Survivalist Pro
Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko
At the final tribal council of Worlds Apart, Shirin mentioned that “[she] made her first million by the time she was 25.” As the super-fan probably knew, revealing her wealth (in addition to her quirkiness) would make her an instant target.
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Read More »Enter Clay Jordan, the 46-year-old Restaurant Owner from Louisiana. In the very first Tribal Council of Survivor: Thailand, Jordan received a vote from Helen Glover strictly because she deemed that “he didn’t need the money”. It’s not as if there weren’t plenty of other reasons for Clay to be disliked; he would go on to lose the Final Tribal Council vote 4-3. If Clay wasn’t affluent, does he get the extra vote and go on to win Survivor: Thailand? What a chilling thought that is. Quickly a precedent arises – the rich person is either a great target or the perfect goat to sit next to at the Final Tribal Council. The curse of being rich is almost as worse as the stigma for tribal leaders being the number one target. For the next few seasons proceeding Thailand we were deprived of the quintessential wealthy cast member, but the groundwork had already been laid for the future of Survivor. Let’s play a fun game. I say the name of a few castaways, and you tell me how they are related? Gary Hogeboom, Willard Smith, Russell Hantz, Lisa Whelchel, and Kass McQuillen. You might be stumped, but if you think really hard, you’ll remember that each of these individuals had something to hide. Gary “Hawkins” Hogeboom was an ex-NFL player and, despite the efforts of Danni Boatwright, took great lengths to not appear as the financially stable ex-NFL quarterback. In an attempt to avoid the negative stigma of being a lawyer, Willard Smith told tribe mates he was a mail carrier. In the large web of lies spun in Samoa, Russell Hantz played the part of a New Orleans fire-fighter. Little did most of the Samoa castaways know that Russell had already made a pretty penny in the oil industry. Lisa Whelchel was anything other than Blair Warner in the Philippines. Whelchel was more worried about people finding out her secret because of the monetary implications, rather than the fame associated with being a child star. And finally, while not a lie, Kass McQuillen sold her reindeer trainer qualifications instead of telling the Brains tribe that she was a lawyer. No specific monetary implications, but again, lawyers have a reputation, and they are paid well for their services. The list could go on and on of players that, in some shape or form, had something to hide. “They’re thinking “Aww how cute; there’s the mom”. They don’t know that I’m more cunning and ruthless than 95% of the population”
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Read More »If you had to pick one word that described the majority of the castaways on that season, it would be ‘starstruck’. Everyone knew who Jimmy Johnson was, so there was no chance he could “Gary Hawkins” himself an alter ego. So, in an elaborate speech to the Espada tribe, Jimmy Johnson lays down his strategic role for the game – he decides to be the rich goat. In fewer words, Johnson tells his tribe that because of his fame and wealth he essentially has no chance to win. Without any chance to win, he offers himself as the noble Final Tribal Council sacrifice, as anyone “should” beat him. If the male members of the Espada tribe had put their egos aside, they would have had the perfect goat on their side…well for a while that is. Once it gets down to the end-stages of the game, no one cares if you are rich or not; it becomes a moot point. While Jimmy makes himself a case for the perfect Final Tribal Council goat, I think he’s the perfect person to take out as the game whittles down. If, like in South Pacific or Worlds Apart, you’re sitting with a solid alliance and need a boot, why not the rich guy? So, to answer the question at hand, yes, the wealthy can win Survivor, but the likelihood of this rapidly drops if the person is famous because of their money. No one cares about the granola company owning Brendan Synnott as a millionaire threat, but everyone has to worry about the ex-baseball/football superstar who has a nine-digit bank account. As we approach the 31st season of Survivor and welcome back castaways from all eras, we acknowledge the drastic maturation of the game. Gameplay in Borneo is considerably different than it will be in Cambodia (brace yourself, Wiglesworth). As a fan, it is refreshing to know that as twist upon twist is added to the game, the social reasoning seems to be a constant. The deceptiveness and social maneuvering that endears many to watch remains an ever-present theme.
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