The AMA Pro Prime Time airs new episodes on Saturdays at 10PM Eastern (7PM for me on the left coast). The way they're working it is they'll show a race every saturday and the newest it'll be is a week old. So they show AMA Superbike race one on one Saturday - then you wait a week to see race two or Daytona Supersport and the thrid week, you'll see the other.
The pace car is only used on the Daytona Supersports. Superbike still has the traditional standing start.
Since SPEED seems to have leaned closer and closer to the NASCAR Channel, I'd like to see them go to two channels... SPEED1 can be their NASCAR Channel and SPEED2 could be everything else. Maybe then we could get back some of the other racing events they used to cover and some Trials, TT, Flat Track and lesser covered car/truck/plane/boat racing.
Speed Channel used to broadcast a lot more motorcycle programming about 7-8 years ago when their host was a grizzled old fart who was replaced by Greg White. Greg's stuff was good in the beginning, but they killed him with program format changes. Speed also used to show World Rally (WRX) races, generally out of Europe, that were fun to watch. But my faves were the big bike road races from tracks all over the planet. "In the end, there was only ONE", - the "doctor"!
To my knowledge, the only format that hasn't yet been seriously filmed for TV entertainment of motorcycle fans is a cross-country endurance race. Back in 1917, Alan Bedell used a 4-cylinder Henderson to set the first x-country record with a time of 7 days, 16 hours, and 16 minutes between L.A. and NYC. Exactly 80 years later in 1997, Dale Walksler set out to better the time established in 1917 on a restored Henderson and did the run in 6 days, 1 hour and 22 minutes. The finish was covered by Al Roker in NYC on the Today Show (also see: "Backroads" magazine, May 2009 issue, page 48, "Racing across Time").
What I'd like to see is some iron-butt guy doing this run on a BANDIT 1250! There are all sorts of other possibilities in a race like this. For example, how about doing the race to test fuel efficiency, like they do at LeMans for cars?
Like someone in this group said, it's fun to watch wheelies, stoppies, and fancy bike wrangling, but after a while it gets stale. With a cross-country run, there can be a lot of variations in what's done, like a Chinese guy running a 125cc bike loaded with a huge sack of stuff on the back! How about the oldest American citizen doing the run? Wait, wait! I'm beginning to describe me!
Herb