Yep, it's almost that time again.
This week's issue of ontv in the Bee has a cover picture with 19 players. There are 9 women, 8 men.
According to www.survivorupdates.com, they are:
Alex Angarita, 28 - Los Angeles, CA - Attorney
Anthony Robinson, 32 - Compton, CA - Witness locator
Boo Bernis, 34 - Lafayette, LA - Construction/fighter
Cassandra Franklin, 42 - Los Angeles, CA - Dept. manager
Dre Herd, 25 - Wilmington, NC - Cheer coach/boxer
Earl Cole, 35 - Santa Monica, CA - Advertising/composer
Edgardo Rivera, 28 - Miami Beach, FL - Ad exec
Erica Durousseau, 27 - Lake Charles, LA - Charity fundraiser
Gary Stritesky, 55 - Ramsey, MN - School bus driver
James Reid, 28 - Los Angeles, CA - Bartender
Jessica deBen, 27 - Los Angeles, CA - Makeup artist/stylist
Liliana Gomez, 25 - Oxnard, CA - Loan officer
Lisi Linares, 36 - Los Angeles, CA - Electroclash singer
Michelle Yi, 23 - Cincinnati, OH - Fashion design student
Mookie Lee, 25 - Chicago, IL - Loan manager
Rita Verreos, 38 - San Antonio, TX - Pageant coach
Stacy Kimball, 27 - Boulder, CO - Internet producer
Sylvia Kwan, 52 - Ross, CA - Architect
Yau-Man Chan, 54 - Martinez, CA - IT director
The quitter (as labeled on the Survivor first listing):
Mellisa McNulty, 27 - Los Angeles, CA - Model
And here's a teaser from an interview they had over there with Jeff Probst. He was asked about Survivor: Fiji...
This week's issue of ontv in the Bee has a cover picture with 19 players. There are 9 women, 8 men.
According to www.survivorupdates.com, they are:
Alex Angarita, 28 - Los Angeles, CA - Attorney
Anthony Robinson, 32 - Compton, CA - Witness locator
Boo Bernis, 34 - Lafayette, LA - Construction/fighter
Cassandra Franklin, 42 - Los Angeles, CA - Dept. manager
Dre Herd, 25 - Wilmington, NC - Cheer coach/boxer
Earl Cole, 35 - Santa Monica, CA - Advertising/composer
Edgardo Rivera, 28 - Miami Beach, FL - Ad exec
Erica Durousseau, 27 - Lake Charles, LA - Charity fundraiser
Gary Stritesky, 55 - Ramsey, MN - School bus driver
James Reid, 28 - Los Angeles, CA - Bartender
Jessica deBen, 27 - Los Angeles, CA - Makeup artist/stylist
Liliana Gomez, 25 - Oxnard, CA - Loan officer
Lisi Linares, 36 - Los Angeles, CA - Electroclash singer
Michelle Yi, 23 - Cincinnati, OH - Fashion design student
Mookie Lee, 25 - Chicago, IL - Loan manager
Rita Verreos, 38 - San Antonio, TX - Pageant coach
Stacy Kimball, 27 - Boulder, CO - Internet producer
Sylvia Kwan, 52 - Ross, CA - Architect
Yau-Man Chan, 54 - Martinez, CA - IT director
The quitter (as labeled on the Survivor first listing):
Mellisa McNulty, 27 - Los Angeles, CA - Model
And here's a teaser from an interview they had over there with Jeff Probst. He was asked about Survivor: Fiji...
Jeff Probst: The overall theme is letting them make almost every decision in terms of how this game will play out in the initial setup. That was the big idea. It starts with 19 people because we had somebody quit the night before, which has never happened before, so that threw us for a bit of a loop because we didn't anticipate an odd number.
They're literally just put on a beach. They've got some fruit trees there, but that's it. I come over in a float plane and drop a box. And in that box they start to get the information. And the information is you're gonna need to build the most elaborate shelter "Survivor" has ever seen. Here's blue prints, a building plan, a map to find lumber and tools. You've got a sink and a kitchen area and a couch, all kinds of stuff to build this elaborate shelter. They're told they have to finish this before the game can continue.
They build this great shelter. They've got water and flint. Once they finish building it, I show up and say, "Now you're gonna figure how to divide these tribes up." They choose somebody to divide the tribes. That person divides them, and they square off in a challenge. The losers have to go to a new beach where they literally have a machete, pot and water they have to boil. No fire. They have a cave they can kind of get under, but it's miserable.
The game is about one tribe living a life of luxury, and the other tribe really scraping to get by while the other tribe has it so good it almost doesn't feel like "Survivor" to them. They have a couch. They have tables. The tribe that wins the first challenge goes back to this reward, which is all these luxury items. They're not necessarily better. They just make life better like hammocks and umbrellas and bottles and decanters and all this silverware and plates and china and a bush shower. So you see them eating. It looks like some sort of Ralph Lauren picnic.
The other tribes show up and they're dragging their butts because they haven't even had water. What was really interesting was how quickly you started to see the attitude change where the winning tribe started to have this sense of entitlement. It was fascinating to watch the rich tribe get lazy and entitled and the poor tribe get desperate and resentful.