{"version":"1.0.0","episode":{"title":"James Hinchcliffe Interview","url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/james-hinchcliffe-interview","audioUrl":"https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/pdst.fm/e/traffic.megaphone.fm/FOXM3661098311.mp3?updated=1778040472","description":"In this special edition of SPEED, Will Buxton sits down with one of the most beloved figures in North American open-wheel racing: \"The Mayor of Hinchtown\" himself, James Hinchcliffe.As the 2026 racing season hits its stride, Buxton and Hinchcliffe dive deep into the evolving landscape of the NTT INDYCAR SERIES. From Hinchcliffe’s transition from the cockpit to the broadcast booth for FOX Sports to the technical shifts reshaping the grid, no stone is left unturned.Key highlights of the conversation include:\n\n\n  The Broadcast Booth: Hinchcliffe shares what it’s really like to trade a steering wheel for a microphone and the challenge of bringing \"the fastest racing on Earth\" to a global audience.\n\n  Indy 500 Insight: A look ahead at the preparations for the \"Greatest Spectacle in Racing\" and why the chemistry in the broadcast booth is just as critical as the setup on the car.\n\n  The State of the Sport: Will and James discuss the global growth of IndyCar, its intersection with F1, and what the future holds for the next generation of drivers.\n\n  The Driver’s Perspective: James reflects on the \"pivotal moments\" of his career and gives his unfiltered take on the current competitive field, including recent standout performances.\n\n\nWhether you're a die-hard INDYCAR fan or a casual follower of the paddock drama, join Will and James for an insightful, high-speed conversation about the passion and precision that defines professional motor racing.\n\nChapters:0:00 Intro0:45 James Hinchcliffe Joins1:45 Vibe Around F13:00 Cadillac F1 Makes Debut In Miami6:25 Juggling INDYCAR &amp; F19:00 Preparing For The Races14:45 Transitioning From Driver To Broadcaster20:25 Knowing When To Retire25:00 Receiving Offers To Drive INDYCAR26:45 Drivers To Watch At Indy 50028:10 INDYCAR &amp; FOX Partnership30:00 Who Would You Like to See Race The Indy 50030:50 Prediction For Indy 50032:00 Outro\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices"},"annotations":[{"startTime":76.5,"endTime":81.7,"type":"topic","title":"F1 calendar","url":"/glossary/f1-calendar","quote":"But yeah, nice, you know, first weekend for me on the F1 calendar this year, nice to see\neverybody again. Sprint weekends are always manic, as you know, and we managed to avoid the monsoon\nthat was threatened on Sunday, which is always a good thing.","canonicalId":"topic:f1-calendar","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The F1 calendar refers to the schedule of Formula 1 races across the year. When a driver says it’s their first weekend on the F1 calendar, they mean their first race event of that season.","simplifiedExplanation":"In Formula 1, the F1 calendar is just the list of races happening throughout the year. Saying it’s your first weekend on the calendar means it’s your first race event of the season."}},{"startTime":81.7,"endTime":87.9,"type":"topic","title":"Sprint weekends","url":"/glossary/sprint-weekends","quote":"But yeah, nice, you know, first weekend for me on the F1 calendar this year, nice to see\neverybody again. Sprint weekends are always manic, as you know, and we managed to avoid the monsoon\nthat was threatened on Sunday, which is always a good thing.","canonicalId":"topic:sprint-weekends","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A sprint weekend in Formula 1 is a format where there’s an extra shorter race (the sprint) that affects starting positions for the main Grand Prix. It typically makes the schedule more intense and compresses practice and qualifying-style preparation.","simplifiedExplanation":"A sprint weekend is a special Formula 1 race format with an extra, shorter race. It’s more hectic because it influences where cars line up for the main race."}},{"startTime":84.9,"endTime":87.9,"type":"concept","title":"monsoon","url":"/glossary/monsoon","quote":"Sprint weekends are always manic, as you know, and we managed to avoid the monsoon\nthat was threatened on Sunday, which is always a good thing.","canonicalId":"concept:monsoon","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing talk, “monsoon” is shorthand for extreme, heavy rainfall conditions. Wet races can drastically change grip, tire performance, and strategy, so avoiding a monsoon is often a big deal for teams and drivers.","simplifiedExplanation":"Here, “monsoon” means really heavy rain. Heavy rain can make the track slippery and change how teams race, so avoiding it helps everyone."}},{"startTime":91.0,"endTime":97.1,"type":"concept","title":"F1 paddock","url":"/glossary/f1-paddock","quote":"Um, everyone will want to know, what's the vibe actually like in the F1 paddock this year?\n\nBecause there's been so much talk, obviously, about the controversy about the rules and then","canonicalId":"concept:f1-paddock","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The F1 paddock is the working area at a Formula 1 event where teams operate between sessions. It’s where engineers, mechanics, and drivers coordinate car setup, logistics, and day-to-day decisions.","simplifiedExplanation":"The F1 paddock is the busy team area at a Formula 1 race. It’s where the teams work on cars and coordinate what happens during the weekend."}},{"startTime":97.1,"endTime":101.6,"type":"concept","title":"rules controversy","quote":"Um, everyone will want to know, what's the vibe actually like in the F1 paddock this year?\n\nBecause there's been so much talk, obviously, about the controversy about the rules and then\n[101.6s]  a month off enforced because of sort of the global political situation.","canonicalId":"concept:rules-controversy","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Rules controversy” refers to disputes or debate over Formula 1 regulations. In F1, small rule changes can affect car design, competitive balance, and how teams interpret compliance, so controversy often shapes the season’s early narrative.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Rules controversy” means people are arguing about Formula 1 rules. When rules are unclear or change in a big way, it can affect how teams build and race their cars."}},{"startTime":146.8,"endTime":151.0,"type":"concept","title":"simulation said they would","quote":"...were these upgrades going to actually produce the lap time that the simulation said they would? So, yes, the drivers are still dealing with and getting accustomed to the new regs.","canonicalId":"concept:simulation-said-they-would","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.62,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In modern racing, teams use computer models to predict how rule changes and hardware upgrades will affect lap times. Those predictions are often based on aerodynamics, tire behavior, and vehicle dynamics, then validated (or corrected) once cars are back on track.","simplifiedExplanation":"Teams use computer programs to estimate how fast the car should be after updates. Then they test it in real races to see if the computer prediction matches reality."}},{"startTime":159.6,"endTime":165.0,"type":"concept","title":"new regs","url":"/glossary/new-regs","quote":"So, yes, the drivers are still dealing with and getting accustomed to the new regs. But I think there's a little bit more of a, you know, let's get on with it.","canonicalId":"concept:new-regs","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Regs” refers to the racing regulations that govern car design and setup. When rules are changed, teams must adapt their upgrades and driving approach, and early results often reflect a learning curve before performance stabilizes.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Regs” means the rulebook for the racing series. If the rules change, teams and drivers have to adjust their cars and habits before they can get consistent performance."}},{"startTime":213.0,"endTime":217.3,"type":"concept","title":"month off","quote":"...he was pretty excited about getting back to racingways and the fact that they'd had like a month off to be able to really go through a lot of processes. But then at the same time, he was also quite tentative...","canonicalId":"concept:month-off","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.68,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A “month off” refers to a break in the racing calendar, which can disrupt a team’s development rhythm. Teams rely on continuous track time for setup refinement and driver “reps” (practice runs), so cancellations can create both recovery benefits and performance risks.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “month off” means there weren’t races for a while. That can be good for resting and planning, but it also makes it harder to keep improving because drivers and teams lose practice time."}},{"startTime":223.1,"endTime":232.3,"type":"term","title":"reps","url":"/glossary/reps","quote":"...what they really needed was reps, and he was worried they were going to get sort of out of that flow that they'd got into over the opening couple of races.","canonicalId":"term:reps","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing, “reps” are practice laps or track runs that build driver familiarity with the car, track, and current setup. After a long break, teams worry they’ll be “out of flow” because drivers need repeated runs to regain timing and consistency.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Reps” are practice laps. After a break, drivers need those practice runs to feel comfortable and consistent again."}},{"startTime":243.0,"endTime":252.7,"type":"concept","title":"gelling as a team","quote":"...the only team that, alongside of an upgrades package, could kind of work on gelling as a team, and you can only really do that at the racetrack.","canonicalId":"concept:gelling-as-a-team","priority":0.48,"confidence":0.66,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Gelling as a team” describes how well a racing crew and drivers synchronize—communication, strategy, and feedback loops that improve car setup. The speaker notes it’s something you can mostly build at the racetrack because that’s where you can test, learn, and adjust quickly."}},{"startTime":263.0,"endTime":267.0,"type":"term","title":"simulation correlation","url":"/glossary/simulation-correlation","quote":"you can bring a bunch of parts to the car, but if they don't correlate with what the simulation is saying, it's a bit of a disaster, right?","canonicalId":"term:simulation-correlation","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Simulation correlation is the process of checking whether what a computer model predicts matches what the car actually does on track. If the correlation is off, teams can make bad setup or upgrade decisions because the simulation isn’t reflecting reality.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means making sure the computer model matches what the car really does. If it doesn’t, teams can waste time or make the car worse with changes based on the wrong info."}},{"startTime":285.6,"endTime":291.8,"type":"term","title":"calibrated correctly","url":"/glossary/calibrated-correctly","quote":"whether there's all their equipment back at factory, back at base, is calibrated correctly and correlates well.","canonicalId":"term:calibrated-correctly","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In racing engineering, “calibrated correctly” means the team’s measurement systems and data inputs are set up so sensor readings and telemetry are accurate. Correct calibration is essential for comparing track results to simulation and for validating upgrades.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means the tools that measure the car are set up accurately. If the measurements are wrong, you can’t trust the data used to improve the car."}},{"startTime":298.5,"endTime":303.2,"type":"term","title":"sprint qualifying","url":"/glossary/sprint-qualifying","quote":"probably outkicked their coverage a little bit in sprint qualifying, which was great to see, only a couple 10s out of SQ2","canonicalId":"term:sprint-qualifying","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Sprint qualifying is a shorter, race-like qualifying format used in some Formula One weekends. It determines grid positions for the main Grand Prix, so teams balance speed with managing tire and car wear.","simplifiedExplanation":"It’s a shorter qualifying event that helps set where the cars start for the main race. Teams push hard, but they also have to think about tires and the car lasting."}},{"startTime":303.2,"endTime":308.1,"type":"term","title":"SQ2","url":"/glossary/sq2","quote":"only a couple 10s out of SQ2, which is phenomenal.","canonicalId":"term:sq2","priority":0.55,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"SQ2 refers to the second segment of sprint qualifying (the “Sprint Qualifying” session breakdown). It’s used to describe performance in the later part of the sprint qualifying format where teams aim to secure the best possible grid position."}},{"startTime":308.1,"endTime":315.1,"type":"term","title":"GP qualifying","url":"/glossary/gp-qualifying","quote":"but it reset a little bit and kind of went back to maybe a proper baseline for GP qualifying","canonicalId":"term:gp-qualifying","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.72,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“GP qualifying” means qualifying for the Grand Prix race itself, separate from sprint qualifying. Teams use it to set the starting grid for the main event, and it often reflects the car’s true one-lap pace.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is the qualifying session that sets the starting positions for the main Grand Prix race. It’s basically the car’s best one-lap speed under race-weekend conditions."}},{"startTime":315.1,"endTime":325.5,"type":"concept","title":"handling characteristics","url":"/glossary/handling-characteristics","quote":"the drivers both said, you know, a big improvement on performance of the car didn't introduce necessarily any unwelcome handling characteristics","canonicalId":"concept:handling-characteristics","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Handling characteristics describe how the car behaves dynamically—how it turns, grips, and responds under braking, acceleration, and cornering. When teams add upgrades, they specifically check whether these behaviors changed in a negative way.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means how the car feels and behaves while driving—especially how it steers and grips. Teams worry that upgrades might change that for the worse."}},{"startTime":320.0,"endTime":325.5,"type":"concept","title":"upgrade package","url":"/glossary/upgrade-package","quote":"a big improvement on performance of the car didn't introduce necessarily any unwelcome handling characteristics, which is always, you know, a risk of bringing a new upgrade package.","canonicalId":"concept:upgrade-package","priority":0.5,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"An upgrade package is a set of new parts and changes a team brings to improve performance—often including aerodynamic pieces, cooling changes, or other technical updates. Teams watch for unintended side effects because new parts can shift balance and handling.","simplifiedExplanation":"An upgrade package is a bundle of new improvements the team installs to make the car faster. The risk is that it might also make the car handle worse in a way they didn’t expect."}},{"startTime":382.4,"endTime":394.9,"type":"topic","title":"Formula One","url":"/glossary/formula-one","quote":"How hard is it for you to put the work in, to stay on top of everything that's going on in Formula One? Because there's a lot, you know, it's the drivers, it's the teams, it's the politics, it's the upgrades.","canonicalId":"topic:formula-one","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Formula One (F1) is the top tier of open-wheel racing, with teams developing highly technical cars and running complex race-weekend programs. The episode discusses the workload of staying on top of F1’s drivers, teams, politics, and upgrades.","simplifiedExplanation":"Formula One is the highest level of open-wheel racing. It involves a lot of people and constant technical updates, so it’s a huge job to keep up."}},{"startTime":425.1,"endTime":440.6,"type":"concept","title":"off season","url":"/glossary/off-season","quote":"...Maybe there's some kind of big shift over the off season, but there's rarely anything like that.","canonicalId":"concept:off-season","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The off season is the period between racing seasons when teams can focus on major development work rather than constant weekend-to-week changes. The speaker suggests that big changes are more likely to happen during this window than during the season.","simplifiedExplanation":"The off season is the break between racing seasons. It’s when teams can do bigger changes to the car instead of tweaking things every race weekend."}},{"startTime":425.1,"endTime":474.6,"type":"concept","title":"IndyCar","url":"/glossary/indycar","quote":"...in IndyCar, we're not worried about upgrades week over week. Maybe there's some kind of big shift over the off season...","canonicalId":"concept:indycar","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"IndyCar is the top open-wheel racing series in the United States, centered on oval and road-course events. It has its own rules and scheduling, so when it overlaps with Formula One, drivers and media have to split attention and travel.","simplifiedExplanation":"IndyCar is a major kind of race series in the U.S. with open-wheel cars. It can overlap with Formula One weekends, which makes it harder to follow everything at once."}},{"startTime":425.1,"endTime":429.9,"type":"concept","title":"upgrades week over week","url":"/glossary/upgrades-week-over-week","quote":"...in IndyCar, we're not worried about upgrades week over week. Maybe there's some kind of big shift over the off season...","canonicalId":"concept:upgrades-week-over-week","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Upgrades week over week” refers to teams bringing frequent, incremental technical changes to the car from one race weekend to the next. The speaker contrasts IndyCar’s approach with Formula One, where development can be more continuous and visible.","simplifiedExplanation":"This means teams often update and improve their race cars almost every week or race. The host is saying IndyCar usually doesn’t change as much from week to week as F1 does."}},{"startTime":502.6,"endTime":515.8,"type":"concept","title":"practice session","url":"/glossary/practice-session","quote":"...I'm awake at 2, 3 o'clock in the morning and can chuck on a practice session.","canonicalId":"concept:practice-session","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"A practice session is a scheduled on-track period where drivers run laps to learn the circuit, test setups, and prepare for qualifying and the race. The host mentions watching a practice session to stay current with F1.","simplifiedExplanation":"A practice session is time during a race weekend when drivers go out to get comfortable with the track and dial in the car. It’s often the first step before qualifying and the race."}},{"startTime":515.8,"endTime":526.6,"type":"concept","title":"quality session","quote":"...because it'll pretty much always happen before our race. So we can, it's almost a nice way... watching that in the background.","canonicalId":"concept:quality-session","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.45,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Quality session” is almost certainly a transcription of “qualifying session,” where drivers compete to set the fastest lap times that determine starting positions. The speaker says they watch a qualifying session on an iPad before their IndyCar race.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is the qualifying part of the weekend where drivers try to set the best lap time. Your qualifying result affects where you start the race."}},{"startTime":634.1,"endTime":641.9,"type":"topic","title":"NASCAR","url":"/glossary/nascar","quote":"I stay on top of NASCAR because I like it and we have some interaction with that world through Fox...","canonicalId":"topic:nascar","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"NASCAR is a stock-car racing series in the United States, with races often centered on oval tracks. The segment references staying on top of NASCAR because of personal interest and involvement through Fox coverage.","simplifiedExplanation":"NASCAR is a popular U.S. racing series where cars race on mostly oval tracks. The speaker says they follow it because they like it and because they interact with that world through TV."}},{"startTime":726.0,"endTime":736.0,"type":"term","title":"FP1","url":"/glossary/fp1","quote":"You may know this young lesser known Spanish driver named Alex Palo was doing FP1 from McLaren that weekend","canonicalId":"term:fp1","priority":0.6,"confidence":0.95,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"FP1 means “Free Practice 1,” the first on-track practice session of an F1 race weekend. Teams use it to test setups, gather data, and help drivers get comfortable before qualifying.","simplifiedExplanation":"FP1 is the first practice session of the weekend in Formula 1. It’s when teams and drivers try things out before the important sessions."}},{"startTime":999.9,"endTime":1005.4,"type":"concept","title":"PR line","url":"/glossary/pr-line","quote":"But I think that was the lesson was a lot of drivers kind of put the barriers up, you know, put the walls up, just, just tow the PR line, you know, whatever they're supposed to do.","canonicalId":"concept:pr-line","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“PR line” refers to the polished, pre-planned messaging people use publicly—often to avoid controversy and stick to a safe narrative. In racing, it can mean drivers carefully controlling what they say to media rather than speaking candidly.","simplifiedExplanation":"A “PR line” is the official, carefully worded story someone sticks to in public. It’s what they say to look good and avoid problems, not necessarily what they really think."}},{"startTime":1047.8,"endTime":1067.7,"type":"topic","title":"Champ Car","url":"/glossary/champ-car","quote":"The, the credit goes to a guy called Jeremy Shaw. And, and Jeremy was the one that kind of first started inviting me onto the international broadcasts of the champ car races back in the day when I was running the Atlantic series.","canonicalId":"topic:champ-car","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Champ Car” refers to the Champ Car World Series, a major North American open-wheel racing series in the mid-2000s. The speaker mentions doing broadcasts for it, which ties into how motorsport media coverage worked at the time.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Champ Car” was a big open-wheel racing series in North America. The guest is talking about being invited to broadcast those races on TV/radio."}},{"startTime":1047.8,"endTime":1052.4,"type":"topic","title":"Atlantic series","url":"/glossary/atlantic-series","quote":"...when I was running the Atlantic series. And then through that, because that's what was playing in Europe.","canonicalId":"topic:atlantic-series","priority":0.22,"confidence":0.66,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “Atlantic series” is a North American open-wheel feeder series that many drivers used to develop before moving to top-tier racing. The guest says he was running it when Jeremy Shaw first invited him to broadcast Champ Car.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Atlantic series is a stepping-stone racing series for drivers. It’s where racers often build experience before moving up to bigger competitions."}},{"startTime":1136.6,"endTime":1145.7,"type":"topic","title":"indie car broadcast rights","quote":"...I went to it was NBC at the time that had the indie car broadcast rights. And I went to one of the guys there and said, Hey, I think this might be my last year.","canonicalId":"topic:indie-car-broadcast-rights","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.55,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Broadcast rights” are the agreements that determine who is allowed to televise a racing series. “Indie car” here is almost certainly referring to IndyCar, and the rights explain why NBC had the coverage James Hinchcliffe was working toward."}},{"startTime":1136.6,"endTime":1145.7,"type":"company","title":"NBC","url":"/glossary/nbc","quote":"...when I stop racing, this is definitely something I want to look into. And so when I was starting to have those feelings and those thoughts, you know, I went to it was NBC at the time that had the indie car broadcast rights. And I went to one of the guys there and said, Hey, I think this might be my last year.","canonicalId":"company:nbc","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"NBC is the TV network James Hinchcliffe says he approached for motorsport broadcast work. In this context, it’s about how racing drivers transition into media roles through broadcast rights and on-air talent.","simplifiedExplanation":"NBC is a major TV network. He’s describing how he talked to them about getting a job in racing coverage after he thought he might stop racing."}},{"startTime":1152.1,"endTime":1186.3,"type":"brand","title":"A1","quote":"...the pin that will pull out of the A1 side is how F1 came into it was at that same time. And at the start of 22, F1 TV's lead commentator was a guy called Ben Edwards... And in some meeting, Ben, you know, chimed up to the boss at A1...","canonicalId":"brand:a1","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.45,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“A1” is mentioned as the place where the decision-making conversation about broadcast talent happened. In motorsport media contexts, this kind of reference usually points to a specific broadcaster/production group rather than a car brand.","simplifiedExplanation":"He mentions “A1” as the organization involved in getting him onto the broadcast. It’s part of the behind-the-scenes media setup, not a car."}},{"startTime":1152.1,"endTime":1164.4,"type":"topic","title":"F1 TV's lead commentator","url":"/glossary/f1-tv-s-lead-commentator","quote":"...the pin that will pull out of the A1 side is how F1 came into it was at that same time. And at the start of 22, F1 TV's lead commentator was a guy called Ben Edwards...","canonicalId":"topic:f1-tv-s-lead-commentator","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This refers to the main on-air voice for Formula 1 coverage. The “lead commentator” typically sets the tone of the broadcast and anchors major race storytelling and analysis.","simplifiedExplanation":"He’s talking about the main announcer for Formula 1 broadcasts. That person is usually the primary voice you hear during the race."}},{"startTime":1174.9,"endTime":1186.3,"type":"topic","title":"North American voice","url":"/glossary/north-american-voice","quote":"...on the broadcast for that one year in a one GP, they were looking for a North American voice. And in some meeting, Ben, you know, chimed up to the boss at A1...","canonicalId":"topic:north-american-voice","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"This phrase describes the casting goal for a commentator who can connect with North American audiences. It’s a common broadcast strategy when a series has international reach but wants regional familiarity.","simplifiedExplanation":"They wanted an announcer who would feel familiar to viewers in North America. It’s basically about choosing the right on-air personality for that audience."}},{"startTime":1271.8,"endTime":1280.0,"type":"concept","title":"back of the grid","url":"/glossary/back-of-the-grid","quote":"...make up the numbers and, and, you know, thrash it out for one more year at the back of the grid. I was always of the mindset that I wanted to...","canonicalId":"concept:back-of-the-grid","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Back of the grid” means starting (or effectively running) near the rear of the starting order in a race. In motorsport, where you line up on the grid strongly affects your ability to pass and your race strategy.","simplifiedExplanation":"It means you’re near the back of the starting lineup. Starting near the rear usually makes it harder to move up during the race."}},{"startTime":1290.4,"endTime":1320.0,"type":"topic","title":"2021 season","url":"/glossary/2021-season","quote":"...And, you know, 2021 was, it was an up and down year on track for a bunch of different reasons.","canonicalId":"topic:2021-season","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The speaker references the 2021 racing year as a period with mixed results and multiple contributing factors. This is a timeline anchor for why they decided to step away from full-time driving.","simplifiedExplanation":"They’re talking about how 2021 was a rough, up-and-down year for them. It helps explain the timing of their career decision."}},{"startTime":1302.4,"endTime":1319.7,"type":"topic","title":"full-time driver","url":"/glossary/full-time-driver","quote":"...being a full-time driver is not easy, right? It's very hard. It's a lot of work. It's a lot of commitment...","canonicalId":"topic:full-time-driver","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Full-time driver” refers to competing as a primary occupation across the racing calendar rather than part-time or occasional entries. The discussion frames it as a high-commitment lifestyle with significant emotional and psychological cost.","simplifiedExplanation":"They mean racing as their main job, not just occasionally. They’re saying it takes a lot of time and mental energy."}},{"startTime":1385.0,"endTime":1397.7,"type":"topic","title":"craftsman truck series","url":"/glossary/craftsman-truck-series","quote":"...you haven't retired, retired, you raced craftsman truck series, as you said, you still do himself whenever you can.","canonicalId":"topic:craftsman-truck-series","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “Craftsman Truck Series” is a NASCAR series that features pickup trucks and a full racing schedule. The speaker mentions it to describe how they still race in other opportunities even after retiring from full-time driving.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is a NASCAR racing series where the cars are pickup trucks. They’re saying they still race there when they can, even after stepping back from full-time racing."}},{"startTime":1433.7,"endTime":1440.0,"type":"topic","title":"F1","url":"/glossary/f1","quote":"...educating people about motorsports, teach them about IndyCar, trying to explain F1 and layman's terms.","canonicalId":"topic:f1","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"F1 is Formula 1, the top level of open-wheel racing run by teams around the world. In the context of the interview, Hinchcliffe is talking about explaining F1 to non-experts on broadcast."}},{"startTime":1456.8,"endTime":1463.0,"type":"topic","title":"craftsman truck race","quote":"...do Daytona 24 and do the craftsman truck race. I mean, that was such a blast.","canonicalId":"topic:craftsman-truck-race","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.65,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The “craftsman truck race” refers to a NASCAR Truck Series event sponsored by Craftsman. It’s a different discipline from open-wheel racing, emphasizing stock-truck racing on oval tracks and short-track circuits.","simplifiedExplanation":"The “craftsman truck race” is a NASCAR event where the cars are pickup trucks. It’s a different kind of racing than IndyCar or F1."}},{"startTime":1480.1,"endTime":1487.0,"type":"topic","title":"F2","quote":"...when it looked like, and as the subsequently happened, F2 was going to run on the Indy 500 weekend.","canonicalId":"topic:f2","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"F2 refers to Formula 2, a feeder series that helps develop drivers for Formula 1. The transcript mentions a hypothetical schedule where F2 would run on the Indy 500 weekend, highlighting how series calendars can overlap."}},{"startTime":1491.2,"endTime":1496.0,"type":"brand","title":"Andretti","url":"/glossary/andretti","quote":"...oh, hinge, you could have that, Andretti. So you could have that fourth car.","canonicalId":"brand:andretti","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Andretti refers to Andretti Autosport, the well-known IndyCar team associated with the Andretti racing family. In the segment, it’s used in the context of adding a “fourth car” for the Indy 500."}},{"startTime":1566.2,"endTime":1579.8,"type":"concept","title":"Indy 500","url":"/glossary/indy-500","quote":"...when you look at Elio at 51, coming back for the Indy 500 again this year, the drive, the drive, the drive for five back again...","canonicalId":"concept:indy-500","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"The Indy 500 (Indianapolis 500) is a 500-mile oval race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. It’s one of the biggest events in American open-wheel racing, so “coming back for the Indy 500” implies a major, high-stakes season goal.","simplifiedExplanation":"The Indy 500 is a famous 500-mile race in Indianapolis. It’s a big deal in open-wheel racing, so when someone talks about “doing the Indy 500 again,” they mean a major target race."}},{"startTime":1592.8,"endTime":1604.9,"type":"topic","title":"open test","url":"/glossary/open-test","quote":"So, you know, we had the open test and I was there for the first day of that and got to see that. And, you know, the open test doesn't by any stretch tell you everything...","canonicalId":"topic:open-test","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.85,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"An open test is an early track session where teams run cars to gather baseline data and evaluate setup. It doesn’t fully predict race performance, but it can show which cars and drivers are already comfortable and consistent.","simplifiedExplanation":"An open test is an early practice session where teams try things out and learn how the car behaves. It can hint at who’s off to a good start, but it’s not the final answer."}},{"startTime":1609.1,"endTime":1613.2,"type":"concept","title":"traffic","url":"/glossary/traffic","quote":"...but it can tell you certain things. And there's a few cars that look quick on the road. And there's a few drivers that already look comfortable in traffic.","canonicalId":"concept:traffic","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.75,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In IndyCar-style racing, “traffic” means navigating around slower cars during practice or qualifying runs. Driver comfort in traffic matters because it affects lap consistency, decision-making, and how well the car can be kept in its optimal operating window.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Traffic” here means other cars on track that you have to work around. Being comfortable in traffic helps a driver keep good lap times instead of getting boxed in or losing rhythm."}},{"startTime":1631.8,"endTime":1644.6,"type":"concept","title":"no tow time","url":"/glossary/no-tow-time","quote":"Jack Harvey had the fastest no tow time both days, which is again incredible.","canonicalId":"concept:no-tow-time","priority":0.45,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“No tow time” refers to lap-time performance without drafting behind another car. In open-wheel oval racing, drafting can significantly boost speed, so “no tow” is a better indicator of a car’s raw pace and stability.","simplifiedExplanation":"“No tow time” means the lap was done without using another car’s slipstream to help you go faster. It’s a way to judge how fast the car is on its own."}},{"startTime":1657.3,"endTime":1663.2,"type":"concept","title":"opening day of practice","url":"/glossary/opening-day-of-practice","quote":"So, I think opening day of practice on Tuesday after the GP will get a clearer indication of where everybody is.","canonicalId":"concept:opening-day-of-practice","priority":0.3,"confidence":0.7,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Opening day of practice” is the first major practice session where teams typically refine setups and validate changes. The host is saying it should provide a clearer picture of overall competitiveness once more of the cars’ planned parts and adjustments are in place.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Opening day of practice” is the first big day teams use to dial in the car. After that, it’s easier to tell who’s truly fast because teams have more of their planned setup ready."}},{"startTime":1679.3,"endTime":1761.2,"type":"company","title":"Fox","url":"/glossary/fox","quote":"How much do you enjoy in all that Fox is bringing to IndyCar... the effort that they've put in... on the Fox side of things...","canonicalId":"company:fox","priority":0.2,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"Fox is the TV broadcaster being credited for investing in IndyCar coverage, including production technology and on-air presentation. The hosts attribute part of the recent growth in viewership and attendance to Fox’s efforts."}},{"startTime":1705.5,"endTime":1735.6,"type":"topic","title":"Speedway","url":"/glossary/speedway","quote":"the technology that they're bringing to the broadcast, especially for the Speedway. You know, we have some incredible things that came last year...","canonicalId":"topic:speedway","priority":0.25,"confidence":0.6,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In this context, “Speedway” refers to oval-track racing venues where IndyCar events are held, and where broadcast presentation matters a lot. The discussion links Fox’s production/technology to the Speedway experience and ticket demand.","simplifiedExplanation":"A speedway is an oval racing track. They’re talking about how TV coverage and fan excitement around those events have been improving."}},{"startTime":1889.8,"endTime":1894.0,"type":"concept","title":"crashed out","url":"/glossary/crashed-out","quote":"[1885.0s] But then I was looking at Paddow's numbers and yes, he's been in better teams, but he also had only one race in his first six starts. He's been the top six every race, except one where he got crashed out with 10 laps to go while running in the top three.","canonicalId":"concept:crashed-out","priority":0.35,"confidence":0.8,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Crashed out” means a driver’s race ends due to an accident, typically before completing the full distance. In racing stats, being “crashed out” is a major reason a driver fails to finish, which directly affects season results and streaks.","simplifiedExplanation":"“Crashed out” means the driver had an accident and couldn’t continue the race. It usually counts as a non-finish, which hurts their results."}}],"speakers":[{"id":"s1","name":"FOX Sports","role":"host"}],"transcripts":[{"url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/james-hinchcliffe-interview/transcript.vtt","type":"text/vtt"}]}