The Amazing Race Season 35 Episode 11 Description
Sweden → Ireland
We’re Finding Our Pot of Gold
- Prize: Cashback rewards for a trip for two to Fiji (awarded to Rob & Corey)
- Eliminated: Steve & Anna Leigh
- Locations
- Stockholm → Dublin, Ireland
- Dublin (Forty Foot)
- Dublin (Gaiety Theatre)
- Dublin (Croke Park)
- Dublin (Toner’s Pub)
- Dublin (St Patrick’s Cathedral)
- Episode summary
- During the Pit Stop, teams had to use a mobile app in order to book a flight to Dublin, Ireland. Once there, teams had to drive to Forty Foot and swim in the Irish Sea to a buoy with their next clue. Teams then had to drive to the Gaiety Theatre in order to find their next clue.
- In this leg’s first Roadblock, one team member had to perform thirty seconds of an Irish stepdance routine from Riverdance in order to receive their next clue.
- After the first Roadblock, teams had to drive to Croke Park in order to find their next clue.
- In this leg’s second Roadblock, the team member who did not perform their sixth total Roadblock had to perform a hurling drill, which involved completing and catching a pass and then scoring a point in order to receive their next clue.
- After the second Roadblock, teams had to drive to Toner’s Pub. There, both team members had to memorize and then recite a passage from James Joyce’s Ulysses in order to receive their next clue, which directed them to travel on foot to the Pit Stop: St Patrick’s Cathedral.
- Additional note
- When teams arrived at Croke Park, they had to rappel down from the stadium’s jumbotron and onto the field before receiving their second Roadblock clue. This task went unaired in the episode
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The Amazing Race Show Description
The Amazing Race is an American adventure reality game show in which 11 or 12 teams of two race around the world (except the Family edition which featured 10 teams of four). The race is split into legs, with each leg requiring teams to deduce clues, navigate themselves in foreign areas, interact with locals, perform physical and mental challenges, and travel by airplane, boat, taxi, and other public transportation options on a limited budget provided by the show. Teams are progressively eliminated at the end of most legs, while the first team to arrive at the end of the final leg wins the grand prize of US$1 million. As the original version of the Amazing Race franchise, the CBS program has been running since September 2001. Numerous international versions have been developed following the same core structure, while the American version is also broadcast to several other countries.
The show was created by Elise Doganieri and Bertram van Munster, who, along with Jonathan Littman, serve as executive producers. The show is produced by Earthview Inc. (headed by Doganieri and van Munster), Jerry Bruckheimer Television for CBS Studios and ABC Signature (divisions of ViacomCBS and The Walt Disney Company, respectively). The series has been hosted by veteran New Zealand television personality Phil Keoghan since its inception.
Since the inception of the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Reality-Competition Program in 2003, The Amazing Race has won it ten out of fifteen times; the show has also won other awards and commendations. Although it has moved around several prime time slots since its inception, the program has averaged about 10 million viewers per season.
The series was renewed for a 33rd season, but filming on the season was suspended in February 2020 after three episodes due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] With new COVID-19 precautions in place, the race completed filming from September to October 2021, and is set to premiere on January 5, 2022