people to follow and lack of exotic locations. This spilled over to
Season 9 where it experienced dismaying ratings of only an average of 9.1 million viewers per episode, a drop from 13 million just 2 seasons ago in
Season 7. The timeslot changing for Season 9 was also attributed to the drop in ratings. From the
tenth season to the
twenty-fourth season, the show was moved to Sunday nights, as a result,
The Amazing Race has seen further increases in its numbers. It is believed that part of this increase is due to "sports overruns" (football, basketball, or golf) that resulted from games played earlier on Sunday pushing the airtime for
The Amazing Race back by some amount on the East Coast along with other CBS programming. In the Sunday timeslot,
The Amazing Race follows
60 Minutes,
Variety states that, while both shows have different target demographics, the crossover audience between the shows is very high based on the average household income of its viewers, and is part of the
Races success. In the 2010 season, another reality television show,
Undercover Boss, was scheduled following
The Amazing Race, the overall impact of these three shows have helped CBS to regain viewership on Sunday nights. According to
Variety, the average age of
Amazing Race viewers that watch the show live in 2009 was 51.9 years, while for those that time-shifted the show, the average age was 39.2 years. In a 2010 survey by
Experian Simmons,
The Amazing Race was found to be the second-highest show proportion of viewers that identify themselves as
Republicans, following
Glenn Beck. The
season 16 finale, however, was the lowest-rated finale since
season 4. Although
season 18 averaged over 10 million viewers and finished in top 40 most watched shows of the
2010–2011 television season, the ratings dropped and the season 18 finale was the second-lowest-rated Sunday night finale. The season 21 finale was down 31% from the
season 19 finale on December 11, 2011. It tied as the show's lowest rated finale ever. Ratings also dropped during the
season 24 finale, which was down 33% from the
season 15 finale on May 18, 2014. As a result of decreasing ratings, starting with the twenty-fifth season, the show moved to Fridays at 8:00 p.m., where it had its lowest viewership ever in this series. Ratings for the show since the move to Friday have remained steady, with seasons premieres maintaining around 6 million viewers and only small drops over the course of a given season. With the show's age, some of its current fans were not born when the show had first aired in 2001, and the production team used a concept like
season 28, aired in 2016, where the use of
YouTube and other Internet celebrities was intended to help bridge the gap between long-time and new fans. This has led the show to have various time slots depending on the situation. The 30th season of the show was moved by CBS to a Wednesday night slot and resulted in an improvement in viewership from previous seasons. van Munster and Doganieri credit this new timeslot to help boost ratings, as it is more amenable for family viewing than previous timeslots. Similarly, when
season 31, which featured former contestants from
Race,
Survivor and
Big Brother, premiered after
Survivor: Edge of Extinction in the Wednesday night slot, the show saw a ratings boost. The success of
The Amazing Race has led other networks to attempt to develop reality shows in a similar vein; CBS Vice President for alternative programming Jennifer Bresnan stated that many of these shows pose themselves as "
The Amazing Race mixed with 'X'" to try to vary the format. Such shows include
Treasure Hunters (NBC, 2006),
Expedition Impossible (ABC, 2011),
Around the World in 80 Plates (Bravo, 2012)
The Great Escape (TNT, 2012) brought van Munster and Doganieri to help with production, and was considered by critics as a "lite" version of
The Amazing Race.
International broadcast and versions The American version of
The Amazing Race is rebroadcast in several countries around the world. Airings in both Canada and Australia are very popular. The Canadian showing on
CTV is commonly one of the top ten most watched shows each week, according to
BBM Canada, Australian broadcasts of the episodes on the
Seven Network often fall into the top 20 programs for the week. Episodes of
The Amazing Race also air in several other countries shortly after the American broadcast, including
Israel, Latin America, China, Vietnam and the Philippines.
AXN Asia broadcasts
The Amazing Race across southeast Asia. The popularity of the show through the service led to CBS allowing for the option of creating international versions of the show in October 2005.
The Amazing Race Asia was one of the first versions created, following essentially the same format as the United States version. Other international versions of the show have been produced in
Latin America, Europe,
Israel,
Australia, and
Canada.
Critical reception Part of the show's success is considered to be the relatively simple formula of following several teams on a race around the world. Because of this, viewers can live "vicariously through the people on the screen", according to
Andy Dehnart of the RealityBlurred.com website. Keoghan offers that: The show is also considered to be successful in that it does not rely on the typical tropes of reality television, where players are trying to avoid becoming too much of a target to be voted off by their fellow contestants; in
The Amazing Race, a team's success is primarily based on their own performance. At the same time, the reality show setting can bring out unbecoming behavior, often leading to the stereotypical idea of
ugly American tourists. Though Denhert was a supporter of the show in its earlier seasons, he has criticized latter seasons for becoming too predictable, as "failed to grow and evolve, it seems stale". Keoghan does state that the reduced budgets has made the timetable for filming "really brutal", but also considers that the difficulty of filming also reflects on the difficulty of the
Race for the teams as well. Denhert further points to the lack of time given for the viewer to learn about the individuals on each team, and instead has added elements like the U-Turn and the Yield to create inter-team drama. While a race is being run and filmed, fans of the show watch for news or spotting of the racers and attempt to track their progress in real time, enhanced by recent social media tools, leading production to figure out ways to masquerade their presence in any city such as through the use of decoy teams. Despite this, fans readily track the Race as it is being run across the globe. In the
19th season, one contestant had lost her passport at a gas station while getting directions to
Los Angeles International Airport. Though spotted by their A/V crew, they could not intervene, but instead alerted production, who prepared for an early elimination of the team at LAX. A bystander found the passport, and after he posted about it on
Twitter, he was directed by a fan tracking the Race's progress to take the passport to the airport, returning it before the scheduled flight and keeping the team in the race. Subsequent seasons have had publicly attended live starts such as starting in
Times Square for
season 25, and frequent use of live social media updates by the racers by permission of production during
season 28. Coinciding with the broadcast finale for each season through about the 22nd season, fans from the website
Television Without Pity arranged for a "TARCon" event in New York City along with the season's teams and other former racers.
Awards and nominations The Amazing Race won the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Reality Competition Program for the first seven years after the creation of the award in
2003, and ten of the twelve years since its creation, against other, more popular reality TV shows such as
Survivor,
Dancing with the Stars, and
American Idol. Its streak was ended in 2010 when
Top Chef won the Emmy for this category. Host Phil Keoghan revealed in an interview that the show's loss that year made him and the producers realize that they will have to try harder to win the Emmy again. In 2011, the show won in the category again for the eighth time. After its seventh consecutive win, some in the media, including
Survivor host
Jeff Probst suggested that
The Amazing Race willingly drop out from the competition in future years, similar to
Candice Bergen declining any further nominations after her fifth Emmy win for her role in
Murphy Brown. van Munster has stated that it is "not likely" he will pull the show from future Emmy awards, considering that it reflects on his and his crew's hard work and high standards. The show has also been nominated and won several times for technical production (Creative Arts) Emmy awards, for Cinematography and Picture Editing for Non-Fiction programs, whereas it has only been nominated for Sound Mixing and Sound Editing for Non-Fiction programs. The show has been nominated in the same five categories for three years consecutively, a trend which continued with the
2007 Primetime Emmy Awards. The production staff of
The Amazing Race has been nominated each year since 2004 for the
Producers Guild of America's Golden Laurel award for Television Producer of a Non-Fiction Program, and won this award in 2005. Bertram van Munster has been nominated six times for the
Directors Guild of America Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Reality Programs award for
The Amazing Race each year between 2005 and 2010, and winning the award in 2007. Due to its favorable portrayal of gay couples,
The Amazing Race has been nominated in 2004 and 2006 for, but not won, the
GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Reality Program. It has received a similar nomination for 2009, and won in 2012.
Home media Seasons 1 and 7 were released in stores, while other seasons have been released exclusively on
Amazon.com through its CreateSpace manufacture on demand program. Only region 1 is available. Select seasons have also been released on
Blu-ray.
The Amazing Race was also added to
Pluto TV,
ViacomCBS's free Internet television service, as a standalone channel on September 1, 2020. The fifth and seventh seasons of
The Amazing Race were added to
Netflix in November 2022. They would later be removed in 2023, being replaced by the seventeenth and thirty-first seasons until its removal in 2024. All seasons are available to stream on
Paramount+ and
Amazon Prime Video.
Other media Two board games have been made based on
The Amazing Race: a DVD Board Game and a traditional board game. A video game for the
Wii home game console has been also been produced as well as an iOS version. Both versions were developed by
Ludia and published by
Ubisoft. In 2010,
International Game Technology (IGT) developed a
progressive slot machine game based on
The Amazing Race and was installed in casinos across the United States. Phil Keoghan featured prominently in the game and served as host of various bonus rounds, inspired by travel and destinations seen on the show, during play. The slot machines were phased out of casinos a couple of years later. Two books have been written by fans of the show; the first is written by
Adam-Troy Castro, titled "My Ox Is Broken!": Detours, Roadblocks, Fast Forwards and Other Great Moments from TV's The Amazing Race", which features an introduction from
Season 8 racers Billy and Carissa Gaghan. The second book is "Circumnavigating the Globe: Amazing Race 10 to 14 and Amazing Race Asia 1 to 3" written by Arthur E. Perkins Jr.
Legacy ''s 38th season as previewed on
NBC's
Today Show, is played by
Elmo and hosted by "Amazing Al", the
muppet version of Phil Keoghan. • The format of
The Amazing Race has led to much smaller scale events for local cities and towns, having teams race through the area with clues and tasks. • Countries and cities that are featured on the show often see the exposure as a boon. A member of the
Icelandic Tourist Board noted that after their country shown as one of the locations in
The Amazing Race 6, their website saw an increase in information requests, and they worked to develop a "Trace the Race" travel package to allow visitors to see the same locations shown on the show. • "Competitours" was created by Steve Belkin to create 8 to 14-days European tours in the style of
The Amazing Race; the tourists are only given instructions each night on where they will be traveling next with a
Race-like task to do the next day (such as encouraging locals to dance with them at a tourist location), to be demonstrated by recording themselves with a video camera. •
The Amazing Race has inspired
popular culture, with notable references to it in shows and films such as
Glee,
Robot Chicken,
Mad TV (in which Charla & Mirna of Season 5 participated),
30 Rock,
American Dad (in which host Phil Keoghan guest starred in the episode),
The Simpsons (in the episode "
Heartbreak Hotel", where Marge Simpson is shown to be a super-fan of a competition show
The Amazing Place),
The Lovebirds (which concluded with the protagonists competing on
The Amazing Race with a cameo voice-over from Phil Keoghan),
iCarly (which referenced the infamous watermelon misfire from
Season 17),
Better Call Saul (in the episode "
Waterworks"),
Hacks (in the episode "D'Amazing Race" which host Phil Keoghan and co-creator Elise Doganieri guest starred), and even
Sesame Street. The Canadian cartoon/reality show
Total Drama Presents: The Ridonculous Race is a direct parody of
The Amazing Race. Additionally, an episode titled "The Amazing Model Race" of the
twelfth cycle of ''
America's Next Top Model'', featured a race-themed challenge. •
Edutainment YouTuber
Sam Denby, co-creator of YouTube/
Nebula game show
Jet Lag: The Game, cites
The Amazing Race as a substantial inspiration for his show, although he has stated that his show differs in that it incorporates travel into the gameplay more directly, and that due to being shot
vlog-style by the players themselves (rather than with TV film crews), it is able to more accurately capture the spontaneity real-life travel experience. ==References==