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Tyler MacNiven

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Tyler Kingsley MacNiven is an American filmmaker and reality television contestant.

Tyler MacNiven
OccupationFilmmaker
TelevisionThe Amazing Race 9

Stanford University admission campaign

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MacNiven first received attention in 1998 when, while a senior at theWoodside High School inWoodside,California, he launched a political-style campaign to supplement his application toStanford University, where he had wanted to go since the seventh grade.[1] After turning in his early admission application, MacNiven held a press conference in front of Stanford'sBowman Alumni House. For the rest of the week, MacNiven and his volunteer staff of friends and family wore sandwich boards and passed out "Tyler MacNiven for Stanford Student" leaflets after school, among other traditional campaign activities.[2] MacNiven said, "There's so many outstanding people applying to Stanford these days that I actually want to be `out standing' in front of them, to show them that he really did have a passion to go there.[3] MacNiven was rejected. He said, "My goal was to make every possible effort, leaving no options untested. That's what the campaign was really about." He was told by the admissions officer that he was noticed and that his campaign was not detrimental, despite seeming foolish to many citizens.[1]

MacNiven graduated fromUC Santa Cruz with a BA in politics, completing semesters abroad inHungary and on aSemester at Sea, which has featured such great minds asFidel Castro among others.[4] He claims to have been the last student ofTom Lehrer.[5]

Kintaro Walks Japan

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In 2004, MacNiven walked the length ofJapan over 145 days. He created a one-hourdocumentary of the trek, titledKintaro Walks Japan. MacNiven cited three reasons for the journey. On his first trip to the country in 2002, he fell in love with the country and had to return. It was on this trip that a friend nicknamed him the "Kintarō," which means "Golden Boy," because of his blond hair. MacNiven hoped to win a girl over, but he ultimately went home without doing so.

Unable to find a distributor for the documentary of the trek, MacNiven burned 1,000DVDs and began hawking copies of the film on the streets of San Francisco and at a restaurant his father owns.[6] One day,George Strompolos, an executive from the nearbyGoogle campus, dropped by. "Dad showed the movie to him," MacNiven said. "He watched it and said, 'This is exactly what we need.'" Upon release, the film was averaging approximately 500 views a day atGoogle Video.[7]

Kintaro Walks Japan premiered at the Santa Cruz Film Festival in 2006 and was voted by the audience as "Best of Fest" and it received the highest winning vote in the 5-year history of the festival.[citation needed]

The Amazing Race

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Main article:The Amazing Race 9

In 2006, MacNiven appeared as a contestant on theninth edition of the Americantelevision seriesThe Amazing Race. He and his teammate,B.J. Averell, who MacNiven met on the study abroad program Semester at Sea four years earlier,[4] beat out ten other teams to win the show's$1 million prize over Eric & Jeremy. BJ & Tyler, as they were identified on the program, were nicknamed "thehippies" by the other teams.

BJ & Tyler came in last in two legs of the season, but both the legs were non-elimination legs.[8] HostPhil Keoghan said, "They enjoyed every single moment they were on this race, whether they were in first or in last. They kept their spirit all the way to the end."[9] "If it's this successful to be hippies, we might as well stay hippies," Tyler said at the finish line inColorado.[10] He also added, "BJ and I approached each country with wide eyes and enthusiasm and joy and a huge spirit of adventure and willing to share that with everybody we met. There's so much in this world. We might as well just take advantage of as much as we can and give back as much as we can and that's important. 'Cause that's how it all works."[11]

The Amazing Race 9 finishes

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  • Anunderlined blue placement with a double-dagger (‡) indicates that BJ and Tyler were the last to arrive at a pit stop in a non-elimination leg.
  • Agreen ƒ indicates that BJ and Tyler won the Fast Forward.

Roadblocks performed by MacNiven arebolded

EpisodeLegDestination(s)Detour choice (underlined)Roadblock performancePlacementNotes
11United StatesBrazilMotor head/Rotor headNo roadblock2nd of 11
22BrazilPress it/Climb itBJ1st of 10
33BrazilRussiaGermanyScrub/ScourTyler4th of 9[a]
4Break it/Slap itBJ2nd of 9
54GermanyItalyFoundry/LaundryTyler1st of 8
65ItalyBig fish/Little fishBJ2nd of 7
76ItalyGreeceHerculean effort/It's all Greek to meTyler5th of 6[b]
87GreeceOmanCamel/WatchtowerBJ5th of 5
98OmanAustraliaSand/SeaTyler3rd of 5
109AustraliaDry/WetBJ4th of 4
1110AustraliaThailandUsed fast forward1st of 4ƒ
1211ThailandJapanMaiden/MessengerTyler1st of 3
12JapanUnited StatesDrill it/Deliver itBJ1st of 3
Notes
  1. ^Leg 3 was a double-length leg, with two Detours and two Roadblocks, shown over two episodes. The placement listed in the top row reflect the order teams arrived at the leg's halfway point.
  2. ^BJ & Tyler initially arrived 5th, but were issued a 15-minute penalty for taking a bus instead of a train all the way to the Isthmos Train Station. This did not affect their placement.

References

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  1. ^ab"Stanford says no to Tyler MacNiven, but he's upbeat, may reapply later."The Almanac, December 23, 1998.
  2. ^Oxfeld, Jesse. "They'll Try Anything."Stanford Magazine, April/May 1999.
  3. ^Delevett, Peter. "High school senior `runs' for Stanford."Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, November 13, 1998.
  4. ^ab"BJ & Tyler." CBS.com.
  5. ^http://www.buckswoodside.com/stories/tomlehrer.shtml Tom Lehrer's Last Class
  6. ^"Gentry August 2014". RetrievedSeptember 20, 2018.
  7. ^White, Patrick. "Online filmmaking has arrivedArchived 2006-09-10 at theWayback Machine."Columbia News Service, February 14, 2006.
  8. ^Bayne, Richard J. "'Hippies' win 'Amazing Race'."Times Herald-Record, May 18, 2006.
  9. ^CBS. "'Team Hippie' Takes 'Amazing Race 9'."CBS News, May 18, 2006.
  10. ^"A frosty finish for 'The Amazing Race'."Chicago Tribune, May 17, 2006.
  11. ^"BJ & Tyler Win Million Dollar Prize."WISH-TV, May 18, 2006.

External links

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