Last weekend I attended the Las Vegas Grand Prix, my very first Formula 1 race. I’d been invited by our friends at eBay Motors, and after having heard so much about how fun F1 races are from fellow journalists and car-people, I was excited to see what the second annual Las Vegas race was like. It was to be a two-day endeavor, with the flight, meals, lodging, and race tickets generously taken care of by eBay, and yet I was still a bit anxious about one thing: I was an imposter.
I arrived in Vegas on Friday, and what struck me immediately was just how invested Las Vegas is in F1. I mentioned this in a previous article, but I’ll show again just how cool the Las Vegas airport’s F1 theme was.
Check out this huge LEGO:
Look at this metal statue, of sorts:
Here’s a Heineken F1 car in the liquor store:
And here’s a huge helmet on a baggage claim carousel:
It was at this point, as I watched people walking through the airport wearing Ferrari and McLaren and Mercedes jackets, that I began to get a bit nervous.
You see, the last time I watched Formula 1 I was about 10 years old, living in Germany, watching Michael Schumacher conquer the world. He was the hometown hero, really, though after a while, he became so dominant that my brothers and I had to choose different drivers to root for, just to keep things interesting. I chose Michael’s brother, Ralf, I recall one of my brothers choosing Mika Häkkinen, and I think there may have been a Jacques Villeneuve fan in our family (though probably mostly because of the fun-to-pronounce name).
Cut to 2003, after my family moved to the U.S. for the final time, and that was the end of my interest in racing, even though I now lived only 25 minutes from Kansas Speedway. I moved on to follow American ball-sports, especially baseball, football, and later NCAA and NBA basketball (which is my current favorite sport, primarily because I love following the characters). My interest in racing never returned, even after I studied engineering and dug myself deep into the automotive industry. F1 cars, to me, seemed distant; these were expensive cars that had nothing to do with a vehicle I could buy at a dealership, so why would I care?
When I left my engineering gig to become a car journalist, every now and then racing-related news would spring up, and while I’d occasionally volunteer to write it up to help my editorial team, most of the time I had to step back and yield the story to someone else. I didn’t have the knowledge or the interest to write about racing, and though I enjoyed attending rally races and drift events and off-road races and even Indycar races as a spectator, actually following along with each league wasn’t something I was interested in.
So as I stood there, bags at my sides, staring out at a city that’s clearly gone all-in on Formula 1, and looking at F1 attire-wearing visitors enthusiastically arriving from around the globe to see their favorite racers duke it out at 200 MPH, I couldn’t help but feel a little uncomfortable. I had sorta feared I might feel this way when I had accepted eBay Motors’ generous invitation. Maybe it would pass, I thought, as I entered a taxi heading for my hotel.
The anxiety only grew from there. Like I said, the entire town was in F1 mode, and my hotel — right next to the track — was no different. Everyone staying in that Virgin hotel (which was right next to the track) was there for the race, and everyone — everyone — was talking about the teams, the drivers, the cars.
I was an imposter. This wasn’t my sport. I barely knew the names of any of the drivers. Lando? Sainz? Who are these folks? What’s with the Bottas guy who seems so beloved despite not being so great? What’s with the pictures of him in a speedo? Why is nobody talking about the handsome legend, Fernando Alonso? (Whom I saw at the Indy 500 a 7 years back). How good is this German guy, Nico Hülkenberg? Are the Germans still dominating like they did when I was a kid?
I didn’t know much about who was winning this year and who wasn’t. I didn’t know why the whole atmosphere felt so…anglo. I really had no clue why driver X got screwed by team Y and why driver Z is leaving his team after N-teen years to the cross-town rivals. I had no clue.
Heading To The Track
I checked into my hotel, had lunch, and headed to the track for Friday’s qualifying session; I’d read Formula 1’s “beginner’s guide” prior to arriving at the race, as things have changed in the last 20 years. There’s lots of great stuff in the guide:
Thanks to the Beginner’s Guide, I understood that qualifying basically involved three stages, with the last five drivers being kicked out after each. As such, after stage one, grid positions 20-16 have been set, and then after stage two, grid positions 15-11 have been set. The final 10 drivers race in stage 1, ultimately finishing the grid-setting process. The three stages are 18 minutes, 15 minutes, and 12 minutes, respectively.
Anyway, before I headed to my seats near the track, I walked past a crowd of adoring fans hanging on to this young man’s every word:
His name is Oscar, and he seems like a friendly young Australian guy. He answered normal questions about his life and his thoughts on other drivers, and what he likes to do in his free time — all very straightforward things — but, like I said, the crowd couldn’t get enough. The youngster had become incredibly beloved by age 23.
I walked through a bunch of tunnels before seeing a large group of people roped off, probably because a driver was walking past:
I then got an RFID wristband, which — along with my ticket on my phone — was the key to getting anywhere at the Las Vegas Grand Prix:
eBay kindly took us to the paddock, where the tour guide taught me all sorts of things about tires. Apparently each team has a technician from Pirelli, who’s basically their tire consultant/installer.
The Paddock
While walking through the paddock (which, to my untrained eye, looked a little empty), I learned that there are three different tire types: Dry, intermediate, and full-wet, as shown below:
The tour guide told me that the full-wet tire is barely used, since races tend to be canceled when there’s standing water. The intermediate tire, shown in the middle above, gets used when there’s just a moist surface, and the dry tire comes in six different compounds: C0 to C5. C0 is the hardest and longest-lasting tire, which is used on courses that tear up tires whereas C5 is the softest tire, used for lower-speed street courses. Pirelli picks three compound options for each race, and teams can choose 13 sets, along with four intermediate and three full-wet sets.
The tour guide told me things seemed a little quiet this year — not in terms of the crowd (though that may have been down quite a bit over last year), but in terms of what teams were telling the media. The teams, the tour guide reckoned, seemed to be keeping their cards closer to their chest for this race. They wanted every advantage they could get.
There was more to the paddock than just learning about tires and media tactics; there were a bunch of journalists in there (see ESPN reporters on the left, below), I bet a few celebs roaming around (though I didn’t see any in the paddocks), nice cafes, and F1-people who walked among everyone else — many gladly having photos taken as they walked.
From the paddocks, I headed into the “Champions Club” section.
Checking Out The ‘Champions Club,’ Watching Ferraris Race, Watching F1 Practice
This was quite a fancy place, with good food everywhere, and a nice view of the track:
I took a few photos of F1 cars doing practice runs — or, at least, I tried to:
Cars from the Ferrari Challenge — which ran before the F1 race and featured drivers from dealerships around the world — were much easier to capture with my camera. Even though the Ferrari 488 Challenge Evo cars can keep up with F1 cars in terms of overall top speed, my seat was at a turn, which the F1 cars could apparently take at a much, much higher speed:
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Then, after I played my very first racing sim game (it was lots of fun), came qualifying, which was actually more intense than I expected.
Qualifying
Again, it seemed like there weren’t that many people at the track on Friday (there’s been debate on whether attendance was significantly down this year), so qualifying was a cool way to watch an exciting race, but in a bit more intimate setting (to be sure, I was in a section of the face that was more “exclusive,” but still, the event didn’t seem crazy-packed on Friday).
The truth is, I really didn’t know who was racing or what was going on, but people around the track — some from my party, some not — kept asking me who I was rooting for, and when I replied I wasn’t sure, I think that prompted folks to tell me all about the teams and the racers. In fact, they were excited to do so.
I was a little uncomfortable with my lack of knowledge, but I noticed during qualifying that the fans at the race didn’t look at me as an imposter at all; many of them were also new to the F1 game, with Netflix’s legendary Drive To Survive having created an absolutely enormous fanbase in a flash of time.
“So, this guy, Carlos Sainz, is like the nicest guy ever,” someone told me — more like Carlos Saint, amirite? “Hamilton… his car isn’t the best this year, but you can never count him out,” someone else said. “Verstappen’s team doesn’t have a fast enough rear wing for this race, but it’s Max. Max is max” someone else said.
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When I asked about Fernando Alonso and why nobody has said a word about him, someone told me: “Oh, yeah, no chance. The Aston Martin team has been awful.”
So I sat there and watched the race on the monitor above me, and the track just ahead (without a monitor, you really can’t tell what’s happening outside of the 1 second the car blasts by). F1 drivers battled it out to secure their grid positions, with announcers on the TV describing which cars seem the best sorted for this chilly track in Vegas. All the while, members of my party were telling me about the teams and drivers — and not just about their professional lives, either. I noticed that so much information that F1 fans were telling me was about the drivers’ personal lives, which seemed to interest them easily as much as their racing prowess.
“Holy crap, Gasly! He’s got the third best lap!” someone told me, excitedly. “Um, why does —” I replied, only to be cut off “Nobody saw that coming! This is awesome!”
Everyone – and I mean everyone — loves an underdog. In any sport.
“Oh no, not again!” someone said. “Those poor Williams mechanics!” someone blurted when Franco Colapinto crashed his car into a wall. Shortly thereafter, someone from my party produced a meme about Williams mechanics.
“I don’t… what does this mean?” I asked?
“Oh, dude, Williams has dealt with far, far, far too many crashes this year. That of all cars, Williams wrecked, it’s just so bad!”
The F1 Reddit thread above seems to echo these sentiments.
Race Day
On Saturday, I worked from my hotel much of the day, as the race didn’t start until late at night (it’s a 10PM start time, which seems to be a controversy, of sorts. Some say it caters to certain audiences unfairly; I have no clue — again, this is all stuff I’m hearing out of my periphery).
I headed out early in the evening for the race so I could see more of the track, and try to understand how it fits into the Las Vegas cityscape, as I’d been a bit disoriented the previous night. Was this really on the strip? It was hard to tell.
Walking around did nothing to help me orient myself; the best thing I could do was look at the tall casinos and then at a map, because the track — and the absolutely gargantuan temporary structures surrounding it — was so enormous and so compartmentalized I felt like I was a mouse in a maze.
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The track consists of a bunch of “zones,” and my ticket only worked in the “East Harmon Zone,” so entering the “T-Mobile Zone At Sphere” or the “Flamingo Zone By Caesar Rewards” or the “South Koval Zone” or any other zone just wasn’t possible.
I wish I had taken more photos of the art installations, because there were some good ones!
I tried walking around the whole track, but it was impossible; I got lost about a dozen times, running into dead ends; while doing so, I saw this temporary bridge built over the track so that commuters could drive over it. I found this impressive:
At about 6:30, I took a few photos of an empty track, which is just a beautiful thing to see:
I even got to see the Driver’s Championship Trophy:
There he is: Michael Schumacher, just above the legend Ayrton Senna:
I also had a look at the insane number of vendors offering mountains of free food to anyone who bought tickets (which started at about $1000):
In due time on that Saturday, things finally became legitimately crowded; I’m sure celebs like Ludarcris holding concerns helped quite a bit:
But there were lots of other fun activations around the track:
You can see that the food vendors got really, really busy:
After I had heard so many stories about each of the drivers and teams during qualifying, I couldn’t help but hop onto my laptop Friday night and learn more about everyone. The dynamics of all the personalities was just so alluring that, by Saturday, race day, I was now much more into the event than I’d thought I’d be.
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Where we sat, we could really only see the tops of the cars over the jersey barriers between us and the track, but we had a monitor, we had our own private little corner of the track, and we had the sound of turbocharged V6s — that’s all we needed for 90 minutes of insanely intense racing.
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You’ve probably already learned about what happened — George Russel, who’d been absolutely crushing it during qualifying, continued to crush it during the race. Lewis Hamilton, who had been struggling due to rear grip issues, did what Hamilton does: He kicked major butt, arriving in second place. The beloved Carlos Sainz, who had done great in quals, rounded up the podium.
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British Racer Lando Norris, who was really the only one who could have taken the driver’s championship trophy from Max Verstappen, ended up in sixth, just behind Max. He needed to beat Max by three points to stay in contention, meaning Max ended up taking home the trophy, as many expected:
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I walked back to the hotel with my eBay Motors friends, and saw fireworks erupt, first over the stadium, and then all over the city:
I Was An Imposter, But A Welcome Imposter
I grew up in an army family, moving around every 2-3 years. This was pretty stressful for my brothers and me, as being the “new kid” at school all the time was honestly terrifying. But the truth is, nothing was more terrifying to me than going to college at an out-of-state, state-school. You see, when I was in elementary and high school, I was a new-kid among new-kids. Everyone was in the same boat; their parents had been stationed at that base sometime in the last couple of years, and plenty of them were brand new, just like I was. This opened everyone up to making new friends instead of clique-ing up, because everyone knew they, too, had been the “new kid” not long ago.
College felt different; the kids at the University of Virginia were coming in with friends they’d had since childhood, and here I was, a kid from a public school in Kansas, all alone. Never have I felt less welcome than my freshman year of college.
The Las Vegas Grand Prix reminded me more of my army-brat experiences in that, yes, I had no clue what the hell was going on — I didn’t know the drivers, I didn’t know the teams, I didn’t know the cars, I definitely didn’t know any of the engineers/technicians, I didn’t know many of the rules, I didn’t know the tracks; I knew nothing. But it becomes clear to anyone attending a Formula 1 race just how enormous an influence Netflix’s Drive To Survive has had on the rapid growth of the sport stateside.
So many people told me they had only gotten into F1 in the last couple of years, and the level of enthusiasm with which they taught me new things about the sport is something I’d never experienced before. More than anything, I noticed that most people didn’t just want to tell me about the teams and cars and rules and standings and other race-related facts — they wanted to tell me about the drivers. They wanted to tell me all about who was the underdog, who was a nice guy and who was a villain, who had screwed whom, who had which wife, what nice things they’ve done in their personal lives, what scandals they’d been involved in, and on and on.
It was clear that one Netflix show had gotten many thousands of Americans to invest in the people behind the sport, and not simply the sport itself. It’s something I’ve learned during my time as a car journalist — you want people to see you not as some faceless entity but as an organization of individuals with different personalities, flaws, and dreams.
This ultra-humanized sport had drawn in so many people from all walks of life, and though many of the folks at the race were all fairly well-off (since they could drop a grand on a race), they were far from gatekeepers. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that, if you’re trying to get into a major sport in 2024, F1 may be the most welcoming of them all.
Topshot image credit: F1
Alright David, what do I have to do to get you to Daytona or Bristol for a Cup race?
YAY! I love F1. It’s the most fun weekend at COTA, IMHO, just because everyone’s so excited about everything. It’s a nerd weekend. A weekend for nerds. It’s just the best.
I’m still kicking myself for not buying the Bottass calendar, though.
I’d also recommend digging into the wild engineering behind those cars. You’d probably get a kick out of that. Scarbs and F1Technical are good ones if you ever wanna go down that rabbit hole.
Race tracks are usually pretty friendly places, no one cares if you’re a grizzled veteran or a new fan. I’ve only been to one F1 race, Austin 2019, but it was a fantastic experience. IndyCar is even more fun, everyone is super friendly and the amount of access for the fans is crazy compared to F1.
Boy those empty fanzone scenes are a huge departure from what you would see at Circuit of the Americas in Austin which runs during the day and seems to be jammed all the time.
I love the awful blurry phone pics of the race cars.
You can bluff in F1 with some careful phrases, when somebody talks about a driver you can just say ‘ well he’s certainly not Senna’ and if the conversation comes to you ‘ I miss the driving style of Gilles Villeneuve’ or ” I think Jean Alesi was underated ” and if really pressed mention that you really liked the cigarette company liveries, and run
“Did you see that outrageous display last night?” works for all sorts of sports.
Bonus Jerry Perez content in paddock slide 3!
I have attended an F1 race once, in Monza 2013. As a lifelong F1 fan the main things you get out of being at the track yourself vs. watching the race from the telly is:
– The atmosphere is just awesome. So many people around the globe gathered together for love of one thing: F1 racing. Tifosi are especially devoted and it is cool to see the whole track area, which is actually like a huge park, full of fans.
– Just the freaking speed. My seat was at the end of the main straight, and seeing the cars swerwing, drafting, defending and attacking while going 360 kph was wild!
– The sound. 2013 was last year of naturally aspirated V8:s and I can tell those things were LOUD. Like top fuel dragster loud, and they were revving up to 18,000 rpm! (McLarens had shorter gearing or higher top speed than others that year, as they were hitting the rev limiter.) And at that speed even the cars ripping through air sounded cool and violent.
– One can actually see cars and drivers quite close, or at least could back then. I attended the track area at Thursday when one could walk freely at the track, pit straight etc. I saw Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg about ten feet away and saw also Williams team practising pit stops right next to me. Also after the race I managed to get quite close to the podium ceremony, which let me see Alonso, Webber and Vettel celebrating and again the atmosphere when running at the main straight to get good position close to the podium in middle of like 50,000 fans is something you won’t get anywhere else.
I’d love to go to another race some year when I have the money and the time again.
Glad you enjoyed it! I’ve only been into F1 for about half this season but my son has been here to hold my hand and explain what’s going on. A while back someone had said F1 is a bit like a soap opera and that turned me off from it. I wish it hadn’t because I am really enjoying the sport with my son and daughter. I recently learned Max is a cat person, which takes some of the sting out of his dominance on track. Even if you don’t go all-in and start learning everything about everyone it’s still fun to watch cars take turns at 150mph/4.5g. There’s just so much to learn about everything surrounding F1 that it can kinda draw you in even if you’re not trying.
Thank you for such an engaging and humanizing report. I come to today’s F1 from a position as outside as your own – my point of reference is Road & Track race reports in the 80s and early 90s by people like Rob Walker. I checked out for a while during the high-speed-lapping-parade era, then came back. I remember where I was when I read that Senna had died. I eventually left for good as one can’t pay attention to everything. I was invited to the Montreal GP around 2010 by a vendor at work – an opportunity that was impossibly tantalizing but also tantalizingly impossible due to ethics rules. I watched the Drive To Survive phenomenon grow; I tried to watch a season of the show, and just couldn’t. So here I am in 2024 where, as car racing, F1 is inherently far more interesting to me than, say, any sportsball, but I know as little about it as I do of those other spots. So I’m either there next to David. I enjoyed his introduction to a race weekend.
On a side note, I was struck by David’s description of how excluded he felt at engineering school. I went to a state school (Georgia Tech) as an in-state student but felt as welcome, if not more, than I had felt at my private high school.. Perhaps it was finding my home immediately in Formula SAE, but everyone who wanted to learn was as welcome as everyone el
The smartest thing the FIA did was allow the show drive to survive to have so much access to the teams, drivers and key people of F1. That show 100% converted me to a fan of Fseries racing.
I agree that the way to watch F1 is on TV, there are only a couple of tracks I’d like to go to, to watch an F1 race – CoTA because if you can get a good spot in the turn 1 bleachers you can see the whole track. Another would be Spa and that crazy uphill turn just off the pits/start line. Lastly – Australia, just because it’s in Australia and I want to go there!
No question F1 has become a media circus/celeb event/rich people’s sport but it’s also pretty fun, and this year has been one of the best in a very long time. I think 2025 with the Hamster moving to Ferrari and 2026 with the new engine rules might turn out to be pretty fun too.
My only criticism of the TV broadcasts is the incessant talking by the commentators – they just need to take a breath now and then and just let us watch the action!
I really miss the Bob Varsha years of covering F1. Him, Hobbs and Matchett were gold.
Accidentally got a photo of a voluptuous woman behind the food counter, I see. It looks like fun, provided you go as you did, with a full ride and access to all the cool stuff
David brought back memories of the F-1 races I attended. The first, when I was very, very young, was the USGP at Riverside Raceway in 1960. No real barriers to speak of (snow fencing, mostly — and Stirling Moss, Jack Brabham, Phil Hill (not, alas, in a Ferrari), Innes Ireland, Jim Hall, and the rest. Also got to see the Lotus and BRM cars being driven to the track early Sunday morning.
Then, all the F-1 races run at Long Beach. That was a lot more expensive (two-day passes and paddock access brought the total hit for me and my ex-wide into the low three figures, IIRC), and a lot noisier. Lauda, Villeneuve, Lafitte, Jabouille, Arnoux and a host of others. The cars were still recognizable, but the barriers made most of my photos Tracy-esque. Still, I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.
Not sure today’s Mega-Event would grab me.
“my ex-wide…” Freudian slip?
My lips are sealed….
I think you mean installations? Or is installments also used? I’m not a native speaker but I studied arts and worked in lots of installation art projects, and I could swear I never heard/read “art installment” before.
Only when a barricade is set up around it. Best leave monument erections alone.
“Installments” is incorrect unless the artwork is financed over time.
there’s something called the imposter syndrome… to quote wikipedia…”the subjective experience of perceived self-doubt in one’s abilities and accomplishments compared with others, despite evidence to suggest the contrary”
but seriously… you’re an expert on cars, just not those, nothing imposterish about it.
When I went to the Long Beach Gran Prix in the 70s I got a Row 11 seat (which was cheaper than rows 1-5) in the front straight bleachers. Naturally, I assumed I would be 11 rows back/up, but I learned the rows were numbered top to bottom. So I was four rows from the front, which meant I — like you — could see only the tops of the cars, which is why my seat was less expensive. There were no monitors in those days. So I spent most of the race standing at gaps in the fencing and barriers, or where I could see them coming down the hill. Back then F1 was more affordable, more accessible, and far less of a circus.
Still too many turns on that track. Las Vegas Boulevard goes alongside I-15 all the way to the state line at Primm, that alone should be the course. It’s dirt most of the way from Jean to Primm, so use the “full wet” tires.
Vegas to Ren—er, California, haha.
If you’re looking for a new sport may I recommend professional road cycling. All the wacky engineering of F1. You want long discussions on tire width, and wheel depth you got it! All the character drama of NBA. Riders mutiny against their teams kinda often! The strategy of chess, but if the Knight could cramp. Almost no rules during the race, but you best believe, there is a rule about sock height! It’s an over complicated wacky adventure, and everyone has sick tans.
Also. because I cannot resist being an asshole:
I’m glad they captured your interest. It’s to your credit that they did.
And it’s good that you found things that turned you on.
pft! Ludarcris concerns!
yeah, ludarcrous! I mean ludicrous.
Some of the tall structures were there probably to keep people from watching the race for free. At least that is my take from reading about other races in close proximity to places where just by looking out the window one could watch the race.
Yeah I remember reading about that last year. A lot of barriers around the city to keep the riff raff from getting a peek at the race.
Yeeeeeah, this and the scheduling-for-Europe-not-America kinda turned me off of the Vegas race, but my friend who lives there had a blast last year, so I really wanna take him up on his offer to crash on his couch some year. Might as well. I do love that fans found a way to peek through some of the dumb barriers anyway, though.
Who is Jacob? Is that his real name?
Whoever he is, he at least could see an entire car instead of just the tops of the racers’ heads. I was lucky enough to go the Canadian Grand Prix a few years ago and had access to the Paddock Club, so had a panaoramic view of the straight and the pits were right below me. I learned the following: How many close-up pit stops can you watch before your attention might wander to the buffet? Maybe three. Is the final straight a good view? It is not, you want a view of a slow corner at the end of a straight and the exit of said corner so you can see the drivers working and some passing. I’m a fan of F1 and the track experience was fun, but the TV experience is where to see the racing.
I have NO IDEA why people sit on the main straight. Unless you want to see pit stops that badly or maybe a distant view of the podium celebration, all you’re going to see is cars streaking by. Which, even as a motorsports fan, is interesting for only so long.
You gotta get in the corners, that’s where everything happens.
Oh, and David, if you thought this was fun, you really ought to get to Road America for the IndyCar race. It will change you.
Good to know. I’ve never been to a race, but I have family near Road America so I would definitely like to get over there for a race sometime.
This is why I love endurance races so much: I have time to hike around and experience different vantage points.
Send David to Le Mans next!
That’d be me. The company I work for oversees safety for LVGP, and I ran into Mr. DT during the race. Those shots were taken from a pedestrian overpass into one of the attendee zones, and one of the few places they didn’t mask from view. Still tough to get a shot, but better than looking through multiple layers of fence/jersey barrier/people’s heads.
This has been a great read that I’ve found very interesting as I also felt like an outsider at first when I got really interested in following F1. It’s even far surpassed NCAA FB and NFL as my #2 and #3. The big change that got me involved was when Liberty Media bought the rights from Bernie, and while they’re still jerks as far as taking things down they don’t like or approval with copyright requests or litigation over-aggressively like Nintendo, they completely turned the model on its head from being a gate-keeper attitude of “well if you didn’t pay to come to the race or our subscription, why should you even be entitled to know anything happened”, to “hey check out some of the really cool stuff that happened, maybe you should watch a full race”. Along with this was actually getting it televised, free(ish, you needed basic cable, but not a paid channel or package), making a big push on youtube with their highlights, and the end result is it seemed like an overall environment that wanted to bring new people in. I think the TV broadcasts are so well done that people criticize them for specific things they’ve done, instead of the more generic “%#@#@ why does NBC have the rights to this this year” type of criticisms.
The one thing that never clicked with me though was Drive to Survive though, I think I got through 3 episodes and already knowing a lot of background it just seemed too heavily edited to invent conflict to make it look like a stereotypical “oh my god we have to weld this popcorn maker to the back of the truck and get to the halfway point in the Baja 1000 before the racers for our party or your and my wife will leave us and sell the shop” reality tv show garbage.
(As an aside, F1 is the only sporting event I’ll regularly try to work my schedule around to watch, but nothing beats the 24 hours of Daytona. You just have to take it in 30 minute doses every 3-6 hours.)
You never got more than a mile from the airport or left the resort corridor. The private equity that runs the Strip loves F1. The 2.3 million people who live in the metro area… maybe ask some of them how they feel next time.
I did, when I was at SEMA a few weeks back. It’s a pain in the arse for many, for sure.
Very nicely written, David. I think you really captured it! Great pictures too. Personally, I don’t quite get the appeal of spending silly money to be ON the track for the 4 seconds of cars whizzing by, and watching the rest on TV, but I am a cheap SOB. I feel like you’d almost be better off in the closest high-rise hotel that overlooks the whole track – but I can only imagine how much those rooms go for.
BTW – as one who went to four different schools in the course of his college/post grad career – that sucks about UVA. The one year I had to live at home and commute to a different school (long story) I felt like that. Commuting leaves you out of all the fun social aspects of college, leaving just the HARD WORK aspects of it. Yuck. Almost as bad as modern remote learning, but with the added bonus of having to drive there and find a damned parking space on campus!
My most fun year of college was my freshman year. Which is why I did not end up returning to that school, and more-or-less started over again after taking a year off. Why yes, you CAN get a 1.3GPA as someone who doesn’t drink, once you find out how cheap student ski passes to Sugarloaf are. 🙂
I had a high school friend who went through that exact freshman experience in CO. Not sure if he ever figured it out like you did.
All it took was taking a year off and working the sorts of jobs that having ONLY a HS diploma qualifies you for to make you realize how critical a college degree is. Even in the late 80’s, $6-7hr didn’t get you very far, even living in your grandparent’s basement. Excellent motivation to get my shit together.
The politicians that run UVA’s “Board of Visitors” have mandated that 2/3 of the undergrads should be in-state. It is actually a huge pain in the ass, especially since the state currently provides only a nominal amount of support to the University, and having a more diverse class is really beneficial for the students. (Not only while in school – For instance if you are a Civil Engineer working in New York, wouldn’t it be great to know another engineer/alum local to the area who knows where to place or source excess fill, or if you are a manager, knowing someone from Korea to help you navigate the local sourcing options).
The thing is, though, that Virginia is a big place (with 8.7 million people) and, even with this level of in-state students, incoming students should end up not really knowing many other people on grounds because the admission office does try for a decent geographical spread – However the incoming students can ask to be assigned to the same dorm or even the same room (or at least this is how it used to be), and this can create cliques that can make others feel like outsiders. Then this is perpetuated a bit because the Greek system of Fraternities and Sororities house a large chunk of the upperclassmen, and often the high school friends end up in the same house – and these houses dominate the social ecosystem.
David should have quickly found the Engineering School to be a bit different than the College and he should have felt less of an outsider once he got to know a few Toolies – who tend not to be as clique-y. There are also lots of clubs where you can join and meet/make new friends.
While it is no longer quite as strong a culture as it used to be, Charlottesville and UVA are culturally aligned with the Old South – not all that far removed from Jim Crow, and this can be a shock for those coming from more progressive regions of the country – and yes, Middle Kansas near an Army base is going to be much more progressive than C’Ville was (it does seem to be getting more progressive).
Why to go see a concert when you can see a live DVD? Or why go out to nature when one can watch a nature document from TV? It is the experience of witnessing something with one’s own eyes and ears and being middle of it, in case of F1 with thousands of fans that share the same passion for the sport as I do.
It is becoming less accessible for the common man…
Hard to see much without special VIP passes these days.
I very rarely go to concerts due to the insane costs (and insane volume levels all too often), I would rather have the DVD – then I can experience it over and over. Not really big on nature either, to be honest, but at least you can ACTUALLY experience that, usually for free other than the cost to get there. There are plenty of things that I enjoy in person, but rarely do those things involve paying hundreds to thousands for the entry ticket, and then overpriced concessions to boot.
Sports fandom is generally lost on me as a rule. Playing a sport is one thing, but just watching others do it? And paying stupid money to be able to BARELY see it in person? Just like F1, you can see it better on TV 99% of the time. Silliness that comes under the heading of a fool and their money…
I have friends who are very well connected in MGM casinos. Last year I had the extreme good fortune of being invited to stay in a corner suite in the Cosmo overlooking most of the main straight. I believe it was about $10,000 for the race weekend.
During the safety car hot laps on Wednesday night, I got to meet and hang-out with Tanner Faust (another really good, normal guy) who was introduced as a friend of my friend’s friend. It felt like I was getting Punk’d, since I was the only person (aside from my friend’s friend) who knew who he was. It was pretty cool just hanging out, talking cars and he really is just a really cool dude to talk to.
I also got to watch free practice and qualifying in a pretty exclusive watch party in the Cosmo penthouse which I heard was north of $1M for the weekend where I was somehow the resident subject matter expert during practice (might have had something to do with my friend introducing me as “this is my friend Jason, he’s pretty much an expert on F1…” I guess it happens when you’re a fan of 20+ years). While there for qualifying, I was introduced to and had a good conversation with Jost Capito (former Williams team boss, and generally really good guy) which was extra cool as a Williams fan. To say it was a memorable experience would be an almost criminal understatement.
*the point of all that was mainly to illustrate just how much those overlooking rooms cost. As for the rest… How could I not share that story?
Very cool! It’s always interesting to meet a celeb and find out they are pretty ordinary folks – I met Patrick Dempsey at a car show in Maine and had a great conversation with him.
And about how in$ane I figured it would be.