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Photo: EKATERINA BOLOVTSOVA
Erika's decision was, in fact, no decision at all, and she not only smashed the hourglass, but went on to eventually win the game. There was a huge uproar about the twist, and not just from viewers, but players as well.
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Read More »Season 40 of Survivor was the end of an era. Featuring 20 past champions, the Winners at War installment was a celebration of 20 years of outwitting, outplaying, and outlasting — complete with a champagne toast to kick things off, and a record $2 million prize to victor Tony Vlachos. When the show finally returned to air in the fall of 2021 after a Covid-delayed 16-month break, it was presented as the start of a new era, with changes that extended beyond just the abbreviated 26-day format and far more diverse casting. Producers threw the proverbial kitchen sink at contestants with twist upon twist to keep players constantly on their toes. (Apparently, there was also some sort of "monster" on the loose, but that is neither here nor there.) Jeff Probst already told EW back in May that many of the new wrinkles we saw on seasons 41 and 42 of Survivor (which were filmed back-to-back) would be back for Survivor 43. "Things like small tribes, earn the merge, no food, risk/reward dilemmas, Shot in the Dark, are here to stay," the host said then. "Other specific twists will come and go depending on the season."
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Read More »There was a huge uproar about the twist, and not just from viewers, but players as well. "It's not even a twist, it's a lie," Sydney Segal told EW, who was part of the winning team but was voted out anyway. "We're told one thing and then something else happens." Danny McCray even argued directly to the host about how unfair the twist was. "We're competitors," Danny told EW. "A lot of us leave a lot of things at home to come out here and play this game. And we put a lot on the line and there's an essence to competition. You play to win so you can win something, right? That's the only reason that you would go out there to compete. And the fact that he was able to lie to us, to trick us and make us work as hard as we did just for it to be taken away from us, it just wasn't cool with me. And his response, you know, it was what it was. I won't really get into that, but it just didn't float with me. So I didn't like it." Of course, Danny also said in that same interview that "My reality TV days may just be over because that was a very, very tough situation for me to handle and process," yet is now starring on The Challenge: USA, so it couldn't have been too terrible. Perhaps taking Danny's feedback into account, the show brought the controversial twist back for Survivor 42, but with a few small tweaks. This time, Probst informed the winners that the player they chose to send away (which ended up being Rocksroy Bailey, below) would have the power to change the game, so they would not be completely blindsided by what was to come. He also informed the winners that one of them could choose to swap places and forgo the feast (and possible immunity, as far as they knew) to go to Exile Island themselves to get that power. While these were certainly improvements, it did not get around the fundamental problem many had with the twist in that players were being punished for competing and winning at something. Survivor Jeff Probst and Rocksroy Bailey on 'Survivor 42' | Credit: Robert Voets/CBS The Do or Die twist also appeared on both seasons and essentially gave players the option to compete or sit out of a challenge. If they sat out, they had no shot at immunity, but if they competed and were the first person out, they would have to play a game of chance that if they lost, would eliminate them from the game. Deshawn Radden and Lindsay Dolashewich were the first people out in that challenge for each of their seasons and were forced to play the Do or Die game in which they had to pick the one box out of three that would keep them safe. Interestingly, neither followed the mathematically advantageous strategy that says you should switch boxes after the first one is revealed, yet both ended up beating the odds and being safe. It seemed everybody had an opinion on the twists, including yours truly. While I actually really liked the decision to have players compete to get into the merge, the Hourglass portion of that twist seemed gimmicky and blatantly unfair — something done more for shock value that solid game mechanics.
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Read More »But I personally had no problem with the Do or Die twist because — unlike the Hourglass — all the players were given all the rules beforehand and therefore could make their decision accordingly. I just don't understand why anyone would ever choose to play it. (My only real gripe with Do or Die was that you could figure out the result of the box game by how much time was left in the episode. If too much time was left, it was obvious the person won, and they would still have to do a full tribe vote. Then again, I'm probably the only one dorky enough to compare the clock to the episode in real time.)
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