RHAP: We Know Survivor - Survivor 50 Panel at The Tribeca Film Festival
Episode Date: June 9, 2026Survivor 50 Panel at The Tribeca Film Festival Survivor celebrates its 25th anniversary at the iconic Tribeca Festival, bringing fans and legends together to reflect on 50 thrilling seasons of blindsi...des, alliances, and changing gameplay. In this milestone panel, Jane Rosenthal (Academy Award-nominated producer and co-founder of Tribeca Festival) is joined by Survivor icons including Rob and a panel of recent castaways to break down just what has kept Survivor fresh, relevant, and captivating for a quarter century. The discussion dives deep into Survivor 50, with candid stories about evolving gameplay—from the old school ride-or-die alliances to today’s fast-shifting strategies where betrayal might just forge your next big move. Rob sets the tone by highlighting the “tribe” at the heart of Tribeca, while Jane and others reveal how Survivor has become both an archive of human interaction and a mirror for social change. The castaways talk openly about the shortened 26-day format, what it feels like to return to “regular” life after the highs and lows of Tribal Council, and the challenge of keeping up in a world (and show) where attention spans are shorter, but the stakes feel bigger than ever. – How Survivor’s social game has evolved from ruthless old-school loyalty to quick repairs and unexpected new partnerships – Rob’s perspective on why being voted out still resonates so deeply with our basic human fears and desires – The impact of Survivor’s increased representation—including calls for more blue-collar workers and trans women on the cast – Insights into the role of storytelling at Final Tribal: has ‘outwit, outplay, outlast’ changed its meaning? – Jane Rosenthal and panelists discuss how Survivor moments—from hard-hitting social issues to unforgettable blindsides—continue shaping viewers and players alike As Survivor 50 continues to push boundaries, the panel raises questions about who will adapt and thrive in an era where gameplay, identity, and society overlap. Does forging new school alliances faster than ever pay off, or do classic Survivor instincts still win the day? Don’t miss this rare look behind the scenes and at the heart of Survivor 50—listen in for stories, strategy, and what could happen in the next 50 seasons! Chapters: 0:00 Tribeca Festival Welcomes Jane Rosenthal 0:25 Jane Rosenthal Reveals Survivor Origin Story 2:36 Survivor Legends Join the Stage 3:30 Why Survivor Belongs at Tribeca 5:18 Survivor’s Enduring Cultural Impact 6:28 Evolution of Survivor Over 50 Seasons 8:05 Shifting Game Strategies and Alliances 10:52 Technology and Studying Survivor’s Past 15:23 Dream Survivor Twists and Innovations 20:08 Survivor’s Impact on Personal Growth 26:10 Outwit, Outplay, Outlast: Modern Meanings 39:03 Survivor Tackles Real Social Issues 49:51 Audience Q&A: Becoming a Contestant 51:40 Storytelling Tips for Survivor Auditions 54:38 Would Politics Ever Belong on Survivor? To order Rob’s book, The Tribe and I Have Spoken, visit www.robhasabook.com Never miss a minute of RHAP’s extensive Survivor coverage! LISTEN: Subscribe to the Survivor podcast feed WATCH: Watch and subscribe to the podcast on YouTube SUPPORT: Become a RHAP Patron for bonus content, access to Facebook and Discord groups plus more great perks!
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Good afternoon, everyone.
Please welcome Academy Award nominated producer and co-founder of the Tribeca Festival, Jane Rosenthal.
Good afternoon, everyone.
Welcome to the 25th anniversary of the Tribeca Festival and a milestone like no other, the 25th.
years, 25 years of survivor.
Let's applaud.
Come on.
Now, there's something that Jeff didn't tell you.
And he doesn't know this.
And it goes back even longer than the 25 years.
So I'll let you in on something I've never said publicly.
So around 1999, I hope there are people who were born in 1999.
nine. I had a, as a producer, Bob and I had a deal at the CBS Television Network. And Les Moon Vez,
who was president of CBS television, said to me, Janie, I'd like you to have this meeting
with this guy, Mark Burnett. He's got this interesting idea. I said, sure. So I meet him.
I meet Mark. He comes in, tells me about all of his history, really exciting. And then he pitches
me, Survivor.
And I said, oh, great, nice to meet you.
And I called Les and said, I don't get it.
So you win some, you lose some.
So now you understand what a reality show like Survivor is doing at one of the country's
most coveted film festival stages.
And we're really honored to have so many of the.
the survivors with us. Whether you're a lifelong fan or encountering the show for the very first
time, I hope you can appreciate survivors and during place in the cultural landscape and find
something meaningful to gleam from the stark insight it offers into our countries and human
condition. I certainly have gotten to understand why I passed on it. No, but...
but why it's become such a phenomenon.
So on the heels of Survivor's epic 50th season,
we've convened the Survivors Legends.
Please welcome tonight.
Surrey, Rob, Camilla,ini, Dr. Danielle Lieberman.
Thank you.
Welcome.
Who's ready to talk about Survivor?
So I guess my first question for the panel would be,
be why are we here?
Why talk about Survivor at the Tribeca Film Festival?
What would you say to someone who came up to you and said,
well, that's just another reality show.
How has Survivor changed our culture?
Rob, you look raring to go.
Well, what I wanted to say is that, listen,
that we are here at the Tribeca Film Festival.
And you can't.
spell Tribeca without the word tribe. Look at it.
Wow.
Think about it.
When did you come up with that?
On the red carpet.
We can tell.
Well, we're here. I mean,
Tribeca is known, first off, thank you all for coming.
Give yourselves a round of applause.
You know, Tribeca is known for storytelling.
storytellers and all different platforms.
It started as a film festival,
and then it got into TV and music and interactive and gaming.
And Survivor is one of the great story series of them all.
People love it.
What would I say to someone who says, why Survivor?
I'd say, screw you.
Survivor's the best TV show on TV.
You know, it helps aspirationally.
It takes you to places that all of us, I mean, that's why I started.
I wanted to go do B. Robinson Crusoe, and it's got the greatest human drama, and it's a competition, a sport show all in one.
It's literally the greatest construct on TV. It's amazing.
Yeah, I do meet people all the time who haven't seen it.
I had to go on the show for some of my friends to watch it even, because they think it's just about, I'm going to build a fire, and I'm going to see how long I can last out there.
But it is the greatest measurement of human interaction that we have, and it is such a cultural archive.
You can go back and look at what were people like in 2005 just interacting with each other.
How did we talk?
And I also think this event is just about community.
All of us watch it.
And you don't always have people.
Like I said, I had to go on the show for my friends to watch it.
But I could always count on going to an RHAP show, a Rob show, and meeting other people who loved this thing that I love so deeply.
And it's beautiful.
And it's beautiful to see all of you who share in this passion with us, too.
Yeah.
I also feel that it's such a parallel to just normal life.
When we're on the island, people think, like a teeny said,
strategy and gameplay, that may come into play,
but most of it is just existing with your neighbor.
And that's what I think draws the masses
because everyone here and everyone who watches
can relate to someone on the show.
And I think that's why it's lasted 50 seasons.
Well, that was going to be my next question.
Why do you think the show has lasted 50 seasons?
And I agree with you about that, right?
Those kind of like micro dynamics of everyday life.
We all have friends and enemies and frenemies or people we think are friends who then are our enemies, right?
And so there are things that we can relate to in Survivor, even though it's this kind of exotic location featuring interesting challenges.
Yeah, the format is so beautiful, and it was so carefully designed.
And there's a reason why it was Survivor that was this phenomenon, this idea of getting voted out of the tribe.
It's something that is a part of us as human beings for our ancestors.
We're tribal people.
If you got out of your tribe as one of our ancestors, you would die.
And so very much like it's, but like you really would back then.
And that's why we like, oh no, like rejection.
This hurts.
And all those things are baked into the show.
So there's just something about the format also.
that people of all different generations,
they watch the show one episode,
and it clicks.
Like, you get it right away.
Like, it really is that from where they started,
like a beautiful format.
Come on, put Kyle's mic on.
They're censoring me.
They're censoring.
Okay, no, it's okay.
And the game keeps developing, right?
I mean, I love sports.
First off, go Nix.
Let's go.
Nice.
Thank you.
But the game has changed from season one.
Seri's first season.
Jonathan's first season to where we are now. And we've seen, I mean, it's sports, right? Like football and
basketball, maybe there are players that change the needle, move the needle forward. Like,
Steph Curry changes the game slightly. But Survivor changes drastically while keeping the
concept the exact same. Obviously, there are twists. Obviously, there are things that, like,
sort of twist things up a little bit. But I think that people who enjoyed the first season
can enjoy it on season 50 for completely different reasons. And at the end of the day, it's still
the same show. So I think it's a really cool sport in a lot of ways, too.
Well, what do you think is the most kind of important or significant change that's happened in Survivor over the years?
Oh, boy, I think the style of gameplay, because from the earlier seasons, what my experience was is that you find your alliance and you stick to it and you ride it to the wheels fall off.
And if someone wrongs you or says your name, put your name out there, they're dead to you.
And now in the newer seasons, what I've found is the person that has led the charge against you is the person that you need to repair relationships with the most and work with the most moving forward.
And that has worked well for a lot of people in this game, including myself.
Can I ask if you think that that change in the game reflects any kind of change in society, or is it just,
a change in the game, it's accelerated, and you know, 26 days is different than 30, blah, blah, blah.
You know, or are we sort of accelerated as people, too, in the way that we have to move through the world?
I think that's a good question, Jonathan.
But I think, yes, I think we are more graceful in society and more forgiving in society
and more open now in society to other ways of thinking, including, like just,
from a personal level with like parenting.
Like I have even shifted in my parenting style,
even though my children are adult men,
but I'm always going to be their mom.
The old school way was, it's my way or the highway.
And even in parenting now is kind of like,
let me understand you, let me hear where your point of view is,
and I think that's what's reflected in Survivor as well.
So when you stab me in the back, not you particularly,
but whomever, I want to,
to now understand why you did that and learn how we can work together moving forward.
So you, we've all evolved.
Society has evolved to be more understanding and more, I don't know, all encompassing,
embracing maybe.
More gracious.
Absolutely.
Technology is also evolved.
And there is so much to consume now about everything.
And if you're a survivor fan now, odds are, as you've seen all the seasons you've studied,
you understand, you know, when the 321 vote split was created and how that was done.
you can watch YouTube videos and podcasts and really study the evolution of the strategy and go
into the game with like innovative plans that you want to do or and that just wasn't a thing you
guys built that you guys created that for us to be able to study and to be able to bring and that is
such a huge part of it yeah they broke it down old school new school so we can face up um
and realize that no it's true i mean i and i want everyone to speak but you know i got to play
with people that had never heard of Survivor.
You know, I was literally out there with people
and I'm like, there's a game happening right now.
Yeah, people are plotting shit
and you've got to figure out what you're going to do.
And they're like, can we just have fun?
I was here.
Let's have a coconut.
And I'm like, no.
And they, you know, all got voted the hell out.
Sounds like Survivor 48.
But to piggyback on what Penner is saying
where that he's playing a game
and there are people who are on the show
at that point who are like,
Hey, Penner, you went against us.
You're a bad person.
The people who play the show now
and the evolution of the show now
is that everybody is very aware
that it's a game.
And there's exceptions in the modern era.
But I do think that the idea of
this person wronged me
is that there's more of an understanding
of, okay, well, that person's making a move.
I may not like it.
And there's a sportsmanship on Survivor
in the way.
And that is really cultivated and fostered, I think,
in the game now in the way that way back when, hey, you crossed me, you're dead to me,
and the show really kind of celebrated that idea.
And you think that stems from the fact that you have people coming on who've kind of studied
up on the show.
Yeah, I say that in the new era, it would be wild if there's anybody that's on this show
now that hasn't seen 30 seasons of the show.
And I think that we all played with people who never watched one episode for me
and Penner and Zare.
Right. Right.
You know, but the notion, you know, to follow on what you were saying,
even I, you know, even I have evolved, but the, don't take it so personally.
That's something that I've tried to bring into my own life.
It's like, it's not about you.
Don't take it personally, you know, what's going on with that other person.
Understand, have more empathy, walk in their shoes, all of those things.
And I wasn't like that 20 years ago when I started playing.
I took it very personal.
And I think the betrayals that happen,
we try not to take them personally.
It's the shame of fucking screwing up ourselves.
You know, Ozzie walking out again
with an idol in his pocket.
Oh, boy.
You know, the poor man has no one to blame but himself,
and he has to live with that.
No one betrayed him.
You know, that's, ugh, that's wrong.
We got to leave him alone.
Please.
I agree, Kyle.
Sorry. Anyway.
I also think it's attention spans, right?
Like we all had lunch and we were talking at the table and none of us watch movies right now, right?
Like everything we consume, people, you know, no offense, Rob, people don't even listen to podcasts anymore.
They're watching clips, you know?
And so, I'm just kidding.
But we have clips.
Okay, Kyle.
And so everything, we're not patient anymore.
Everything is so go, go, go.
And obviously the game, a big change is gone from 39 days to 26.
but I think even if there wasn't that shift to 26,
people want to do things so fast
and they want them to be so big all the time.
And I think that's also reflection
of what we're seeing, obviously, in society, in the game as well.
Why'd they make the episodes 90 minutes then?
Fair enough, because it's just so good.
It transcends the attention.
There you go.
Right, and there are only 65 minutes of actual show
and 25 minutes of commercials for 90 minutes.
He said we want fast, but we still want more.
Yeah.
90 minutes is definitely more.
I would take two hours.
Well, I do think that the way that the show is constructed is that they don't want there to be ever like a slow moment.
And I think that's why there's so many like twists and advantages and journeys.
There's always something new happening.
I think that that does play into the shorter attention spans of viewers.
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So you've mentioned the twists.
Is there a particular
kind of twist or innovation in the show
that we haven't seen that you folks
would like to see on the show in the future?
A season where there are four tribes
divided by race.
A novel idea.
It's the open era.
It would be something that would go over so big now.
Yep, Jonathan's evolved.
Anybody got an answer for that?
I think, I think, all gay season, all gay season.
Love it.
I think dual confessionals would be pretty cool.
Like all these dating shows have two people in confessionals at the same time.
It'd be very difficult to do on Survivor.
I think there's very few moments you could do it.
But as somebody who watched 48 back and saw all the things that Camilla was saying behind closed doors,
I think it would have been nice to be in there moderating a little bit.
Camilla, do you want to speak to that?
I'm being moderated right now.
Other changes we'd like to see on Survivor?
I think any twist would just be used on me and I'd get blindsided, so I'm going to say now.
I would like to see, you know, we've seen a lot of three tribes.
I want to see bigger groups going to tribal council.
Because when you do have three tribes, it's kind of like, you know, the people that are on the tribe that aren't going to
to tribal council don't need to start playing the game as hard.
You only really need to start playing hard once you know you realize you have to vote someone out.
And so if there are more opportunities for people to get voted out,
then people are going to have to play the game earlier and faster.
And I think that's interesting for me.
So I want bigger groups going to tribal council.
Interesting.
I agree.
Well, that speaks to, to me, something, you know, you have to win to win.
I know that sounds so obvious.
But if you're on a tribe and you win that first challenge,
and you get a flint and you get some food,
you have such an advantage,
and it tends to that you then keep winning.
And if you're losing, you're demoralized, you're hungry,
and you start losing, and the slope is super slippery.
Maybe that's a reflection of society and the world,
or I don't know, but, you know,
that twist that you can bring people out there,
even if you're ostensibly winning,
you're still got to be playing the game,
not just as a physical challenge, you know, mastering team.
I love that idea.
I think it's cool.
I agree.
I think one of the changes that you've talked about, Jonathan,
is kind of the move away from casting kind of villain figures, right?
More toward casting lovable folks, like the folks we see on the stage today.
Would the rest of you agree with that?
You're not that lovable.
Have you met us?
Yes, I don't know if this is, and you guys know, I don't follow the media,
but I hear that Jeff has decided to move away from villainous characters,
and you were talking about this, sportsmanship is now more of a thing.
And we don't want sociopaths or psychopaths on the island any longer
because we want the kids who are watching the show to see good choices being made leading to good results.
Does that sound good?
I don't know.
Because in the world that we all live in, that's not really how it works, is it?
I mean, yes, making good choices can lead to good results,
but there are psychopads out there
and there are people who wish you ill
and who are trying to take your spot,
whatever it is, in your business, in your family,
I don't know.
Right?
And so, you know, let's not pretend that's all a kumbaya
thing.
And so I'm all for it.
What I don't want, what I would be afraid of.
And, you know, we talked about this,
the psych testing that we all had to go through
to make sure we were not going to hurt
other people out there.
We weren't physically psychopathic and going to, you know, burn people's socks.
I think they decided once people were, you know, literally trying to hurt other people,
that that was a line that they had to draw.
But I am all for folks who are diabolical and ready to do whatever it takes to move themselves forward.
I think that's a great reflection of the society that we have to survive.
I see folks nodding.
I think you're going to get that, though.
I think although they may not specifically look for that character type,
I think a little bit of that exists in all of us,
especially all of us sitting up here.
So I think although they may not look to cast villains,
I think some villains will be made for the future seasons.
Interesting.
Yeah, and I can only speak to my experience,
but I was not even born when the show started.
And I watched the show, my mom who was here today showed me the show
when I was in fifth grade, I was a child,
and I loved watching the people fight and have conflict,
and I learned a lot from that.
And so I think that, you know, it's still good to have people.
And like Seris said, you can't predict how people will actually act.
And you can't predict who will be a hero.
And even in a situation when there's a hero and a villain,
you'll always have people who have different opinions
on who is the hero and villain in that situation.
And that's the beauty of the show that you can't change.
And that's the beauty of like 16 human beings going on to an island.
And that's the beauty of survival.
for sure. Yeah.
Great point.
I think what the show is
hoping for is
that they do want there to be
conflict, but conflict
like around the game in the same
way that like in sports you would see
two teams who wants it more.
I think that they still want that
of this person has a thing.
This person's in my way. I want to get rid
of them. I think that the show really doesn't
want to explore
hey, I don't like this
for whatever reason and I want to get rid of them or there's somebody who is
intentionally trying to be a bad person on Survivor.
I just think that that's the direction the show really wants to go away from.
Less interpersonal conflict and more game related.
Interpersonal conflict in the same way around like if you were playing a board game of like,
hey, like, well, I have to get, you know, this person has a hotel on Park Place.
I got to get rid of them.
And I got to take them out.
that kind of conflict I think they're looking for as opposed to I hate this person because I can't
their whatever type of person. I hate that. To that I say make sure you have your identity
all squared away before you go and that won't come up as much. Well I think another change that
you've talked about Jonathan and continuing on our theme of storytelling right is kind of the increased
emphasis on telling one story right and I think you know the theme of the show at Witt Alp
play at last, do you think that that's still as important as it once was, or is it more about
how you state your case, how you tell your story?
Oh, it's a great question.
I don't know.
I think that you still are outwitting, outplaying, and outlasting.
And I think that you do that with your character.
I mean, character is story, right?
And so you go out there and you have to work with people, maybe this past season,
people that you know or you know of,
my seasons, people I didn't know,
and you have to navigate
those shores.
And if you do it properly
and don't make a mistake and shoot yourself in the foot,
maybe you will emerge the winner.
There's an element of luck,
and there's, like any good story,
there's an element of luck,
and it's all about character
moving through the circumstances
that are within you,
your own personal demons that you've got to wrestle with,
that are activated by the shit that's coming at you,
and they throw stuff at you to trigger you,
and it's that wrestling, that tension
that makes any character compelling
and any story compelling, I think.
And so Survivor does that beautifully.
That makes sense?
Absolutely.
I was going to say just that.
Exactly how he said it.
I also think that, like,
the way that you play the game
is so much wrapped up in who you are.
Right.
Like, everybody goes into Survivor
and says that they are going to be this
or they're going to be that.
but when you strip down bear, you're going to be who you are at the end of day.
I think the best piece of advice I saw going into season 48 was Tiffany from season 46 said,
like, if you have a strategy, yeah, give it up to, she said, write down, keep on writing it down.
Like, don't forget what those core principles are because you're going to lose them out there, right?
Like, so much of how I played the game was a reflection of who I was.
I am a lawyer.
I used to be a teacher.
I think those helped me.
I also, I've been incarcerated three times.
I think the way that I had to move in jail and the way that I've had to move around people in difficult situations,
definitely informed how I played the game
and how I fit in with people on my tribe.
You cannot get away from it as much as you try.
I think that's a beautiful thing.
And it also allows you to tell your story in the process.
I do think back to outwit, outplay, outlast.
I do see this like what I think is a misconception
with other people, where they think outplay means
doing well in the challenges and surviving and stuff.
But the game is more than just challenges and surviving.
It is the strategic gameplay as well.
well. And so I do think like even now in the new era where people say, oh, you know,
people aren't surviving and they don't do that. They are still outplaying at the end of the
day. It just might not be in challenge. It's just the game overall. Yeah, I feel like those
definitions have changed over time. And we have a scholar here. Mr. Rob Cisterino, I would love to
know what you think the modern definition of each outwit, outlast and outplay.
Wow, this is like I'm in the final three. The modern definition of outwit, outplay,
I mean, Outwit, I think is,
I think that goes without saying.
But I think that,
I mean, yeah, you're like, like,
out strategize people.
In terms of outplay,
I would say, like,
I would still say that that's the challenge component
if I was going to like take apart the slogan.
But Outlast is the interesting one in terms of,
like, I think that this is what, you know,
we see so many of the winner,
do is just avoid all of the pitfalls that can take you out of the game. And I think that that's
really ultimately the one that matters is they just outlast every single vote until you are the
only person left that the jury votes for. How do I do? Would I get the vote? I got goosebumps.
Yeah, yeah, you have my vote. Anyone else outwit outplay outlast? Surrey, you look like you want to say
something. No. No. Sorry. I mean, I agree with what Jonathan said. I feel like you can't out with
outplay or outlast without involving yourself, your story, your relationships. They are
most important to even make it to any of those milestones. You can't outlasts if no one knows
who you are. You can't outplay if you haven't had an alliance to get you.
to a certain point.
And outwit, like Rob said,
it's kind of self-explanatory.
So I agree with what Jonathan said
and with most of what they said here.
Yeah, so a few of you have talked now
about how kind of your identities
and experiences from outside the show
kind of filtered into the world of the show.
But what about the reverse?
Has being on the show
and sort of dealing with the situations on the show
changed how you interact with people in everyday life?
Not for me.
Like, I'm a nurse.
I'm a mom.
I'm married for 23 years.
My husband's right there.
Hey, H.B.
So, no, I moved through the game,
kind of how I moved through life.
And that's why I said it's kind of parallel for me,
and it hasn't really changed who I am outside of the game.
I've been given more opportunities,
and I've been receiving, like, a lot of love.
Thank you guys.
I love you all right back.
But outside of that, no, it hasn't affected.
How is that to navigate, kind of going from the show to working in the real world and being a nurse?
I don't know. I'm going to shoot that to Camilla. We were having a conversation backstage. I said, you back to work?
She was like, yeah, once it's over, I'm just back to work. Because we all are just regular people that have been given the opportunity of a lifetime and experience such an amazing journey.
So I don't know, Camilla, how's it for you?
It was very easy to transition back to normal life.
I mean, there was a little, like, you come off as high from Survivor,
and you try, at least I tried to go back to my normal life the first time,
and there was an adjustment period where nothing in my normal life was giving me
the same dopamine that Survivor did.
The dopamine that I would get from winning challenges or surviving tribal council
or saying something and looking at the jury and seeing them liking it, you know,
I wasn't getting those dopamine hits in real life.
Derek, you're great, you're wonderful, but it's not the same as Survivor.
But then after some time, your brain gets to balance, and then it's like, yeah, I'm just a normal person with a normal job.
I will say for me, personally, playing Survivor sort of made me look back at myself and be like, damn, I'm the biggest thing holding myself back.
I was a very not confident person before I went out to Survivor.
and I didn't have like it wasn't like a like oh I hate myself or I don't think I'm this I don't think I'm that
I just thought I wasn't as capable as I actually am and going on Survivor doing the challenges made me realize like damn I can actually do a lot of things
and that has given me this confidence that hasn't left since I since I came back from 48
some people I work with might say I'm too confident now but I'll take that over like the level of confidence I had before Survivor so I have to thank Survivor for that
Is that one of the reasons that you wanted to go on the show
to gain confidence?
I wasn't aware of my lack of self-confidence.
I wasn't aware that this was a problem with me
until I caught myself going into every single challenge
and whenever Jeff, like, I would just look at the challenge
and immediately be like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Jeff would ask Survivors Ready, I would always say no.
Like, not loud enough for anyone to hear.
Not loud enough for anyone to hear.
We're like, it's his countdown instead of like 3-2-1,
it's Survivor's Ready.
and I would just say to myself, no.
And I think Jeff heard me say something
when you walked into some motion at Final Four
where I was like, oh, you know,
it's going to be so easy to drop out of this.
Like, I'm just going to mess up.
And he's like, no, no, no, no, no.
Camilla reframed that.
And I'm like, oh, you know, I guess anyone can drop out,
not just me.
And that was when I was like, damn,
I always look at it as I'm the person
that's most likely to mess up.
And that's when the switch in my brain activated.
I'm like, wow, it's been me the whole time
holding me back from everything.
Can I ask, did you guys,
because you were talking about watching
the confessionals, and it is fascinating
to finally watch the episode, right?
Because we all have our own memories
of these events, and stuff was going on behind
the, everyone else was having their lives,
and then you get to see how you were talked about,
how you were plotted against,
or talked about fondly, or whatever.
You know, and I had this experience,
and you were saying, oh, I got to see myself
and have this new realization.
I saw myself quite differently.
In some ways, very disappointingly, honestly,
the first time I played, I'm like, oh, I'm the asshole
in this season.
No, no, I'm an asshole.
This is terrible, you know,
which was eye-opening, and I hope I evolved.
And, you know, you said, did you now go through life
a little differently?
Did you guys have that experience
to see yourself and say,
oh, I did not realize that this is
some of who I am.
I think I had the same experience as Camilla.
Like I was already at the interview portion.
I'm like, oh, they're never going to select me.
And once I played the first time and realized, damn, you are capable of us.
I'm afraid at every challenge.
I'm like, oh, God, what if I can't?
What if I'm unable?
How is it going to look?
What am I family?
I got bought, you know, all of that is running through my mind.
and from playing the amount of times,
each time I learned something more
and I get something more like,
damn, you need to be,
and I say this when I do cameos,
you have to, I'm my own worst critic.
It's loud in my mind,
but I have to be my loudest cheerleader
and I need to let the cheering for myself
override the criticism of myself,
and that's what I've gotten
from the seasons that I've played.
My whole world has changed
after playing Survivor.
And I think a lot of that is that it was like
the biggest life dream that I've ever had,
which is like, you know,
I thought about it every single day
for probably 15 years,
what it would be like to play a Survivor.
And I just, I mean, I'm wearing this shirt,
has Surrey on it now I'm sitting next to you.
So part of that is just the feeling of accomplishing something
that you've thought about and dreamed of so long.
It gave me a sense of like inner peace,
and it opened up my mind to,
think about what else I would want from life, but it also, the experience of being perceived on such
a wide scale was really new. And obviously, like, I was going through kind of a confusing
experience with my own gender at the time that I played. And from Jump, it was very much
discussed online. And it gave me the opportunity to really identify what felt good to be called
and what felt comfortable and what I didn't like.
And that changed my whole trajectory,
and it gave me the confidence to come out.
It gave me the confidence to identify other patterns
and relationships in my world.
I quit drinking after the experience of being on Survivor.
And I also met the love of my life through Survivor,
Stephanie from season 48.
So there's three massive whiz right there
that it has just completely turned my whole world,
round and that's on top of just the fulfillment of doing something that I thought about for so long.
And obviously there's this other part that's like, well, what next?
Because I did for 15 years want to do this thing so badly.
And I'm searching for another passion that is to fulfill in the same way, to go after.
So it's complicated, but it's been incredible.
And I don't know that any of those things would have happened without all of, you know,
the lead up to Survivor and all of that.
Awesome.
Rob, I imagine you have something to say about this.
I mean, you created this whole media empire around survival.
Well, I played so long ago.
And so I don't really feel like that going through the experience,
I feel like that I was greatly changed.
Although my wife watched the shows, and then she said,
no, you're an asshole.
So I had that.
But then, like, I had the whole rest of my life that I,
I lived since then, and it's been over 20 years since I've played, and I feel like I've
grown and evolved in all sorts of different ways.
And Survivor has given me so much, but it's hard for me to parse, like, what was from Survivor
and what did I learn from, you know, 20 plus years of life?
Yeah.
I think that a lot has changed about my life.
I think that I'm more comfortable with just my voice and who I am as a person.
I grew up in Southern Virginia.
My family's from New York, though,
and I grew up in this rural area
and was constantly sort of thrusted back and forth
between my black community
and a predominantly white school that I went to.
And I coached switch.
I've had to do that throughout my life
in all of my interactions.
And I was constantly just trying to figure out
because sort of as a defense mechanism,
like, how do I get people to like me?
Like, because I don't want to get my feelings hurt.
Like, if I feel any sense of disdain or dislike
towards me, it's going to, like, ruin my
month. So like how do I just fit in so I can sort of hide at the same time? And then I got on
Survivor and I did I never realized it but I think that caused a lot of emotional turmoil for me.
And I got on Survivor and I fit in with people and the same thing that it caused me turmoil.
I think my entire life allowed me to connect with people and play this game in a way that I thought
was like fun and efficient. And and then the television part aired and I hate the sound of my
voice. I hate some of the things that I've had to sort of change about myself to protect myself,
but people were receptive to me. And for the first time in my life, I think I was like, people
like me for who I am, no matter where I am or what I'm trying to do. Not everybody will, but
there are people who do. And so I think that it's allowed me to be more vulnerable and just
allow me to move comfortably in my own skin, for lack of a better term. If I may, that was beautiful,
Everybody, and we all sort of had the same story.
It was interesting.
Two of us thought we were assholes or jerks or something,
and everybody else had thought that they were not so confident,
and we got to see ourselves, and what I love about Survivor,
and what is so moving to me when I'm interacting with folks,
is that we have become known as ourselves.
You know, we're not actors or anything.
We have come into your living room and made ourselves vulnerable,
even to ourselves, you know, exposed ourselves.
to ourselves to all of you and are so,
so we are identifiable and relatable
and that you have welcomed us into your living room
week after week is why you're all here
and why Survivor is so powerful.
You know, it's because we're everyday people
who are going through the same effing neuroses
that everybody else is just, you know,
I always said the cost of the extraordinary experience
of Survivor is you do it in front of 10 million people.
You know, but the reward of getting to do it and play it
was worth playing for?
Oh, I didn't, guys.
Yeah, that was great.
Anyway.
Well, so we've touched on a few kind of, we've talked about a little bit about code switching and gender identity.
And, you know, over the years, Jeff and Survivor have tackled a variety of kind of social issues and topics, race, class, gender identity, sexuality.
Do you feel like there's kind of social issue or topic that Survivor has.
handled particularly well?
And is there an issue or topic that Survivor hasn't tackled yet that you'd like to see
kind of on the show in the future?
That was a compound question.
It's a really complicated question.
Because all of the situations have their own complications.
Like, for example, Zeke, that was an extremely upsetting and unfortunate situation, how it went
down.
It should have never went down because.
obviously, Varner never should have done that to him,
but obviously it opened up a conversation that for me watching
did change something for me and do something for me.
You know, how Jeff took control of the situation,
how the others immediately jumped in and condemned what happened and supported Zieg
and to just see the representation in general moved mountains for a young person
who is still figuring it out.
And I think it is, like we've said about everything with Survivor,
it's something that happens in the real world.
And it's one of those things where, like I said,
a lot of people who I'm close friends with who don't watch the show,
you can put that moment on,
and everyone is on the edge of their seat because it is so real,
as unfortunate upsetting as it is, it is so real.
And it's not something that you see on TV every day at all.
Yeah, I,
I kind of agree with what Artini is saying,
but I also think I wanna kind of give them
applaud Survivor for addressing situations,
real life situations, real life issues as they come up
and doing the best that they can to be inclusive
and to address them and have the conversation,
sometimes hard conversations, but they have them
in front of their audience who is the reason Survivor still exists.
And some of these issues affects the audience
at masses that are watching.
that are watching, and this is why Survivor is what it is,
because the people watching, when the issues arise,
and Jeff handles them and brings them to the forefront,
it speaks to them, and they may be watching,
saying, yes, that's what I'm going through.
That's why people relate to Survivor,
and that's why Survivor will go on far past season 60.
I said it here first, y'all call me season 62, okay?
I'll say also that I think one of the strengths,
I think historically over 26 years of the show is when things come up organically between the players.
And when not so much as like when like, okay, well, let's talk about this at tribal council.
But it's like people use you, because Survivor gives you the opportunity to see real people from, you know, where the show was, you know, conceived from all different walks of life.
And it was in the first season of like, here's Rich and Rudy, Diyadh.
And they don't understand, like Rudy doesn't understand Rich,
is turned off immediately, but they get to know each other.
And, you know, you see that relationship form.
And I think about like in, when Jamal and Jack have the conversation that's just between them,
it's not like with the whole tribe and it's not part of tribal council where Jack called the buff a du rag.
And Jamal is like, hey, like, we got to talk about that.
And I think that those are when Survivor does these important moments the best.
Yeah.
I think following up on that, I hear a lot of discourse now, like Survivors trying to push things on us.
And I actually just think it's the opposite.
Like, I think it comes down to casting, right?
Like, I think at the beginning of Survivor's tenure, you saw a lot of the same caricatures of people cast it
or what you would expect from somebody who looks like that or this.
but now as the casting has progressed,
as the show has progressed,
you see tons of different people on there.
And what that's going to give you
is so many more variables
so that those situations
that people have just brought up
can actually happen.
And so it's the same game.
It's the same thing that's happening,
people making connections,
but because we're seeing people
from different backgrounds,
those connections are different.
The drama is different.
The turmoil is different.
I think that's, like,
as people continue to progress,
we're going to see different issues pop up on the show.
And I think, like,
you just want to continue to see different types of people, right?
Like there's somebody out here who hasn't seen someone like them on Survivor.
And I think, like, we just got to keep on making that happen.
We've got to get those people on.
Right.
Are there any types of people specifically,
not just you or anyone who you'd like to see cast on the show?
Transwomen.
I'd like to see more, like, blue collar workers.
I think that...
A trans women blue collar workers.
Yes, yes, yes.
Put it on a T-shirt.
But I think that like that's sort of,
because so many people who watch the show
are now getting on the show,
a lot of those people are in like traditional,
stereotypical white collar jobs
where they're like really honed in on the strategy
and things like that.
But I think that there's so many more perspectives
to be offered by the game
when we have more diversity of profession too.
That would be really cool to see.
Like my dad was a railroad worker.
I think he would have been phenomenal on Survivor
like 10 years ago for not just that,
but for so many reasons.
No, I love that idea.
I totally agree.
And part of the problem is,
just the, who can literally afford the time and the energy to take 30 plus days off, let alone
let alone know how to work the levers to get your videotape scene and moved forward, to have
that kind of social acumen to make yourself, you know, viable and have it viable in your life
to be able to say, I can go and do this. And unfortunately, it is become, maybe it always was,
but at this point, it's kind of a self-selecting group of folks
who either are achieving a certain income level,
have achieved one, or are like students or, you know, artists
or something whose schedule is more variable anyway.
Is that right? I think.
You know, railroad workers, God, it would be incredible.
Not just to have your dad here.
I would love to meet them.
But, you know, to have blue-collar folks,
it's very hard to take the time to do Survivor, I think.
No, it is. I think it's a choice, though, because I'm a blue-collar folk. And I always have been from the beginning when I started 20-plus years ago. I'm a nurse. I've been a nurse in the operating room. I'm going to be a nurse in the operating room on Monday when this is over. But it's just a choice that am I going to let this opportunity pass me? Am I going to take the opportunity to live life and experience things I've
never experienced before and that's what this has been for me like i've been exposed to like you guys
were saying there's people from all walks of life from the lunch lady to astronauts people i would
never come in contact with in my regular everyday life um so it's just it just comes down to making
that choice like yeah maybe i'll have to give up cable or you know something else in my life so
that I can make this happen and experience this opportunity.
Awesome.
Love it.
Yeah.
Well, I know you're an inspiration to a lot, a lot, a lot of people.
Yeah, I mean, I think one of the things that's so profound about Survivor and a lot of reality TV, right, is that it's not like, okay, we're going to do the very special episode about, you know, X type of person today.
It's just people, right?
Living their lives.
And as you said, organically dealing with the issues that come up in everyday life, issues that then filter into that world of Survivor.
One of the things I'm curious about, I think it's been touched on a little bit.
Tina, you talked about coming to the show as a fan of the show.
What were the reasons that made you want to kind of get up off your couch and audition for Survivor?
Oh, great.
Okay.
I'm a fan.
Like, pretty much everybody here.
Everybody here.
I was watching and I would be screaming at the, no, don't say that.
Oh, they're going to vote you.
Why did you do that?
Then my friends who I would talk about the show too growing up,
say, you always said, I'm gonna go on that show.
And it was just that, like I loved the show,
I love the concept, I loved the,
I loved everything about Survivor,
and I just decided one day, you know what, I'm gonna try.
And the rest is, it's three, I'm here now at Tribeca Film Festival.
Little Old Me, girl from Jersey City, New Jersey.
Anybody else?
I mean, like I said, I was shown Big Brother and Survivor when I was in fifth grade,
and that quickly turned into me printing out pictures of the cast and pasting them onto my
agenda book at school.
And it's the closest thing that I've ever had to, like, a religion is loving this stuff
and studying this game and, like, becoming obsessed with people and modeling myself after people
and learning from it and becoming absorbed in the community.
And it's also just always felt like a place where there is something.
to the fact that the first winner of Survivor was a gay man.
It's something like, I think it's a way for queer people to see all the things that we've
had to do in our life in terms of integrating ourselves socially and overcoming, like, adversity.
And everybody has their own unique version of that and what they get from Survivor.
But for me, I saw a lot of the things that folks on these games were doing with stuff that I
wanted to be doing in real life where I already was.
and it was just always, it felt inevitable to me
that I would end up there and get there
and a lot of the things that I did in my life
were with the mindset of wanting that
and so I put myself in work situations
and job situations all with the mindset of like
this is gonna teach me something that might help me on Survivor,
which is psycho. So I don't recommend that,
but it's been truly the honor of my lifetime
to then transform into somebody who people watch
and go, no, don't do that, don't say that.
So yeah, that was it for me.
Yeah.
I think when I, I got into Survivor during COVID, which happened to align with the end of my law school career.
And like, I was super excited to like get out of law school and get out into the world and start making money.
And I got out.
I was like, I'm going to take care of my family.
I'm going to do everything.
And I came out of law school.
I had like $160,000 in debt.
And I was just working harder.
And I was like, this sucks.
And then like, the people.
that I was around all the time and like I've been really fortunate with like who I've worked with
and where I've worked them. But like a lot of times lawyers can take themselves really seriously.
So I'm like if I'm in more debt than I was before, I'm not like really doing or achieving
what I was hoping to do. Like I'm just going to go for something and do what I want instead of
just sort of like being a part of this wheel. And I think that the first episode I saw Survivor
was when Denise idled out Sandra in Winners at War. I had no context. I had no idea what was going on.
but I was like, this looks interesting.
And I was like, it's more interesting than what I'm doing,
so I'm going to sign up for it.
And I can't believe I got picked.
Awesome.
I can.
Yeah, we can.
Is there advice you might have to folks who are interested in being on Survivor
in terms of auditioning?
I feel like a lot of people,
I mean, the first time I filmed the video,
I was trying to be someone who I wasn't.
was trying to be someone who I saw on Survivor because I thought, you know, they were the
closest thing to me on Survivor. Let me try and play up those aspects of me. That went horribly.
I rewatch the video not too long ago and I'm like, who was that? Why did I do that?
Just talk in the video. It sounds stupid, but like, I saw this advice on Reddit and I followed it
for my audition for 48.
and I'm pretty sure that's why I got called.
And the advice was,
two stories are better than like five facts about yourself.
I didn't talk about any...
I mean, in the callback that I got after sending my video,
the casting person on the phone was like,
you didn't tell us your name, your age,
where you lived, where you were born, nothing.
But we want to know more.
Because confessionals are just storytelling.
The whole show is storytelling.
And so if you can show how you tell stories in your video, that'll give them good signal on, like, do they want you? Do they not want you? So, like, make sure you're a good storyteller. So the moral here is follow the advice on Reddit.
Always listen to Reddit. Especially when they're talking about you.
Yeah, I think that, like Camilla is saying, I think that you have to think about it a little bit like this is like your pilot for,
your confessionals. That's really what they're looking for. So if it helps, think about it like
you're in confessional, you're talking to the audience, and I think that that's the biggest thing
that they want to see. Yeah, it's storytelling is the keyword. And like they always say in
storytelling, it's important to show and not tell. So when you find yourself wanting to be like,
I'm super outgoing, I'm the life of the party, I'm really competitive. Anytime that you catch
yourself saying an adjective, replace it with a story that demonstrates,
how? Like, how are you outgoing?
Like, give me an example, the more specific and detailed you can be, the better, because
all you're doing in your confessionals is talking about other people.
So the more stories you can tell about how you integrate with other people without
just having, like, a catch-all phrase to describe it, the better.
Yeah, they want you to be funny. They want to know that they can cut to you in a confessional,
and you're going to tell them this truth, and you're going to have a perspective that no one
else on the show has. Maybe it's a perspective that somebody else on a previous season might share,
but they need to know that they're going to cut to you and you're not going to be like there was a guy
on one, I don't even remember his name, I'm sorry, but he was just like, he just like froze up and
he's like, I don't know. It was kind of, you know, you know who I'm talking about. And, and,
that's, you can't, that ain't going to work. So they need to know when they cut to you and you're
going to talk, you'll be funny. So be funny. If you're not funny, you're not going to get on.
I put Kyle on. Is that true?
Everybody on this stage, it's funny, everybody here has a great sense of humor, they do.
And they're, you know, our personalities were very diverse here, but that is the common threat,
I believe, and the common threat of the folks who go far and have impact on Survivor.
And they, look, they cast people so that they, everyone's going to go in some order.
Somebody's going to be the first one out.
They might have hoped that you were going to go all the way to the end.
They need 20 people or 16 people, all of whom are going to make great.
great TV all the way to the end.
And those are folks with big personalities who are funny.
You look like you're going to say something, no.
No.
That's just my face.
Say something funny.
So, I mean, we've talked a little bit about representation and social issues.
I kind of want to circle back to do you feel like there are any kind of social issues
that have not been explored on the show?
I think one of the things we talked about, Jonathan, is politics.
Do you think politics, which really hasn't been explicitly discussed,
on Survivor, and we don't have to explicitly discuss it here today.
But do you feel like Survivor kind of necessarily has to be a world apart from politics,
or could you see a scenario where politics is openly discussed on the show?
I mean, it was openly discussed with a couple of arch-conservative guys I played with.
That never made it onto TV, although I think Jeff Kent did badmouth Obama in his final tribal.
600,000 after Obama takes me.
I want to win a million bucks,
because I saw Kyle complaining about his taxes recently, too, though.
Michael Scoopin, may he, you know.
God, what a dick he was anyway.
But he was just like, hey, you're not so bad.
Liberals aren't so bad.
Just don't take away my guns.
Let's not get into Scoopin.
Sorry, I even believe.
Let's not.
But it's dangerous to talk about politics.
You guys tell me the second you do, you're putting a target on your back and it's going to cause conflict.
You need to sit around the campfire and not be yelling at other people.
So, you know, you save that for Ponderosa.
When the cheap liquor comes out and then you can get down into it.
I think you're absolutely right.
I would never discuss politics on Survivor.
However, I think the beauty of Survivor is the lack of censorship when you're with your tribe.
Now, I'm not talking about what gets shown on TV.
I'm talking about the freedom to do, play, say, speak.
Whatever you decide is truly up to you.
So when I hear people say, well, I got the bad edit and they edited me wrong.
Well, they can't edit what you don't do or say.
So I think that is another reason why I love Survivor so much because I can go on there and act a complete fool if I choose to.
Or I can talk about politics.
I can talk about race relations.
I can talk about whatever I want and no one has ever said to me in 20 years,
don't talk about that or you can't say that.
They let you do and say whatever you want and then they decide to show what they want to show.
But don't talk about politics if you ever get chosen to go on and survive.
Nobody did on 47.
Like really nobody did discuss it.
So I feel like it's just one of those like, will we ever know?
What would they choose to include?
How would they choose to tell the story if we as the contestants who create the story?
are, for our own reasons, tepid to discuss it with each other, because it's our first time
meeting each other. And it's such a, it carries such a heavy weight, what you think?
Yeah.
I'm remembering, sorry, I'm remembering, we got on the beach at Fans versus Favorites.
I was part of the Favorites tribe with Surrey. And there was a woman there who left because
she was crazy. And the first thing she said, right, you know what I'm talking about, she was a fan.
and we had Amy and one other person
and she literally, this woman was just like,
oh, I'm glad we don't have any lesbians.
We don't want any lesbians on our tribe, right?
And we were all like, well, that's the first to go, right?
All right, we gotta get rid of this crazy psychopathic, bitch.
Is she the one who went up to chat and was like,
I've never met a gay man in my life?
And he goes, you have, honey, you just didn't know it.
Kathy Schleckman, ladies and dil.
Yes, so just shut up.
Just shut up.
wise words.
On what Saris said, I think strategically in Survivor, you're at the beginning of the game,
especially, like, your entire job is to not stand out.
I think if you're, that's at least my view is like you really want to just blend in.
And obviously political conversations can lend themselves more so to controversy than others.
But I also think that, right, like, I think that there's this big, like, I hate the phrase like,
oh, you're getting political.
Because so much of our lives is just political, like, you know, how you treat people or
how you treat people, what you talk about, what your interests are.
All of it is wrapped up in how our government is run and what the political consequences can be
in a lot of factors.
On our starting tribe, there was a lot of conversation about religion on season 48.
I'm not going to say religion is political, but there's a lot of overlap, right?
And so, like, some people were more comfortable with those conversations than others,
and it drove the starting dynamic of that tribe.
Camilla almost didn't work with me because of certain things.
and die. Oh yeah, no, sorry. Sorry. Let me rephrase that. Let me rephrase that.
Camilla. Tell us more.
Camilla, Camilla thought I was a Disney adult.
Didn't work with me because I had to be like, Camilla, I don't want Disney. Like, please. I like holes, though.
So all this to say, like, so all this to say, there was, there's so much overlap in my mind of our lives with politics, and it comes out in Survivor in sneaky ways.
And Camilla just doesn't like Disney. That's it.
Big on what Ceres said about like, people might make a comment that is like really off color.
And you can, in the real life, like in the real world, go and inform them and educate them.
On Survivor, that is a very risky thing to do for your gameplay.
Like on our, on a tribe on 48, there were many questionable things said.
And in the real world, not by me, not by Kyle, not by Kyle, not by Kyle.
in the real world
I would have stopped
questioned why do you think that
what do you mean by this
in Survivor you can't
really do that because
one of the
there was another comment sorry
this will now put everything in context
I overheard at
camp someone say
cancel culture is crazy
everyone gets canceled for the littlest things
like you can't even say anything anymore
and that's when I was like
I can't be myself on this tribe
I need to be care.
Like, I can't be who I am in the real world here
because I might be deemed as someone
who is trying to cancel people and stuff like that.
So the real world does affect how you play in the game.
And you can't really play.
There are parts of the real world that you can't fully play in the game
that are related to politics because you don't want to single yourself out.
You know, you don't want to...
People are very sensitive when it comes to this stuff.
And, like, people immediately, like, if you hear a comment,
like that, then you're like, okay, you know, I got to back off.
And even though it hurts so much to not make a comment back in those times, you kind of have to
bite your tongue and just be like, there is a game being played here, there is a million
dollars.
Unfortunately, I will have to let this pass because I need the million dollars.
I never learned that lesson.
It had my ass bit every time because I could not shut up.
Ass biting.
I think that's a good place to end.
So I've been told we need to start wrapping up
Because we have a little treat for the audience
But I want to thank all of our panelists for being here today
It's been such an amazing show
Let us throw them
Yeah, this is wearing a shirt that was touched by Serene
Nice catchphrase
There are more goodies? No, that was it
Those were the goodies for the audience, okay
So is that, I guess so
So there's a clock up here that's been counting down guys
We still have 32 seconds
Can I ask, is there one question?
You want to ask them?
Is there any questions?
Oh, I'm not going to ask the Donald Trump question.
No, no.
We're not going to ask it.
Anybody, wait, we have time for one question from the audience.
Anybody who's got their hand up who wants it, that lady?
It's a long question.
What's the question?
The question is, how many people have gone to a jury knowing already who they're going to vote for
and not being swayed at the jury?
Don't believe the hype.
That's first of all.
Second of all, everybody that plays this game, once you're at the end of the game or you're a part of the jury, you have been, you have been witness to everybody else's gameplay.
So I don't care what you came into the game with what mindset.
It always changes.
And this is why I tell people, don't come in with a strategy.
That strategy is never going to work.
You have to be ready to transition on the fly.
And once you watch the game progress and be played and have the opportunity to sit on the jury,
That is what you used to make your decision, no matter what anybody else thinks who lost.
Are we done?
Yes.
Yes.
We can file out.
There's a voice.
Yes.
We're done.
Thank you, guys.
Thank you.
Thank you.
