rench.If we kick out some Quebec team, we're all   gonna 
 homecoming   dresses under 100 look stupid.So we have to stick together.In actuality,   the devious duo secretly planned a U-Turn on their U-Turn stance.We love Quebec   but we came here to win.First, teams had to complete the Detour, of course.One   of this week's options forced a fevered sprint through the historic Marais   district in search of three marked cafe chalkboards.Teams had to order each of   the trio of menu items then jog them all back to waiting diners, who then needed   to hear the selections read back verbatim.to mimic a new runway look.After   Mickey and best pal Pete Henry took an impromptu whisk through the French   countryside care of a clueless taxi driver, the teams got down to work, mostly   finding the tasks fairly straightforward.were simple even for French   neophytes.Though it didn't stop Sukhi Atwal from brainstorming a mnemonic device   to the mild irritation of brother Jinder.she relayed breathlessly.Can you listen   to me for a minute?I need my own method!Sukhi again displayed her flair for   French as they found their second of three menu items.Before Sukhi and Jinder   reached that point, though, they instigated the episode's other major element of   drama by lying openly to Vancouver bartenders Ryan Steele and Rob Goddard about   their progress.After this understandable lapse in manners, both teams for   whatever reason were suddenly resolved to U-Turning the other.As it happened,   the Terrace, B.siblings reached the board first.replied Ryan in a talking-head   later.So Alain and Audrey and Ryan and Rob were thus relegated to completing   both halves of the Detour, a chore they mutually accomplished seemingly buoyed   by a wave of resentment.I wish I was actually pinning it onto Sukhi's skin.and   Mickey and Pete, so blissfully unstressed that they sometimes seem to be running   their race in cheerful isolation.enthused Mickey as they reached the board to   see that they had been spared.All these malignant machinations made for an   awkward scene when the   teams 
 red   homecoming dresses became bunched up at the week's nefarious Road   Block.The challenge required the methodical reconstruction of a work by French   street artist Bastek using only Mentos candy, to be carefully judged by the   artist himself.lamented Natalie upon arrival.This looks impossible.She then   completed the task with her usual effortless efficiency, but others   struggled.Michel in particular laboured and laboured on his candy creation, to   the point where all teams but the hockey players were working   simultaneously.announced Alain with gleeful venom as he and his partner finally   arrived, turning his attention to Pierre.Damn, you guys are so slow.although   Jinder didn't immediately seem to experience any remorse.he declared with   typical aplomb.Ryan spat upon arrival.If Jinder was untouched by regret, it was   tempting to wonder whether Michel felt the same.He laboured over the Mentos task   for hour after hour, staring in disbelief at his apparently flawed sugar   creation.Michel was left alone to fruitlessly ponder where he had gone   wrong.Ultimately, the Atwals followed the hockey players to the Pit Stop and   Mickey and Pete soon joined them for a third-place finish.Alain shocked his   partner by falling to one knee.While one team agreed to spend their lives   together, Michel toiled for what only felt like a lifetime on his Mentos   masterpiece.Though he arrived hours later, a determined Rob ultimately won   Bastek's elusive approval first, and the friends sprinted off to one of the more   impressive second-last-place finishes you're likely to see.We fought our   hardest.Meantime, Michel took roughly eight hours before finally assembling   something worthy of the master's approval.jogged in upbeat unison to their   elimination.host Jon Montgomery marvelled in a chipper tone.It's just   unbelievable.Until this week, the inseparable siblings had looked to pose a   formidable challenge to the rest of the field, perhaps second only to the hockey   players.They were athletic, clever and capable, not to mention imbued with a   competitive edge that won them few friends but seemed   to 
 short   homecoming dresses position them for a lengthy run.Still, they were   positive upon defeat.It's sad, but life goes on.It was just a blast.After a year   of buying nothing, Geoffrey Szuszkiewicz and Julie Phillips can spend money   again on Sunday.Phillips is looking forward to getting a proper haircut, while   Szuszkiewicz is going to purchase a couple of essentials for an upcoming   trip.When the former roommates embarked on a year-long adventure in buying   nearly nothing last summer, the friends imagined they would celebrate the   experiment's end by spending a chunk of their savings on tattoos and a vacation   to Thailand.Now, nearly a year later, there's no plans for a tropical holiday,   or tattoos, and they don't even have a long list of items they've been pining   for after a year free from consumerism.and both plan to permanently adopt many   of the habits they've embraced.said 29-year-old Phillips.The pair's life   experiment was sparked after the apartment Phillips was planning on moving into   was destroyed by last year's flood and Szuszkiewicz offered her a room in his   home.vacancy rate, the new digs were great.Szuszkiewicz had little room for all   of Phillips' stuff.Moving and purging was a difficult task for the   self-described hoarder, and it sparked extensive conversations between the two   new roommates.Buy Nothing Year was born.The experiment entailed a year without   purchasing anything beyond the duo's defined necessities which included toilet   paper, rent, utilities, cellphone bills and groceries.Emergency dental work was   also added to that list after Szuszkiewicz took a bad tumble while biking (a   mode of transportation he took up because of the experiment) and needed to visit   the dentist several times.from haircuts to transportation and dining out.They   initially planned to spend the last month of the experiment not purchasing   groceries, instead relying on their garden and Dumpster diving, but that phase   didn't work out as pl