Yes, I have watched the program; its interesting and sad at the same time.
Remember this is a TV production.
They work on interesting cars and paint is usually incredible.
Sad because it is another scripted, edited glimpse about a subject
we are interested in and the editor is just trying to make entertainment.
I cringe every time I see them use a grinder on the cars right after it
comes out of the paint shop, that does not seem very professional to me.
If you watch closely you might see segments the don't seem right; I think
that is the editor juggling the time line of the build around. These are 3
week builds and filming crammed into a one hour time slot. Have you
noticed that one guy has bought 4 or 5 of these cars; I'm beginning to think
that guy is the producer or one of the backers of this program.
At least its not as bad as American Hot Rod. That production
company must be paying Boyd some really big buck to portray him as one of
the worst employers in the country on national and possibly world TV. I
know I would be asking for at least a 7 figure dollar amount to be a
complete jerk like that. I'm surprised anyone would work for him after
seeing that program.
MHO
Ron Fraser
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-tigers@autox.team.net [mailto:owner-tigers@autox.team.net] On
Behalf Of Thomas Witt
Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2006 2:32 PM
To: tigers@autox.team.net
Subject: RE: And while on the Subject of Clones...
Same subject, different angle and kind of goes along with Dr. Moonstone's
"What have I done," Alger story.
Has anyone watched "Wrecks to Riches" on the tube. Kind of makes me cringe
when "Barry" (forgot his last name) seems to hack together "clones" with
reckless abandon. Regardless of disclosure (and I'm not sure there even is)
sadly it presents the public with the attitude that it is OK.
Tom
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