Junkyard Wars Tour
ArtEnvironment writes "Junkyard Wars coming to a... MALL near you!?
Here's your chance to experience Junkyard Wars firsthand, or at least a glorified pinewood, er I mean JUNK derby! You can build unique gravity-racers and compete on a 'special effects-filled', mini race track. In addition, you can watch clips from the show and possibly even win prizes, yay!"
"Seeded" is not the same as "staged". It would be a really crappy show if they had to build boats, but nothing in the JY would float! They seed the JY with many things that can be used to help the teams, but the teams have to put together this junk in a useful fashion.
For instance, planting a long chain isn't the same as handing over all the parts to build a wrecking ball. The seeded stuff is still usually junk. The few exceptions are stuff like airplane motors, which is more of a safety precaution.
The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
One of the teams that competed earlier on in the series, The N.E.R.D.S., have their thoughts on this here.
The short answer is that yes, there are parts there that one wouldn't find in a normal junkyard due to safety concerns, and that yes, there are a higher number of "good junk" than the average real world junk heap, but honestly it's not like it's still not difficult as hell.
The "Junkyard" concept is only that, a concept designed to hold the show together, not an absolute reality that must be adheared to or else.
The point of the show is to get the viewer to watch the little animated bits where they tell you how a certain piece of technology works (or might not work, in some cases). The rest is just hooks to get the viewer interested.
Ita erat quando hic adveni.
Junkyard Wars will never be the same as the original Scrapheap Challenge. JW doesn't have Rob Llewellyn (sp?) for one thing.