TV Review: Nova - "Marathon Challenge"

This week's episode of Nova takes something of a different tack than the usual episodes. Gone are stories of history, great discoveries, and cutting edge science. Instead, this week's episode focuses on running the Boston Marathon.

Months before the event, Nova put together a marathon team representing a cross-segment of society. There are 13 members of the team, some in decent condition, but the vast majority, if not overweight, are "over-fat." These "over-fat" people, while they weigh an average amount, have far too high a percentage of body fat. This is, the show tells us, a more and more common occurrence in our society and something that our marathoners hope they are able to rectify.

The 13 members of Team Nova, as the group is called, are followed through nine months of training. Each member does solo runs during the week and then on the weekend they get together for a group run. They are directed in their training by their head coach, Don Megerle (director of Tufts' Annual President's Marathon Challenge) and Uta Pippig, a former Olympian and three-time Boston Marathon winner. Their progress is also monitored by doctors and nutritionists every step of the way.

The narrator explains early on in the episode that Nova's producers have been told to expect that nearly half of their team may not make the marathon (this is why they follow so many people). However, in the end, only one member of the group drops out. The woman in question did not quit of her own choice, but rather due to a recurring leg injury that prevented her from being able to run.

While this fact is a testament to the fortitude and luck of the members of the team, as well as the excellent work of the coaching staff that trains them, it makes the story of each individual member harder to tell. There simply isn't the time necessary to tell 13 individual stories over the course of an hour long episode without losing the overall narrative. Wisely, the show chooses to sacrifice some individual stories in favor of the overarching narrative. This is the better choice to make, but it means that there are people on Team Nova who speak nary a word. It certainly isn't Nova's fault that their runners are successful (it is what they hoped for), but it does hurt the storytelling.

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Article Author: Josh Lasser

Josh Lasser, formerly known as "TV and Film Guy," and complete with a Masters Degree in Critical Studies in said areas, gives his opinions on TV, Film, and Entertainment in general. All of which he does in a shameless attempt to try to get paid to do the exact same thing. …

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  • 1 - Josh Lasser

    Oct 29, 2007 at 1:49 pm

    Congratulations! This article has been selected for syndication to Advance.net, which is affiliated with newspapers around the United States.

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