Big, fat let down ...
I've heard a lot of people poo-poo these trips - LAME. Lame and sad.
So, they aren't doing it the way you (the general "you", not you specifically) think they should. There is more than one way to do this sort of thing. So they thought, being newbies, they should over prep. If they hadn't, the same people would be mocking them for not going prepared. Everyone either starts off grossly under prepared and a danger to themselves and others, or hanging on the coat tails of others - they chose the latter, which is the smarter of the two options. So they decided that being famous actors with millions of dollars might mean they should take extra care while driving through areas of questionable security; wouldn't you?
They still got out there and did it which is far more than what most people complaining about the trips they have done.
I'd rather not see the overlanding community stoop to such a level mentality as to discount the way some overlanders choose to do things because that isn't the way the "cool kids" are doing it. That sort of judgmental stuff is, in my opinion, the worst thing that can happen to the community, period. We all do this for our own reasons and in our own way but should be connected by a spirit of inclusion, not exclusion. Saying someone's trip is less legitimate because they aren't hardcore enough is counter - and destructive - to the culture. If the LWD/LWA/etc journeys are frauds because they over-prepared, I'd hate to think of what the little jaunts most of us take most of the time are considered or how much of a nancy-boy I must be for having a SPOT when I am rarely more than 50 miles from a paved road.
Once Overlanding becomes a competitive pursuit where machismo rather than experience is paramount, I'm out. I have zero interest in hanging out with people who mock others for not being hardcore enough. If there is anything more worthless to do, I can't think of what it is.
Personally, I like that they did it and have more respect for them for it. Calling it a scheme is just ... ehh - lame. It is so opposed to how I see overlanding that things like this make me re-evaluate my opinions of the whole thing. I'd expect it from some balls-to-the-wall rock crawling club, but here? Really? What a let down.
BTW, for those that really think they are so much tougher, watch The Race to Dakar and honestly ask yourself if you would have kept riding for hours upon hours in the condition Charlie was in after his crash. I've skied for miles on a black diamond slope in Colorado with a loaded backpack on badly broken ankle with no help and I don't think I could have done what he did. Maybe I'm just a sissy like them, though.