Things were cooking for Lindsey Vonn.
It was early 2020, the world had yet to shut down, and the Olympic downhiller had been retired for less than a year. An HBO documentary about her had aired a few months听earlier ago, and her memoir, , was set to drop in March. (The looming pandemic would push its release to October 2021.)听She had听launched with longtime sponsor Head听补苍诲 then with a childhood friend. Soon Vonn would be making her own film , and Frank Marshall, producer of The Sixth Sense and Seabiscuit, wanted to team up. Now Vonn听was in the foothills north of San Jos茅, Costa Rica, sitting on a rock in utter bliss with听Lucy, her baby-sized Cavalier King Charles spaniel and number one travel buddy.听There, at the Territorio de Zaguates Dog Sanctuary, the ground around her shimmered with hundreds and hundreds of street dogs. 鈥淚t was a wave of dogs, like 1,500 of them,鈥 Vonn says.听鈥淚 literally couldn鈥檛 see the ground.鈥
Vonn had come here to work on her latest television project:听hosting The Pack, a ten-part reality competition series on November 20. The show casts a dozen dogs and their owners鈥攐r 鈥減artners,鈥 as Vonn calls them鈥攐n a jet-setting journey around North America, Central America, and Europe. At each location, they race to complete tasks that are designed to showcase what producers say is the deep bond between humans and their dogs. But really it鈥檚 all about which dog can tug, fetch, push, or paw its way around an obstacle the fastest. Episode by episode, the field is whittled down to a single winning human-canine听team. Along the way, we learn fun dog facts (mushing started in the tenth century), see awesome landscapes (Switzerland, Costa Rica, Utah), and learn about various pup-focused charities and causes around the world. Think of it as The Amazing Race but with more听barking.
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The competition itself offers up a $500,000 prize, plus another $500,000 earmarked for听various charities, including $250,000 for the winner鈥檚 charity of choice. But the takeaway, fleshed out with emotional backstories and on-camera interviews, is more about how a human鈥檚 unconditional love for a dog can bring confidence, patience, and growth to each. Fair enough鈥攕cores of new pandemic pet owners stuck at home will surely relate.听
The show began as an idea from Chris Castallo, Amazon鈥檚 chief for alternative programming, who recruited , an Emmy-winning producer听from The Voice and Survivor, to bring the show to life. Bienstock, who is himself 鈥渁 dog guy,鈥 needed a host who had a spirit of adventure but who was also obsessed with dogs. 鈥淲e came up with Lindsey Vonn,鈥 he says. 鈥淪he really loves dogs on a human level.鈥
The show oscillates between the cool and the contrived, depending on your own relationship to travel, adventure, and things you鈥檇 like to do with your dog. My 11-year-old loved watching the pups roll balls and play a giant floor piano, but for non-dog owners (guilty听as charged), parts of the series鈥攍ike dressing dogs in little hats and outfits for a Parisian fashion show鈥攆eel lame. Same goes for the more outdoorsy moments. Go stand-up paddleboarding with your dog? Standard. But rap off a thundering jungle waterfall with a sopping wet standard poodle dangling from a harness between your legs, just because? Um, OK.听
The show works best when we get to see dogs doing very dog things. Dixie, a bluetick coonhound, just cannot shut up at the least opportune times. One dog runs off to play with the other dogs instead of crossing a finish line, upending a tight race. Snow, the rappelling standard poodle, lets out a burp right into the face of his owner, er, partner, Josh White, as White goes to speak to the cameras.
Funny stuff aside, we also get to see dogs use their skills in ways we humans never could. We watch them find survivors entombed in a mock earthquake disaster zone at a research and training facility in Mexico City, and then we stare in awe as they sniff around a battleship to find puzzle clues tucked away in cabinets and forgotten recesses. Some tasks rely less on instincts and more on newly taught tricks. Humans desperately pleading with their dogs to fetch some keys to free their owners from a jail cell is pretty funny. Watching dogs try to deliver a fine French meal to discerning Parisians, on the other hand,听just听looks like a great waste of food.

To make sure the canines didn鈥檛 have to do anything that made them anxious, afraid, or stressed, the producers hired an animal safety team that had input on听everything from the design of the tasks to how the dogs would travel. That included chartering a plane with a grassy 鈥渄og toileting area鈥 and first-class seats for the pups. Veterinarians traveled with the group and helped keep track of all the shots and paperwork the听dogs needed to clear customs quickly. The safety team听followed the dogs wherever they went. 鈥淭hey were super conservative,鈥 says contestant Mark LeBlanc, partner to Ace, a border collie, who does well in the show (no spoilers!). If a dog did not want to do a particular task, the team would step in. 鈥淚t was never, well, maybe the dog can do this,鈥 says Nicole Ellis, a certified professional dog trainer on the safety team. 鈥淚t was nope, the dog is stressed, we鈥檙e not doing it.鈥
As for Vonn, she holds herself well as a host, with a combination of听folksiness and glamour. With toy-sized Lucy often staring blankly from her arms, Vonn celebrates and empathizes with the contestants, but she听isn鈥檛 afraid to call out bad form: Vonn听gives one contestant a real tongue-lashing before booting him off the show for hanging himself out of a moving vehicle and later taking his dog out of a travel harness.听鈥淚 can say what needs to be said,鈥 she says.
In the end, Vonn鈥檚 hoping this will lead to more dogs getting homes and to another season of The Pack. And perhaps, she says, the spotlight will help her launch a real acting career. 鈥淢aybe the Rock wants me to be in a movie,鈥 Vonn jokes. 鈥淚鈥檓 just going to throw that out there.鈥