
So year after year, I've sat by while The Amazing Race trounced my beloved Project Runway for the Best Reality Program Emmy. This wasn't such a big deal—we're talking about the Best Reality Program Emmy, for God's sake—but I've recently been schooled in why this perennial clobbering has been allowed to continue, and that's because The Amazing Race is awesome. (While we've stopped the presses, allow me to share the also-breaking news that kittens are cute, Nazis are evil, and, yes, pizza is delicious.)
What made me finally pay attention to The Amazing Race: the inclusion of contestants Mel and Mike White, a father-son team made up of two of my favorite people on earth. Mike White is the writer/actor responsible for one of my favorite movies. Mel White is a writer and clergyman and former speechwriter for Jerry Falwell, who eventually came out as a gay man and founded the amazing Soulforce, devoted to "freedom for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people from religious and political oppression through the the practice of relentless nonviolent resistance." What this looks like in practice: A seemingly never-ending bus tour, in which Rev. White and assorted Soulforcers trek around the country peacefully attending services at churches opposed to gay rights, and sometimes meeting with their pastors/rectors/what-have-you when the pastors/rectors/what-have-you have balls enough to meet with the sweet old gay clergyman who just drove across the country to see them. (Alexandra Pelosi's HBO documentary Friends of God featured footage of Soulforce in action, which involved Mel White sitting in a pew at a fundamentalist church service, quietly weeping. What Dustin Lance Black touched on his Oscar speech, Mel White has devoted his life to: Convincing gays that God loves them, no matter what His alleged spokesmodels say.)
Anyway, thanks to The Amazing Race, I now get to watch Mel White and Mike White paraglide in the Alps and haul huge wheels of cheese down Swiss mountains, and it's so great. They are adorable, especially dad, and other contestants are quite lovable as well (primarily the cutie-pie deaf guy and the oddball country couple that got cut at the end of the last episode. Bah.)
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