Misplaced Pages

American Ninja Warrior: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 02:33, 10 January 2010 edit65.96.106.168 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Revision as of 02:38, 10 January 2010 edit undo65.96.106.168 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit →
Line 2: Line 2:
'''''American Ninja Warrior''''' is a spin-off of '']'' and began on December 12, 2009 in Los Angeles, California and the top 10 move on to compete at Mt. Midoriyama. '''''American Ninja Warrior''''' is a spin-off of '']'' and began on December 12, 2009 in Los Angeles, California and the top 10 move on to compete at Mt. Midoriyama.



|1st season differences from Sasuke == '''1st season differences from Sasuke''' ==



The 1st Season of American Ninja Warrior has a few notable differences between the American version & the Japanese ("Sasuke") version. They are The 1st Season of American Ninja Warrior has a few notable differences between the American version & the Japanese ("Sasuke") version. They are
-In stage 1, competitors actually compete against each other for the 30 fastest times to advance to stage 2, unlike in Japan where competitors just need to complete the course in a certain time limit. The American version sets a limit of 30 competitors advancing to stage 2. There's no official limit of competitors for stage 1 stated whereas in Japan, only 100 competitors can attempt stage 1. -In stage 1, competitors actually compete against each other for the 30 fastest times to advance to stage 2, unlike in Japan where competitors just need to complete the course in a certain time limit. The American version sets a limit of 30 competitors advancing to stage 2. There's no official limit of competitors for stage 1 stated whereas in Japan, only 100 competitors can attempt stage 1.

-Stage 2 is in reality an expanded version of stage 1. Again, competitors are competing against the course and each other for the best times to advance. Only 15 competitors with the best times advance to stage 3. -Stage 2 is in reality an expanded version of stage 1. Again, competitors are competing against the course and each other for the best times to advance. Only 15 competitors with the best times advance to stage 3.

-Stage 3 in the American version is essentially a version of army Boot camp. In stage 3, competitors have to complete 4 different tasks with the lowest combined time (consisting of carrying 10 bricks across a beach while being held back by bungie cords, carrying barrels over logs, hopping through tires, etc). Only the 10 competitors with the lowest times win a trip and a chance to compete at Mt. Midoriyama in Japan. As such, there is no "final" stage in the American version. -Stage 3 in the American version is essentially a version of army Boot camp. In stage 3, competitors have to complete 4 different tasks with the lowest combined time (consisting of carrying 10 bricks across a beach while being held back by bungie cords, carrying barrels over logs, hopping through tires, etc). Only the 10 competitors with the lowest times win a trip and a chance to compete at Mt. Midoriyama in Japan. As such, there is no "final" stage in the American version.


Line 51: Line 55:


^William had to retire due to heat exuastion. ^William had to retire due to heat exuastion.


== '''Season 1 competitors performance at Mt. Midoriyama.''' ==

In stage 1 only Rich King, Levi Meeuwenberg and Brian Orosco successfully completed stage 1. The majority of the American Ninja Warrior competitors ran out of time. Levi Meeuwenberg was the only American competitor to advance to stage 3, but once again was defeated by the cliff hanger.






Revision as of 02:38, 10 January 2010

This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "American Ninja Warrior" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

American Ninja Warrior is a spin-off of Sasuke and began on December 12, 2009 in Los Angeles, California and the top 10 move on to compete at Mt. Midoriyama.


1st season differences from Sasuke

The 1st Season of American Ninja Warrior has a few notable differences between the American version & the Japanese ("Sasuke") version. They are -In stage 1, competitors actually compete against each other for the 30 fastest times to advance to stage 2, unlike in Japan where competitors just need to complete the course in a certain time limit. The American version sets a limit of 30 competitors advancing to stage 2. There's no official limit of competitors for stage 1 stated whereas in Japan, only 100 competitors can attempt stage 1.

-Stage 2 is in reality an expanded version of stage 1. Again, competitors are competing against the course and each other for the best times to advance. Only 15 competitors with the best times advance to stage 3.

-Stage 3 in the American version is essentially a version of army Boot camp. In stage 3, competitors have to complete 4 different tasks with the lowest combined time (consisting of carrying 10 bricks across a beach while being held back by bungie cords, carrying barrels over logs, hopping through tires, etc). Only the 10 competitors with the lowest times win a trip and a chance to compete at Mt. Midoriyama in Japan. As such, there is no "final" stage in the American version.

|Finalists

|1st Competition

Winning Finalists

1st Place: Brian Orosco

2nd Place: Levi Meeuwenburg

3rd Place: Travis Furlanic

4th Place: Paul Darnell

5th Place: Rich King

6th Place: Caine Sinclair

7th Place: Shane Daniels

8th Place: Geoff Iida

9th Place: Joop Katana

10th Place: Rick Huelga

Losing Finalists

11th Place: Andrew Karsen

12th Place: Ryan Cousins

13th Place: David Campbell

14th Place: Sean Morris

15th Place: William Spencer^



^William had to retire due to heat exuastion.


Season 1 competitors performance at Mt. Midoriyama.

In stage 1 only Rich King, Levi Meeuwenberg and Brian Orosco successfully completed stage 1. The majority of the American Ninja Warrior competitors ran out of time. Levi Meeuwenberg was the only American competitor to advance to stage 3, but once again was defeated by the cliff hanger.


Stub icon

This television-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: