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Amazing Ride

From reality TV to everyday life, a mother and son celebrate gratitude

Thirteen teams line up in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, for the start of “The Amazing Race.” (Photograph by Kit Karzen/CBS)
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March 1, 2025

Vicki Hillhouse

The energy was electrifying in the Activities & Recreation Center at Point Loma Nazarene University for the premiere of season 36 of “The Amazing Race.” Students gathered, and friends and family flew in to watch Resident Director Danny Butler and his mother, Angie, a middle school teacher, make their series debut in 2024.

It felt like half a lifetime to Danny since the duo set out on their reality television adventure, representing Walla Walla, Washington, in challenges around the globe against 12 other pairs with a        $1 million prize waiting for one team at the finish line. It had actually been a year and a half since filming ended.

Danny says holding the secrets of the season for so long was a grind. Everyone in the room wanted to know where in the world they went (Mexico, Colombia, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Barbados); what kinds of wild adventures they had (paragliding into Medellin, rally car racing in Cordoba, tracking down the childhood home of singer Rihanna in Bridgetown); and how far they made it (sixth place).

 

A Memorable Exit

But there was a much larger spoiler: Danny and Angie made series history in the eighth episode. Separated from their film crew in a Barbadian roundabout, they lost so much time in the wait to reunite and continue with the race that they were ultimately eliminated. Fans were reeling about the unprecedented loss, caused not by Danny and Angie’s actions but by decisions outside of their control.

 

Mother-and-son team Angie and Danny Butler race through Colombia on the 36th season of “The Amazing Race,” which aired in 2024. They paraglided into Medellin and, among other things, had to harvest and process a kilogram of ripe Arabica beans as one of their roadblock challenges. Photo by KT Karzen/CBS and Yuri Hasegawa/CBS

 

In the year since, their elimination is one of the most asked-about aspects of their experience. Angie’s second-most asked question is from mothers who want to know the secret to a family bond so tight that her eldest son would invite her to compete on a reality show in the first place.

Their response to just about every question is one of cheerful gratitude—a hallmark, along with their deep-rooted faith, of their time on the show.

“We didn’t want to disappoint each other,” Angie says.

Their ending—however controversial—was a sort of gift.

“The way we went out—Mom killed it that day playing pickleball—neither of us failed each other,” Danny says.

“Our job on that show was to love others well and reflect our love for each other, and I think we did that,” Angie says.

 

Sharing the Experience

Danny hopes to one day return to “The Amazing Race” for an all-stars season to get another chance. In the meantime, he and Angie launched a podcast, “Read the Clue,” where they recapped the episodes from their season—with Angie in Walla Walla and Danny in San Diego. They have made appearances together, including at Over the Edge Celebrity Weekend, a three-day brush with reality TV stars raising funds for their chosen nonprofit organizations.

Angie, who’s taken the year off from teaching science at Walla Walla’s Pioneer Middle School, has been invited by local churches to speak about her experience and the bonds she has with her three children. She looks up other show contestants when she’s traveling outside of Washington and was even recognized at the bottom of Bryce Canyon in Utah when a family asked her to take their photo and realized they’d seen her on television.

“I never dreamed that would be part of my journey,” she marvels. “Once we got off the show, I thought that was it.”

 

Living a Dream

Danny, 28, had long been preparing himself to be a contestant. In their Walla Walla home, the family, including father Dan, built puzzles, played games and enjoyed challenges.

A dogged fan of competition shows, Danny knew he wanted to be a contestant someday when he watched the 12th episode of the 15th season of “Survivor.” Contestants and their loved ones were blindfolded on opposite sides of a maze and had to race their way to a dais in the middle.

“I thought, ‘That is the coolest thing. I want to do that someday,’” he says.

“The Amazing Race” held a particular place in his heart. When Danny was a freshman in high school, he staged his own version of the show in Walla Walla. Friends and fellow youth group members pedaled their bikes through town, following his clues and competing in challenges. It led them, among other places, to the local candy store where they had to guess flavors of jellybeans in a blind tasting to move on.

Making the show about a decade later was a dream come true. Now, with the 37th season slated to begin March 5, Danny and Angie look forward to expanding their reality television family.

Danny plans to host the kickoff with another version of his own race for friends the weekend before. Then he’ll put together a premiere party at his home.

“I will watch on my TV and be ready to jump on socials to celebrate and root for so many fun people,” he says.

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Vicki Hillhouse

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