Bamazon (History Channel's version of Jungle Gold)

Ashman

Active Member
Silver Stacker
Eight out-of-work Alabama construction workers are locked in the fight of their lives, risking everything they've got on a long-shot chance to find gold in the Amazon jungle. The only problem: it's one of the most inaccessible and inhospitable places on the planet, filled with aggressive jaguars, venomous snakes, malarial mosquitoes and countless miles of impenetrable mud. They'll need all the Southern grit, pride and muscle they've got to survive the jungleand strike it rich.

It's a bold gambit by their leader, Alabama real estate mogul Tim Evans. When Tim's business crashed a couple years ago, he decided to use what was left of his fortune to ship tons of heavy equipment down to Guyana, South America, and lease a piece of land in the country's treacherous, poorly mapped northwest interior. All his research told him that the land held massive veins of gold. But getting at itin a place with no roads or infrastructuremeant he'd need all the help he could get.

Tim reached out to seven of his most trusted former employees, guys who'd been with him through thick and thin. They had been broke and out of work for so long that Tim's offer to share profits of a gold mining venture seemed too good to pass up. So what if none of them knew the first thing about mining? So what if most of them had never been out of the country before? They're Alabama boys, and that means they know how to get things done.

But they don't have much time, and the odds are stacked against them. In six weeks, the rainy season will end, and the rivertheir only way in or outwill become impassable.

Over the next six weeks, these men will have to find a way to work together on a mission many say is impossible. But don't underestimate a crew of determined 'Bama boys on the hunt for gold in the Amazon.

The premise is virtually identical to Jungle Gold, except they go to South America (Guyana) instead of Africa (Ghana) and they seem (from the first episode atleast) to be better funded and slightly better organized.

Somehow I missed this show and only just came across it today, the first 5 episodes are out already and it is currently airing weekly.
 
I've watched all the episodes, and the owner/ boss off this whole operation is an egotistical ass! He loves to talk in third person, and because he is putting up all the money he believes he can treat his workers with little respect. Those guys must be in real bad financial shape to put up with his antics.
 
The first 3 episodes are about getting their bulldozer through the jungle. Its ok but phoney of course. One of the guys gets "lost" in the jungle for 4 hours.....with a camera crew of course !
 
After watching a couple more episodes it is clearly as scripted as hell.

Seriously who goes trudging off into the Amazon jungle without a GPS or at the very very least a map and compass.

And as silvertail said the boss is a complete wanker, all the other guys are are covered in mud and sweat and out he comes all pristine (presumably from his satellite tv equipped, air-conditioned hut) to rip into them for not working hard enough.

I'll keep watching it though, just to see the gold if for nothing else.
 
^ Indeed, not unlike modern day colonialism. Westerners roll up to some impoverished 3rd world country, set about wrecking the landscape and then taking that country's gold home with them. I bet they pay little or no royalties for their gold also.
 
My favorite part of the show is becoming when ( the boss man Tim Evans) right hand man keeps getting his feeling hurt, then comes back with emotions need to to left at home, only to stomp out of camera view cussing because they give him no respect. The leaders of that show are a joke. If tim Evans was a self made millionaire, it has to be from slipping on some water in Walmart and sueing them. I haven't seen him portray a skill that wasn't crap!
 
So thankfully this season has now finally finished. 12 ounces was their total gold haul ! Given the excavator alone cost $250,000 and will be left in the jungle along with pumps, buildings and other costs, the expedition must have cost $500,000. The 12 ounces totaled about $17,000 so who knows how the shortfall is funded !
 
Thanks - only watched the first episode and was totally unimpressed by the boss - just saved me bothering to download the rest.
 
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