Everybody needs to be objective here. When marketing or reviewing a product, you have a responsibility to be as accurate as possible, that's the whole point. You want to give a good representation of the product as it will appear to the largest group of consumers. Anyone who creates a production like this for public viewing should be open to criticism, and TamerBowling has handled it exceptionally well. Honestly, they have put out tons of review videos, and these two were the ONLY ones that weren't on par with the rest, and just because of the first halves of both videos.
As for the "professional pro shop guys" who know everything, and how dare anyone play the lanes wrong or throw it wrong . . it's kind of their job to help people do it right or to point out when it's not done right, because you know if someone spends 250 bucks on a ball and it "sucks," you know exactly who is going to get blamed, even if they're playing the lanes wrong and throwing it wrong . .
Then there's the other crowd who wants to give everybody a medal or trophy no matter what. I make my own videos and still field plenty of criticism, but even if one of the complainers is dead wrong, I'M the one who put the video out there, I'M the one who opened myself up for it. My videos, my responsibility, it comes with the territory. That's like saying we shouldn't criticize an athlete for a bad performance. Yeah there are all kinds of excuses you could use, but at the same time, it's part of what they signed up for. You can't praise someone for doing good and keep your mouth shut when they do bad . .
The bottom line was that the original videos misrepresented the reaction that the vast majority of the consumers will see out of those two balls. It's still incredibly helpful to see how those balls will react in unfavorable conditions, not many videos show that, but it's also a great illustration of why being able to read ball reaction, play the lanes right and picking the right equipment is so important. Otherwise you get balls that back up all the way to the pocket . .
Either way, they have put out a new video which shows the balls in a much better light. Yeah people will say "well yeah they're gonna look good if you set it up like that," but isn't that the point? If they design a ball for medium-heavy oil, shouldn't you show it and use it on the condition it was designed for? Or is that too much logic and reasoning for this crowd? The new video shows the balls as they were designed to react, plus we have the other videos that show you how they fare on other conditions. And as always, they are all great productions.