
Their creations are the reason that Blown Away will see popularity. They are fostering a warm feeling, and capturing the hearts of viewers. Netflix should put more money behind the creators on Blown Away. Something is lacking, and it may be a matter of extending the episode time for more footage. The process as it stands, is leaving the viewer wanting. Or perhaps at elimination, the artist is given the opportunity to defend their work. I wish more information were given to the viewer on why each piece was chosen. The judges critique the pieces in a separate showroom and only ask the contestants a few follow-up questions before announcing the winner and loser of that week's challenge. Lack of Contestant Involvement in Judging Viewers have no idea how the artists get to the final product.

Final creations seem to appear out of nowhere with no middle, or beginning sight. One of the biggest concerns for me is the lack of documentation of the pieces. Though I liked the editor's character building, they fall short in other ways. "I'll live to blow another day." - Andi Kovel Season Two Contestant on Blown Away By Will Porada on Unsplash

Somehow the art is enough to circumvent the cheesiness and make it something rare and beautiful. The creators of this program make it special and irreplicable. The integrity of the creations by the contestants carry the show. Tegan Hamilton, who suffered an early elimination, also took to social media to display her skill.īlown Away is a light show that is easily digestible and borderline mindless. Luckily, artists like season two contestant Elliot Walker uploaded their own work to personal social media sites. There are barely any stills online, no cast photos of season two, coupled with little documentation of the pieces created on it. Unfortunately, the media budget for the show seems slim. In only a matter of hours, these individuals create evocative, awe-inspiring creations. Cat Burns The Quality of the Workįor a lackluster prize “worth 60,000,” so you know it isn’t cold hard cash- the contestants work incredibly hard. Her sacrifice to do what she loves pulled at my heart strings and made me a genuine fan of hers.Īll walks of life congregate to the glass blowing stage and I really enjoyed the lifestyle diversity of the group. Cat’s story resonated with me because she has an eye disease that progressively worsens and will eventually end her career. There are also contestants with softer sides like Brad Turner who calls himself the silent killer of the hot shop but spends his days as a stay-at-home dad.Ĭat Burns describes herself as “a farm girl from New Jersey who likes fire.” Cat prides herself on being an organic farmer and an avid composter. However, for me, the redemption came too late after several episodes of him degrading the others. The show does try to redeem Chris in later episodes by attempting to explain his attitude, showing some of what he has overcome. Bouncing from one beautiful creation to another. Chris can replicate items in near-perfect fashion and glides through the challenges with ease. He makes it obvious that he is well known in the glass blowing world, and his work speaks for itself. Most challenges he's taught the special guest in the past. ContestantsĬhris Taylor, who has been in the glass-blowing game longer than some of the contestants have been alive, makes it a point to belittle the competition. I also love how the editors build the world and give the contestants a personal feel. Each contestant competing for a prize worth 60,000 dollars is extremely talented. Sarcastic and overly confident assholes, drama, and competition. For example, the winner of each challenge is called “the best in blow.” (I mean cmon).īlown Away has breathtaking and innovative art. The show could benefit from acknowledging the innuendos and playing off them.

I pressed play and the rest is history.įormer Big Brother contestant Nick Uhas hosts the show, seemingly unaware of how often he says glory hole (or how enthusiastically). Intrigued, I clicked and noticed it was a glass blowing competition. Scrolled across the middle in red lettering read: “Blown Away” I was perusing the casual viewing section on Netflix and came across a show with two glass figures, one red, the other blue, leaning against one another.
