“RACE: Bubba Wallace” really centers 2021, a year of COVID and controversy. Wallace has already gone from someone who didn’t really talk about race or injustice to a major voice on the subject. Flashbacks reveal this journey, including his CNN declaration that Confederate flags need to be banned from all NASCAR events and the noose incident, which still makes Wallace emotional. If you think that the noose was just a misunderstanding or, worse, a plant, because NASCAR determined that it was a door pull and not a threat, watch at least that segment on this show. You may have a new take on it.

In 2021, Wallace joined 23XI racing, co-owned by Michael Jordan, who is absent and could have been a major voice here as an interview subject given how he’s avoided discussing racial issues in his role as an influential athlete, and fellow driver Denny Hamlin, who is a prominent interview subject. The producers keep the interviews tight, letting Wallace tell most of his own story with a few insights from collaborators and then the bigger picture commentary from people like Jemele Hill, Michael Strahan and Kamau Bell, all of whom I could have actually used more of. There are times when “RACE” feels a little too stuck in Wallace’s own clubhouse—his delightful mother is a major interview subject—when it could have been stronger with the opinions of outsiders to give a different perspective.
I also found the history segments very informative but all too brief. Episode three unpacks the story of Wendell Scott, who became the first Black driver to win a Cup Series race in 1963 but could not stand on the podium and celebrate that win because the organizers feared a riot. I would watch a whole documentary on his story. However, “RACE” sometimes seems more interested in what happens on the actual speedway than the role Wallace plays as the fourth Black driver in the history of the sport. While I’m not sure spending so much time on actual races benefits the overall project, I do have to admit to now understanding some aspects of NASCAR more than I did before and having more respect for the art of it. The producers here very expertly reveal how quick decisions, both major and minor, and really a great deal of good/bad luck can impact a race in a way I haven’t seen before.
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