Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dayton catfish noodlers to appear in ‘Amazing Race’

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

“The Amazing Race” debuts on CBS on Wednesday night with two best friends from Dayton among the teams angling for a $1 million cash prize. Cody Buell and Nathan Worthingto­n, both employed by La-Z-Boy, were recruited for the travel competitio­n series after casting agents saw an Instagram account of their favorite pastime: catfish noodling.

“I hung up on them several times because I thought it was a scam,” Buell said of the initial phone calls from reps of the reality show. “I finally got curious and talked to them. … After I checked it out, my jaw was on the ground.”

Worthingto­n said he thinks producers saw the entertainm­ent value in having people on the show who catch catfish with their bare hands, a sport known as noodling or catfisting (note the second “t” in the spelling).

“I think they were interested for the excitement of it,” he said. “They wanted a little bit of craziness.”

The show’s premise is that teams of two people with a relationsh­ip to each other (often family members, friends or co- workers) will compete with other teams in a race around the world. The race is split into legs, and each leg requires teams to decipher clues, navigate in foreign lands, interact with locals, perform physical and mental challenges and find transporta­tion on a limited budget provided by the show. The goal is to arrive first at the end of each leg of the race to avoid the possibilit­y of being eliminated.

Filming of the 32nd season took place almost two years ago, from Nov. 10 to Dec. 3, 2018.

Worthingto­n said he initially dismissed the idea of being on the show because he didn’t think he could be gone from work that long or leave his wife and two children behind while he crisscross­ed the globe. His wife, Tiffany, convinced him it was “the opportunit­y of a lifetime,” he said, so he ventured into the HR department at La- Z- Boy with the unusual request for time off.

“Cody is in management. I work on the floor,” Worthingto­n said. “I thought he would have an easier time getting off. He told me to talk to the lady over human resources.”

When he told the HR director they had an opportunit­y to be on “Amazing Race,” she apparently had another

kind of reality show in mind, perhaps a singing competitio­n.

“She said, ‘You mean you’re going to sing “Amazing Grace”?’ I told her that might be an interestin­g show, but I don’t know if anybody would watch it,” he said, laughing at the recollecti­on.

Once he cleared up the confusion, she approved their time off.

Worthingto­n, 39, and Buell, 33, have been friends for eight years, since Buell moved to Dayton from Paint Lick, Kentucky, to work as La- Z- Boy’s environmen­tal and sustainabi­lity manager. Buell said he asked during his job interview if anyone at the company could take him catfish noodling. He describes himself as an adventurou­s person who has tried horse wrangling, bull riding, hang- gliding and scuba diving among sharks.

“I’d always seen noodling and always wanted to do it,” he said. “When I interviewe­d, I asked if anybody there did that. They introduced me to Nathan.”

Worthingto­n said he’s been noodling for about 11 years now. His previous noodling companions were also coworkers, but one lost interest and another moved away. Buell arrived in February 2013, just before noodling season began.

Catfish spawn in spring and summer in secluded spots along riverbanks. The noodler sticks a hand into those nesting holes to try to entice the catfish to protect its eggs or defend the hole. Once the catfish bites, the noodler grabs the catfish by the gills and pulls it out.

Buell said he and Worthingto­n are catchand-release noodlers. “I actually did my second master’s degree thesis on the bio-accumulati­on of toxins in catfish,” he said. “It’s all catch and release.”

Contestant­s are contractua­lly sworn to secrecy about the outcome of the show, but a few bits of informatio­n have been released by the network.

The conte s tants began the race at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles and traveled first to Trinidad and Tobago.

“Eleven countries and 20-something cities in 30 days,” said Worthingto­n. “Whatever you can carry on your back is what you have for the month. When [host Phil Keoghan] says go, you are on your way. If you’re going in the wrong direction, you just have to figure it out.”

Both he and Worthingto­n said they enjoyed the experience and still keep in touch with their fellow contestant­s.

“The people were great. I cannot say it enough. I’ve said it to every person I can. I preach it high and low. Every person — every contestant, every member of the production crew, every member of the film crew — they were sweet, they were loving, they were kind. They’re all like family to me,” Buell said.

He and Worthingto­n have made it to one of the two reunions the contestant­s have had since filming ended, “and we talk and text every day, the whole cast does,” Buell said.

“It ’ s amazing the people we got to meet, especially coming from a small town,” Worthingto­n said. “There were Olympic hurdlers and profession­al football players and profession­al volleyball players. We would have never had the opportunit­y to meet people like that. At first it was pretty intimidati­ng. As time went on, they just turned into friends.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY SONJA FLEMMING/ CBS ?? Nathan Worthingto­n, 39, left, and Cody Buell, 33, best friends and co-workers from Dayton are among the 11 teams competing for a $1 million prize in the 32nd season of “The Amazing Race,” premiering Wednesday night at 9 on CBS.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY SONJA FLEMMING/ CBS Nathan Worthingto­n, 39, left, and Cody Buell, 33, best friends and co-workers from Dayton are among the 11 teams competing for a $1 million prize in the 32nd season of “The Amazing Race,” premiering Wednesday night at 9 on CBS.

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