When a show has been going on for over 20 years, usually doing 2 seasons per year, it stands to reason that beats are going to remind you of what came previously from time to time. When that happens, the temptation to lean in and exaggerate those moments is great. Such is the case tonight, where we return repeatedly to the well of comedy that is Debbie Wanner (“Survivor Kaoh Rong”). And even bearing in mind that context, I can’t blame the producers for returning to that particular well. It may not be deep, but it is certainly flavorful.
My dear readers, it is my intense pleasure to welcome you back to “Idol Speculation”, my knee-jerk opinion that EVERYONE is entitled to! And Probst certainly wants us to like these contestants! We get his usual narration about the game of “Survivor” and what it means, but this time, it’s more focussed on getting out people’s backstories and play styles. I know they’ve been doing this a lot for more recent seasons, but they front loaded this one in particular. I swear, about half the cast gave at least a taste of their thoughts right at the start. Ryan talks about being born with and through physical therapy overcoming his mild cerebral palsy, Noelle talks about her leg, Karla mentions her upbringing, Morriah talks about making friends, then using those friends to win the million, you get the picture.
Special mention, though, goes to Owen talking about wanting to see his shot in the introduction, something most fans can relate to. The editors, not missing a beat, give him an intro shot. Great, but still not enough. Bring back the full intro, you cowards. You certainly have the time to do so. I won’t be talking about each flashback in detail right now, partly because there are so many, partly because most of them will get a rehash later in the episode anyway.
What I will talk about is the use of flashbacks for characterization as a whole. A holdover from the past two seasons, this has been somewhat divisive amongst the fanbase. Some feel that it helps build a deeper bond with the players, and is a contributing factor to the casts being the biggest strength of the past two seasons. Others feel that it comes across as forced, and so doesn’t do the job of connecting us to the players that it is supposed to. I fall more into the former camp, even bearing in mind what I’m about to say. Much as I like the flashback backstories, they largely don’t work in this episode. Mainly it’s the timing that’s the issue. We frontload them so that they overload us and blend together, and the ones we DO get largely have only the most tenuous of connection to the conversation at the time. I still come down on the “like them” side as a whole, but this episode is not the way to sell the viewing audience on the idea.
Oh, and it also gets rid of the iconic “39 days, 18 people, 1 Survivor!” that Probst used to end off his narration with. Granted, the permanent move to 26 days also did that, but I can only complain about one thing at a time.
On the beach proper, Probst does his usual spiel about the game of Survivor and what it means. We hear from the superfans how much it means to be here. Mike Gabler, hereinafter referred to as Gabler, talks about the show being bonding for his family. Jeanine talks about her father falling in love with the show after emigrating from China. Pretty standard stuff, but all of it competent and enjoyable. Really, the only noteworthy thing here is that we get, in a montage, a shot of our snuffer this season, and it is EPIC! Fitting with the logo, the main motif is “octopus”, a carving of one flowing almost organically over the top of the snuffer. It gets the “Idol Speculation” seal of approval. That seal means nothing, but feels good to give out nonetheless.
Probst also takes this time to inform our players of their tribe names, Vesi, Coco, and Dumbass. Everyone is naturally excited by this, and it underlines a change I had NOTICED, but hadn’t commented on until now: The removal of tribe names from buffs. Something that had been standard starting with “Survivor Nicaragua”, and something that I overall didn’t like. Apart from it implying that the viewers were morons who couldn’t differentiate tribes without a label (assuming they weren’t colorblind), it also made the buffs for a season feel less cohesive overall, since naturally the merge buff could not have a name printed. In the long run this was not worth complaining about, especially since the names were rarely legible because of the way people wear buffs anyway, but still, happy this has finally been rectified.
On to our first challenge, as per usual for supplies at camp. Two tribe members run off to untie boxes in the jungle, then bring them back. Two more people then race out to untie and drag to shore a boat with more boxes, which the whole tribe brings back to a pole. The last two left then assemble said boxes into a large cube, which one tribe member climbs on to use a stick of bamboo to get a flint off an inclined bamboo pole, the first to do so winning said supplies. Pretty standard first challenge fair, though I will give props to the puzzle on this one. “Make a cube” puzzles are old hat for the show at this point, but I like how there’s no obvious “inside” and “outside” to these pieces. It’s all geometry, and I like that for a puzzle.
For all my predictions that Vesi is going to utterly dominate this season challenge-wise, this challenge is actually quite close (and has a sweet swooping drone shot to boot). Coco is slightly behind on the crate carrying portion, largely due to Geo needing to roll his crate along while everyone else carries theirs, but they make up good ground on the boat portion, and actually finish their puzzle first, largely thanks to James, though Lindsay is certainly also a contributing factor. Working the bamboo sticks proves unwieldy, though, and the other teams catch up. Vesi pulls out the win anyway, thanks to them informing Dwight that he can stick the flint in the hole the stick for better grip, and Dwight following through, but it was not the level of blowout of, say, Taku in most challenges last season that I was expecting.
Vesi is of course celebratory back at camp, but also take the time to do introductions. Here we’re learn about Cory’s carefree Hawaiian lifestyle and Nneka’s history having grown up in Nigeria. Dwight wants to get moving on his “Survivor” experience, however, and that means it’s shelter-building time! The flaw in that plan, however, is that in order to build a shelter, you need to know how to build a shelter, something no one on this tribe cops to knowing. This will become more pronounced later, but as Vesi will demonstrate, having supplies does you little good if you don’t know how to use them.
For our other tribes, they of course have to “earn” their supplies, as is the norm in this “new era” of “Survivor”. And what creative new dilemma has the show come with for our tribes? What new and intriguing quandary will our players face this time around?
Savvy or Sweat. Again. Yeah, strap in folks, this is going to be a problem for this episode as a whole. For all that it does draw in the viewer, and will change some details, as we’ll discuss, this season feels like it at least copies format from the past few seasons. This makes the season feel like a cheap rehash, not a good look for the longevity of the show.
Now, the twist is copied wholesale in broad strokes alone. A choice between a more mental challenge that everyone gets to work on, but only gives you a limited number of guesses (in this case one, in keeping with “Survivor 41”, as opposed to the two of “Survivor 42”), and a physical challenge that separates two people from the tribe. Like I said, though, it’s the details that make this new and different. The puzzle is obviously not going to be triangles again. In this case, the tribe has a number of bones arranged to make a large number. Moving exactly two bones, they must make the largest number they can, placing said bones to make new numbers. More changed up, though, is our “Sweat” option. Instead of a physical task that has a set point of completion, two tribe members dig in a set area, trying to find a bag of supplies within a set time limit. Despite my kvetching, this is honestly a decent change-up. I think it would do a lot to help avoid the perception of being a carbon copy if they had just changed the name. It doesn’t even fit as well, since the “Sweat” option is less about physical effort, and more about luck/search techniques. Perhaps a “Luck vs. Skill” name instead?
Dumbass tribe is up first. After Gabler reminds us of his age and the problems this presents in bonding with his tribe, Sami, our young guy, is initially very gung-ho about doing the “Sweat” option. This makes Owen, the other young strong guy on the tribe, nervous, throwing him into the “Voce roll” of trying to push his tribe towards the option that puts less pressure on him individually. As Owen is overall better at the game than Voce, he actually succeeds, and his tribe begins to work out the “Savvy” puzzle.
Coco, meanwhile, has jumped immediately on the “Sweat” option. This is largely at the urging of Geo, who says that his tribe is not a brain trust. Seems a bit rich coming from the guy who most physically struggled during the first challenge, and the tribe as a whole that did best on the puzzle portion. Ryan is fine, and the rest of the tribe is not going to complain, though, so the pair set to digging. Ryan wisely has them dig in diagonals from the corners of the square area, and this strategy bears fruit. After what we’re told is only about half an hour of searching (out of a 4 hour time limit), Ryan finds the bag. Funnily enough, this happens right when he says they might get lucky, and comments on how he’s always been lucky. Remember that, I’ll bring it up later.
Back with our Dumbass tribe, we find that my joking name for them is non-indicative. After some agonizing, Sami gets the problem solved seemingly with ease. He admits he had hoped to hide his smarts, but getting flint is more important. Sami also starts listing off the various aspects of himself, and how he could be labeled as such. Sensing a golden opportunity reminiscent of the Debbie Jobs of “Survivor Kaoh Rong”, production, of course, lists all these options out. Needing to not COMPLETELY copy their previous work, however, they instead list all the occupations at once, adding them on as Sami lists them. Hilariously, this culminates in the last one needing to be angled to that it fits on the screen. Good comedy, show. Good comedy.
Back on Vesi, as they continue to struggle with their shelter, it’s time to start looking at alliances. Noelle talks about her bond with Justine, due to them being similar ages. Unfortunately, math does not seem to be Noelle’s strong suit, since 2 is not a majority in a tribe of six. Nneka and Cody have bonded, meanwhile, since both work in similar fields. They add in Jesse as a third, showing that they’re at least marginally better at math. Dwight is not brought up in any conversation that we see, which bodes ill for his prospects, in my view. Yeah, no one’s outright targeting him, but if you’re not brought up at all, even as a number, that’s a bit of a concern.
Going back to our alliance, Cody is pushing hard for Justine to be the first one out. Justine mentioned that she worked in sales, a profession that, Cody notes, prepares one well for the game of “Survivor”. And he should know, since he’s in sales. Not that he’s mentioned that to his tribe, which leads the editors back to the Debbie Well once again, to tack “Sales” onto the end of Cody’s chyron. Again, hilarious. Reasonable argument too, but Jesse admits that he’s the one in the middle in this whole mess. Jesse also takes the time to give us his backstory, and this is probably the one that works the best out of the whole episode. Someone asks about Jesse’s tattoos, and he gets to talking about growing up being in a gang, before turning his life around. He gets his GED, goes to grad school, it’s uplifting stuff, and most important, actually flows naturally with the conversation!
Over on Dumbass, Owen is having a hard time. He’s doing what, on paper, seems to be a smart move. He puts feelers out to people, a casual “Hey, let’s let each other know if our names come up.” thing. But according to Owen no one really wants to go along with that, nor talk much strategy at all. This would be concerning, but I think Owen exaggerates. True, Gabler is not a fan of the pitch (despite the fact that he will later make a similar agreement with Elie), but Elie, the only other person we see Owen give the pitch to, does agree. Seems more like a Gabler issue than a tribe issue.
Elie, whatever she agrees to with Owen, has other plans. She gives a heartfelt talk about losing her sister to a drug overdose, and the bond the two shared. It’s sweet stuff overall, and does make us bond with and sympathize with Elie. That said, it is a bit jarring when Elie tries to force a connection to the women’s alliance she has formed with Morriah and Jeanine. Don’t get me wrong, perfectly fine and reasonable strategy, and a sympathetic backstory, but the two don’t HAVE to be related, and it feels kind of forced that the show seems to make Elie tie two unrelated things together.
Before we get to alliance discussions on Coco, we get to see Ryan eating an earthworm. He says it doesn’t taste very good, which seems like a fair assessment. That said, this is the last time Ryan is really highlighted this episode, so I want to talk about him here. Pre-season, I was not super-excited for this season. Even viewing people in the best light, it seemed like a lot of the players were going to be kind of generic, and not stand out. Ryan was a big offender in this area, but after tonight, I’ve changed my tune on him (along with a few other players). The dude has a charm that didn’t seem to come across on paper, but every moment with him on screen is a joy. He’s just so optimistic, and that smile is infectious. While we didn’t need to see his “cerebral palsy” story twice, it is a nice story, and good mark for him in terms of overcoming obstacles in his life.
But I think Ryan is more than just a good social face, however. I think Ryan may end up our season winner. I know, I know, he wasn’t one of my pre-season winner picks, and I will stand by them when I look at how wrong I was at the end of the season. I also acknowledge that this is really early, and I may be WAY off-base here. However, recall that Ryan had the search strategy that got the tribe his supplies, was the one to find the bag, and most notably, right after saying “I’ve always been lucky.” That, to me, seems like one of those confessionals that applies to the situation and appears innocuous at the time, but might be a big “winner hint” for down the road. Sort of the equivalent of Fairplay saying Sandra “Won’t be the Final One” on “Survivor Pearl Islands”. Technically a spoiler, but one done subtly so the public can’t guarantee it. Again I may be very wrong here, but if this WAS an episode one hint to a Ryan victory, I will be happy. Both because he seems like a nice guy, and because I will have called it.
As to our actual alliance, it doesn’t include Ryan. A girl’s alliance has formed here as well, largely at the behest of Cassidy. She feels that many people on her tribe play “loudly”, while she wants to play more quiet. To this end, she ropes in Karla and Lindsay, who are only too happy to band together to prevent being voted out. All, after all, could potentially be vulnerable. Lindsay is the oldest person on the tribe, while Karla is visibly overweight, and so could be seen (incorrectly, from what we get this episode) as a liability in challenges. They even go so far as to peg their fourth. James and Lindsay are both from Philadelphia originally, and so the pair bond over that, and James gets brought in as a fourth. It helps that we see James talking and connecting with Cassidy and Karla as well, though he tells us he’s doing that with everybody. He gives his own flashback, talking about being a chess champion at age 13, and often being the only African-American kid in the tournaments. This is annoying, not because there’s no segue or that the backstory is not touching (indeed, this is on the more heartwarming end of the spectrum), but because it leads to James talking about wanting to be “seen as a pawn, but playing like a king”, a forced chess metaphor that I don’t doubt is going to be only the first of many we’ll see on James’ “Survivor” tenure.
We briefly check back in with Vesi. They have not managed to start a fire yet, something we saw both other tribes accomplish already. Cody steals the spotlight, however, as the aforementioned tattoo talk leads to him showing off his own tattoo. On his butt cheek. Which says “LIVIN!” I bring this up only because it becomes our proper episode title. It’s not bad, but as we’ll see later, there was a much better quote they could have used.
Dumbass gives us little to work with either. Gabler again talks about the difficulties in bonding with his tribe due to the age gap between them, while the women debate which man to bring in as their fourth. Elie makes sure to note that Gabler is by no means off the table, and we see the pair make the “let me know if my name comes up” pact Gabler poo-poo’d from Owen earlier. Solid strategy, but again, nothing special.
Moving on, Karla and Geo get to talking about their shared identity as gay Latinos. There’s no flashback, but it feels like one, with the pair talking about the individual hardships they’ve endured. Again, good stuff. Had they included more flashbacks here, I would not have minded. The focus, though, is on strategizing, as despite Karla being nominally in the women’s alliance, she also agrees to work with Geo, the pair later bringing in Ryan to make a threesome (James would presumably be the fourth). Karla talks about how worried she was about being the first person out, and thus how weird it is to be seemingly in the middle. A far cry from the tough, confident woman we got in most of the previews, but I’m rooting for Karla this season, and her emotions are understandable, so I’m not going to complain. While she’s in a good position now, I’d say her going with the men is better long-term. That bond with Geo is the 1-on-1 bond you need with someone to help keep the alliance tight, and while I don’t doubt Karla is tight with the other women as well, it’s the difference of one truly tight person versus two slightly tight people. Plus hey, if you’re worried about being voted out due to perceived weakness, Geo isn’t exactly acquitting himself well right there.
Vesi STILL doesn’t have fire, and to make matters worse, their “shelter”, such as it is, collapses on Dwight. Somewhere, Rupert (“Survivor Pearl Islands”) is taking notes on their shelter design. Thankfully for Vesi, a distraction comes in the form of a boat. Yep, it’s “Shipwheel Island” time, or at least this season’s equivalent! Dwight volunteers to go, which no one particularly objects to, further supporting my theory that he’s out on most tribe strategy discussions. James and Ryan want to stay behind on Coco for shelter work, and of the remaining four, Karla is selected based on a “Guess the closest number” method. Dumbass also goes “random” but has the more clever method of having people hold out varying amounts of fingers which get counted, with whoever’s finger is 43rd getting to go. This ends up being Gabler.
Now let me tell you, this Shipwheel Island is very different. The last few times, people walked up a hill. This time, they walk to A ROCK! Yeah, props for changing it up a bit so we aren’t seeing the same shots over and over, but this is not much. Karla uses the admittedly difficult-looking walk to talk about her own backstory. Given that this group didn’t seem to chat much about the game, this seems like a good use of time, and the backstory is nice, but again, not much of a segue.
For all my snark, the dilemma at the rock is at least different. All three will privately decide whether to risk or not risk their vote. Rather than wait until Tribal Council to find out what happened, however, they reveal publicly at once. As one would expect, all who chose not to risk do nothing. Everyone who chose to risk a vote, however, draws a tube from a bag containing the same number of tubes as risked votes. One has some advantage, the remaining ones have a lost vote. The jury is still out for me on this change. I appreciate them not going with EXACTLY the same mechanics as last time, but how public everything is I’m not sure is a good move. It feels like it will incentivize more conservative play, since you can be called out for potentially screwing someone up immediately. That said, it does open up more direct mind games than the previous iteration, and like I said, better to shake things up.
All three of our players make the logical decision here. Karla, being the swing vote, decides not to risk. Gabler and Dwight, being at least nominally somewhat on the outs, need the advantage more, and thus go for the risk. Each draws a tube, and we head back to camp. Dwight, despite telling pretty much the truth, gets disbelieved by his tribe. The one good thing that happened is that they got fire while he was gone (after 30 hours, per the chyron). In a good bit of editing, we see him start to open the tube, only to cut to Gabler. Being a more up-front type person, Gabler is believed by his tribe, and he sets about opening his tube. With no subtlety, Gabler crows his delight at his advantage, an idol good for two Tribal Councils. Dwight has lost his vote. Can’t dwell on that for too long; we’ve got an immunity challenge to get to!
Our challenge is really not as spectacular as you would hope a first immunity challenge is. It’s an obstacle course combining elements from the first challenges of “Survivor Edge of Extinction” (particularly in the balance beam), “Survivor Millennials vs. Gen-X” (in being able to make the beam easier), and “Survivor Heroes vs. Healers vs. Hustlers” (in choosing which table maze to go with, depending on when you get to that portion of the challenge). Nothing BAD in each of these, and I’m glad to see choices make a return in challenges, but it just lacks the epic scale you hope for in such a challenge.
Thankfully, this is made up for by our immunity idols for the season. They are nothing short of INCREDIBLE! Two figures in native headdress, similar in theme but distinct, as multi-idols should be, if you’re not going to split one idol into equal parts. Much as I hate to praise this season, I would compare them favorably to the idols of “Survivor Edge of Extinction”, which also had multiple idols distinct from one another, but with clear theming to them. Good job, art department!
Also worthy of praise is the misdirection. We’ve had good strategizing from all three tribes, and there’s a real sense of mystery about who will win. Even Coco getting out to an early lead after Ryan does well in digging under a log is no guarantee of victory for them, and this is me saying that after the fact, knowing Coco keeps their lead. I should also mention that during the “get up a sheer wall” portion, James loses his pants, leading his tribe to tell him “Get your pants on.”. I bring this up because, when you have such a funny title GIFT-WRAPPED for you, show, you use it. I don’t care how much you liked “LIVIN!”, this was clearly the superior choice!
Coco, as I said, wins, having gotten to the mazes first, and wisely picked the traditional table maze as the safest option. And I say this knowing the Heroes did the same thing in the same challenge on “Survivor Heroes vs. Healers vs. Hustlers” and lost. Vesi and Dumbass are in a bit of a race for second. Dumbass has been behind, but both tribes struggle on the maze. However, while Vesi is able to work together, and come up with a more stable method of working the table (standing behind one another in the center as opposed to one person on each side), while Gabler and Sami on Dumbass argue and can’t get their act together. Thus, Vesi gets second, and Dumbass gets their flint confiscated, since that’s back as well, I guess.
Gabler is pretty broken up about the loss. taking a good portion of the blame for the maze issues, and even going so far as to say he’ll be using his Shot in the Dark. Why he does that when he has an IDOL that’s only good for two Tribal Council’s anyway, I don’t know. Fortunately, this tribe does not initially seem to be one that cares too much about challenge performance, and Elie reassures him that he’s not going anywhere, such that Gabler wisely takes back his public claim of use of his Shot.
So, I guess the debate is between Sami, the other person who arguably cost them the challenge, and Owen, who hasn’t bonded as well with the tribe. Oh, wait, Elie is talking about needing to keep Sami for his challenge ability. Ok, so I guess we get the “downfall of Owen” story, right? No, there goes Elie talking about Morriah being weak in challenges, and how she should go now. Guess the women’s alliance is out the window? Oh, but Morriah is back pitching Owen, which Elie is considering as we head off to Tribal, and do you get why the episode starts to fall flat after the immunity challenge now? Everything is messy and poorly explained.
Morriah being “weak” is the worst offender of all, since we see ZERO evidence on screen of her doing poorly in either challenge. Jeanine visibly messed up on the digging portion, and Gabler and Sami cost you on the maze. Even the first challenge, Morriah contributed just as much as the rest of the tribe. You were out there, not me, so I’ll assume we didn’t see something, but surely we could have some EVIDENCE to show that this isn’t a baseless claim.
In the great debate between getting rid of Owen or Morriah, the correct answer is Gabler. I get that having a player who is very honest can be seen as a good thing, but the dude is MESSY as a player. I wouldn’t trust him to keep my alliances secrets for me, and between that and his challenge performance, he’s of little use. Even his idol is of no real value to the tribe, only being good for one more Tribal Council after tonight. Yes, him playing that or doing his Shot in the Dark after all is a risk, but surely you can split the vote with Owen or something. If it MUST be between Owen and Morriah, Owen is the smarter choice. We’ve seen nothing to indicate Morriah is a liability, and while Owen hasn’t been playing badly, he’s not as connected or well into an alliance as you would hope.
Our Tribal Council is decent, but overshadowed by the epic set. At first glance, it’s nothing special. Domed huts in the trees. But there’s a great bone motif going on. Skulls throughout, and a great rib-cage walk-up leading into the council. Really my only gripe is that, while the individual art elements this season are all top-notch, they don’t coalesce. Bones at Tribal Council, but a bull-shaped urn (which is also pretty cool) and an octopus snuffer, with native figure idols. Not seeing a theme here.
Probst reads Dumbass the riot act at Tribal Council, since they go the Jacob Derwin (“Survivor Ghost Island”) route in overconfidence in their tribe in face of evidence to the contrary. Dumbass goes so far as to say that they won the challenge, despite, you know, losing. Their reasoning is that they didn’t give up, which is assuredly admirable, but doesn’t change facts, as Owen will later point out. Once Probst is done snarking some sense into them, we settle down into pretty bog-standard double talk, though it’s talk that convinces me that Owen’s going. Less because of what’s said, and more because Elie, our presumed decision-maker, glances over at Owen at multiple significant moments.
This, it seems, was just misdirection, as Morriah goes home. I am not happy. Apart from not thinking it’s the smart move, Morriah seemed nice, yet it felt like we barely got to know her. In contrast, Owen had clear flaws in his game, and while he to seems like a nice guy, we didn’t necessarily need much more than what we got. And Gabler, of course, would still have been best on both strategic and character fronts. I’ve outlined his flaws as a player, and while he is definitely the biggest character of the three, I feel like what we got of him would still be plenty for the season. Sort of a Vince Sly (“Survivor Worlds Apart”) for the modern era: Out early, but memorable for his time.
This premiere fizzled out by the end. It was still good overall, and did the primary job of bonding me to the cast, and had many good moments. I didn’t emphasize them much, but those drone shots during the challenges were gorgeous, to highlight one underrated element from the episode. But my, was there nothing after the immunity challenge. Up until then we had good characters and strategizing, then BOOM! Decisions made with no congruity with what we’re shown, and a disappointing exit of someone we hardly got to know. By no means the worst, but this show, and I suspect this season, can do better.
-Matt
Title Credit to Jean Storrs.
Tags: 41, 42, 43, Baka, Cassidy Clark, Coco, Cody Assenmacher, David Voce, Debbie Wanner, dumbass, Dwight Moore, edge of extinction, Elie Scott, Entertainment, Geo Bustamante, heroes vs healers vs hustlers, hidden immunity idol, Idol, immunity, James Jones, Jeanine Zheng, Jeff Probst, Jesse Lopez, Jonny Fairplay, Justine Brennan, kaoh rong, Karla Cruz Godoy, Lindsay Carmine, Mike Gabler, millennials vs gen x, Morriah Young, Nneka Ejere, Noelle Lambert, Owen Knight, Pearl Islands, reward, Rupert Boneham, Ryan Medrano, Sami Layadi, Sandra Diaz-Twine, Survivor, Taku, Vesi, Vince Sly, worlds apart