Made the mistake of watching part of this last evening too. What a bunch of jagoffs and misfits the show decided to feature. Also, much (probably most) of what they cooked looked subpar, unless you go for things like a hat made out of half a pineapple on your roast hog or ten kinds of sugar on your chicken. I was especially surprised that people would spend tens of thousands of dollars on robo-smokers (with oven dials, yet still incapable of keeping temp) and travel, then use the competition as the occasion to try things out for the first time (e.g., cooking a pig; cooking baby back ribs). Also -- an inexplicable total absence of reference to the local So. Ill. BBQ traditions, 17th Street, the Apple City team, etc., despite the fact that the competition is held in a field adjacent to the 17th Street Bar & Grill. No doubt, creative editing explains some of this. Some.
There are many BBQ enthusiasts and writers out there who hold these goofs up as the pinnacle of BBQ, while the real pitmasters are working their brick-and-mortar or steel and glass pits in relative anonymity.
PS, I know there are many "normal" people who do competition BBQ, and Mike Mills is the undisputed king. I love his original bar & grill and what he does. Don't get me wrong. But the guy who won it all in the episode speaks for himself; he's obviously very successful in a format where his personality and presentation is explicitly part of the competition. That tells me there's an institutional bias favoring -- or at a minimum accepting -- his approach. That might be a new thing, but it's a turn off.