When I heard what the concept of Survivor 27 was, I am not going to lie—I
was very wary. I thought bringing family members with their loved ones was
another show (Amazing Race, anyone?).
I thought we had already seen Redemption Island for two seasons too many. And I
was not thrilled with the cast. Three people from One World? Candice Woodcock? The Boneham clan?
No, I did not have high hopes for Blood vs Water.
So imagine my surprise when I
watched the first episode and really enjoyed it. And then the second. And then
the third. Somehow, in between all the crazy twists and strategy that Survivor can’t seem to get away from,
they have found a way to bring back the things I loved most about the show that
I haven’t really seen in a long time.
The loved ones twist has brought
back my favorite part of the show—emotions and characters. Suddenly the players
care about one another again. The
vote outs and challenges are emotional. The viewer is watching relationships be
built, and it is only a matter of time until we get to watch these
relationships break down. This isn’t forty-five minutes of searching for the
idol. We are character building again.
And the place where we get the
most emotion? The most character building? Well, Redemption Island, of course!
Rather than being a waste of fifteen minutes where a few tribe members watched
two people compete to reenter the game, only to be unceremoniously booted as
soon as they weren’t immune, we are watching two entire tribes gather to vent
their anger, sadness, and frustration at the position of their loved ones in
this game.
Rupert Boneham is already gone,
and Laura is playing a quiet (and smart) game. The One Worlder’s may not be long for Survivor 27. And I am not gonna lie—I like Candice at Redemption
Island a hell of a lot better than I ever liked her when she was actually
playing the game in Cook Islands or Heroes vs Villains.
This season is shaping up pretty
nicely so far. No, it is not the Survivor
of old. But this weird mash-up of twists has something going for it—a little
bit of heart. A little bit more than just a game.
Now, I am going to recap a tiny
bit out of order, because I want to talk about Colton first, and then be done
with him. But first, a brief interlude into the history of quitters in Survivor.
I don’t think anyone even thought
about quitting Survivor before Shawna
in Amazon, but she stuck it out,
making Osten the first quitter one season later. Osten sold all his clothes
early on, and between that and the elements he was really struggling
health-wise. On multiple occasions, Osten asked his tribe to vote him out, but
they didn’t. And when the Morgan tribe had to go to tribal right before the
merge, Osten offered himself up. He was sick, his heart wasn’t in the game, so
shouldn’t he go over everyone else who really wanted to be there? But it
wouldn’t be that easy for Osten. Survivor
wouldn’t let the tribe just vote him out (something we saw in later seasons,
such as Johnny Fairplay in Micronesia),
instead choosing to wait until he said those two magic words: “I quit.” Because
then the producers could make an example out of Osten. Survivor did not like quitters. Osten probably would have had it
worst if it hadn’t been for All Stars Jenna Morasca and Sue Hawk quitting one
season later for what were considered “valid reasons” (Jenna’s sick mother,
Sue’s altercation with Richard Hatch). So Osten sort of lucked out. History
does not look kindly upon him, but had Jenna and Sue not quit just a season
later, it would probably be a lot worst.
Our next quitter came in season
10, Janu in Palau. Janu was also
struggling for a long time before being sent to Exile Island. Upon returning,
she decided she had accomplished everything she wanted to in the game and laid
her torch down so Stephanie Lagrossa would have a chance to continue on.
Similar to Osten, it was a long time coming, and both probably could’ve been
quietly voted out by their tribe without so much hoopla.
Six seasons later, Kathy Sleckman
quit the game without even waiting to get to Tribal Council. We all know that
she couldn’t feel her family, and later found out she went off her anti-depressants
cold turkey. Of all the Survivor
quitters, she has stayed most active in the community, always willing to talk
about her quit open and honestly.
We then move onto season 21, where
Na’Onka and Purple Kelly called in quits in the same episode. Na’Onka had
threatened to quit much earlier, and Purple Kelly barely even got a confession
until episode seven, so it’s tough to know where her head was at. Jeff told
them to think about it, and let him know at the next Tribal Council, which they
did. Na’Onka was the first quitter since Osten to really be vilified for her
actions. She was in a good position in the game, had already made the jury, and
could’ve gone to the final three. She had even just won a big reward challenge
right before quitting. Purple Kelly didn’t become a Survivor villain, but instead a nobody—she was basically edited out
of the show so we never got a chance to know anything about her. Two quitters:
one a villain, the other an invisible edit.
The Nicaragua quitters were followed by Dana in the Philippines. A season built around the
return of medical evacuees, Dana got sick enough to have the medical team
called in, but not quite enough to be pulled from the game—so she pulled
herself.
We had people ask to be voted out
over the seasons, but these people were our real quitters. And for the most
part, there was a common theme. These people were sick (physically or mentally)
and struggled for a long time before giving up—some of them even making it to
the jury. A quitter is still a quitter, but at the end of the day, don’t we
feel a little bit better about it if we can rationalize it? If we can say Osten
quit because he was sick, and Jenna wanted to be with her mother, and Kathy
needed to be on her meds, we can at least justify it to ourselves.
Enter our latest quitter, Colton
Cumbie.
The Colton quit really doesn’t sit
well with me. Colton’s tribe hadn’t even gone to Tribal Council yet. The game
hadn’t even begun. But when Aras told him outright that he was in trouble,
Colton decided he wasn’t going to give Galang the satisfaction. Why let
yourself be voted out when you can just quit, right? Tina pegged Colton
perfectly: “He knows he can’t win the game.” And to Colton, that was reason
enough to take the power away from his tribe and walk away on his own.
Jeff Probst was not very nice to
Colton during this whole exchange at Redemption Island. In fact, he made some
serious claims that I am not sure he has been able to back up—namely that
Colton was already a quitter before Blood vs Water began. Jeff stated that
Colton (who was in a position of power at the time) “feigned” appendicitis to
quit in One World. Now, I am not a
Colton fan, but this seems a little hard to believe. Colton was running the
show on his tribe. And the medical team that left poor Dana in so much pain in Philippines because her condition was
not life-threatening had actually pulled Colton for faking? They are actual
doctors. That seems a little far-fetched.
We do know that Colton did not, in fact, have appendicitis. But I
have to believe that he was sick, and he was pulled because medical was truly
concerned for his safety. I’d prefer to have faith in the Survivor medical team, than to call Colton a two-time quitter. But
Probst has a lot more riding on how Colton is perceived. Because he can say he
didn’t want to bring Colton back all he wants—but he did. So he either brought
back a quitter (something Survivor
insists they will never do), or he brought back someone who, to use his own
words, should have never left the couch.
Survivor producers dropped the ball on this one, and all the
back-pedaling and Colton-bashing won’t change that. Colton should’ve never been
asked back to play a second time, no matter how much he loves the game. I can
think of name after name after name of players who would be better returnees.
But we got Colton, and we got another Survivor
quit. He is the ultimate loser his week, and I feel I have already wasted
enough time on him. This ends Colton’s time on Survivor, and the time I will spend talking about him.
So onto our second Redemption Island
duel!
When Tyson realizes Rachel was
voted out of the Tadhana tribe, he is not happy. But he is also not stupid. He
immediately calls out Tadhana on their plan to vote out Rachel so Tyson would
take her place, giving Tadhana a chance to win immunity. Rachel then won the
hearts of America by telling Tyson not
to switch with her. Just like Tyson, she knows what Tadhana’s brilliant
strategy is, and she wants to make sure it does not come to fruition. She takes
a bullet for her man, and makes it clear that she will be competing in the
duel.
Now, we start to call out Brad
Culpepper. “Mr. Football over there, smiling at me like he does,” Tyson says.
“You can be big, but that’s the worst thing in this game.”
Marissa chimes in by adding that
Brad is basically an idiot, keeping weaker people on his tribe for no real
reason, ensuring that Tadhana will continue to lose immunities. She also adds
seemingly everyone’s favorite line from the episode: “Fuck you, Brad
Culpepper.” Monica cannot be thrilled about this. But we as the viewers are. I
know I am not the only one who is loving the build up for an epic Brad
Culpepper downfall.
The duel itself isn’t interesting
(dominoes, basically) but it still somehow managed to be a nail biter. Candice
beats everyone by completing her dominoes in about five minutes as any Redemption
Island assassin would do. We’re left to watch Rachel and Marissa struggle in
the 114 degree heat, neck and neck, for forty-five minutes. And yes, along with
all of Galang (minus Gervase) I was rooting for Rachel. I like Marissa, but
after sacrificing herself for her man, I wanted to see more Rachel Foulger.
But, alas, it was not to be, as Marissa just barely beat Rachel out to take
second in the duel.
Candice gives the second immunity
idol clue to John (bad play, Dr. Candice), and Tyson hugs Rachel, asking, “Did
you have fun while you were here?” Rachel says she did.
Back at Galang after the duel, we
see a whole new side of Tyson. He’s not just a funny dude who kicks ass at
challenges. He’s a sensitive guy who loves his girlfriend, and knows there is
more to life than this game. “Too many people take it too serious and it shouldn’t
be.” Tyson knows what he’s talking about.
Aras tells Tyson he made the right
decision although it was hard, and Monica complains about all the shit being
talked to her husband. Tyson admits, “being here with Monica is a little
weird.” This doesn’t bode well for the fifth member of the Galang power
alliance. Tyson is clearly pretty high up in this alliance, although I think
Aras and Tina are running the show (it’s hard to tell in a tribe that never
loses who is in charge). It’s impossible to know that one Culpepper voted out
your girlfriend in an attempt to remove you from the game, and then align with
a second Culpepper 100%. We may be seeing the beginning of Monica’s downfall as
well, completely by no fault of her own.
Over at Tadhana, Dr. John Cody is
thinking about those two votes cast against him last Tribal. He is thinking
that maybe he wasn’t as smart as he should have been with the immunity idol
clue last time around. So this time, he goes to Brolliance leader Brad Culpepper,
and paraphrases the clue. But he doesn’t want Brad to search for the idol with
him or anything. Because then the rest of the Brolliance may get suspicious (as
if they aren’t already). John isn’t being as smart as he should be in regards
to this idol, but Brad is overthinking John’s actions. When two guys who don’t
seem to know much about how to play a good game of Survivor are “running” the game, it does not really bode well for
your tribe.
Episode three’s immunity challenge
was very intense. Galang sat out Monica, obviously because they knew Brad
couldn’t handle watching someone from his tribe try to knock her into the water
and feared for Katie and Ciera’s safety. We then got to watch Brad annihilate Gervase
without even giving him a chance, Laura Boneham took out Katie, Dr. John beat
Aras, and Kat ended Ciera’s chances on one push. Hayden also beat Tyson with
one push, but this may have been partially due to a shoulder injury Tyson
sustained almost immediately. Medical came in and noted that he popped his
shoulder out and possibly tore a tendon. How this will affect Tyson’s game
going forward remains to be seen, but today it keeps him from being able to
compete in anymore battles. Now Tadhana has some momentum, and Katie Collins is
about to face off against her mother. Katie should probably care a little about
this—she knows her position in the game is not great. She knows a win here
could really help her in the coming days. So what does she do? She giggles, and
bad ass Tina Wesson takes her out. My god, how can you not love Tina?
Survivor had been hyping an emotional battle, and when Aras told us
earlier, “When I was a kid, my brother never looked out for me,” it was clear
that they were going to be it. And while it may not have been as intense as all
the hype, it showed us so much about these two people with just a few minutes of
screen time. It was the longest battle we got to watch, with athletic Aras
getting the upper hand early. He decides to give his brother a chance to get
his footing and start from square one midway through their battle. As soon as
he turns his back, Vytas takes a cheap shot at his brother, “one of the biggest
un-sportsman-like moves,” trying to knock him out while his back is turned. This
backfires, and Aras beats Vytas. Aras tears up, and we get some real, raw
emotion from the former winner. “Do I feel like I’m seven? A little bit, yeah,”
he tells Jeff. Then, “He’s my brother. I don’t wanna fight against him. We’ve
done it enough.”
Vytas’ response? “He’s the college
athlete… I’m the junkie… He beat me. I’m proud of him.”
Vytas and Aras’ relationship has had
it’s ups and downs, and there is also still clearly a lot of tension between
them. We’ll probably never know the whole story, but this interaction showed us
so much about both of them. The Baskauskas brothers are compelling to watch. I
can’t wait to see more.
After Vytas and Aras, Laura
Morrett gets the chance to compete against her daughter. Unlike bad ass Tina,
Laura is a little weepy, saying, “That’s my baby.” But, the two compete. And
Ciera loses the pivotal battle, despite the fact that Laura really seemed to be
taking it a little easy on her daughter.
Katie and Ciera could not be
feeling good about their challenge performances. They each had two chances, and
couldn’t pull out one win between them. And with Tadhana about to attend Tribal
Council yet again, how could their heads not be on the chopping block?
Well, because the tribe is being
run by the brilliant Brad Culpepper, of course. And what does Brad think? “John—he’s
a strong player. He needs to go.”
Great plan, Brad!
The problem with all of this is
that Brad’s logic is flawed. He complains that Candice will win Redemption
Island, and John will reconnect with her. “Brad doesn’t control John anymore.
Candice controls John.” The only problem with this is the fact that everyone (minus Caleb) has a loved one
they can reconnect with. And of all the loved ones, isn’t Candice actually the
best for the Brolliance? She doesn’t have her own alliance over at Galang. In fact,
she has been planning their downfall for days now. Wouldn’t sticking with John
just give Brad another vote at the time Candice was to reenter the game? Wouldn’t
Candice just become an honorary female member of the Brolliance?
But more on Brad’s poor gameplay
later on.
We get the red herring of Brad
perhaps being voted out by his allies after some serious strategizing from
Hayden, who is concerned that the Brolliance is already going to cannibalize
itself—which “could be like opening Pandora’s Box.”
But Tribal Council went pretty much as predicted—John was blindsided after Vytas explained that “trust is the
currency of this game.” John knew there was a target on his back, but he
trusted that his allies would see the value he brought to the tribe. Not
exactly smart, considering the fact that Tadhana consistently keeps weak
players in the game in favor of voting out stronger competitors for strategies
that may or may not work down the road.
And then Jeff Probst tells Tadhana
something that sums up exactly how I feel about this tribe: “It appears you’re
voting people out based on the future. It also appears that with each vote,
your tribe is getting weaker.” Know what this means, Tadhana? You are not
playing a smart game! Wise up, please! I am so sick of seeing you at Tribal Council.
So who is in a better position
than they were last week?
![]() |
Week 3 Winners |
So, Vytas can’t be a winner every
week, I guess. Not that he was a loser—but I think his stock has stayed pretty
level.
My pick of Caleb as a winner is
simple. Just like Laura Boneham’s place in the game rose dramatically upon
Rupert’s exit, Caleb’s is going to do the same with the loss of Colton. No one
can get paranoid and vote him out because they are afraid he will reconnect with
his loved one like the tribe did with John. And no one can blame him for things
Colton is doing, like Galang may or may not do with Monica. Caleb is a free
agent, and when the tribes merge and start voting out people who are in pairs,
Caleb is going to be able to fly under the radar for quite awhile.
His first few days on the island,
Hayden seemed overwhelmed. Survivor
and Big Brother may have some
similarities, but I don’t think Hayden realized how hard things would be. But
now that he has gotten his footing under him, my BB12 friend is starting to strategize. He realized that once his
alliance is willing to vote out one of their own unnecessarily, it’s only a
matter of time before the whole thing crumbles. He was the one who suggested
voting out Brad because “John is a threat, but I am starting to think Brad is equally
dangerous.” And Hayden is right—but he also probably realized as far as
challenges go, voting out Brad is the last thing they should do. I liked seeing
a little life from Hayden this episode, and based on what I already know about
him, I think this bodes well for his time in the game. Hayden could sneak up on
everyone and suddenly be in the final three.
But I couldn’t choose the biggest
winner this week. By losing Rachel, Tyson is in the same boat as Laura B. and
Caleb without a partner. Aras and Tina really seem to have a good handle on
things. Gervase is part of the majority alliance, and his niece keeps winning
duels. Plus, as a whole, Galang just cannot lose. So I can’t just pick one. The
Galang tribe as a whole are the ultimate winners this week. They haven’t lost
yet, and at the rate Tadhana is voting out strong competitors, they may be
pulling a Koror before we know it.
![]() |
Week 3 Losers |
As I said earlier—I am done
talking about Colton, which is why he is not on my Losers List. At the end of
the day, he is really the biggest loser of them all. But I’d rather focus on
people who are actually playing the game of Survivor.
Which is something John Cody may
not be doing for much longer. He tried to smarten up and share his clue with Brad,
but it was too little, too late. He felt too comfortable with his tribe, and if
Survivor seasons past have taught us
anything it’s that when you feel too comfortable—it’s because you are about to
get blind-sided. Now Dr. John may get to hang out with his wife (and Marissa)
for a few days on Redemption Island, but then I think he is going to lose the duel
and be tossing his buff in the fire. I am pretty convinced that John’s game
ends here. We all know Candice cannot be beat, and Marissa is starting to go on
a nice little second place run. John’s hemming and hawing and inability to play
Survivor with some intelligence (if
everyone knows you have the clue, share
the clue!) has brought his game to an early end. Another person somewhat
high in my pre-game power rankings bites the dust.
Monica Culpepper is a loser by no
fault of her own. She is actually playing the game smart. But she married a guy
with zero clue on how to play Survivor,
and then she brought him along with her to play the game. As the face of the
Brolliance, Brad is taking all the heat at Redemption Island, which is not
reflecting well on Monica. Tyson already made mention to how uncomfortable it
all was, and I don’t think that’s the last time we are going to hear something
like that. Laura B. or M. may be replacing her in that majority alliance, and
she may be joining fellow One Worlder
Kat at the bottom of the Galang totem pole.
So, clearly, the biggest loser of
week 3 is the man behind the Brolliance himself, Mr. Brad Culpepper. We already
talked about Brad’s flawed logic for voting out John, a much, much, much stronger competitor than Katie and
Ciera (who also both have loved ones in the game). But to make this even
better, Brad then tells the tribe that he thinks he’s going to vote for Ciera while
everyone else votes for John. You
know—in case John actually does win
Redemption Island. Then he won’t be mad at Brad. Brad is doing jury management
before there is even a jury, and on top of that he is telling everyone that
that is what he is doing. Even former loyal allies are concerned at “that level
of shiestiness.”
So now Brad has turned against his
main ally, while telling everyone else he doesn’t want blood on his hands and
might cast a throwaway vote, alienating John and the rest of Tadhana. He is
being blamed by everyone at Redemption Island for their position in the game—publicly,
in front of the other tribe that his wife
is on. He consistently decides that keeping the two weakest players on his
tribe is a good idea, because he is paranoid about the future of the game. Brad’s
tribe has not won an immunity challenge yet, and he has no one to blame but the
Brolliance that he professes he is in charge of. The buildup to his downfall is
almost complete—now it’s just a question of whether Galang loses and votes out
his wife, or his own tribe turns on him first. But the Culpepper’s are going to
be out of this game or at least competing against each other at Redemption
Island before we know it.
And that ends my ramblings about
the third episode of a season that is shaping up to be so much better than I had
expected
Will we ever find out where Galang
stands by watching them at Tribal Council? Is a tribe swap inevitable—or is it
even fair when some people could end up with their loved ones on their side?
Will Candice be so in the zone at Redemption Island that she’ll pull a Sophie
Clark and yell at John to quit the challenge and help her win? And how many
more Tribal Councils before the looming Culpepper blindside?
I, for one, cannot wait.
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