Actually, you don't "totally get it" at all. This is the Iron Butt Rally, no one riding in it cares if there is even one spectator watching them. Those riding in the Rally aren't in the event for fame , fortune , or to develop a fan base and they certainly aren't in it to please or entertain even one spectator.
The riders are in it because they want to be as a minimum an IBR finisher. Riding in the IBR may be the most selfish , self centered thing that many of the riders will ever do in their lives, The level of commitment required just to make it to the stating line is significant , and that is the easy part.
A group of us on here have the private spot tracks of many of the top riders. They are our friends and we know where our friends are going because they choose to share it with us, and it is a given that we won't talk about it, nor share their tracks with anyone else.
If I were riding I would not have my track made public because the IBR is an intensely personal event. I would however share it with some of my friends .
Spot has changed the rally by providing a significant safety net for the riders. The accidental byproduct is Spot TV
It's interesting how social networking is changing some things.
I have had Spot since my first rally. It was one of the conditions that I was "allowed out" if my family could have the peace of mind that a Spot track brings, whether that is in fact real or illusory. As it turned out, my wife was not the one who drove the viewing, it was the kids who kept my Spot track up on the TV in the living room, pretty much until I got home. They still do that although they now watch it on their smartphones too.
Those early tracks had very few views. For me, the rider, it made little difference. While I took some comfort from knowing the kids were keeping tabs, motorcycling is still a solitary experience, and it remains so to this day.
Recently I did a 48/10 and something surprising happened. I knew that I had publicised the event widely, not from a desire to attract followers or fans, but merely because I knew folk enjoyed these trips much as I had just enjoyed Jerry's successful trip. So I too made my Spot public for the duration. The ride was the ride, from my seat. It remained me, the bike and the road. This one was longer than average, and made even more solitary than usual because my phone failed and I was restricted to Facebook and text messages.
I didn't care who watched. I knew some friends were out there, and my family in the US, England and France were watching occasionally. What I wasn't prepared for was the "public" interest. When I did manage to call my wife on about day 8 she told me that the Spot page, which I hadn't looked at, had 11000 views !!!
When I finally arrived at the end of my ride, and the start of the IBR, the view count was up to 14000. This amount of interest was something I had never experienced before, and I was immensely grateful that so many people (even if the wife refreshed the page 5000 times) were interested in my little exploit. There were laptops open all over the public area of the Sheraton in Alb. and most of them seemed to be open on my Spot page. I didn't know whether to yell "I'm here", or slink out and hope no one noticed
The thing is, I bought the Spot as a safety device and for my family's peace of mind. I don't care if one thousand watch, or one hundred, or just one. It doesn't influence what I do, although I do seem to get pretty quick reminders when the Spot track appears to go the wrong way. When I am riding all the Spot does is report my position. Apart from pressing the "OK" at gas and bonus stops, and the "Custom" at longer breaks I rarely give it a thought as to who might be watching or what they might think of what I am doing. I do what I do and they are simply invited to observe.
There will come a day fairly soon when it will be possible to live-stream the entire event. If I can afford the bandwidth I'll do that too and my friends and family will be able to watch the entire ride in real time. That will not affect what I do or where I go either, although if the Cognoscenti Group are gonna send us to Nevada brothels I may have to learn how to pixilate the image because I'm not sure my Mom would approve.