RHAP: We Know Survivor - The Pride Has Spoken | Episode 22: Myles Kuah

Episode Date: June 19, 2026

The Pride Has Spoken | Episode 22: Myles Kuah This week, Dr. Evvie Jagoda (@EvvieJag), Matt Scott (@MattScottGW), and Grace Leeder (@HiFromGrace) are joined by Australian Survivor winner ...Myles Kuah for a funny, thoughtful, and wide-ranging conversation about identity, strategy, representation, visibility, and becoming the first openly queer winner of Australian Survivor. Myles reflects on being biracial, bisexual, and “bitribal,” embracing the “jungle rat” nickname, navigating the tension between how he was seen and who he is, and using humor, numbers, authenticity, and a little chaos to turn an underdog story into a winning game.Follow Myles on social media for more. We want YOU to share your story: What has being LGBTQ+ in the Survivor community meant to you? Please submit your video or audio response by Sunday, June 21st for a chance to be included in an upcoming episode of The Pride Has Spoken. Submit your story here: bit.ly/tphs2026 They also discuss this year’s Pride merch campaign. Profits from merch sales will go toward three LGBTQIA+ charities chosen by the hosts: Rainbow Railroadhttps://www.rainbowrailroad.org/Ten Oaks Projecthttps://www.tenoaksproject.org/Sisters PGHhttps://www.sisterspgh.org/You can find The Pride Has Spoken merch at:http://robhasawebsite.com/storeThe hosts also highlight several other charities and organizations that listeners suggested, including: Our Spot KCLambert HouseKindling CollectiveAli Forney CenterBranching Out AdventuresNAGLY, the North Shore Alliance of LGBTQ+ YouthLGBTQ+ OutdoorsBAGLYQueer History ProjectHITOPS PrincetonZebra YouthOut & EqualSMYALThe Okra ProjectTrinity Place ShelterUs Helping Us Use #ThePrideHasSpoken and share your love for this week’s guest, or to share your love for the podcast or a queer Survivor player or moment. Order a #ThePrideHasSpoken buff, t-shirt, mug, or more at robhasawebsite.com/store. Never miss a minute of RHAP’s extensive coverage! LISTEN: Subscribe to The Pride Has Spoken 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!

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:15 Welcome back to The Pride Has Spoken. This is episode three of season five. My name is Grace Leader. Are you she her pronouns? My name is Matt Scott. I use He-Hem pronouns. And I'm Evijikoda and I use they-then pronouns. And I'm so excited to be here on this episode of The Pride Has Spoken
Starting point is 00:00:36 where we have a true legend who you may or may not know. And now you will know. A legend, the first ever. queer winner of Australian Survivor. We have Miles from Brainsbronn 2, Australia. The sequel, yes. Yeah. And we had an amazing conversation with him.
Starting point is 00:00:58 Yeah, Miles played Survivor last year. I mean, he gets if he played before that, but it aired last year. He won. Spoiler, if you haven't watched the season, I did fully just spoil it for you. I would encourage you to go watch it. You do not have to, don't go watch it. It's a lot episode also.
Starting point is 00:01:13 The Australian Survivor is a lot. lot in general. But yeah, I'm very excited to have Miles on the episode today. I will also say very fun if you want to do the cheat code version and go to YouTube and watch the edits of Miles game. It is so impressive to see him playing, like, such a standout game and a standout player and a standout human and someone I'm glad that we got to talk to. So you'll hear that conversation with Miles Qua in just a little bit.
Starting point is 00:01:42 Anything else we want to say about Miles about the conversation as. Well, also I just want to say a kind of great thing about watching his season is like, because Australian Survivor is so, if you don't know this, if you never watch Australian Survivor, it's a lot more misedited, like edit biased. So you get to watch Miles a lot in the season. And as you'll hear, he's really fun and interesting and entertaining.
Starting point is 00:02:06 So there's a lot of Miles content available. Should you need more, which you will? Yes, we get. Miles was known for playing on the bottom of, of tribes, he was sort of like ostracized a little bit, he plays at the bottom a lot, but he's like such a mind for strategy and numbers, and so, man, it's just like
Starting point is 00:02:22 figure him how to get out of those situations a lot. Power bottom. He gets nicknamed the jungle rat, and he eventually becomes king of the rats, and he has this very iconic line of biracial, bisexual, bi-tribal, during a tribe slot. So he's, he's an
Starting point is 00:02:38 iconic Australian survivor player, I think, not just because he won. But I think, like, this season is, I feel like so far, the is like confidence is key. Like we, we chatted with Carolyn last week, chatting with Miles. I think there's similar vibes and energy actually happening. You would not expect that probably
Starting point is 00:02:54 that like Miles and Carolyn would have so much in common, but there's like a confidence thing that I think that they both have going on, which I think is really cool. So excited for people to hear our conversation with Miles today. Yeah, you'll hear him talk about what, about his bisexuality and the degree to which that's a big part of his life.
Starting point is 00:03:11 He talks about being an Asian man on on TV and on an Australian Survivor. And he talks about why Andy from Survivor 47 is his secret nemesis. So stay tuned to find out about all of that. Yes. And some quick thing I'll say, too, is we use the word buy so much.
Starting point is 00:03:28 Buy the Pride is Spoken merch. Check that out on his website.com slash door. I know Grace is rubbing off on me. We have shirts. We have buffs. We have tons of great crop tops. We have crop tops. We have crop bags, stickers.
Starting point is 00:03:44 Yes. And all of those things are going, all the proceeds from those are going to three lovely charities. We have Rainbow Railroad. We have Citrus PGH and Project Ten Oaks. The links for all those charities are in the China. If you want to donate to them directly, but buying merch is for them. There's also about 100 buffs available to buy there as well. So please do it. There's a new shirt design, new logo design this year as well. Yeah. And whether you're buy gay, like whatever your sexuality is, we want to hear from you. We have a question that we want you to answer. What has been LGBTQ plus in the survivor community meant to you? You could submit your response to that in the next few days,
Starting point is 00:04:22 hopefully be part of one of the episodes this season at bit. dotly slash TPS 2026. The link is in the show notes. Check that out. But now let's get into our conversation with Miles Qua. All right. And we are back. And we are so thrilled to be joined by the one and only by
Starting point is 00:04:46 racial by tribal, bisexual, Miles, how are you doing? Yeah, I'm happy to be here. That's a lovely intro. I've got that on a mug now. I've been selling that on a mug. Oh my gosh. I saw that.
Starting point is 00:05:00 I'm tempted to buy one, Miles. I have to sell you. To buy one? Oh, no. Miles, you sort of have like a million nickname. So, you know, King of the Jungle Rack, King of the Jungle. You know, there's a million.
Starting point is 00:05:16 Rat King Yeah, Jungle Rat and Rat King were the main two, I think. King of the Jungle, we got a different one over in Australia who's got that now. But yeah, yeah, I mean, the nicknames are part of the fun, right? Like, I've always, Australia's Fiver is big on the nicknames. As soon as you get like any sort of name given you, the producers just start, like, hand and get it home.
Starting point is 00:05:39 I think like the casual audience really responds well for the nicknames. Everything. Alliance are named on the name. There's really been branding. It really frustrates me
Starting point is 00:05:51 in New Era a US survivor, how all of the alliance names just end up being like the tribe name three or the tribe name
Starting point is 00:05:59 four because the tribes are so small that you don't need to specify within a tribe what an alliance is versus in Australian Survivor
Starting point is 00:06:06 like definitely has more of a history of like big iconic alliances within that. Going into did you envision, having like a different nickname because obviously there's the jungle rap but I mean
Starting point is 00:06:19 you know you'd be called the jungle rat no like I didn't have an aim to get a nickname but it's one of those things were as soon and people people I actually feel really bad for Max who nicknamed me this because he he mentioned it to me I was like because I I'd backstab them right this is something people forget about with the with the rat name people were like oh it's so good you called you a rat it's like I was a rat I totally screwed him over. And there's some historical context there as to why people kind of go upset about that. But that doesn't really apply in this specific situation because I was being a rat.
Starting point is 00:06:56 And then he asked me if it would be all right if he called me that. And I just saw, I saw lights. I saw branding. I saw stars. I was like, yes. Especially because I was worried at that point about being voted out really early because I was just on the block constantly. And so I was like, if I do get voted out, this is my root.
Starting point is 00:07:14 to get invited back, right? So call me, and I was like, use the nickname. Call me the nickname. Like, I was very happy with it. And one thing that you talked about on the show is that you do pole dancing, which is so cool and I really want to get into. And my question is, has the Rat King nickname,
Starting point is 00:07:32 has that influence, are we doing some pole routines? Is that a potential future drag name? Like, it's got, the nicknames are so available. It hasn't, but the potential is definitely. there. Yeah, the pole dancing is a lot of fun, obviously. It's like a really awesome hobby and you should definitely try it. But yeah, it hasn't been any cross-off because I just do it as like a fun casual hobby. I'm not doing any performances or anything. That's a big step. I don't know, like, getting on national TV is one thing, but then going out and doing an actual pole dancing
Starting point is 00:08:03 performance for people, I think is a whole other level of like exposure. Harder than Survivor, more revealing than Survivor. Well, genuinely, here's something interesting. The most anxious I've ever felt in my entire life is the first time I had like a little end of the season showcase for pole dancing. And when I was going out on Survivor, I was thinking about that in my mind as like if I can do that, like I can do anything. And like obviously, as you would know, it's like a big thing going on Survivor. It's very scary. It's very like anxiety-inducing. But it was nothing compared to my first time like getting up on a poll in front of an audience.
Starting point is 00:08:43 And so that actually really helped me with the, with like kind of try to tone out and forget about people like, the people are watching me basically. I love that so much. I feel like you imagine like the classic like survivor motivation is, oh, you remember when you were like at the last second of the big game, you know, like some like some stereotypically masculine thing as like the cornerstone. But no, it was I did that poll routine in front of the audience.
Starting point is 00:09:12 And that's what I'm going to drop. I love that so much. Yeah, it's terrifying. This is awesome, though, but it's cool to, like, dive in with you to have you on Miles. Like, obviously, the show gives, like, one edit and Bertrand as the winner. You are very much the main story of the season. But, like, I'm so curious sort of, like, how you sum yourself up or how you would introduce yourself. For people who don't watch Australian Survivor who aren't familiar,
Starting point is 00:09:45 like, who are you? How would you sum it up for folks? Yeah, I mean, I got really lucky that my edit was very generous to me, both in the amount of content and the quality of content. Like, there's something that happens very consistently throughout the season, which is like a lot of the audience are like, why is everyone targeting Miles? Why is everyone like getting annoyed at Miles?
Starting point is 00:10:06 Because it would show everyone kind of gaining up on me and everyone would be very defensive about like, oh man, four miles, he's just getting, like, ganged up on. It's like, I was doing things that were pissing people off, and a lot of the time weren't really shown. Because the edit, like, because I'm the hero, and because I'm the one that, like, I thought I was the villain when I was actually playing through.
Starting point is 00:10:26 And I make it to the end, I win. And then suddenly I get this, like, have to get this hero edit, where they cut all of the things I was terrified to, like, come up. I had so many things in my mind that I'm like, oh, when they show that, when they show that, I'm going to look so bad. It's going to be so embarrassing. It just basically all got cut.
Starting point is 00:10:42 But as far as how to sum myself up, I think pole dancing finance guy is probably a good way to go about that. I think that was like basically... Your intro is you're sitting at the computer doing financial... You're doing like finance stuff. Yeah. Then it's like clips of you pole dancing. And then you're playing like Dungeons and Dragon.
Starting point is 00:11:03 You're playing with your friends. You get like a mega intro. I mean, this is like Australian Survivors, like mega. huge already, but you get, yeah, you get this like very multifaceted intro. Yeah, yeah. And that was kind of how I pitched myself in production was basically like, oh, I'm like finance guy, but plot twist. Like I'm this like nerdy finance guy, right? But plot twist. I'm also like this fabulous queer pole dancing, like outgoing eccentric person as well. And I've always like really enjoyed kind of breaking stereotypes and being a bit out of the box
Starting point is 00:11:35 in that regard where like I don't really fit into any kind of category that you could kind of stereotype people into. But yeah, that's kind of how I'd pitch myself. Can I add to, I think what's, and I was, when I was listening to some of the deep dive with Shannon, you're also talking about the way in which
Starting point is 00:11:53 you were sort of looking to be something that they might. And I think you sort of, when you realize that they were doing Brands versus Braun too, you sort of have this like, oh, that's kind of perfect. You think that, but it's almost, almost like what you like about that you come off a certain way, which is like you might fit into their idea of what a brain might look like, but then you can sort of subvert that expectation. Is that, is that true? Is that how you feel?
Starting point is 00:12:18 Yeah, absolutely. And like, it's one of those things where my kind of archetype on Survivor would traditionally be someone who is like not super confident and not super like plan boy. Right? It's the, like on paper, you look at me and you're like, oh, it's the nerd. But it's very much breaking the nerd archetype because I'm like very cocky and overconfir and I'm very comfortable in my own skin. I'm very outgoing. I'm really athletic. People are always surprised. I like, I pole dance. I play soccer. I used to box. I do a whole, I'm a very athletic guy. And so I come in and I get like the nerd thing is the first thing that's kind of put on me because I do talk a bit like a nerd. I kind of look a bit like a nerd. And I've had eye surgery,
Starting point is 00:13:00 so I don't know to wear glasses. Like I used to wear glasses. So I'm very much like nerd vibes. But like I went to a private boys school where like rugby was all the all the rage and I'm actually a really big rugby fan. I played a lot of rugby growing up and like when we're picking teams in PE right? Like initially I would always
Starting point is 00:13:17 get picked last because it's this like little Asian guy getting picked for touch football and I'd show like we'd start playing and like I wasn't the best there but everyone would always be surprised of like oh he can actually pass a ball and he can actually step and he knows how to play rugby
Starting point is 00:13:33 because it's like, you know, I'm in the little, I'm in the tiny little Venn diagram intersection between like queer, Asians and rugby fans apparently. Yeah, I love it. This is actually, that brings me to something I'm curious about as someone who's not as familiar as a lot of people of like Survivor Australian, like just all of the lore and different characters.
Starting point is 00:13:57 But like you mentioned being Asian, being queer, like going into the experience where there are certain, in players that you saw who you were like, oh, I, like, they remind me of me, or I think I might, like, in terms of representation, sort of mirror them a bit or compare with them to some extent. On the representation side, I do feel like the way that queer people are often presented in Survivor,
Starting point is 00:14:23 and I guess in media and more generally, is quite, like, it's quite stereotypical a lot of the time in a way that, like, don't really align with. Because I'm like, I'm by, I lean towards women most of the time. I kind of only like guys. And I'm definitely a bit queer presenting. But like, you know, I'm probably not your kind of stereotypical, like, queer person vibes wise. And so on the queer side, especially because I do feel like on shows like Survivor,
Starting point is 00:14:51 it's definitely something that's kind of presented a lot more. Like I think Paulie from my season would be a like classic example of like a queer person on Survivor as far as like making it a big part of their vibe. On the Asian side a little bit more, definitely there's been a few players like Jared in 2017 and Eileen and Titans versus Rebels. But it's really hard because there's not been a lot of very good Asian representation on Australian Survivor. And then oftentimes the Asians that are, and this is something I was very aware of very conscious of going in, the fact that oftentimes people who either get targeted early, a lot of them do get labeled sneaky, which is like a problem. And that's what people were really upset about with the nickname.
Starting point is 00:15:33 thing for me is that it's the classic thing. Asians get labeled sneaky. Now, I was really sneaky. But a lot of other people, it's kind of unjustified. And a lot of them get really dead purple edits, right? Like, even people like Eileen and Jared, who were really big players on their season, like got basically done in on the edit. And there's, like, obviously they're not the only ones. Way in Brains versus Brawns get, comes fourth. No, it comes fifth. It'll be four. I can't remember. It comes fifth, but it gets, purpled in the entire second half of the season. Yeah. And so, yeah, it's quite difficult.
Starting point is 00:16:09 There's not really many players, other than maybe Jericho from 2017, but not that many players on that Asian side that you can kind of look at as represent, as really strong representation. The only one that there was definitely a bit of was George, who obviously we all know George, who kind of is not Asian,
Starting point is 00:16:29 but has like the ethnic vibes and is also like, on Brains versus Bronze wasn't out as queer and then it's like given as a throwaway line in heroes and villains. But that's actually kind of like how I wanted to be presented as like strategists first, like fun character first and kind of queer representative second. And I made a really big effort throughout the season
Starting point is 00:16:49 because they were trying to push it a bit more and especially some of the interactions with Pauli where they were always trying to like push it into like, oh, is it a flirty thing? Is it a romance thing and being like, no, this is pure strategy. and I'm going to cut him later and it's very cut for it and whatnot. I was always really hesitant to that and I was thinking about George a lot of the time as far as kind of how I'd want that kind of queerness and eccentricity to be portrayed
Starting point is 00:17:14 as far as like having it be strategy and character first and then those things second. When you think about George, you think about like the king of strategy of strategy on Australia survivor and he's gay and, you know, Yeah, and it just happens that he's a fun, fabulous gay man as well. Like, that's the second kind of thing about him. And it fits perfectly with like some of the other kind of gay strategists throughout global survivor history. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:44 Like Todd, Richard Hitchard Hatch. Yeah, exactly. Well, I think what's interesting, no, just that, like, you talked about having this, this journey of feeling like you were, you might be portrayed as a villain. And I actually want to go back to that in a bit because I think it's, I think you're, what we saw from you on the show is I think it's like really interesting and then this idea that like you win until you sort of you feel like then you sort of get more of a here's at it but in terms of like thinking about your
Starting point is 00:18:15 queerness I think also probably like what might be like sort of forgotten about is like you know especially early on like you don't know how long you're going to go you talk about this in the finale of like you know you're talking about love of your conversation with Kalin where you're like how far did you think you'd get he was like well, I thought I'd win. And you were like, I was really kind of hoping maybe I'd make the merge. It's like this really cute moment. I think of like, because I think I'm more in the camp of view of maybe having a little bit more like,
Starting point is 00:18:40 if I ever want a reality show, I'm not expecting to do as well, you know, as maybe I would want to do. But like in these moments early on where like potentially you're being, you know, even at the moment where like you and Polly have a connect. And for folks who don't know, like, Mazz, you basically save Polly with a, you know this, Miles saves Pauly. but Maasai's Polly with an incredible idol play. Polly would have gone home.
Starting point is 00:19:02 Successful knowledge is power in survival and survival. Yeah, steals an idol in the same tribal and then plays it for and eliminates the ally of the person he stole the auto from. It's like so incredible. But yeah, like even in that moment, like you haven't won the game yet.
Starting point is 00:19:18 So like I'm assuming like these things where you feel like they're kind of pushing are coming in maybe even earlier in the show where you know what you don't want is for it to be, you know, 75, 80% of your, of your shirt. Is that relatable or am I off of my office? No, 100%.
Starting point is 00:19:34 Right. But you've only got a certain amount of time to, like, content that they are willing to give you, especially in Australian survival, where like Australian Survivor is brutal with the purple edits, right? Right. Especially in Australian Survivor,
Starting point is 00:19:46 you've only going to get X amount of air time of content. And I don't want to waste content that they might give me on me talking about, what is an important, part of my life, but I don't think is kind of defining for who I am, right? Like, I think I'm
Starting point is 00:20:02 a lot of things before I am bisexual man. I do wish I actually talked about kind of the Asian representation a little bit more, and especially as it got later in the game, because that is what, because I think that there's actually quite good queer representation on Australian Survivor,
Starting point is 00:20:18 especially in the last couple of years, there's been some really, like George and Kirby alone, there's been some really big queer characters and even going back to me. I even think on your season. There's a lot of representation. Noonan and Pauli on my season.
Starting point is 00:20:31 There's some other people who are like more like quietly, you know, quiet bisexuals. But the, yeah, definitely the Asian thing is one that I do wish I talked about
Starting point is 00:20:41 a bit more in hindsight. Like coming out of it at the time, it was very much like, I don't really want to talk about representation. I kind of want to be focused on like character and strategy
Starting point is 00:20:51 and all narration and all that. But afterwards, it was probably one of my bigger regrets of the season. And then even not just that also just like I've got a lot of messages because after the season being like so happy for the representation whatnot. And it's like the queer thing, it's the Asian thing. It's even just like nerdy, anxious people, right? And like I'm not someone who's like super anxious and super unconfident, but I am someone who has grown up as a nerd as still a bit. It's like somewhat of an outsider in that kind of regard. And it's definitely something that
Starting point is 00:21:25 while I'm out there I wasn't really thinking about, but when I got back, it was like, oh, yeah, it's like really cool to see people like you on your screen, and I'm kind of, especially in something like the show like Survivor, right? Like, US Survivors had a few like, you know,
Starting point is 00:21:41 Coffin-style, cryptocurrency, big nerd narrator. Yeah, yeah. Australian Survivor doesn't really lend itself to that in the same way for a few reasons. They don't cast as many of them and the ones that they have casted, historically not done very well.
Starting point is 00:21:58 And they have, at least especially now, I feel like there's a way higher percentage of the the mateship professional athlete, like on Australian Survivor than US, which is maybe a dichotomy. Oh yeah, totally. Well, less so the last couple of seasons, but like, if you go back historically, right,
Starting point is 00:22:16 you look at like your champions versus contenders one and two, you look at 2016, you look at even Brains versus Braun's, like the Brains tribe was very much not, nerdy on that season. Like, it's definitely an issue historically that has meant that my type of archetype has always struggled a little bit. And so it's something that I do wish I talked about a little bit more in hindsight. It was interesting in your deep, when you talk about when you were looking for other deep
Starting point is 00:22:42 dives and you were kind of like, I kind of had to like find somebody who I thought was sort of like, you know, kind of made in is the main one. That's right. That's right. 2019 is like the main one where I'm like, oh, it's another young, young, nerdy physics, mathy guy, right? And that was actually really useful because his entire,
Starting point is 00:23:01 like deep dive and entire story is about him, like wishing he had made the move at this point, this point, wishing he had taken more agency. And especially because you combine Asian thing, queer thing, nerdy thing, all kind of things that can kind of lead to you, being kind of overlooked or being kind of swept up in the game. And then also, I did some data before the season.
Starting point is 00:23:22 If you look at the performance of young players on Australian Survivor, the US Survivor has a much stronger track record of young players, like taking dominant positions in the game. Like even recently, you look at like San, you look at Rizzo. You've got these young guys who can really put their stamp on the game. In Australian Survivor, it's a lot. And I don't know why this is necessarily, but the young people under 24, under 25-year-olds,
Starting point is 00:23:45 have a much harder, rougher track record where, like, there's very few young players who've managed to, like, A, make it very far, and then B, more importantly, like, really put their stamp on the game. And so that was something I was really conscious of, like, hey, I fit into all these categories plus the age thing of, like, if I don't do things, I'm just going to kind of get swept up in it all. It's all going to kind of wash over me, and I'm going to, like, kind of miss my shot here. Like, I need to take the agency myself and very much that poorly move,
Starting point is 00:24:18 was about, like, hey, I need to make my stamp on the game because I'm not going to be able to just play, like, a cool under the radar, chill game, and then get the attention. I'm going to be someone's sidekick or I'm going to be seen as a floater or something like that. Can I also also say, all of this, like, announces this. Just in case people, again, I also learned in the deep dive,
Starting point is 00:24:38 that you didn't really start watching Survivor until, like, 22. Is this right? Am I getting the date, right? Yeah, yeah. You just have this much, like, knowledge about it. I'm very obsessive about things, right? Like, and the way I get into anything. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:50 Like, I'm a big stats guy. I can, anything that I get interested in, I can tell you the stats. And, like, there's a lot of seasons of U.S. Survivor that I haven't seen. But, like, I've only seen about, like, eight or nine seasons of the U.S. survivor. But I'll be able to tell you, like, kind of most of the boot order and what the important votes are and what, like, the final two. Like, like, the first thing. Like, it's probably explains why you did well in thinking in your, in your season. But, yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:15 Like, what was it? So, like, we often talk about, um, the practice. it has spoken, how Survivor is like very queer coded in many ways, but, and I'm sure you've talked about this before, but like, what was it that drew you to Survivor and made it this obsession for you? Yeah, I'm just a really big strategy game guy. Like, honestly, I've never been a big reality TV person. I've never watched a lot of reality TV.
Starting point is 00:25:41 And to be honest, I'd never even, like, thought about watching Survivor. And then, like, I love going down little YouTube rabbit holes on strategy games. Like, I've done it with, like, poker, with Pokemon, with, um, and, I've done it. like Settlers like a catan like all that kind of stuff and like I watched a video on survivor strategy one time and I was like oh that seems interesting clicked on it watching was like oh wow this is a lot deeper than I first like would have fought from the outside I just thought of some like reality TV show right like I didn't take it seriously and then I kept watching and I got kind of obsessed and I'm even now I'm obsessed with survivor strategy I'm very
Starting point is 00:26:12 much like a big numbers guy I love like funky votes I love like trying to plot out like what's the path forward, like take out this person, try and bring this person in, yada, yada, yeah. Yeah, it's the strategic side. Like, I'm very much not a big drama person. And I mean, that really helped me the way I played is like, I never really got involved in like the drama of it all. It was all just like, all strategy all the time, basically.
Starting point is 00:26:36 But yeah, I kind of get like this with strategy games just in general, right? Like, I love strategy games. That is the best story of a YouTube algorithm. I think I've ever been. Yeah. that's the most positive outcome. I feel like this is something I've thought. I think we often talk about the way Survivor
Starting point is 00:26:57 sort of appeals to queer fans, we've talked to endlessly about that. I do think like strategy and games in it of itself, I don't think I've really thought, and maybe like thought hard enough. I wonder whether it is sort of like, and I don't know whether that's exactly why you might have been drawn to and why you love strategy games.
Starting point is 00:27:14 I do you feel like there's almost like this sort of like ideal version of like a level playing field of like if like if if society is not like a level playing field for cripple or people who are underrepresented or do not have as much power as other people there is a thing of like if I can like figure out the rules of this game and sort of like figure it out I wonder if there's like a thing to to that but what is it that about you know what is specifically about
Starting point is 00:27:37 is just like the crunching that because I guess but survivor is not just about crunching the numbers but it's also you have to develop a social relationship to figure out whether that yeah can be a number for you. You'll notice that the part that I'm good at is the crunching the numbers and the part that I am notoriously not good at is the social side of it. In fact, one would argue I have statistically the worst social game of any player in Survivor History as the person with the most votes against them from any season of Survivor.
Starting point is 00:28:06 Like, I mean, I'm not bad. I'm good at the social part of not, like, really upset. Like, I was good at kicking my head down. I never really blew up at people. I never gave people a reason to vote me out, but I was not good at building the social bonds, like the deep social bonds, especially quickly in the way that you do.
Starting point is 00:28:26 And it's funny because over time, I've kind of built these connections afterwards where I'm very close with a lot of people for my season. I only had like three, four really close allies on my season, but it was really the numbersy strategy stuff that pulled me through. But as far as you brought a question on what draws me to strategy gained, I don't know. I've been playing
Starting point is 00:28:47 strategy games since I was little. My parents were really big strategy game people. My dad was teaching me chess at like five years old. It's something that I mean, I've always been very analytical. Like I love solving problems. I've always been like really good at maths. My entire job is mathy problem solving essentially.
Starting point is 00:29:02 So I don't know if there's for me a link to a link to the queerness. Maybe there is. I'm not sure I've never delved into it super deep. But it's just like I love puzzles. I love problem solving. I love being able to kind of put the pieces together and come up with the correct outcome, basically.
Starting point is 00:29:19 And so that's what's always appealed with me. Like with strategy, it's actually less about winning and more about understanding the game for me. Like, I'm really, the winning is just the proof that I understand how the game works and understand the strategy behind it.
Starting point is 00:29:35 And just to say, not to digress this, but I feel like what's interesting, Grace, is like, I feel like, I don't feel like Survivor is a level playing field, right? I mean, Miles just... I was about to say, actually, So, yeah, you have agreed. You went in thinking like, oh, people are going to see me as too young, as Asian, as bisexual,
Starting point is 00:29:52 as like not athletic enough just from how I look, you know? And it's like, I feel like what's cool about Survivor is it's actually the same like unequal or like, it has a lot of the unequal things that would come to in life. But it is a game. And in the very first season of the show, the gay man won. And like an unexpected person won the game. And like I think it's, I feel like it's a cool thing where it's like this. And look at Sandra, right?
Starting point is 00:30:16 Sandra, exactly. It's like, it's like life, but then there's like all these examples from even from the very beginning where the surprising person who, you know, doesn't fit the bill, not Captain America, not the river raft guideer wins all the time. Can I say, though, it is, it is not, it is not, it is not, it is not, you're right that it's not equal. I don't know what it is. But it's also like you, you, you essentially do have the same amount of power when you start
Starting point is 00:30:40 the game as somebody who might, who might be like, you know, a straight, way, man, you know, you do. I mean, maybe, but I think Jonathan is always going to start the game in a better position than that. You know what I mean? Not Jonathan has some crazy. I mean, it's just objectively true. Like, he's never going to get voted out as the first vote.
Starting point is 00:30:58 And I feel like I, maybe you feel as way Miles have like a reasonable shot of being the first boot on any season. I was supposed to be the first boot on my season. It's crazy. It was literally like, I was going to be the second boot and like until 10 minutes before tribal. Well, ironically, I don't know how much you know. about our season. But I was saved
Starting point is 00:31:17 because Indy, who is like a lovely ethnic lesbian, middle-aged woman had, like, we had built this connection in that both of us
Starting point is 00:31:27 were the two people on the out, and she basically blew up her game to try and save me. Queen, lesbian queen, we love. Yeah. Where would we be now
Starting point is 00:31:37 without Indy? Exactly. Yeah, yeah, literally. Like, we had built up, we had literally built a connection
Starting point is 00:31:43 on the fact that both of us were feeling really on the out. And we were like our two closest allies and no one else was really kind of talking strapped to us. And I was going to be the target and she like just completely imploded her game trying to save me. That's so sweet.
Starting point is 00:31:58 Was it something that you guys explicitly talked about also about, you know, that you were being bisexual and her being lesbian? Was that something that was explicit in that connection or was it kind of just? Yeah, we knew each other were queer. And also she's like mixed race as well. And like it was a very, it was a pretty white tribe. And so, yeah, it was something that we were definitely bonding over a little bit. But I guess the point in the way it was like, yeah, but it did take her blowing up her, like, she did have to leave, you know, for you to go on and flourish.
Starting point is 00:32:29 But yeah. And have you shared some of the money or no, just kidding. I mean, you're not, can't tell us that. The question I was going to ask, Bob, is you played a lot, you played basically almost, I think in the, in the end, you talk about 50% from the bottom. But then you end up on top. So it sounds like your verse. Yeah, yeah, I guess so. But I'll tell you what, I didn't play well from the top,
Starting point is 00:32:51 so I'm not a very good verse. You won. You won? Yeah, it's true. All of my worst gameplay came from the top, though, so. That's so many. Okay, the thing you were talking about that you felt like you were going to get, you were sort of getting a villain,
Starting point is 00:33:08 and then you feel like in retrospect, you got it. Is that still how you felt? when you won and knowing the show is about the air. Because there are moments that I feel like, it does garner a lot of sympathy, I think, for you in the way that like some of your... Yeah. So if it's not clear that Miles loves talking about strategy,
Starting point is 00:33:27 in the show that was also very clear as well, there are like full segments of you, like, especially when like you swap and then especially as I being like, I need you to stop dying. Like you're doing yourself no favor, which I'm like sitting there being like, oh, but I actually, I think that they're,
Starting point is 00:33:42 is a bet, like, there obviously is a bed of it, but they don't want you to do this because it hurts their game. But it is, there are these times where, like, other people are giving confessionals being like, Miles is very annoying. And I learned in your deep dive that you actually asked all of your friends to give you all of the worst things about you, which is like, such a brave thing to do.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Traumatic. Yeah, so traumatic. So that notion of feeling like you were going to get a hero, is that like between the show airing or as it was starting, you were like surprised by seeing? I knew at the point that I'd won that I was probably going to get a hero edit because Australian Survivor is not subtle in its editing at all right? However, even the extent to it
Starting point is 00:34:22 surprised me a little bit like there were definitely some interactions where I felt like I was the villain in the interaction that were flipped over to make me more likable to be the guy who is the hero and yeah, it was very weird a lot of the, a lot of the worst, my worst kind of moments. And to be fair, I was never like, the one thing I had is that I was never mean to anyone. I would kind of piss them off by being annoying or by sometimes saying that what I do have
Starting point is 00:34:52 in me is I can be really insensitive sometimes, right? So I would say insensitive things without thinking about it and would upset people. But I was really deliberately never mean. And it's very easy in Survivor to be mean, right? Like the production team are all kind of like pushing it. They want the drama. Everyone's like tired and hungry and grouchy. And I made a really big effort to never be mean,
Starting point is 00:35:13 to always take everything with a smile and whatever and never like bite back when people were like coming at me. And so they didn't have any like mean content. But definitely what surprised me is that I was playing off the villain character. Right. Like like I was trying to play the heel. I was trying to play the kind of foil. And me and AJ,
Starting point is 00:35:31 I thought that we would be the kind of the final boss villains that someone else would beat to win basically would take out to win. And so they, and what they do is they take all of those villain confessions and then they kind of reframe them to be like cheeky or like, you know, heroic or whatever. Yeah, it was very strange, but I kind of knew, I knew that I would get the hero edit. I wasn't expecting the extent to which the hero edit that I got, where I got really a lot of focus for like emotional content. Like even they show me like crying about voting out my closest ally at final five. they are you know they just show all of these kind of really nice moments and they always frame them really well and they anyone who is against me is the villain and considering I'm on the bottom the whole time everyone's against me at some point so basically everyone
Starting point is 00:36:20 like our season's bizarre where you have like three people that get nice edits and then everyone is is framed as like a villain everyone else basically because they're all just like picking on me basically um yeah yeah it's it's very strange and what I wasn't expecting the extent of it. Like, they really, and it's actually something I criticize our editing for a little bit is I think a bit. Our season is a lot of people were picking me as the winner from very early on. And especially once we hit Merge and then once Karan goes, it's like, who else is they even to win?
Starting point is 00:36:52 Because they're just shoving me down the audience's throat basically the entire time. I watched, I had seen it knowing that you had won. So I didn't, I didn't watch it in real time. I'm often, like, catching up. And, like, it's so obvious. I think you get the biggest intro package of any... Not that other people don't get intro packages, but I'm just like...
Starting point is 00:37:11 Oh, yeah, it feels like they've... Yeah, they're not subtle Australian Survivor. Could we... Maybe actually, like, one thing I feel like we normally do with guests, which we haven't really done is, like, sort of go, you know, even before... Which we talked a little bit about before Survivor, but in terms of, like, Krinister... I think also, like, I just want to be...
Starting point is 00:37:28 Like, any other representation you want to talk about in terms of the show. But, like, in terms of coming out, you... What was your coming out story? Do you want to find out on it? Yeah. Yeah. I remember back in year nine, we watched Bazelermans, Romeo and Juliet,
Starting point is 00:37:43 and I watched the fan and I went, I like Romeo. Is that the Leonardo DiCaprio one? Yeah. Young Leonardo DiCaprio. Yeah. And then I kind of just came to the realization over the next year, and then I just kind of came out to a bunch of people.
Starting point is 00:38:01 It's very weird because I was like the only person out of the club. I went to a private person. all boys private school, quite fancy, quite traditional. And I was the only person who came, who was out of the closet at school that I know. I know a bunch of people have come out since, obviously. But I didn't really suffer too many, like, negative social consequences of that. I think part of it is because I'm already, like, such a big, quirky personality and I'm also a very confident person.
Starting point is 00:38:30 Like, I think that people, because there's, there were a lot of people who are homophobic at my school, but I never, and I know people were talking behind my back, but I never heard anything. No one ever said anything to my face. I think, you know, people like that, they kind of like taste, they smell weakness, right? So I imagine if some of the other guys in my year that were out, that were queer had come out of the closet, I think a lot of them would probably have gotten a bit of shit for it because it would have been like in a much less confident manner than me, right? But with me, it's like, I'm very confident.
Starting point is 00:38:58 And then also, I think because I'm already a pretty eccentric person, it kind of just gets lumped in with that as opposed to being its own. thing. Like what I was saying earlier about the fact that I think queer is probably like point number three or four or five in kind of the description of miles. You know what I mean? And so like, and I think it's below like it's already like eccentric or a bit quirky or whatever however you want to describe it. Survivor winner. Yeah, but yeah. I think when you like that, it kind of gets lumped in there.
Starting point is 00:39:29 And yeah, so I don't know. I have I feel like I haven't really got, because I'm also pretty straight passing most of the time. And obviously, like, I do like to dress plan boy only sometimes, you know, I do the pole dancing. But, like, I'm not someone who's really obviously queer, right? That you'd meet and be like, oh, yeah, that's a gay man, you know. And so I don't think it's something that's had too many significant, like, negative impacts on my life in the way that I think a lot of other people have kind of experienced it. Which is something I talked about. And, like, people, in my final speech, I mentioned the fact that, like, I've kind of had a really privileged life.
Starting point is 00:40:04 And people are like, um, Asian, queer, no, what? I was like, yeah, it's just, it's never really kind of affected me negatively. And also, to be fair, it helps us Sydney is like a pretty good city. Yeah, right? Like, Sydney is, and I live, like, in the inner city of Sydney, right? Like, I live a couple blocks away from Oxford Street, which is like our gay street, essentially. So it's really, I've been really lucky in that regard, being in the bubble.
Starting point is 00:40:32 Yeah, I feel like I've had that for, you know, where, like, Like, especially when I, at first when I came out, I feel like I had very similar, where it's like nobody would say anything to my, to my, and I do feel like there is a level, and I feel but because it's like, you do have to have like,
Starting point is 00:40:44 because there's certain level of confidence, I think that come, but I think like folks who are, you know, engaging in homophobia or transfer or whatever are, there is some like, some of wanting to have power in a conversation. And if you're not sort of willing to give them any, then I think that they find it a little futile.
Starting point is 00:41:00 Right? And bullies, boys find people who pick on people who are weak. The bullies don't bully someone who's like a strong, confident person. They pick on someone who's like, who they see is an easy target. Who they perceive to be weak, yeah. Yeah, exactly. It's interesting though, even just like you mentioned like dressing flamboyantly,
Starting point is 00:41:18 pole dancing, like, because as someone who went to an all boys high school and also kind of understands that environment and how like, oh, like, nobody's out apparently. And then like, we see how that evolves. Yeah, three years later. and it's like, okay. Yeah, exactly. It's like, but I find it so interesting, like just thinking about masculinity,
Starting point is 00:41:40 which even was like a topic on our last episode. Like, how did you come to embrace those parts of yourself that are more flamboyant that, like, well, and whether it's the way you dress, whether it's pole dancing, like, how did you come to embrace those things in a world where I can imagine, like, that not being the most,
Starting point is 00:42:01 especially in that all boys' environment, like being the most common thing. Yeah, so I think a big one was musical theater and I was really lucky when I had a boy school that I was at actually had a real big focus on the musical theater program on the theater program in general and actually a lot of people who are like, who were kind of your more traditional like cool kids or math,
Starting point is 00:42:22 like a lot more normal. Like the theater program was not just for the theater nerds at my school. It was actually something that was pretty widespread and a lot of people did. And that was definitely a good outlet. And then I remember, like, my first year out of high school in uni, I started working as a bartender at a gay bar, and that really kind of opened all the possibilities up.
Starting point is 00:42:41 You know, I started dressing more flamboyantly. I started interacting with a lot more queer people. I started feeling, like, it improved my social skills as well, because I am a very naturally extroverted person, but I've never, I've always struggled a bit with actually being a good conversationalist. I'm not like a natural small talker. I'm not, I can talk very easily.
Starting point is 00:43:01 I've always been something easily, but I'm not necessarily someone who is good at conversation. That's been something that was built through the bartending, which kind of forces you to do like hours and hours of small talk every day, basically. And so I got a lot of kind of, I got the strongest social skills there, was interacting with a lot of different people. I was able to dress a lot more flamboyantly there as well. And so that was kind of a period where I was experimenting with my style a lot more.
Starting point is 00:43:26 And my style was pretty wild for a little bit. I feel like it's kind of now become a bit more kind of, and deliberate and like as opposed to just what it was initially, which was like an explosion of skin fabric and color. Oh, oh my gosh. We never named the episodes before, but that would have been a good one. Explosion of skin fabric and color.
Starting point is 00:43:50 Yeah, but yeah, so I think like that I think that was a really big part of kind of figuring it all out was working at the gay bar and interacting with all these like amazing queer people and like getting to kind of be figure out not even being myself figure out who I was basically and who I wanted to be. That makes so much sense. I feel like that and I feel like that exposure to queer people like whether or not your queer is often like a good a good just like that. That queer community is a place where people have had to figure out who they are and like we're doing that and know and figure out that it's not you know what people might expect them to be and that and I feel like that's just cool exposure for anyone.
Starting point is 00:44:31 Yeah, and you know you're going to be accepted and supported with whatever, with however it is, right? Like, I think kind of some of the fashion decisions that I was making back then are kind of dreadful and hideous looking back at it. But, you know, everyone's going to support you regardless. Yes, yes. We actually have some photos of you back that. I would.
Starting point is 00:44:50 Are you still into musical theater? Are you still a big musical? I mean, I'm not like a die-hard musical theater person, but like I enjoy music. Like, I was in, like, a couple of school musicals. I wasn't, like, the drama kid, right? But it's just something that I've enjoyed and definitely was, like, a bit of an outlet during high school.
Starting point is 00:45:07 But, yeah, I'm not, like, a big musical theater guy, but I enjoy a musical, you know? Okay, very. And going back to what you said kind of at the beginning, when you said, you know, you, you know, you're kind of, like, dabble in guys and maybe lean towards girls. And I guess I was wondering,
Starting point is 00:45:25 why for you is the, why for you, I feel like you're very out, and proud about being bisexual when I think there could be pressure or like an easy route, quote unquote, easy route of, you know, if you're mostly dating women, you don't need to necessarily like hype that label. I know this is something we talked a lot
Starting point is 00:45:43 in our episode with Andy last season about the importance of... I watched that. That was actually really an awesome. Oh, wow. I love that. Yeah, please, please. That being said, it annoys me because it's another thing that, like Andy came on 47, Andy aired right before my season. and Andrew has the same arc as I do.
Starting point is 00:46:01 And then now he's come on and he's had the exact same, like bisexual man who mostly dates women thing. Again, Maltham, I don't need to do this. Andy's a big loser and you won. Oh, no. Andy keeps on stealing my stick. I get to do it. It's infuriating.
Starting point is 00:46:19 No, I love Andy. Andy's one of my favorite survivor characters. He's amazing. But yeah, yeah, it's an interesting one. I think it's something like, I don't know. maybe, again, it's because I haven't experienced the negative social pressures of it where, like, for me, it's just like a thing
Starting point is 00:46:36 and it's not something that I would ever hide. Like, I've never had a reason to really, obviously during high school, it was a big thing to kind of come out, but since high school, it's never been a significant negative thing. It's just been a thing about me, right? And to be fair, it's not something that I draw a huge amount of attention to, right? Like, it's not something that I'm, like, broadcasting from the rooftops,
Starting point is 00:46:58 but it's just a part of me that I'm not particularly drawing attention to, but also I'm not like making an effort. Like there's no reason for me to hide it, you know? Yeah. And it seems like that's, and I feel like also that you knew it and were able to speak it at such a young age. It's like you're not going to put that genie back in the bottle, you know? Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 00:47:16 Yeah. And it's something I feel pretty comfortable with, right? Like I think that the people who struggle with that a lot of the time are people who are not, obviously sometimes because of external social pressures, but oftentimes it's more that they're just not very comfortable in themselves. And that's totally valid. But I'm some, like, I've never really experienced that.
Starting point is 00:47:38 This is so interesting because, like, you also, like, are the first queer winner, or first openly queer winner of Australian Survivor. We, you know, obviously, you know, poverty is right on your tail. So there's that. About title right before. It's a pretty good group to be in. Who have found knowledge of powers as well. That's right.
Starting point is 00:48:03 Something to it. Something to it. But I mean, what's that like? Because it's, I mean, that's one of the headlines, obviously, that people use when they're like, oh, look, here's Miles. Who's making history, not only in finding, like, the four idols, but also in this way. Like, how does that feel to have that part of your identity again, which isn't, like, the biggest part of your identity? but how does it feel to have that, like, front and center at times for people? I mean, I'm pretty comfortable, and it is cool.
Starting point is 00:48:32 I love that I can kind of be that representation for people mainly. Like, initially when I was on that, as I said, I didn't really want to make it a particularly big deal. But, like, post-survivor and post-seeing kind of the impact that it's had on people, where I get a lot of really nice messages. I get a lot of messages, like, about people who feel, more comfortable in themselves because of like me succeeding, right? And feel good because of the narrative that they saw of me being able to kind of like
Starting point is 00:49:05 push through all that. And what's great about Survivor is that what you see is literally like everyone kind of being on me. And then by the end, everyone's turned around and voted for me, right? Like I managed to pull everyone on side. And so, yeah, I just love that I can be that for people, right? And it's not something that I thought about. I didn't realize how much I would have appreciated.
Starting point is 00:49:25 that while I was on there. And now afterwards, it's like the, the fact that there are people out there, somewhere out there, there's some like half-Asian, bisexual pole dancing nerd kid, like 10-year-old who's looking up and being like, I could be like
Starting point is 00:49:41 him, you know? And that's really cool. That's really cool. I know, I'm not, they're not, they're not, they're not half-age, but they are bisexual and they did, they did take a pole dancing class because they loved seeing you. I've gotten that.
Starting point is 00:49:56 Wow. People, no, there's been a few people who've reached out to me and being like, oh, I tried pole dancing because I saw you pulled on. And it's like, that's awesome. That's awesome. It's so much fun and more people should do it. And actually, I've had quite a few poll dancers reach out to me and say that they really appreciate kind of the stigma side of what of me with pole dancing. They're like, such an unsexual human, right? Like, I like, I like to feel sexy.
Starting point is 00:50:22 But like, how I'm presented on the show is, oh, this is like nerdy, quirky guy, Miles, right? I'm not one of the guys presented as, I'm not one of like the guys or gals who are like the sex symbols of the season, right? I'm like the strategist, I'm the nerd, I'm like fun and silly. And maybe to some people, but...
Starting point is 00:50:39 A lot of, I had quite a few pole dancers reach out to me and thank me for like kind of normal... Because pole dancing, there's like... Yeah. ...stigms stigma with regards to, like, that it's obviously associated with sex work. And for good reason, but like that's the first thing everyone thinks.
Starting point is 00:50:54 it's associated with like really sexy women who are like being very like putting their body out there and whatnot, which is great. And that's what it should be associated with. But like it, I think it's really, people have said that it's really good that there's just like a kind of normal guy doing it. Right. Like it's just, it's a person who is so like the way I'm presented unsexy that it's like that it normalizes and like, oh, and like this isn't just a thing for like gorgeous strippers, right? it's a thing for people do for fun, right? And I really like that I can be that as well. I think it is a shame they haven't had any other like hot dancers on.
Starting point is 00:51:31 And I know actually in the casting for the last two seasons, there's been a couple of pole dancers who have made it like reasonably far in casting but haven't managed to make it on, who are like actual kind of pole like, you know, pole dancers, right, either instructors or strippers or whatever. And I think that would be really. though obviously I don't know how like if the network is ready for that or not but yeah it's really cool that we can
Starting point is 00:51:57 have the pole dancing representation and very much poll dancing representation of it's not some like gorgeous like skinny musly fit woman who like though that is like a really fair representation of it but for like normal people basically
Starting point is 00:52:13 yeah normal survivor winners and stuff like that yeah I do I love I love when you come back to camp and they, like, you do, you do pull that on the, like, being pretty shoes. Oh, that is so fun as well, because my underwear, it's 40 days in at that time.
Starting point is 00:52:28 My underwear is so loose. And it's like, I know that my nuts are going to be popping out and the editors are going to be blurring some stuff. But at that point, it's like, it's for the content. Like, I don't care. All of my castmates have seen it, you know? And just to go to your, the thing you said about, like, feeling like you wished maybe you talked about some of these things more in the,
Starting point is 00:52:47 in the show. I just want to, like, uplift that, like, your journey as having been a survivor contested, a survivor winner, like, isn't over just because the show's over. Like, you know, you're here doing this interview now. And I think what's been something really cool for me is like, yeah, like, yes, I get comments every now and then that I should have voted for Xander. But mostly what I get is people, you know,
Starting point is 00:53:09 reaching out because they're queer people that watch the show after and they're, you know, excited to have seen me. And I just think, like, I know, and I'm, you know, it's already been a second since your season, like, people are going to. continue finding you and it's like it's undeniable who you are. And I just think like,
Starting point is 00:53:25 it's an amazing example. And it's like, I do feel like there really is something to this thing of like, even like someone like George, he didn't win. And there is something in actually having, you know, the bisexual, biracial man win the show like is just cool. And I just, yeah. So, you know, thank you. I know you did it for us.
Starting point is 00:53:46 But, uh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I was thinking, I was thinking the whole time I was like, Evie would want me to stay strong. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Doing it for that. Oh my gosh. Yeah. This is amazing.
Starting point is 00:53:56 No, I mean, look, you, I just have to take a moment. You did call out Andy earlier. Do you have any words for Parvety, by the way, the other queer Australian Survivor winner. Like, you know. I mean, Parvite's just amazing, right? Like, I don't know if I have any words
Starting point is 00:54:12 because I think everything that needs to be said about poverty has been said, right? Like, she's just an icon, incredible survivor player. Like she's one that I really look at as well as being in that like, as someone that I really relate to more because she is like a strategist first
Starting point is 00:54:29 and she does like piss people off sometimes. Like she is like blunt and kind of does things her own way. And like the queerness is like a really big part of her but it's also not who she is. And I want to make it really clear as well that I don't have a problem with people who like fairness is like a big part of like that kind of main part of the personality. I think Paul is probably someone who's like a really good rep for that. But it's just like that's not who I am. Right. And so it's about like kind of what I relate to.
Starting point is 00:54:57 And poverty, you know, she's probably similar in that it's probably like point like three, four, five in the story of like who is poverty with point one being like insane social strategist. Yeah, she's just amazing, right? And I feel very blessed that I am like the winner before her. Yeah, I was the person who kind of came on before her and got to even just be in the same conversation as her. Yeah. I kind of, the other thing you're talking, you know, like, Pauli, like, as an example, in the show,
Starting point is 00:55:31 like, his jury question is, like, sort of, like, about pride. It's like, could you tell me something like your private? Like, I do think that is a thing he, like, really loved. But also, like, in the show, he talks about the, like, part of his journey. It was like, I think, does he get a letter from his dad? Yeah, relationship with his dad, yeah. And he had a really tough relationship with his dad. And I feel like we're like,
Starting point is 00:55:49 this has been really enlightened because I was sort of as I was watching the show thinking like, yeah, there is this really interesting relationship between Miles and Polly. None of it is sort of that's coming up is sort of,
Starting point is 00:56:00 like, queerness is not front center there. And I'm sort of sitting there being like, like maybe looking for it a little bit more, but it's been really enlightening. I think I almost feel like, you know, getting you to come on to,
Starting point is 00:56:09 obviously we're gonna like, you know, it's the pride is spoken. It's sort of like part of the point of this show. But like putting a little bit on you to be like, please talk it like poking you. You'll be like, talk about all the times you were sad about being queer and you're like,
Starting point is 00:56:20 that's not my story, you know? And actually it's like, it's something that will resonate, I think, with a lot of our listeners. So I really appreciate me. Yeah. Yeah, I think it's an interesting story that doesn't get told that much, and for somewhat good reason, which is like, I think it's a less important story to tell because I think the important stories to tell
Starting point is 00:56:41 are people who really struggle with their cleanness. But as a result, it's a story that doesn't get told as much, which are people that are just like a bit gay. And like I really, you know, like, gay would have also been a perfect name for the episode. Yeah, people were a bit gay and it doesn't really affect them
Starting point is 00:56:58 in their normal life most of the time. But it's still like proud and they're still like definitively queer. Yeah. Yeah. No, I really do think, I really do think like you're saying, like it's not like the most important story to be told,
Starting point is 00:57:11 but it is an important one. And I do think like, especially I feel like for men, I do just think women there's just less of that compulsively patriarchal Yeah I think especially for guys Because in women like I do feel like
Starting point is 00:57:27 The bisexual woman who mostly dates men thing is like a lot more normal line for women And obviously there's issues with how that sometimes treated and presented But versus for guys it's a lot less of a thing And like one thing that annoys me sometimes is that I have to deal with is like the by guys being assumed
Starting point is 00:57:45 to be gay and being treated as day which is like a real classic thing that happens especially someone who's like as I said mostly into women is quite frustrating sometimes but yeah it's really cool the other person who I realized who I was thinking about earlier about this
Starting point is 00:57:59 right who I'd belong to the same box as Ozzy I really like kind of representation as far as being someone who is just like Ozzy's like a bisexual man is my understanding but is so many things before that right and was known like for so many things before that.
Starting point is 00:58:17 And also it's like a pretty awesome representative of traditional masculine masculine, of what you'd kind of describe as traditional masculinity. But like, and not even in that kind of like jock gay kind of way
Starting point is 00:58:31 where it's like it's a really masculine dude but like also very gay. You know, it's like, you look at Ozzie and you never really clock it from the outset that he's like a queer man. And he does like, it's just a part of him that he's just bisexual.
Starting point is 00:58:44 And you just like, again, it's like kind of three. four points down on the list of things about Oscar, you know. But I think that's really cool. Yeah, I think it's powerful, though, too. And just to echo what we've already been saying, like the fact that you're, like, you contain multitudes, people contain multitudes.
Starting point is 00:59:03 It's important for people to see they can be multiple things. I was at this comedy show on Sunday where someone was making this joke of like, asking, like, wait, am I black first or am I gay first? in their face. And it's like, here are all the things at once. And like, I think that's an important lesson for people to take away too. So I really appreciate you like representing that, but also shining a light on that. But like, people don't have to choose who they are. Like, you are just who you are. And it could be like 10 different things. It could be a hundred different things. And it's okay to be a bit gay, you know? I just think that's a great lesson.
Starting point is 00:59:40 I do think the story you're talking is kind of like, I think what we, like, I sort of envision is like, I hope that there are kids now the way that they're, the way that they will experience their, it will be a little more, like it is not this like super, it's like, oh yeah,
Starting point is 00:59:53 I think I might be attracted to Leonardo Caprio and Romano Juliet. So I think I'll tell my friends. Then I tell their friends and then their friends are, oh, that's okay, that's great. And that's kind of what they're like. Yeah, especially because I think the media
Starting point is 01:00:05 representation for kind of bisexual guys, I think you're talking about this with like Andy. Like the bisexual man media representation is not fantastic. And, like, very much the queer man media representation is very, like, flamboyantly gay in a way that, like, you know, like, is great. And to be fair, that's a side, I think, should be represented the most because I think it's the most important to represent. But, like, for a lot of people, isn't going to, isn't going to be something that they relate to. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 01:00:35 100%. I mean, like, when I was growing up, the only lesbian I knew about was Ellen. Like, that was the only thing is just... Are there other? Is there other? I mean... Yeah, I didn't realize. I'm a lesbian.
Starting point is 01:00:46 Married to an Australian, no? Yeah? Am I right? Am I right? Portia. Yeah, another famous queer Australian. So true. No, but point being, just like, yeah,
Starting point is 01:00:56 it's like, you know, the most obvious thing about representation is the more examples you have, the more different types of people and different types of experiences you get to see, right? Yeah. One thing I wanted to ask, actually, and like, this could be,
Starting point is 01:01:08 I feel like a totally inter question, but like, do you think there's anything particularly different about, like, queerness or queer culture? in Australia, in Australian culture? Do you think that there is, you know? I'm not sure. I think, so firstly, I think it's easier to be queer in Australia than it is in America.
Starting point is 01:01:25 I think it's like less of a cultural issue here. Like I do think that even the kind of more kind of right-wing conservative side of Australian culture have like mostly, like have gotten a lot more over queerness and like, you know, homosexuality than kind of some of you lot. some of you Americans have. I do feel like I'm Canadian. I do feel like there is some synergy. Yeah, not to be like you Americans,
Starting point is 01:01:52 but like Commonwealth country where I feel like Canada and Australia, yeah. The thing about Canadian culture is I think that's true also. And then there are also, there's like, for us it's like hockey broco. There's like there are certain obviously still within, you know, westernized. We go that with like rugby culture.
Starting point is 01:02:08 That's sort of a little bit. Yeah. There is some like bro culture energy stuff that I could imagine could still be hard to come out. But generally there is a little bit more of a progressive bit. Yeah, I think we've also got, I think, probably more queer representation, like, especially as far as gay men, like on mainstream TV, I feel like, and I could be wrong about it, just thinking about like comedians and TV presenters.
Starting point is 01:02:32 And we've got quite a few, especially because we've got kind of a smaller media landscape than you guys do, right? So it's harder to be kind of trapped inside your own circle bubble media-wise. in Australia. There's a lot, like, if you're watching just any mainstream TV, there will be some level of queer representation, basically, unless you're watching, like, Sky News, which is our, like, very right-wing news broadcaster.
Starting point is 01:02:57 But I'm talking, if you're talking about watching, like, any entertainment TV, there will be queer people on it, specifically gay men most of the time. Yeah, so I, but other than that, I'm not sure, to be honest, what... I don't know, yeah, I didn't prep you with that yet. By the way, I'm going to ask you. But I think, no, but I do think that the political situation, like, if there's not a strong, like, right-wing, homophobic wing, like, I think we're- Our right-wing side is, like, all focused on immigration, basically. Like, in fact, the last election, what happened is that the, like, conservative party kind of tried to import some of the kind of, like, cultural stuff, and it really-backed.
Starting point is 01:03:39 Like, the Australian right-wing is a lot less cultural-wory. it's a lot more kind of immigration and economics focus in a way. But like I obviously I disagree with what I think is kind of important, especially because inherently the way Australian politics works with preferential voting is that, and mandatory voting is that it's important to hold the centre. The centre dictates Australian politics as opposed to you're going to motivate your base to come out. No, you've actually got to motivate the middle to vote for you essentially. It's happening in Canada to, yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:11 somewhat of a check on just how bad that can get and even you look at the most there has been less like a surge in conservative politics in Australia but it's like very focused on immigration as opposed to immigration and some economic stuff
Starting point is 01:04:25 as opposed to like queer bashing. Immigration that's happened to here too the only one exception I would say is there can still be an appetite for like anti-trans stuff where it's like a little bit of like we've agreed the same sex marriage is like not going to be repealed
Starting point is 01:04:39 but well that yeah the conservatives in Australia also kind of have that, but it's really not a really big part of their platform, interestingly. Like, it's not something that they're super vocal about. And as I said, in the last election, they tried to, and it kind of really backfired, yeah. Love that.
Starting point is 01:04:57 Well, maybe a good takeaway here. We typically do ask folks, if you're doing anything for Pride. Do you do anything for Pride Miles? Also, this is a dumb question. Oh, is Pride in June in Australia? Yeah. It is pride in Australia, but pride is a lot less of a big fit.
Starting point is 01:05:14 Like I really, when I'm thinking about gay celebrations, like Mardi Gras is really good in Sydney. The like two weeks leading up to Mardi Gras is massive in like the gay community in Sydney. Less so in other cities. I know Melbourne it's like still somewhat big. Other cities less so, but Sydney has like one of the biggest Mardi Gras celebrations in the world. So pride is less so. I haven't really got anything particular plan for pride.
Starting point is 01:05:41 But our big one is Mardi Gras, and that's where I'd get loose, you know. When does that happen? Yeah, when did that happen? Yeah, and what did you do for Mardi Gras last year? Yeah. Well, this year I actually wasn't here for Mardi Gras because I was in Japan with Kailen and A.J. skiing.
Starting point is 01:05:57 Okay, cool. That's amazing. That's so fun. Yeah, so I did miss it this year to do with the boys. That's very sweet. Yeah, yeah. So that, but it would be like, you know, go and we have like a massive parade
Starting point is 01:06:11 and you go to the parade and you get really drunk and then you go out to a bar afterwards or whatever, you know, like classic things. And wait, and is the gay bar that you worked at still open and what's it called and should people go there? Yeah, it's the oldest gay bar in Sydney. It's called Dallas. It's a bit of a dump now.
Starting point is 01:06:28 I'm not going to lie, but I mean, it's a fun time, right? It's not one of the places I would go if I was going out. But, I mean, it's a really nice kind of building and it's got a lot of history in it. Yeah, to be fair, you did have to be paid to be there, so that makes sense. Yeah, yeah. But no, this is awesome. Look, there's so much there, but I have to ask, like, are you,
Starting point is 01:06:48 I would love to see you performing pole dancing sometime. Like, could we get a performance? Like, at some point, not on the podcast. This is mainly an audio media, but I mean, is, are you coming out of pole dancing? I don't know if you're in retirement right now or semi-retirement. I mean, you're welcome to watch the pole dancing. clips on Instagram. I have a second Instagram account that I link to where I put all my pole dancing stuff, right? So there's all that there. As far as like live performance,
Starting point is 01:07:15 I don't know, that's terrifying. Like, it's scary enough poll dancing alone, let alone poll dancing in front of people. It's so funny because I'm like, me out on an island, like, playing survival all the whole time, easy. Like that totally disassociating, like, forgetting that there's cameras and there's going to be like thousands of thousands of thousands of thousands of people watching me. But pole dancing, that's when the fucking anxiety, final flight kicks in, you know? Fair enough.
Starting point is 01:07:39 Gosh, I want to ask you, though, like as we kind of near the end of this, you know, you, as we've talked about a lot in this conversation, like you represent so many different identities. And I'm, you know, in thinking about someone who is a future player who might similarly represent many of those identities, including being queer,
Starting point is 01:08:00 like, is there advice that you, you'd have for them as they go out on Survivor. Yeah, one thing that was really interesting for me, and this happened both pre and post swap, is obviously both of them, I kind of started on the outs. A lot of that because of like personality traits of mine, that my, A, my inability to kind of form those fast social bonds and then traits of mine that may have, like, put me on the outs.
Starting point is 01:08:22 And then what happened is that over time with both of them, as the people around me spent more time with me, we built stronger connections and ended up. both of those tribes, I ended up in fantastic positions in by the end of it, where I was aligned with, like, most of the people on the tribe. Because, like, as people spent the time, like, getting to know me, they actually kind of came around to me. And I think it's important to understand that, like, if you don't need to,
Starting point is 01:08:47 obviously, it may be the one who gets voted out first or second. But, and that's, like, really unfortunate. But generally, you don't need to not be yourself. Like if you are yourself, here's it. Here's what it is. You need to be yourself if yourself is not a dick. Because I do hear people being like, oh, go out there and be yourself. Some people should be a bit less of themselves, honestly.
Starting point is 01:09:12 But if you are yourself and you are positive and you're enthusiastic and you try and like bring light to people's day, then regardless of if people kind of find you weird a little bit at the start or like are off put by you or whatever, like they will kind of come around to you. and that's kind of what happened with me. Like once they spend enough time and put the effort into like getting to know you. And so like I'm worried that,
Starting point is 01:09:37 like I sometimes worry that people will look at my story and be like, oh, look at what happened to him at the start. We need to kind of downplay our more interesting and out there like personality traits or like characteristics or whatnot. And I think it's kind of the opposite. I think it's the fact that you can thrive if you like regardless of your personal,
Starting point is 01:09:57 of like how you present and whatnot. But I think one thing that's really important as well is to kind of be aware of the negative aspects and be aware of how people are going to like perceive you and then kind of adjust to that. And that's something that like with the, you mentioned earlier with the data points, I did a, in those who don't know, I did a survey before going out of what all my friends and family didn't like about me, right? I got like them to rank their three least favorite traits of mine.
Starting point is 01:10:22 And so I was like really aware of what people were going to be annoyed by and pissed off by by me and what people wouldn't like and whatnot. And then being able to do that gives you a lot of power with regards to how you can adjust to that. So it's like be, don't be afraid to be yourself as long as yourself is like positive and fun and enthusiastic and kind and caring and whatever. But you know,
Starting point is 01:10:42 I literally think, yeah, I co-sign all of that and I just think like authenticity is the most attractive quality. No matter what it is. Like we were talking about this with Carolyn last week. I think about on my season of subscribers, Sydney who has gone on to awesome on the challenge.
Starting point is 01:10:58 Like she is objectively, you look at her and you're like, why is this person charming? But there's something so charming about someone just being like, oh, I'm the best. Especially in Survivor, right? In Survivor where everyone is kind of trying to like pretend and bullshit you. Being someone who is authentically yourself will make people inherently trust you a little bit better because they're like this person.
Starting point is 01:11:21 They are exactly who they say they are. Yeah, exactly. And then you can, you know, lie about who you're voting for. Yeah, exactly. It's a survivor. But, like, Miles, as we get toward the end, any words for your queer survivor fans, or your queer fans, I should say?
Starting point is 01:11:41 Oh, I don't know. Thank you. Thank you, everyone who's been a fan of me. That's really cool. Yeah, I think my story is proof that you can be yourself and people will appreciate you for that. And it was something that happened out on the island. It was something that happened with the public as well.
Starting point is 01:12:01 Like I very much, and it's something that I've luckily never had issues with being myself. Like I've always been very confident and being very happy to be myself and like never really worried about the backlash. But for people who might have like anxieties about that, I think you just need to look at kind of my story and what happened and like look at that as hey, no, the, if you are, people will value the authenticity. And I think something that's even more notable for me is the fact that like, if you look at postseason, I'm one of the people from our past, who probably is the most genuine friendship still
Starting point is 01:12:34 within my cast. Because people value that authenticity and value when you are like an interesting, fun, quirky personality. And it's something that like a lot of people try to hide and I think is a really big shame. Hell yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:12:51 Miles, where can you mention, you have an Instagram account where you have an Instagram account where you put some of your pole dancing anything else you want to plug or plug I didn't even get to, I wanted to chat with you about Alien Man which is a song you released earlier
Starting point is 01:13:03 at the song. I released some music just like a little side hobby of mine but yeah you can buy it at Miles Quar on Spotify. On Instagram you can find Miles Quar on Instagram and then I've got a second pole dancing Instagram account that's in the bio of my main account. If you want to vibe of stuff
Starting point is 01:13:21 you can follow me on Twitter, Miles MQua, and that's where, like, I put out Survivor content and thoughts and whatnot. Like, I was tweeting a lot during, like, Survivor 50 and Survivor 49, and while, like, Survivor Redemption was airing. Like, yeah, especially with Australian Survivor stuff. So if you want kind of survivor analysis and thoughts, like Twitter is the way to go. And Evie, Junglerat.com, you can get a rat pole dancing t-shirt from a. Oh, I don't know if those...
Starting point is 01:13:50 Oh, no. I need a check because they expire. Well, the listings expire after a while, and I don't think I was bothered to renew them last time they expired. Yeah, well, you can't. You can't get a, but you can see Miles in a rap, a ball dancing shirt.
Starting point is 01:14:07 And maybe DM Miles and see if we can get those shirts out. Yeah, yeah, I'm sure I can sort something out for you if you really want one. All right, Mouse, thank you so much for coming on. This was such a tree. Your first international survivor, this was a good one to start. Oh, yeah. Thank you so much, Miles. Yes, thank you.
Starting point is 01:14:21 Thank you for having me. Yeah, thank you. All right, everybody. Thank you so much for listening. What a wonderful interview with Miles. That was such a treat. So exciting. So lovely.
Starting point is 01:14:30 Make sure you send in your clips for our special episode, bonus content, where you get to be featured in the episodes yourself. Make sure you buy some merch and use hashtag the Pride has spoken on social media for the episode. Let's do or plug our social media. Matt, where can people find you? Matt Scott DW on Instagram on Blue Sky and all of the platforms. Check me out. I'm out.
Starting point is 01:14:53 I'm out. Check me out. And you can find me at Evie Jag on Instagram. That's really the main one. So, you know, start there. I'm on social media at High Friday, Grace. All right, we'll see you all next week. Until then, the pride has spoken.

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