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Survivor Game Changers Episode 4 Player Who Voted Malcolm Off - jonesfaught

34th season of the television series Survivor

Season of television series

Survivor: Game Changers
Season 34
Survivor34Logo.jpg
Presented by Jeff Probst
No. of days 39
No. of castaways 20
Winner Sarah Lacina
Runner-up Brad Culpepper
Location Mamanuca Islands, Fiji
Country of origin United States
No. of episodes 13
Release
Original network CBS
Original release March 8 (2017-03-08) –
May 24, 2017 (2017-05-24)
Additional information
Filming dates June 6 (2016-06-06) –
July 14, 2016 (2016-07-14) [1]
Season chronology

Previous
Millennials vs. Gen X

Next →
Heroes vs. Healers
vs. Hustlers

List of episodes

Survivor: Game Changers — Mamanuca Islands is the 34th season of the American CBS competitive reality television series Survivor, featuring 20 returning castaways. The season premiered on March 8, 2017 with a two-hour airing, marking the series' 500th episode,[2] and ended on May 24, 2017, when Sarah Lacina was named the winner over Brad Culpepper and "Troyzan" Robertson in a 7–3–0 vote.

This season was the third to film in Fiji after Survivor: Fiji and Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X.[3] It was the fourth season to feature entirely returning players, following Survivor: All-Stars, Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains, and Survivor: Cambodia and was the 11th season overall to feature returning players.[4]

This season introduced several alterations to the game format. The process for resolving a tied vote was changed for this season, removing the second ballot where only non-tied castaways were allowed to vote between the tied castaways and proceeding directly to the procedure to resolve a deadlocked tie: an open deliberation between non-tied voters. The rest of the process remained the same (however, there turned out to be no such scenario in the season). This format twist was retired in the following seasons, with the revote being re-introduced.[5] The format of the Final Tribal Council, in which jurors individually addressed the finalists by delivering a statement or asking questions, was changed to a moderated discussion between the finalists and jurors.

Casting [edit]

According to host Jeff Probst, this season featured former contestants from the show that were considered "game changers"—those whose strategies and risky moves either affected or would have significantly affected, how their season played out. Probst stated that in preceding seasons, "we've had so many new players that were good players, and the game has continued to escalate in terms of the level of gameplay that it suddenly became apparent that we actually have a lot of great game players." Producers also sought out applicable contestants from earlier seasons in order to ensure a balanced representation of players from throughout the program's history.[1]

Probst also pointed out that Game Changers was being cast while the 33rd season, Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X, was still filming. Because of this, two of the 20 slots for Game Changers were reserved for Season 33 players, in case producers wanted to ask any of them back; should either spot have gone unfilled, producers had two earlier players in mind.[4] Fiji winner Earl Cole was asked, but he dropped out due to injury.[6] Worlds Apart co-runner-up Carolyn Rivera was considered for this season's cast, but she was cut by producers late into the casting process.[7] Ultimately, Millennials vs. Gen X castaways Zeke Smith and Michaela Bradshaw were cast.

Ethan Zohn from Africa and All-Stars, Joe Anglim from Worlds Apart and Cambodia, Kelley Wentworth from San Juan Del Sur and Cambodia, Danni Boatwright from Guatemala, Sabrina Thompson from One World, and Corinne Kaplan from Gabon and Caramoan were asked, but they declined. Anglim and Wentworth would both eventually return for Edge of Extinction and Zohn and Boatwright would return for Winners at War.[8] [9] [10] Marty Piombo from Nicaragua, Jon Misch from San Juan Del Sur, John Cody from Blood vs. Water, Worlds Apart winner Mike Holloway, Alexis Maxwell and LJ McKanas from Cagayan, Sophie Clarke from South Pacific, Jonathan Penner from Cook Islands, Micronesia, and Philippines were also contacted, but ultimately cut.[11] [12] Clarke would eventually return for Winners at War.[9]

San Juan Del Sur winner Natalie Anderson was originally cast on the season as well, but she ultimately had to back out shortly before filming began due to medical reasons.[13] Her spot was filled on short notice by Worlds Apart contestant Sierra Dawn Thomas.[14] Anderson later returned for Winners at War.[9]

Contestants [edit]

List of Survivor: Game Changers contestants
Contestant Original tribe Expanded tribe Dissolved tribe Merged tribe Finish
Ciera Eastin
27, Salem, Oregon
Blood vs. Water & Cambodia
Mana 1st voted out
Day 3
Tony Vlachos
42, Jersey City, New Jersey
Cagayan
Mana 2nd voted out
Day 6
Caleb Reynolds
28, Hopkinsville, Kentucky
Kaôh Rōng
Mana Mana 3rd voted out
Day 9
Malcolm Freberg
29, Hermosa Beach, California
Philippines & Caramoan
Mana Nuku 4th voted out
Day 11
James "J.T." Thomas Jr.
31, Mobile, Alabama
Tocantins & Heroes vs. Villains
Nuku Nuku 5th voted out
Day 13
Sandra Diaz-Twine
41, Fayetteville, North Carolina
Pearl Islands & Heroes vs. Villains
Mana Nuku Nuku 6th voted out
Day 16
Jeff Varner
50, High Point, North Carolina
The Australian Outback & Cambodia
Mana Nuku Nuku 7th voted out
Day 18
Hali Ford
26, Knoxville, Tennessee
Worlds Apart
Mana Mana Mana Maku Maku 8th voted out
1st jury member
Day 21
Oscar "Ozzy" Lusth
34, Venice, California
Cook Islands, Micronesia & South Pacific
Nuku Tavua Nuku 9th voted out
2nd jury member
Day 24
Debbie Wanner
51, Reading, Pennsylvania
Kaôh Rōng
Nuku Mana Nuku[a] 10th voted out
3rd jury member
Day 26
Zeke Smith
28, Brooklyn, New York
Millennials vs. Gen X
Nuku Tavua Nuku 11th voted out
4th jury member
Day 29
Sierra Dawn Thomas
29, Roy, Utah
Worlds Apart
Nuku Mana Mana 12th voted out
5th jury member
Day 32
Andrea Boehlke
27, New York City, New York
Redemption Island & Caramoan
Nuku Tavua Nuku 13th voted out
6th jury member
Day 33
Michaela Bradshaw
25, Fort Worth, Texas
Millennials vs. Gen X
Mana Nuku Mana 14th voted out
7th jury member
Day 35
Cirie Fields
45, Norwalk, Connecticut
Panama, Micronesia & Heroes vs. Villains
Nuku Tavua Mana Eliminated[b]
8th jury member
Day 36
Aubry Bracco
30, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Kaôh Rōng
Mana Nuku Mana 15th voted out
9th jury member
Day 37
Tai Trang
52, San Francisco, California
Kaôh Rōng
Nuku Mana Nuku 16th voted out
10th jury member
Day 38
Troy "Troyzan" Robertson
54, Miami, Florida
One World
Mana Tavua Mana 2nd runner-up
Brad Culpepper
47, Tampa, Florida
Blood vs. Water
Nuku Mana Mana Runner-up
Sarah Lacina
32, Marion, Iowa
Cagayan
Nuku Tavua Nuku Sole Survivor
  1. ^ Debbie was initially exiled after not drawing a buff during the second tribe swap. She joined the tribe that lost the next Immunity Challenge, Nuku, directly after their Tribal Council.
  2. ^ After all other remaining castaways became immune — Brad by winning the immunity challenge; Aubry, Tai and Troyzan by playing hidden immunity idols; and Sarah by playing the legacy advantage — Cirie was eliminated by default.

Future appearances [edit]

Aubry Bracco returned for Survivor: Edge of Extinction.[15] Sandra Diaz-Twine returned in Survivor: Island of the Idols to serve as a mentor alongside Rob Mariano. Sarah Lacina, Tony Vlachos, Diaz-Twine, and Mariano returned to compete on Survivor: Winners at War.

Outside of Survivor, Caleb Reynolds competed on the premiere of Candy Crush.[16] Reynolds and Sierra Dawn Thomas competed on separate teams on a Survivor vs Big Brother episode of Fear Factor.[17] Michaela Bradshaw competed on the thirty-seventh season of The Challenge.[18]

Season summary [edit]

The 20 returning players were initially divided into two tribes: Mana and Nuku. Nuku fared much better in challenges; throughout two tribe switches, original tribal lines held strong and the Nuku members were able to eliminate most of the Mana tribe.

When the tribes merged, two main factions emerged: an alliance led by Sierra and Brad and one led by Andrea and Cirie, with Sarah navigating between the two groups to eliminate threats on both sides. She used her social connections and game advantages to protect herself from betrayal by Andrea and Cirie's alliance. Meanwhile, Brad won the final four consecutive immunity challenges, and Sarah ultimately aligned with him and Troyzan to reach the end of the game together.

At the Final Tribal Council, Troyzan was overlooked by the jury for being Brad's follower throughout the game, and went on to receive no votes to win. Sarah was commended for her strategic control and social flexibility but criticized for manipulating personal relations for strategic gain, while Brad was lauded for his challenge prowess but condemned for his condescending attitude. Ultimately, the jury awarded Sarah the title of Sole Survivor with seven votes to Brad's three.

  1. ^ a b c d e f Combined reward and immunity challenge.
  2. ^ Only one tribe won the immunity challenge, sending the other two tribes to Tribal Council together to eliminate a single player.
  3. ^ There was no reward challenge due to the tribe switch.
  4. ^ Debbie was exiled after drawing a package containing no buff during the second tribe switch. She joined the tribe that lost the next Immunity Challenge, Nuku, directly after their Tribal Council.
  5. ^ There was no reward challenge due to the merge.
  6. ^ After all other remaining castaways became immune — Brad by winning the immunity challenge; Aubry, Tai and Troyzan by playing hidden immunity idols; and Sarah by playing the legacy advantage — Cirie was eliminated by default.

Episodes [edit]

Voting history [edit]

Original tribes First swap Second swap Merged tribe
Episode # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Day # 3 6 9 11[a] 13 16 18 21 24 26 29 32 33 35 36 37 38
Eliminated Ciera Tony Caleb Malcolm J.T. Sandra Jeff Hali Ozzy Debbie Zeke Sierra Andrea Michaela None Cirie Aubry Tai
Votes 9–1 7–2 5–1 5–0[b] 3–2 5–2 6–0[c] 7–4–2 7–4–1–1 6–5 5–3–2 6–3 6–2 4–2–1 0–0–0[d] Default [d] 4–1 3–1
Voter Vote
Sarah Sandra Jeff Michaela Ozzy Debbie Zeke Sierra Andrea Michaela Michaela[e] Tai Immune Aubry Tai
Brad Caleb Malcolm Hali Ozzy Andrea Tai Andrea Andrea Michaela Aubry Immune Aubry Tai
Troyzan Ciera Tony Hali Ozzy Andrea Tai Andrea Andrea Michaela Tai Immune Aubry Tai
Tai Caleb Malcolm Sandra Jeff Hali Ozzy Andrea Sierra Sierra Andrea None[e] Sarah Immune Aubry Troyzan
Aubry Ciera Tony Sierra Michaela Hali Zeke Debbie Zeke Sierra Brad Tai Sarah Immune Troyzan
Cirie Michaela Sierra Debbie Zeke Sierra Andrea Aubry Sarah Eliminated
Michaela Ciera Tony Sierra J.T. Zeke Zeke Debbie Zeke Sierra Andrea Tai
Andrea Sandra Jeff Michaela Zeke Debbie Zeke Sierra Brad
Sierra Caleb Malcolm Hali Ozzy Andrea Tai Andrea
Zeke Sandra Jeff Michaela Aubry Debbie Sierra
Debbie Caleb Malcolm Exiled[f] Jeff Hali Ozzy Ozzy[g] Andrea
Ozzy Sandra Jeff Hali Zeke
Hali Ciera Tony Caleb Malcolm Zeke
Jeff Ciera Tony Sierra J.T. Tai None[c]
Sandra Ciera Aubry Sierra J.T. Tai
J.T. Sierra Michaela
Malcolm Ciera Tony Sierra
Caleb Ciera Tony Hali
Tony Ciera Aubry
Ciera Michaela
Jury vote[19]
Episode # 13
Day # 39
Finalist Sarah Brad Troyzan
Votes 7–3–0
Juror Vote
Tai Sarah
Aubry Sarah
Cirie Sarah
Michaela Sarah
Andrea Sarah
Sierra Brad
Zeke Sarah
Debbie Brad
Ozzy Brad
Hali Sarah
Notes
  1. ^ On Day 11, a joint Tribal Council was held where two tribes voted together to eliminate one castaway.
  2. ^ Tai played a hidden immunity idol on Sierra, therefore six votes against her were not counted.
  3. ^ a b Following an open and oral poll of his tribemates, in which they confirmed they would all vote for him, Jeff was eliminated without a formal vote.
  4. ^ a b Sarah played the legacy advantage, and Tai played hidden immunity idols on himself and Aubry, therefore three votes against Sarah, two votes against Tai and one vote against Aubry did not count, and there were no counted ballots. As Brad had won the immunity challenge and Troyzan had played an idol on himself, Cirie was the only player non-immune, and was eliminated by default.
  5. ^ a b Sarah used her vote stealer on Tai, therefore Tai was ineligible to vote whereas Sarah cast two ballots.
  6. ^ Debbie was exiled after drawing a package containing no buff during the second tribe switch. She joined the tribe that lost the next Immunity Challenge, Nuku, after their Tribal Council.
  7. ^ Debbie played an extra vote advantage, allowing her to cast two ballots during a single vote.

Reception [edit]

Survivor: Game Changers was met with generally mixed reception. Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter gave the season and the finale a mixed review, criticizing the season's confusing direction, saying the season "was pretty good for me for a long time and then it started becoming increasingly confusing, both in terms of in-game momentum and the editing, which relied excessively on misdirection that actually left viewers unable to understand several big votes. Then 90 percent of Wednesday's season finale was infuriating for me, with one frustrating vote after another seemingly leading to a result that I was prepared to be irritated by." He did, however, applaud the winner, saying "The correct person was victorious. And a Survivor season ending up with the 'right' winner, or a winner whose path to victory I could see and endorse goes a long way toward me making my peace with a season."[44]

Editor of Entertainment Weekly, Dalton Ross, also had mixed feelings towards the season, believing that the final four were "not nearly as engaging or exciting a group as one that would have included any number of people who got voted out early" but still believed that "the right person won." He also noted "there were simply too many immunities and advantages in the game" which became evident in the tribal council where contestant Cirie Fields was eliminated because she was the only contestant of the six remaining not to possess immunity from elimination in some form. "It was almosttoo much and demonstrates howGame Changers was more about crazy events than solid character arcs."[45] Ross would later rank the season 20th out of the 40 seasons.[46]

In 2020, Survivor fan site "Purple Rock Podcast" ranked this season 28th out of 40 saying that "abundance of twists and turns makes the season struggle narratively" but "there are some excellent episodes along the way, and the winner plays a very strong game".[47]

In 2020, Inside Survivor ranked this season 31st out of 40 acknowledging the exciting pre-merge but criticizing the imbalanced cast, the lackluster post-merge, and lack of a cohesive story.[48]

In 2021, Rob Has a Podcast ranked Game Changers 31st during their Survivor All-Time Top 40 Rankings podcast.[49]

The incident where Jeff Varner outed fellow contestant Zeke Smith as transgender was covered by various news outlets, with fans heavily criticizing Varner's actions. Varner explained himself following the episode's airing and expressed regret for his actions,[50] but was subsequently fired from his job due to the negative publicity over his outing of Smith.[51] According to The New York Times, between the episode's taping and airing, CBS and the producers of Survivor worked with Smith as well as the advocacy group GLAAD to determine how best to handle the episode.[52] CBS's handling of the incident, including its decision to broadcast, drew mixed response. Ira Madison III of MTV News argued that the episode was "irresponsible" because it put "Varner's words on air" without "actively repudiating them," explaining that while Varner was chastised for his actions his words went unchallenged.[53] In a column for Slate Magazine, however, David Canfield praised the show's handling of a politically sensitive topic: "It's safe to say that never before in popular culture had a large American audience been guided into witnessing such forceful, persuasive, and (seemingly) unprompted advocacy for the trans community...With fundamental trans rights still a point of debate in standard political discourse, the collective rejection of anti-trans bigotry [sic] that Survivor put on display is major."[54]

Ratings [edit]

The March 8 premiere episode "The Stakes Have Been Raised" faced the smallest viewer audience in the show's history, watched by only 7.643 million viewers and receiving just a 1.7/8 rating/share in the critical 18–49 demographic. While ratings were substantially down from the Survivor: Kaôh Rōng and Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X premieres in February and September the year prior, the series still ranked first in its timeslot, but tied with ABC's The Goldbergs for the 18-49 demo. The series also managed to edge out ABC's Modern Family for total viewership, ranking first but placing second within the demo for the night.[55]

U.S. Nielsen ratings [edit]

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Official CBS Survivor website

Survivor Game Changers Episode 4 Player Who Voted Malcolm Off

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survivor:_Game_Changers

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