It’s Miami, and an inaugural race to boot. It’s not for the existing fans. Think it’s bad now? Just wait til your favorite “influencers” flood TikTok.
…And it’ll all be a net positive for the sport at the end of the day.
It’s Miami, and an inaugural race to boot. It’s not for the existing fans. Think it’s bad now? Just wait til your favorite “influencers” flood TikTok.
…And it’ll all be a net positive for the sport at the end of the day.
First year of Austin was a mess. Amenities weren’t really finished and GA areas were pretty raw.I'm worried the inaugural Vegas GP will end up like this, so I'll be looking at 2024 to possibly attend.
Helps to be a local, but they've changed the entry/exit strategy nearly every year, plus it's nearly as bad as Silverstone for just being in the middle of nowhere. Rumors have us not being on the calendar every year, likely moving to an every other year format soon. I suspect the three annual US GP's won't happen very often.Shiiiiiit, Austin is still a mess; getting to and from the track is a nightmare from what I've heard.
First year races are like first year of a new car, there ARE going to be issues unforeseen and addressed in later races. Have they released any projected ticket prices for Vegas yet?
You're not lying. I'm a divorced dad and made the mistake of not getting a notarized letter from my ex before attempting to cross the border from Upstate New York for the 2017 Canada GP with my sons. The Québécois agent examined my passport, eyeballed by sons, asked me to roll down the rear window, walks back to my oldest son in the rear seat, and his first words were, "Where's mommy?" (ugh)Spa is next for me. Been to Silverstone, Austin, Indy and Hockenheim. I hear Montreal is great too, but I’m not a fan of Canadian Customs Officers.
Yeah, sounds about right. I've been to something like 40 countries and Canada is the worst experience I've had with Customs. I had a college roommate get married in Ottawa, I was recently divorced, might have been deep into a drunken phase and have never been the best of planners. Large parts of this are at least partially my fault, but it was still a stupid experience.You're not lying. I'm a divorced dad and made the mistake of not getting a notarized letter from my ex before attempting to cross the border from Upstate New York for the 2017 Canada GP with my sons. The Québécois agent examined my passport, eyeballed by sons, asked me to roll down the rear window, walks back to my oldest son in the rear seat, and his first words were, "Where's mommy?" (ugh)
It took about 20 minutes of him peppering my sons with questions and having them call their mother and having her speak with the agent before they let us cross.
But the circuit, the weather, the city, the food and the racing were amazing, and I don't recall the prices being too ridiculous.
That's fucking outrageous for them to go through the computer.Yeah, sounds about right. I've been to something like 40 countries and Canada is the worst experience I've had with Customs. I had a college roommate get married in Ottawa, I was recently divorced, might have been deep into a drunken phase and have never been the best of planners. Large parts of this are at least partially my fault, but it was still a stupid experience.
So the plane lands, I hit Customs, they ask how long I'm there and what I'm doing there. I say a week, I'm here for a friend's wedding. They ask where I'm staying, where the wedding is, if I rented a car, etc. I say Ottawa, I don't really know the details, I have a rental car, but I don't remember which brand, I'll just start at the first in the line until someone knows who I am, I don't know where I'm staying, or where the wedding is, I'm just phoning my friend once I have the car and we'll meet up. They took me to "the room" and held me for three hours, asking all sorts of inane questions. Then they took me to another room and a guy was putting on rubber gloves. I told them I'd pay full price and fly my ass back to the US, they can keep their bad beer and poutine. They laughed and told me it was to check my laptop. Then they pulled up all of my photos, asked if the lady in lots of shots was my girlfriend, if the pics from Germany were mine (where I worked at the time), etc. It was the dumbest experience I've had for no real reason, they can keep their country, I'll go anywhere else.
I was pretty steamed, but also apparently three hours of detention and dull questions is my breaking point. I’m an accountant, not a marine.That's fucking outrageous for them to go through the computer.
I think I asked this before but if you don’t have cable how would you watch the race on Sunday?