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Dirty Jobs Collection 3

Discovery Channel // Unrated // August 26, 2008
List Price: $19.99 [Buy now and save at Amazon]

Review by Kurt Dahlke | posted August 17, 2008 | E-mail the Author
Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe: Collection 3:
Whether it's an American phenomenon, or worldwide, the proliferation of a certain type of cable TV programing has proved one thing: there's a huge majority of people out there who'll watch a show about someone doing something rather than do it themselves. Home and Garden TV is a big part of that - sure some folks will get off their couches to stencil leaves on their walls, but most are happy to just sit back, soak it in, and move on to the next spectator sport. (See the Olympic games, for instance, and ask yourself what the real level of interest in synchronized diving is.) In the case of The Discovery Channel's Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, we'll admit that watching, rather than doing, is probably a good thing.

Rowe, the extremely personable host/ participant of the show, is a burly cross between Troy McClure and your local television news anchor. He's smart, funny, (with just the barest hint of snide) tough and good lookin' - the kind of guy every man wants to be, and the type of man every woman wants to be with. Finding his niche in this spectator world, Rowe has become the ambassador for dirty, dangerous and disgusting work, shadowing for a day folks who do things like clean up road-kill, paint bridges, tan leather and harvest kelp. As the refrain from the show's theme song (a snippet from a pre-Mike Patton Faith No More song) says; 'it's a dirty job but someone's gotta do it.'

And even though he's not exactly that 'someone,' Rowe, in adventure tourist fashion, does every job eagerly, with good humor, and incredible bravery. In addition to Rowe's spectacular attitudinal triumvirate (and pecs) the show fronts its own triple-threat of appeal, plying its trade through our desire to learn weird stuff, to get a sense about the type of people who do weird stuff, and to be grossed out.

Keeping in mind the name of the show, not all of the jobs in this 2-disc collection are disgusting (an illusion maintained, however, by the titles sequence that shows - among other atrocities - Rowe nearly heaving as a Road Kill Cleaner). Some of the jobs are just dirty or dangerous. No one is going to lose their lunch, for instance, as Rowe learns how to throw a pot, (duhn duhn duh) a job that merely gets his hands covered in clay. Nonetheless, that job, and the likes of Special Effects Artist, (Rowe turns into a zombie) Shingle Maker and Cranberry Farmer all fit neatly into the realm of armchair spectator delight. In much the same way shows like This Old House constantly side trip into places like toilet factories to maintain interest, most folks really like to see how stuff is made, or done, and it's what Dirty Jobs does best. I never thought I'd sit for 40 minutes to see how a billboard is erected, as in the first episode shown here, but by the end of that time I'd come away with plenty of knowledge and respect for the craft.

Respect comes into play when you meet the characters who actually get paid to do this stuff day to day, like the roughneck Texans who swing those multi-ton billboards around in the air, guiding them by hand so they can shove bolts through the tiny, tiny holes that secure the massive structures in place - high above the concrete, too. Their playful ribbing of Rowe (he gets his share of jabs in, too) and salt-of-the-earth vibes segue weirdly into the odd southerner who ices Rowe with his deadpan disdain for Rowe's lack of skills on the wheels of pottery steel. From gentlemen who wade into vast tanks of water-and-striped-bass-poop, through seemingly normal volunteers that are vomited on by egrets, to chemical analysts who synthesize the smell of dirty diapers, pretty much everyone approaches their work with good humor and a degree of knowledge that is way more specialized than one might think.

And then there's the gross-out factor, something that probably draws more people to the show than any other aspect. Even with all the danger and esoteric skill-sets, there's still plenty of room for gagging. Hands down the most disgusting things in this collection are the piles of rubbery fat, flesh and fur scraped from deer hides during the tanning process. Though the guys who do this job for a living are unaffected, I'm just happy that smell-o-vision is not a popular technology. We also get to enjoy Rowe's director of photography retching repeatedly on the way back from a kelp-harvesting mission, but the spew is digitized out. Hey, isn't that what we came for? In all, Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe: Collection 3 is a thoroughly entertaining, often hilarious, and only slightly nauseating continuation of one man's mission to say he's worked at the worst of the worst, if only for a day at a time.

The jobs on display in this collection are as follows:
Billboard Installer
Snake Wrangler
Jug Maker
Leather Tanner
Bridge Painter
Space Crawler Maintenance Technician
Fish Farmer
Vomit Island Worker
Alligator Egg Collector
Kelp Harvester
Special Effects Artist
Runway Painter
Odor Eater
Spray Insulation Technician
Cave Biologist
Slime Eel Fisherman
Shingle Maker
Buoy Cleaner
Brick Maker
Cranberry Farmer
Mud Mineral Excavator
Rice Plantation Worker

The DVD

Video:
Presented in a nice 1.78:1 widescreen ratio enhanced for 16 x 9 TVs, Dirty Jobs might provide at times a little too much detail, if you catch my rancid drift. Colors are on par for television, natural looking but lacking a particular zing. I guess they are not exceptionally bright or rich, but certainly at an acceptable industry standard for shot-on-location television. The picture is crisp and clean, with few apparent compression artifacts beyond some minor aliasing. For approximately four-hours per disc, this a dandy looking collection of episodes.

Sound:
Dolby Digital Stereo is dialed-in to an excellent degree for television, as well. Beyond accurate stereo placement (and of course great detail whenever someone retches) there isn't a whole ton of exciting dynamic range or super special soundscapes, but there's nothing to complain about, either, and talking parts are mixed with an ear for good balance with the soundtrack.

Extras:
Alas, there are no dirty extras of which to speak, but with eight hours of programming at about 20 bucks retail, I'm not going to complain (for fear that someone will throw bat guano at me or something).

Final Thoughts:
Encompassing 12 episodes and 22 different jobs, this two-disc, eight-hour-long third collection of the most dirty, difficult and disgusting jobs out there is sure to please you armchair technicians who love to learn about weird stuff while staying clean and dry. Host Mike Rowe makes getting covered in grease look, if not fun to do at least very fun to watch. His mix of 'News Magazine Host' voice, looks and technique is a truly unique counterpoint to his massive guns and fearless enthusiasm for doing things like spelunking in toxic waste. While this third collection of Dirty Jobs lacks some of the utter disgustingness of earlier jobs Rowe has tackled, his wry joy of discovery, repartee with the fascinating individuals who actually do these jobs everyday for a living, and our realization that we can watch, learn and keep a clear line to the fridge makes Dirty Jobs Collection 3 a sure Recommended bet for a few nights of fun - for those of you who haven't already seen these shows on cable TV, or who want to relive the muckiness at your leisure.

www.kurtdahlke.com

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