RHAP: We Know Survivor - Why X Won Survivor S50
Episode Date: May 27, 2026Why ____ Won Survivor S50 Aubry, Jonathan, and Tiffany came into Survivor 50 with plans to significantly change their games. Joe, not so much. And Rizo had just finished playing his last game! Whose m...odifications worked best? How did each of the Final 5 with their threat levels in a game full of all-stars? And where did some of them go wrong in their assumptions or actions? David Bloomberg and Jessica Lewis are back one more time this season to sort it all out for each of the finalists . At RHAP, we know Survivor, and we know Why Aubry Won and Jonathan, Joe, Rizo, and Tiffany Lost. Survivor 50 wraps up with a marathon Why Blank Lost finale as hosts David Bloomberg and Jessica Lewis break down exactly how the season’s endgame shook out and why Aubry finally claimed the win. Why Blank Lost is back to tackle every key move, alliance shift, and jury vote that defined this milestone all-star season, with Jessica and David leaving no strategy or blunder unexamined. The discussion opens with Jessica poking fun at her “winner’s curse” and a tongue-in-cheek song, setting the stage for a deep dive into the five finalists’ games and what truly separates strong Survivor gameplay from simple longevity. The hosts critique the live reunion, sharing their disappointment at Survivor 50’s missed chance to spotlight legends like Jenna and allow early boots or returning winners to speak. David and Jessica also unpack Jeff Probst’s highly publicized fire-making blunder and question the wisdom of fan-voted twists and recycled challenges including Aubry’s ahead-of-the-curve prep by purchasing a Simmotion replica to practice at home. Game highlights include: – Aubry’s masterful “middle game” strategy, how she pushed and framed moves (especially Ozzy’s blindside), and ensured the jury saw her agency when it mattered. – Jonathan’s continued growth paired with social blind spots and his struggle to connect beyond his alliance, as revealed through both gameplay and post-show interviews. – Rizo’s smart alliance with Cirie, pivoting plans after direct feedback from Emily and Devens, and his calculated endgame choices. – The impact of challenge preparation outside the game and debate over whether repeated puzzles erode Survivor’s unpredictability. – Tiffany’s near-miss at final immunity, her social butterfly status, and why these became liabilities once threat levels peaked. David and Jessica leave listeners questioning how much pre-existing Survivor legacy or a subtle strategic edit truly factor into a win. Did Aubry’s story sway the jury—or was it all about gameplay in the moment? Don’t miss this in-depth breakdown as Jessica and David reveal exactly why Aubry won and what every finalist must learn about timing, jury perception, and managing threat level when playing Survivor for $2 million. 0:00 Survivor 50 Finale Begins 4:24 Cirie, Ozzy, and Jury Reunion Snub 12:17 Jeff Probst Spoils Firemaking Result 23:07 Aubry’s Strategic Game Evolution 29:01 Aubry vs. Jonathan for Ozzy Vote 38:13 Aubry Masters Playing the Middle 51:29 Jonathan’s Improved Game Assessed 59:42 Joe’s Survivor Approach Critiqued 1:06:33 Rizo’s Adaptive Survivor Strategy 1:13:08 Tiffany’s Social Game Threat 2:07:27 Tiffany and Aubry as Endgame Targets 2:34:19 Winner Aubry Crowned, Final Reflections To order Rob’s book, The Tribe and I Have Spoken, visit www.robhasabook.com 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!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you lost Survivor and you're feeling down, David and Jessica will turn it around.
They'll break down the rules and they'll show you how you're playing yourself and got voted out.
This is why Blank Lost.
This is Why Blank Lost.
Oh, baby, this is why Blank Lost.
Welcome back to the final Survivor podcast of the Y Blank Lost 10th anniversary year.
and 25th anniversary of Y Blank Lost as a Concept.
Except this week, it's Y Blank One.
I'm David Bloomberg and I picked off.
Hick Aubrey has my winner prediction in the pregame.
Yes, that is how good I am.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever.
Joining me, of course, in full support of me,
is my sister, Jessica Lewis, who has the opposite effect with her winner picks because she curses them to their doom.
I do curse them to their doom.
And I am supportive of you for being right.
Unfortunately, I have to acknowledge that you were.
But yes, sorry, Chrissy.
I tried.
But it's just, it's never going to work out for me and winner picks, unless you're JT.
That's the only time ever, it's ever worked out.
So, anyhow, sorry about that.
But David, yes, I think it's interesting.
You're kind of dressed like a Luigi Mario type character today.
So it's very cute.
The W stands for win.
You're dressed like a winner.
And you've got, you know, you're supporting me there with the David,
your right sweatshirt.
And then also you even, it was nice of you.
You even recorded a song for me.
You're right.
David, you're right.
David, you're right.
David, you're right.
David, you're right.
David, you're right.
All right. The only thing that you need to do next time you want to play that is then include your wrapping after it.
I don't know what you're talking about. That never happened. You must be living in a different universe.
It's recorded somewhere. I just don't have it on. I don't have a button I can push to play it.
Yeah, I don't know what you're talking about.
Of course, Aubrey is only one of five players we'll be discussing today. Though, of course, she will be the main focus by virtue of the fact that she won.
Now, we will still go through the podcast in our usual way for all of them by looking at how each played in comparison to my rules for winning.
I originally wrote way back after season one and have been updating ever since using all the non-spoiler information available to us.
Not that anything is really a spoiler at this point.
For what we saw, TV, interviews, social media, and secret scenes.
And the newest published versions of the rules can be found at Rob his website.
website.com slash yX loss feed where you can click on the link bubble for the survivor rules.
The one thing I want to remind everyone about before we get started is that because we have to
talk about five players, we unfortunately cannot give all of them the time they deserve or else
we'd be here for like seven or eight hours, which is a bit too long even for the length of
our podcasts the rest of this season, which have admittedly been rather long. This one will be too,
which, you know, I suspect people already know
because by the time they click on this,
they know how long it is.
We don't get this point.
It's a guessing game.
On the plus side,
the reason that people didn't get a whole podcast
devoted to them prior to now,
or rather, yeah,
it is that they didn't lose earlier.
Right.
But before we address how the final five did
in terms of the rules,
we always have some other things to discuss.
With this being the finale,
where we talk about literally everyone who remained,
almost everything of importance
will end up in our rules discussion somewhere.
But I do want to share thoughts
about the live finale and supposed reunion.
And you can put reunion in big air quotes there.
Yes.
Because the, it was so great
that we got a live reunion
where we could relive past moments with the cast
and hear from people who left way too,
soon. You know, all the reasons
that the fans actually
voted for a live finale
and reunion.
Yes. And then we did
not hear from anyone
really. No. No.
We did not.
This was exactly like
all the other votes. Jeff put it
in the hands of the fans
and then interpreted the results
however the hell he wanted.
And
this was not
what most fans thought they were voting for.
Why even bring back the pre-jurers
who are, by the way, Jeff,
they're not suddenly called non-jurers.
I don't know where that term came from,
but all of a sudden he's calling them non-jurors.
The only reason they were there
was as a lead-in to a beer commercial.
Yeah.
Well, when I do, oh, go ahead, I'm sorry.
I was just to say, even most of the jury
barely got a passing glance from the camera.
Yeah.
Plus, there were so many previous winners and other people who are important in the Survivor Universe in the audience.
We got none of that.
Yeah, it is really disappointing when you have an opportunity to, one, bring all of these people together,
which, as you indicated, the fans are very excited about, they're interested in.
And though there were moments shared with particular players,
there weren't moments shared with the players that we haven't heard from recently,
or those players who are sitting in the audience who were winners and are all gathered together.
I do feel like there is something missing.
I know when we had our live finale, it felt more inclusive.
Jeff really tried to go to multiple people and ask them things.
Not everyone was spoken to, which also is disappointing.
However, there was more of a discussion being.
had amongst players and questions being posed to various people who were sitting there who had
been waiting for their opportunity to explain something they did in their game.
Like, I got to talk about the rocks.
So it is a moment that you look forward to as a player.
And I think we all looked forward to it as fans.
And then to see it kind of fall flat and not recognize someone like Jenna.
My God, how do you not speak to Jenna?
Who is someone from the original?
original like start of all of this.
And here she is season 50 and she isn't even acknowledged.
And so I do think that it's,
it was lackluster in that regard for sure.
Yeah.
I mean, I suspect,
I feel the same way.
They should have gone to Jenna.
Now,
I can tell you what Jenna would have said.
He would have gone to Jenna and Jenna would have said,
well,
I tried to get Ceree out in episode one.
And look,
all of you finally figured it out at the end of the game.
And that's fine.
If that's what she wants to say.
I mean,
And it's, it's, because the thing that I do think people tend to forget is that while Jenna is
someone who is seen as kind of a character at this point, right, because she's, she's been part of
our existence for so many years that you, you lose sight of the fact that she's also still
just a person who is playing a game trying to win a million dollars, which turns into two.
And so those moments are very human and very real.
And so to give them an opportunity to speak, I think is important.
and it needs to be done.
And so I just think that it's sad that we didn't get those moments with those players.
But you know, Jeff made specific room for some moments because doing the finale, the way he did,
open the door to the screw up of epic proportions we saw as he spoiled the outcome of Final Four firebake.
Now, this was not all Jeff's fault.
There should have been stage managers and directors overseeing all.
of this.
Flags being waved in the air.
Right.
Right.
Because Jeff said afterwards,
I think it was on the CBS
mornings, he said, yeah, I was
backstage.
You know, he doesn't need to watch.
He has other people telling him when to do this all.
Right, right.
But Jeff is the showrunner,
which means he's ultimately responsible.
And it was Jeff's idea to do the finale
this way.
Yes.
And I will say I would like to,
there's been a lot of banter back and forth,
obviously, about Jeff screwing.
up and when it was happening, my jaw was really on the floor because I was watching it going,
wait, is this, is this really happening right now? It was very hard to fathom that that was going on,
but it brought me back to a moment that I actually had with Jeff when I was in L.A. and I was at the
finals for casting. And one of the conversations I had with him, which has really, it's, it stuck
with me because of the way he responded to it. I was talking to him when we had our, it was basically one
on one. Lynn Spielman was in the room, maybe one other person, but that was it. It was like maybe
four of us in a room. And, uh, and I had brought up this idea of Jeff and how I was so,
I was just so surprised that he never screwed up. Like he didn't blow up anyone's game. He didn't
say the wrong thing. Like people lie about their professions like I was going to do. And he never
messed that up. Like there was never a moment. Yeah. Remember you mentioning that earlier in season?
Yeah. And so like then to see this happening, I was,
like, oh my God.
It brought me back because when I said it to him, he was like, oh, I really thought about
that.
Butterfly effect, Jessica, you pursed him.
God, look what I did.
You brought it up earlier this season and poof.
I keep, I'm sorry, world.
I just came wrecking things for everyone.
But it was, it was a moment.
I do appreciate the fact that he just kind of let it roll.
and kind of made fun of himself for it and moved on.
And so that was fine.
But it was one of those,
it was one of those times where it's like,
well,
he's been doing this for 50 seasons.
I guess we have to show him some grace, right?
Again,
he caused it.
He allowed it to happen by setting up the finale this way.
Yeah.
And,
you know,
I plan to talk about this later.
But if you look at the fan question
for firemaking, it is the most slanted question.
Oh, for sure.
For sure.
And I'm glad that you brought that up because I do find it amusing that he spoiled
firemaking, which so many of us despise.
So then to be like, and now it's even that much less intriguing and interesting because
we already know the outcome before we even saw it was really quite fascinating.
So maybe we should just do away with firemaking.
Yeah.
The question was like,
so many dramatic moments have come from or something like that.
Well, you killed that, didn't you?
Yeah.
Yes, very much so.
Very much.
Well, I will say thank you, Jeff, for doing that because it allowed me to get up and go make a sandwich.
Because I was like, I don't, now I know what's going to happen.
And I hadn't eaten dinner yet.
So I was like, I'm going to go make something to eat and I'll come back when,
because I already know who won in fire.
So that was a good little break for me.
Anyway, it's all about Jessica, isn't it?
Yeah.
I saw other people say the same thing.
Like, oh, good.
I didn't have to watch that.
I could catch up on other things, you know.
Right.
Like, I could go do what I needed to do.
I had kind of a busy night.
So I got to go eat and, you know,
then came back and watch the rest of it.
So it was great.
Yeah.
Now, moving on, we, of course,
have our regular segment for the season.
Because heaven forbid,
they managed to not give us content,
even when we need to talk about five different players.
And worse than that.
that, we have to do a special combination. So it's the CBS mornings crew and Jeff Probst are wrong
about blank. For the finale, it was just Gail King screwing up for CBS warnings. Plus, Jeff
joined in to say some dumb things as well. Not nearly as clueless as Gail, mind you, but he of all
people should know better. Should. Now, you might wonder what Gail King could screw up since the season is
over and she can't ask her infamous question about who each player thinks will win.
This time, she admitted again that she just started watching Survivor this season.
And yet, that didn't stop her from trying to do game and strategy analysis.
It was mostly just a babbling, which was also something I noticed all season and includes the
way she often asks a question.
And then just as the person is starting to answer it, she interrupts the person she's interviewing,
which is really poor technique.
But first thing Gail said was trying to give advice to Tiffany by saying it's very important
to make friends along the way.
As if this is sage advice from on high and Tiffany hadn't done it and that was the reason
she was voted out because she didn't have enough friends.
No, no, that is not it.
Tiffany pointed out she had too many friends in the jury.
And I don't think it's much of a spoiler for the rest of the podcast to say that's true.
Though, of course, there's a lot more to it.
Not making friends was definitely not her problem.
Although Gail seemed confused when Tiffany pointed this out.
To be honest, that may be her permanent state.
I do find it fascinating the way that she does pose questions because she is someone who, like, poses a question and provides an answer with,
in the question because she keeps talking instead of just saying,
so what about this?
Right.
And then she adds to it.
I don't understand.
It's very strange.
Yeah.
Very strange.
Now, Gail also told Tiffany it was wrong for her to tell off the other players at
her last tribal council because she couldn't know she was going.
Except as Tiffany pointed out, they literally told her.
Not to mention, they all ganged up.
to try to beat her at the previous immunity challenge.
Yeah.
Gail, if you claim to be watching a show,
you have to pay a tainty bit of attention.
Just a little.
Now, as for Jeff, he was talking at one point
about the way people changed their games
and he came to Joe.
Now, I was surprised he actually admitted
Joe played almost the same way both times.
But then he tried to spin it into a positive
by saying doing that and getting to the end both times is its own accomplishment.
No, Jeff, being a goat dragged along because everyone wants to go against you knowing you'll get no votes.
That's not an accomplishment in the game.
It's so harsh.
Oh, I haven't even started.
I know.
And listen, everyone, we're going to try to find a balance here we are.
Are we?
Are we, though?
And a balance of objectivity.
Let's just say that.
And that is there are two components to what we do, right?
It is we talk about the gameplay of the player.
It's not necessarily about the person themselves.
Like Joe was a fantastic human being and there are so many aspects of Joe.
Well, I understand.
You've been blocked.
I don't think I've been blocked.
Many, many, many, many, many have.
been blocked.
Some of these past survivors have been.
I should have went and checked.
I think Joe is a great person.
I really do.
But there are there are parts of who Joe is that just don't mesh with plain survivor.
And so those are the things that that we will be discussing.
It's nothing against Joe as a human being.
He is lovely.
He is fantastic.
There are so many attributes he has.
However, this is about winning survivor.
So yes.
And then for Jeff,
the worst part was him fawning over Jonathan.
He specifically like went out of his way three times to redirect what was being talked
about and praise Jonathan.
But why did we'll skip over Jonathan at the beginning, though?
Did you notice that?
She like asked Aubrey a question and then she skipped to Joe.
And I feel like, but I feel like maybe Jeff was trying to redirect because like you missed
Jonathan.
Like maybe he was like, hey, Gail.
here's my little nudge.
You went from Aubrey, Joe,
and then she went to Rizzo,
and she was going down the line,
but like she,
because Jeff even said,
I want to go back to Jonathan,
and then Gail still, like,
went then to Tiffany.
It was just like,
it was almost like Gail didn't want to talk to Jonathan.
That was the impression I got.
That's funny.
I doubt that.
I suspect it's for just Gail being Gail.
I did not notice that.
But even with that,
even if you only count that as normally,
he's still specifically,
redirected the conversation two more times about how great he was, how getting three votes to win
was a real achievement. And I'm like, not from those three jurors, it wasn't. And I'm not saying
Jonathan necessarily did poorly. We'll of course talk about his game shortly. But just the way
Jeff was laying it on so thick for the second place winner, not the actual winner. It just made my
stomach curl a little bit. And I can understand that. I also do feel like the way that Jonathan
has presented himself both in that moment and all of his exit press, you can't help but feel like
your heart is crushed a little bit for him because he is so crushed. And it's interesting that
this is how we've kind of come to this moment, right? Because in seasons past, when they were not doing a
live finale, people would find out like that night that they hadn't won. And so then they have a
year to process before they're doing exit press, right? Jonathan has spent this past year thinking,
maybe I did win. I could have won. And we're back to that like original exit press that we would
see when there was live fineries where you have someone who's like living that moment the next day,
like, oh my God, I just lost. And now I have to talk about it with everyone in their brother. And I
don't want to. We saw the same thing happen with Chrissy when she was like, no, I don't want to really
talk to anybody the night of the live finale because she didn't want to be part of that.
And now we see it with Jonathan.
And now we're hearing it in his exit press.
And we're seeing it when he's in the CBS morning show.
So it's like they're literally living their like most horrific moment in front of the world because they just came to learn you actually lost.
And that's got to suck just a little bit.
It does.
It does.
I feel like he should have known, especially since there was one high point for,
related to CBS warnings.
They posted a series of clips on social media
of players being told to vote out Gail,
hold up a parchment with Gail's name on it,
vote her out,
and do a confessional about it.
Most of them were fairly mundane and pointless.
But D was amazing.
She said, Gail, you asked me to predict the winner
when I already knew.
So it was like some sort of trap.
And I was like, thank you, D.
He's amazing.
And I also did.
like Ceree saying she was voting out Gail because Gail had said Jenna was robbed way back in
episode one, which of course I had pointed out here. No, she wasn't. I mean, but going back to the D
thing, if D knew who the winner was, Jonathan should have known. I mean, he already knew, he already
acknowledged that Ozzy had told him like at a premier party. Everyone else was sharing their
votes apparently, except for Devin's,
Christian, Emily, and Devin's. Right.
Did Jonathan think he got all three of their votes?
Well, that's what he said.
I mean, because I do think it's like revisionist history we see a lot of people doing.
And in his brain, he's probably thinking to himself all of the reasons why they could
have voted for him, right?
And so you're kind of like working through the calculations and the parameters of it
and like, is there a chance?
And so I do think that that year must be really trying.
because you're spending so much time in your own head imagining maybe, maybe they did.
Maybe they did because they all worked together and maybe they had the same kind of group thing going into it.
So yes, I could see him trying to convince himself of that and not wanting to recognize that, no, that's not what happened.
But I would, I could see why he would be struggling with that because you want to convince yourself you won because if you think that you played a great game, which he clearly thinks that he did.
then you want to try to legitimize why you lost and you have to blame it on somebody,
not yourself.
Yeah.
He definitely did that, as we'll talk about.
And that's another thing.
You mentioned, and we'll definitely get into that.
You mentioned, you know, your heart breaks for him a little bit.
Yes, but.
Yes, but the way he reacted in many of his interviews took away from that because of the way
he threw blame everywhere except on to himself.
Oh, and I understand that too.
Yeah.
And we'll talk about that more later.
But yeah, I want to feel sympathy, but he makes it very, very difficult.
And so, and it's interesting what you said.
Yeah, he wanted to give reasons why he won the whole year.
Whereas Aubrey told us afterwards, she learned.
You know, don't do that because you will just, even though the, you know,
tribal council was very clearly slanted in her direction, I think. And she believed she had the votes to
win. She wouldn't allow herself to fully embrace that until Jeff literally held it up because she didn't
want to go through what she went through before. Right. And she was probably doing what Jonathan did
previously, where it's like you're working through the numbers and you're convincing yourself,
I could have pulled it out. And then you don't. So yes, I think she was much more.
in tune with that idea.
But she's also been through it before.
Jonathan is not. And so it's one of those
components as well. Like he lost
in firemaking, so he's on the jury, so he
doesn't know what it feels like. I mean, I don't know what it
feels like. I'd love to know what it feels like to sit
in the final three. I would not love to know
what it feels like to lose. However,
it's something that you don't know until you
experience it. And so I think
Aubrey had kind of a leg up
just in the dealing with it
mentally, as opposed
to Jonathan, who has never had to do
that part before. Right, right. Okay, well, there were obviously some other things going on,
and I already have or will be posting about those on TikTok and YouTube, where I am at David
Bloomberg TV. Hey, Ontario, come on down to BedmGM Casino and check out our newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick. Don't miss out. Play exciting casino games based on the iconic
game show. Only at BetMGM. Access to the Price is right Fortune Pick is only available at
BetMGM Casino. BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager, Ontario only. Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connix Ontario at 1866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario.
Before we get to how Aubrey and the other four did,
we do want to mention that the rules we're about to discuss come in a shorter and much more
colorful version as a poster.
Go to rob has website.com slash yx lost feed.
Scroll down to the poster and click on it.
And then you can keep scrolling and get the poster on a t-shirt.
And then after you order that, you can also order the checklist on a t-shirt, which is
available there.
So again, go to rob has a website.com slash yx lost feed to get all of your needs to carry
you through the summer.
They should start making these available as well.
Well, you need to, we'll have to talk to, we'll have to talk to Rob about getting that into the,
into the merch shop there.
That's right.
I'm sure he'll be, right.
Yeah, I'm sure he'll be thrilled.
He'll be very thrilled.
I'll be like, no, we're not.
But come on, this is so fun.
You can't help but love it.
I agree.
At the very least, we can put it on a mug, you know, come on.
I know, they used to do mugs.
Yeah.
My mom has one of the mugs.
The problem with our design for mugs is it's a bit too intricate for the.
Yeah, it's very wordy.
My mom has one.
I did acquire one for my mother.
She has it in her China cabinet, which is so cute.
So thanks.
Very nice.
Where it belongs with all the other priceless China.
That's right.
Exactly.
Well, Aubrey, Jonathan, and Tiffany came into survival.
or 50 with plans to significantly change their games.
Joe, not so much.
And Rizzo had just finished playing his last game.
Whose modifications worked so much better.
How did each of them deal with their threat levels in a game full of all stars?
And where did some of them go wrong in their assumptions or actions?
At RHAP, we know Survivor, and we know why Aubrey won and Jonathan, Joe, Rizzo, and Tiffany lost.
Now the first and most important rule is, of course, to scheme and plot.
And this is probably the area where the viewers who are unhappy about Aubrey's win,
the relatively few of them, are saying she didn't do enough.
I know I certainly heard that in comments leading up to the finale and after it,
because they may be smaller, but they're vocal.
And the thing is, it's simply not true.
if you didn't see the strategizing that Aubrey was doing,
I encourage you to go back and rewatch after listening to this podcast.
All of it, the whole season?
Well, especially this one right now,
where we're focusing on Aubrey a lot.
Because Aubrey did strategize,
and she explained it on the show,
especially in tribal council.
I mean,
that was why I was so certain going into the finale.
I've gone over this over the past couple of podcasts.
that the scenes they were showing us of Aubrey explaining her game,
that's why it was so obvious Aubrey was going to win just by watching the show.
Yeah, but I do, I am curious, and perhaps you can speak to this,
that is it necessary for the editors or the producers to put that component into the show
to add that in to legitimize her as a winner?
Or are they doing it because it should be present
because she is doing those things
and it's just harder to show it through the edit?
Do you see what I'm saying?
I think it's because I think they have always had trouble
editing games that are not,
I mean, like a series of big moves.
Yes.
Which he did not do.
You know, it's easy to edit a winning game if Devons wins.
It's easy to edit a winning game if Surrey wins.
Even though she doesn't make big moves,
she controlled everything.
It is easy to show that.
A game like Aubrey's is more difficult to show.
And I think that's why they added it in.
Plus, I think Sam Phelan talked about last week
that they learned their lesson from the early seasons
where they didn't.
They left it more of a mystery.
And people like Erica and Gable are winning.
And everyone's like,
uh, what?
Yeah.
So I think it's a combination that you need to put it in there to explain it.
Otherwise, everybody's like what's going on.
And it helps to, you know, show this is what the winner did.
Now, because, you know, a lot of scheming and plotting that Aubrey did was not,
I'm going to stand up and do this myself.
Right.
Rather, it was her working with others to accomplish her goals and succeeding.
And we saw this especially in the second half of the season, obviously, such as she talked to Jonathan about working together secretly in episode 10.
And then later she circled back to talking to him about how well they did working together to get Ozzy out.
And that has been an ongoing and very heated debate among viewers on social media.
Who was responsible for taking out Ozzy?
part of the problem is some people,
they want to assign a move to just one person.
Yes.
Who incidentally, of course,
just happens to be their favorite.
But most moves are not made by a sole individual
unless you're like,
sure.
Right.
I mean,
unless you're like,
even,
even Surrey coming back in exile and changing everything.
But I do think that there's something to add to that is even if you are
seri and even if you are the person who's changed.
changing everybody's minds. She still can't do it by herself because if everybody looked at her and said,
too bad, so sad, we already made up our minds and this is what we're doing. So she has a lot of
influence for sure, but you need a group of people to make it happen. And so I do think that
there is something to be said about that, that group mentality where two people can both be on the
same page, but everybody can push a little bit differently. Everybody can influence the vote a little
bit differently. Some have more influence than others. And I think that in that particular moment,
they were each coming at it from a different way. Like Jonathan was like, I want Ozzy out because
Ozzy is a direct threat to me for like the physical challenges and I, and I know I can't beat him.
And Aubrey felt the same way. However, her influence was different. She was utilizing information that
she had and then sharing it with people, planting those seeds, going, listen, you're not in his end game plan.
So you need to consider this and making people think about it.
So it appears as if it's in their best interest as well when in actuality it's also in hers.
And so there are two very different ways to come at this as a player.
And I think hers is much more nuanced, but much more strategic because it's not in your face.
Like this is what we have to do.
And that's it.
It's more of like, well, let's think about this.
And let's work through what the end result would be if you don't vote Ozzie out.
And you make people feel.
more like it's their idea when it's in actuality, not just their idea.
That's what I was going to say.
It goes back to, again, something Sam said last week.
You know, you presented as a we.
Yes.
And now, so yeah, we saw she drove the decision.
Mm-hmm.
But we saw Joe being essentially forced to admit that at tribal council.
Mm-hmm.
You know, that, yes, he went along with them.
it because of Aubrey, not because of Jonathan.
Right.
And, but that's the way Aubrey mostly worked.
She pushed her ideas while using other people.
The Ozzy decision was a perfect example.
I expected that to come up at final tribal council.
And it did.
And like I said, she won that debate because Jonathan insisted Joe was going with him
no matter what.
And Joe had to acknowledge.
They basically pushed on him.
He didn't want to say anything.
You could tell.
Right, right.
Until they like redirected the question to him for the third or fourth
time and he finally had to say yes that it was Aubrey who got him to flip and then in case there
was still any doubt Rizzo told Mike Bloom after the game Aubrey knew about the extra vote.
Aubrey knew that Ozzie and I and Surrey were close.
Aubrey then goes, tells Joe who I am very closely aligned with and Joe comes back to me and
he's like Rizzo, you're in a trio with Surrey and Ozzie?
And I'm like, absolutely not.
I'm in a trio with you and Jonathan, Joe.
so I have to pivot.
If I tell Ozzy to play his idol,
Aubrey will now go into the jury,
not preaching about me for telling Ozzie
that he should have played his idol,
but preaching to the jury that I was Ozzy's sheep
because I was able to do what he wanted.
And if she does go home, Ozzie's right,
and that's all of my equity bomb.
Mm-hmm. Yeah.
So she basically put him in a corner.
I don't know that that was her goal,
but by giving him all this information
and then giving it to Joe as well
Rizzo didn't have much of a choice in terms of his game.
That was game set match to Aubrey.
She was the one who got them to flip against Jonathan,
or Ozzy, not Jonathan.
And we really didn't even need to go to the interview for that last week
because we saw a scene of Rizzo telling Surrey about it
how Aubrey relayed all that information that Ozzie had told her explaining that was the reason he turned on Ozzie.
This completely backed up Aubrey's role.
It certainly wasn't Jonathan or Rizzo acting on their own the way Jonathan acted when he strutted around camp later.
Well, and I think, too, Ceres' response to Rizzo is it's supportive of what Rizzo ultimately ended up doing too,
because she saw it and went, gosh, what is he doing?
You know, then he's got to go.
And maybe she's just saying that because she's doing the serif thing.
But I do think that there was a world in which she was,
she saw that for the negative effect that's going to have on her game and on Rizzo's game
and the plan that they had moving forward.
And so I, you know,
I think that that that just shows that Rizzo is playing at a different level than someone like
Ozzie in that moment.
And it's more in tune of like the Aubrey where you're,
you're working through all of the after effects.
Like, okay, what if I do this, then what is it?
And I will love, I love that Rizzo said this too.
Rizzo's like, fourth place and twelfth place are no different.
You know, you play to win.
And so he's looking at that as how do I win as opposed to how do I just make it
to the next round, which I can appreciate very much.
Yeah.
I thought originally that Seree might do what you said, just say it to Rizzo for saying it
to Rizzo, but she had a confessional where she,
talked about Ozzy's two brain cells, which she later...
And she dropped an F-bomb.
So you know, she was pretty upset.
Yeah.
She was pissed.
Yeah.
Now, some people have said all Aubrey did was save herself.
And of course, she was going to pass along that information.
But they're missing the point that she had to know this was important information and
exactly how to frame it to make the others most likely to flip.
Yeah.
And the best part was Rizzo then telling Ozzie the reason as he walked out of tribal council.
And like I said, Rizzo also telling Surrey.
Like he totally and accidentally gave Aubrey credit in that moment.
Yeah.
And of course, that was just one instance of her gameplay that I was happy to see disgust in final tribal council.
It was noted in interviews that there were several instances of this type of tug of war over credit.
And they only showed the highlights because, of course, final tribal council is much, much long.
And this was, of course, not the only time she worked with people to accomplish her goals.
We saw her work closely with Devons and his allies until she wanted to go in a different
direction.
As Devin's told Mike Bloom, Aubrey and I had really gotten a deeper relationship when we were
tied together.
But clearly, I was more into that relationship than Aubrey was.
And then he laughed.
He continued.
We see that she was loyal to me then, but not really loyal to me after that.
And I think that's better in gameplay.
Aubrey would later say at Final Tribal Council
that she was welcomed post-merged by Christian, Emily, and Devin's.
And then people told her, those four were the snakes in the grass.
So she knew she had to separate herself and readapt to another group.
And earlier this season, Aubrey told us she's not afraid to make a big move and jump ship
from her allies.
That was clearly foreshadowing because that's exactly what she did.
As Ozzy said in final tribal council, I think your ability to play the middle is exemplary.
Now, the best part of that interaction was Jonathan saying, I don't understand that.
Can you please explain that to me?
And, you know, Ceri led out an involuntary kind of, oh, like, she couldn't believe that he said that.
That made me laugh.
Because she, of course, realized how bad it was for him to say that in Final Tribal Council.
He didn't seem to know what playing the middle was.
but Aubrey sure did.
And then Ozzy explained that her ability to adapt to either side was obvious.
But Jonathan and Joe kept saying, get out the middle, yet here you are on either side of the middle,
which was a great, great line by I am.
I was very proud of him in that moment.
I'm like, look to you, Ozzy.
That was great.
I mean, that was a great off the top of his headline.
Yeah, like it was fantastic.
But I also, I do want to say that this.
This is something that is, and I know you've highlighted a lot of it, but it's not easy to play in the middle.
And I feel like people who on this particular season were trying to get those people voted out are highlighting the fact that the people who are playing the middle are the most dangerous.
So the fact that you are giving Aubrey Guff for playing the middle, it's like, I'm sorry, weren't you targeting all the people in the middle like all along because they needed to go because they were the most dangerous because.
they were playing the middle. So there's, there's a lot to be said about like that, that idea of
playing the middle and it being a very scary prospect for the other players because it does elevate
you. It puts you in a better position. And you usually have much more information than the other
people around you because you're getting it from both sides. So I just, I thought that was kind of
fascinating that they had been acknowledging those middle players for so long as being problematic and
dangerous, but then didn't want to give her, like, props when people were like, yeah,
you've been playing in the middle.
They're like, yeah, it's terrible.
No, it's actually not.
No.
Yeah.
You know, later, Jeff said, you really sat in the pocket this season.
We all saw it.
And even Joe said at one point, Aubrey is a strategic player, deceptive and really good at
working the room.
With Joe saying it and not appearing to be mad about it, that says a lot.
Now, one issue about being in the middle.
declaring herself, quote, open for business, was, as Mike Bloom pointed out in an interview question,
some people might see that as passive gameplay. But Aubrey said she knew people could have that
perception, and she knew she was playing a subtle game, but it was what she needed to do with this
group of people who had big personalities. She said it's not the type of game she would naturally
play, which meant taking her foot off the gas more when she realized she didn't have the social
capital to make things work like at the start of the merge. And it's interesting because one of the
primary reasons Aubrey lost in Co-wrong was that jurors did not see the moves she was making.
I said back in the Why Michelle One podcast 10 years ago that in Final Tribal Council, to quote myself,
Aubrey apparently spoke at length about what she did and how she played.
But much of the jury simply didn't believe her because they didn't see it.
As Jason said to me, she was really good at hiding what she was doing,
but to the point it had hurt her because we could not see it get done.
She played by far the best game and should be the winner when it comes to the final three,
but she did not let the jury know what she did.
Jason also said in at least one other interview that he had no idea how well she played the game.
The jurors didn't realize it until they saw the show.
The only people who saw it were those in her alliance.
This has become a classic example within the special corollary to Rule 1,
which talks about people keeping their scheming too well.
Hidden. So it was a risk for Aubrey to try to keep her moves hidden like that here as well.
But this time, she was able to ensure people of various alliances knew what she was doing.
As Ozzy said, they all saw her in the middle. They just didn't do anything about it.
And I think this is where something Aubrey told Rob comes into play. She said that as a marketer herself,
she listened to some marketing related podcasts because she knew the only audience that mattered
was the other players.
She wasn't worried about making the best TV or about the production side.
And she's spot on there.
It's something we often talk about.
She needed to ensure the players saw what she did by the end of the game and she did.
Yes.
And I think to her credit as well was recognizing those individuals who were playing.
playing the game with her that were ahead of her, if you will, as far as their gameplay and potential
winners and when they needed to be removed in order for her to continue to move up.
I think it's also something that speaks volumes of understanding your place in the tribe.
Well, people are recognizing what you're doing.
They might not be recognizing it as it's better gameplay than that person over there until
that person over there is gone.
So, yeah, we've talked about a lot about Aubrey's end game already.
But I suppose we should go back in time to the Genevieve situation because some anti-Aubrey
viewers are still saying she played poorly then.
It was just lucky to make it.
But of course, the whole time, the only pieces of information we've had to be operating
on were what we saw on TV and what Genevieve said.
Aubrey finally had the opportunity to give her side.
And as she tells it, she approached Genevieve and tried to keep her door open.
But Genevieve was after her and lying to her, some of which we saw, like Genevieve
following Aubrey into the jungle and claiming she was worried she might be sick.
Now, we laughed at the absurdity of saying that at the time.
But if you're Aubrey, that is no laughing matter.
The two of them basically circled each other like dangerous predators.
And each had different perspectives afterwards with it ending on the note of Aubrey saying she still told Genevieve she was hoping to work with her.
And Genevieve saying, I'm not speaking to you.
Yeah, which is really like a lot to think about that you would completely like shut someone out so quickly like that.
Yeah.
And again, you know, the problem is Genevieve had her point of view.
Aubrey had her point of view.
Right, right.
You know, Aubrey said that, yes, she did mention that Genevieve was dangerous,
but it was in a more general conversation.
Like people were just openly sharing, or a few people were just openly sharing thoughts.
Like, oh, I think this about this person.
I think that about that person.
She says Genevieve's dangerous and all of a sudden it gets shared with Genevieve.
Right.
But we saw something similar happen to with like Colby and Surrey, right?
Where Colby told Savannah something about Surrey, which is taken out of context.
Like when you're saying it, you expect the person.
hearing it to have the same type of mindset that you're having in that moment.
But this is survivor.
You can manipulate information.
And so you go back and go, guess what so-and-so said about you?
And it comes across as a very threatening comment as opposed to like, oh, well, isn't that, I'm
flattered that that's how they would feel.
No, they're like, oh, good.
They're going to target me.
They got to go.
So you need to choose your words wisely.
And I do think that although Aubrey's intention there was to not necessarily go after Genevieve,
the utilization of the phrasing that she had was a problem.
Yeah.
And you say that's something in Survivor.
That could be something just in your office, too.
Oh, for sure.
Yes.
Someone would come to me and say,
I can't believe the way so-and-so is acting.
And even if I just said, uh-huh,
they would run back to so-and-so and so said,
David said.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He agreed with me.
You're like, wait, what?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes.
Now, there is one other piece of Aubrey's strategizing
that I want to discuss.
And it happened before
the game. So we're just going like backwards in time each,
jump each way here. And not pregame alliances
because like, you know, like say the second person made with
all the people who voted for him. Rather just using her head.
Aubrey saw that Samotion was one of the options in the fan vote.
So she bought a replica on Etsy and practice.
This is brilliant.
I hate it. Well,
I love it for her gameplay.
I know you hate it for her ability to do that.
But yes.
But now, I personally did not vote for Sumotion.
I will in the future now because obviously it's the best thing ever.
But do something new.
So sick of this.
Well, it was never going to be anything new.
It was always going to be a classic.
I just wanted to be a classic.
I understand.
But I knew based on the fan votes and how people talk about Sumotion
and talk about how great it is,
I knew that would be the outcome.
And I bet Aubrey was in touch enough to know as well.
We, of course, have heard of Carson 3D printing puzzles
or other players even building challenges to practice
like a snake ball challenge and stuff
in the hopes that it'll come into play.
This was truly a game-saving, strategic move on Aubrey's part.
And I give her props for doing that,
100% and I've complained about this before so I apologize for doing it again but I just have to
mention it quickly I do think that there's something to be said about the unknown and I think
that Survivor has lost that component of its game where you should be introducing challenges
that people don't expect and they don't know what to expect maybe it would it's either that
either you need to do something that has never been done before so you so people can't go on
Etsy and buy it. People can't 3D print it. Or you have to go back to just the,
those like, um, challenges just go on forever where you have to like, like it go, go back to
Borneo. You're standing on, on a, on a post and you have to have your hand on a post. And yes,
you know, I mean like, and that's just will. That's, that's what that is. It's just your will to win and
how badly you want it comes through in those types of challenges. So endurance challenges. So,
So to me, like, that's what it needs to go back to.
Like, I, I can fully, like, give her props for finding.
And the fact that somebody built one of those and has it on Etsy, my gosh, they're
going to sell a whole lot more now.
So they dare be.
But I do think Somotion is awesome.
I do think it's a great challenge.
But I do think that when you become too predictable, you take away some of the interest in
the show itself because then it, as I've said before, it's more game showy.
and I don't like that component of it.
I mean, in a way,
Sumotion is an endurance challenge.
Someone commented that she was doing it for 15 minutes, you know, before.
Oh, and that is true.
And it's mentally challenged.
So there's so many things about it that I appreciate and I love.
If you want to do some motion, well then make it, like, do the same thing.
Just build it differently.
You know, like switch it up.
Like you can still do some motion.
It doesn't need to be the same, the same exact piece that's been utilized before.
I mean, there are things that can be done.
There's an art department.
They have lots of money.
They can do that.
I will say, and I hate to even sound like I'm defending here, this was Survivor 50.
They weren't going to do something new.
They wanted to do a classic.
And, you know, they put it out there as one of the questions.
It never would have occurred to me to go out there and do this.
And again, that's why huge props to her for realizing you could even do this.
Yeah, the fact that she like was like, I wonder if I could buy one of these on Etsy.
Oh my God.
I mean, that's yeah.
And same thing with Carson.
Like the fact that they're taking those additional steps, I can, I can, wow, that was incredible that they did those things.
She's like practicing fire.
Like these are things that you can do.
But I also just, there's something about it that just rubs me the wrong way where I feel like there is, there's this want for new and unknown.
And when you don't have that anymore, it can.
It can be frustrating.
But I'll stop on my soapbox now.
AI is moving fast across the enterprise.
But without visibility, it's just chaos.
Different tools, different models, different teams using AI in completely different ways.
Service Now turns that chaos into control.
With the AI control tower, you see all your AI across the business in one place.
What it's doing, what it's done, and what it's about to do.
so you stay in control.
To put AI to work for people, visit servicenav.com.
All right, well, we can move to Jonathan then.
He talked in pretty much all of his interviews, plus in the game itself,
about how he changed his game.
He even told Mike Bloom, most people, they say it and they don't do it,
which is 100% true as we saw again this season with other players.
He continued, but I did change my game completely.
And maybe I should have made it more known at the end,
how I changed my game, but I don't know.
Now, I thought if there was one thing he did make well known, it was that he changed his game.
He said that repeat.
And he's right.
He did.
He was much more strategically minded this season than in his first.
He made alliances outside of what we might have expected coming into the game.
He did make moves like blindsiding Camilla and taking out D.
And yes, pushing for a move against Ozzie, even though his effort wasn't what actually put it over the top.
And he said a lot of the right things, like knowing he had to be fluid and he couldn't rely on the old, quote, honor and integrity stuff because people who do that make it to final three, they get maybe one vote. So you have to do more. You got to make some sort of moves to win this game. I am certainly willing to credit him for improved.
Mm-hmm. Yeah. And I think that he did improve his game. I think that we saw a different side of Jonathan. There was there was much more.
discussion being had with Jonathan by various players. And I can appreciate the fact that he was
working through possible vote strategies with individuals when he was presented with a new idea
and points that they were making. And so all of that I do see as a new type of Jonathan approach.
And then in addition to the other things that he was able to do when you do have a strong
alliance and you do have a core group of people that you're working with, you're a new
initial idea of the game, honor and integrity can work because you can have that core group of
people with those values, but you are able to go beyond that because you are willing to strategize
with other people and try to open yourself up and align yourself with other people in different
ways. So yes, I can definitely appreciate the change that he recognized needed to be made and made
those changes. Yes. But here's the thing. Just because you played a better game than you did before,
doesn't mean you played the best game of this season.
And I think a good example is when he talked in the final tribal council about how he used
heart-to-heart personal stuff to blindside people after not doing that on 42.
Okay, good from a strategic standpoint, but we'll have other things to say about that in Rule 5.
And just because you learned to play Survivor and do certain things like making allies,
outside your own group and things like that.
Okay, you should have known that coming in.
You're not rewarded for leveling up
if you started at a lower level to begin with.
It's something he should have known before his first time out.
And many players do.
Even putting aside other aspects of the game,
he started below average in terms of things like strategy
in his first season.
Bringing his skill level up doesn't automatically put
them at the top of the class.
Like if you're taking a class and you get the first semester, you get a C.
And the second semester, you get a B plus.
Well, the A students still did better than you.
And I can see that.
I can definitely see that.
But I do think that we've given credit to Aubrey for leveling up a little bit.
Like she corrected components of her game that she had done incorrectly before.
And so I do think that he.
corrected some things that he was not doing correct before. And so there there is this idea that
he did improve. But as you said, that doesn't make him the best player the season as he kind of
thought that it was. But I think that there's kind of this weird idea that Jonathan is is focusing on
where it seems like people are giving Aubrey credit for the four times that she has played. And what we have
seeing improve of her game. And she even talked about this in Final Tribal, where this was her
legacy, her story, right? Where she started like this and this is how she's going to end.
And so I think Jonathan is struggling with this idea of, but look, I did the same thing. Like,
I got better too. And I got better too. And I think I'm more well-rounded than her game was this
season. So why are we giving her credit for becoming a better player and not giving me credit for
becoming a better player.
And I feel like that's really a big part of what he's struggling with because I think he asked,
like everyone who interviewed him, what do I need to do better next time?
What do I need to improve on?
Yes.
So it's like this weird, like, but you're doing that for her and not me kind of mentality.
That's what it sounds like.
She improved.
He improved.
But they started here.
And for those of listening, I have one hand higher than the other.
They started like this and they both moved up.
Yes.
But they both moved up, you know, and that's the thing.
You know, the, the, the A student moved to an A plus.
The C or B minus student moved to a B or a B plus.
And so, and we even saw that and some other things.
Like he talked about how he strategized outside where he normally,
people thought he would have.
Yeah, but some of those were failures.
Like go back to.
the double duo tribal council.
He was certain that Christian was voting with him.
He was absolutely certain of it.
We saw him grilling it.
And no, Christian was never with you on that.
Yeah.
That is a strategic miss completely.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
And maybe it's like things kind of merging
because he and Christian were together during that challenge.
And so he might have thought, well, look, we've come together.
So now we can vote together.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Now, with all of that said, as I mentioned, I do think Jonathan played a strategically
sound mostly game.
If he had managed to get Aubrey out and faced Rizzo and Joe at the end, that might
have carried the day.
And if it did, I would have been perfectly okay with that outcome.
But he did not out scheme Aubrey.
And as I mentioned earlier regarding his questioning what Ozzie was saying at final tribal council, he didn't and still doesn't understand that.
He knew his way of playing, but he didn't really get that there are others.
Yes.
That is very fair.
All right.
Moving to Joe, what can we say about Joe's scheming and plotting?
I'm tempted to just say nothing and move along.
But we can't do that because there were so many negative things to say.
And we have to cover those too.
We said it in the preseason.
Joe didn't learn anything from his first time on Survivor because he didn't try.
Sure, in final tribal counsel and interviews, he claimed to have changed his game.
But as I mentioned earlier, even Jeff Probst noted on CBS warnings that he played the same way.
And of course, a key example of everything that he did wrong goes back to the blowup between him and Devin's in episode two.
that we've already covered it in terms of both in that episode and then, you know, talking about what Rick didn't handle well last week, but now it's Joe's turn.
And most of that was from a strategic standpoint because what happened there led to a ton of confessionals and discussions among his tribe mates about him.
I'm going to condense it a lot, condense it down, but it's still a lot.
Like I, you know, from my pages of notes, I deleted bunches of quotes.
But he was driving people crazy.
Devons, Christian, Surrey, you name it.
They talked about having to play with him basically as an obstacle.
As Devin said, Joe is so frustrating.
Joe wants to play his way and we all have to play around him.
And it sucks, man.
It's boring and it's restricting.
And all of us are coming out here to play on leash.
Christian said, you can't just play with him.
You have to play around him.
We're not going to get him to violate this code.
He has his set boundaries.
And so on. Even Savannah noted in her interview with Mike Bloom, you have seven people total on the beach.
And six people were really concerned about their ability to work with Joe in the future.
And these six people were fairly reasonable people. We've been in tough moments before.
For this amount of people to be concerned about the possibility of working with someone closely or at all in the future, I think that speaks volumes.
And Joe was just so caught up in playing Survivor, his way, that he truly couldn't.
see it's not the way 99% of people play.
I think eventually he did.
I think eventually he realized his way was not the way.
But he still really learned nothing from his season.
Multiple people talked about how much they liked Joe as a person,
but hated him as a game player.
Yeah, and this is what goes back to what I was saying earlier,
is that there are aspects of his, like, just person,
his personality, who he is as a human,
that just don't mesh with the game of Survivor.
And this is, it brings me back to something that was told to me before I played,
and I'd mentioned this on this podcast.
Like, keep Jessica in a box was what I was told,
because there are certain parts that just don't work in the game.
And Joe needs to be cognizant of that as well,
where there are certain components of Joe that are fantastic for Survivor.
Being loyal is it, it can be a great attribute,
but it can also be to your detriment if you're not willing to find those moments where you need to shift.
And if your biggest game move is, well, damn it, once we made the merge, I had to lie.
Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, like, this is, oh, wow, stunning that, like, suddenly this is your move is that you've told Tiffany a lie and you want credit for lying when everyone's like, this is Survivor.
That's what you do.
And so I do think that if lying in your headspace is like a really big decision and a really big move,
then you're not going to be seen as a strategic player when you play Survivor.
Because that's just a, that's a very small component of very big plans that are created on Survivor.
And so I do, I do think that that's just something that Joe will struggle with because of who he is as a person.
And it just doesn't mesh with the game.
Yeah.
It's funny that, you know, his wife came out for the family visit and told him basically, you know, take off the restraints and play.
And he was like, oh, I'm glad she told me that.
She should have told you that before you left for the game.
Yeah.
Well, because it would have been fascinating, right?
If everybody had come into season 15, seeing what they had seen with Joe previously.
And if he had completely done like, you know, I guess a 180, you know, where it's like he is, he is now I'm going to lie, cheat and
steal and no one's going to see it coming because I'm Joe.
That would have been fascinating.
Yeah, we said that.
We said that in the preseason.
If he was going to do that, great.
We would have applauded that.
Yes, yes.
But no.
And even before he lied at the merge, like you said, you know, going back to episode
three, he was thrilled to be swapped because he got to be with Coach and Colby for
core values.
Yes.
Yes.
You know, but then.
as you said at some point he realized he had to sometimes lie and vote people off that he had said he
wouldn't and you know that probably coincided with when he was pulled more tightly into
seri's orbit because he kept acting like he didn't want to vote people out and then eventually
he would do it anyway and other people like serri and rizzo kept ensuring joe was looped in on whatever
they were doing with him reciprocating by telling seri information like when jonathan and the other woman
wanted to target aussie so i will say somewhere along the lines he slightly modified his stance on
actually playing the game yes but he also still got pissed off at things like devons talking
about lying and playing a hard game and he was still difficult as azi told rob i don't know what kind
of game joe was playing but he was a really hard person to play with you.
with every single vote that was going to be a little bit strategic,
we'd have to draw a formula like this and this and this, Joe.
As Sam pointed out in the finale recap podcast,
even if Joe did change his game,
what did it help? It didn't.
Yeah. Yeah.
And I think it's interesting that Ozzy is the one talking about drawing a strategic
like map for Joe.
That kind of just emphasizes the point of.
Yes, very much so.
very much, though.
Now, I want to address what Emily said in Final Tribal Council about everyone running plans through Joe, making it sound, she was giving him a lot of the benefit of the doubt, as if he had some strategic role there.
That's not why they were running plans by him.
They kept talking to him because they didn't want him to get pissy about being left out, which was something we have talked about over the course of the last few podcasts, people mentioning that he felt everyone needed to tell him everything,
else he'd get mad. Joe even told Rob he was trying to play survivor by going along with votes he
he didn't particularly want. That's not exerting power. That's not driving a vote. That's not even
going to him for permission. They were letting him know so they could make him do what they wanted him
to do. They had their extra vote ready and his name was Joe. Yeah. And he even acknowledged that in the
final tribal that he was he did not lead the charge on any of the votes of the decisions being made
that he didn't have that agency and and i think that speaks volumes of your gameplay because you really are
kind of going along with what you're being told but also you are a part of a group which is great
but you're never you're never actually making that decision you're never actually the one that is
like what about this idea let's talk through what this looks like and and and
he acknowledged at himself.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He didn't lie to people or vote people out because he thought on his own, ooh, this is a good move.
I need to do this.
It's because he was told we are doing this because it is a good move for our alliance.
He's like, yes.
I don't want to.
I don't want to.
I don't want.
Okay.
I will.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
All right.
Leaving the final three and going to Rizzo, I think he played very well, especially considering
his circumstances.
As he told Dalton Ross, I was a dead.
man walking coming into the game. My first impression with everybody was, we got to get this guy out.
We had coach writing letters to Colby and Ponderosa to take me out. And my arc was, this kid's
annoying, but I really like this kid. Then I aligned with Surrey and Ozzy, two icons of the game.
And I pretty much knew everything that was happening. And in many ways, I played similarly,
but in many ways I was different. In 50, I played the middle. I flip-flop, back and forth.
I think I did a really great job. Forty-nine, I was really much in the
you're either with me or you're against.
And I think that is a pretty good brief summary of his game.
It is amusing that he described himself as being in the middle
because that's one thing we were saying
when other people were claiming Christian Devons and Emily were in the middle.
We're like, no, Suriazzi and Rizzo are the ones in the middle.
Yes.
And I think that to his credit as well,
he didn't shy away from the idea of aligning himself with a Surrey,
which I think we really should also recognize as being fascinating
because here we have someone who is a very,
he's a student of the game, right?
He can tell you from start to finish who played when and who won
and everything in between.
And so the fact that he's looking at someone who is seen as one of the greatest
players of Survivor and she's willing to kind of take him under her wing
and he's like, oh, yes, please.
and then I will utilize you as long as I have to because he recognized what Surrey was capable of and also when she would be expendable.
And so I think that that also shows just how strategic he was because he was planning that far in ahead, you know, in advance kind of thing where like I can see where the game will go to and I can see my place in this spot.
So I really do appreciate that he was able to do that on 50 better than he was on 14.
because he really was kind of locked into a core group in 49.
But yes, I think it's a hard spot to walk into when everyone sees you as Riz God.
And that's all they really know about you when they start this season.
Yeah, I don't feel like we saw as much strategy as he was actually doing.
Yes, I agree.
We certainly saw some, of course, but certain things aren't as tangible.
For example, Dee told Mike Bloom, he's so.
self-aware. How is it that I trust Rizzo and I just met him so much more than Charlie, who I've
known for a while? And she told Rob, he's a phenomenal player. Meanwhile, Rizzo hid his tight alliance
with Sari and Ozzy, which allowed him some freedom without worrying he'd be targeted for it.
And he was not just a passive member of the alliance like Joe. He played an active role in
decisions. For example, when there was a discussion between voting out Christian or Emily,
he pushed hard to stick with Christian and not suddenly switch because of what Emily said to Surrey about Ozzie.
And he was strategically minded overall like in the Mr. Beast tribal council when the person who ended up being voted out said she never took the lead in any strategy discussions.
And he replied exactly what I was thinking.
Don't come out here and say, oh, I never say names.
That means you aren't playing the game.
Yeah.
Man up.
You said it.
That's it.
Live with what you said.
I appreciate Rick saying he wants.
me out. That's a compliment. If you want a plan to happen, you make it happen. I think backing out
of it just isn't going to be what you want. Yeah. And I loved that he was able to kind of put it all out
there and recognize what needed to be done in order to win this game. And he also knew who he needed
to sit next to in order to have even a shot at doing so. Yeah. Now, of course, one of that,
those biggest decisions when you talk about who he needed to be sitting next to was whether or not
to let Ozzy go a couple weeks ago.
We discussed that already when talking about Aubrey.
So I'll just say that I think his reasons were correct.
And he couldn't just keep Ozzy around after all that happened.
Yeah.
No, I think that everything that we've already touched upon is set in this spot here.
Now, one thing we did not know about Rizzo was that Emily and Devin's told him something
very important earlier in the game.
He told Mike Bloom, it's pretty early on.
in the merge and Emily tells me, Rizzo, honestly, I don't know what you're doing in this game.
And that really raised alarm bells because it's like, holy crap, I'm playing really well
because I know everything that's going on. But these people don't know how well I'm doing.
And had they watched 49, they can see that I can dictate a vote behind the scenes, but they didn't.
So I was thinking to myself, okay, if Emily doesn't see it and she's a strategic queen, she loves
the strategy of the game, I need to get to the end with people that Emily won't vote for.
and I don't think she was going to vote for Joe and Jonathan.
Rick's the same way.
Honestly, I think even if I make it to the end with Joe and Jonathan,
Rick probably doesn't vote for me because Rick doesn't believe what I was selling.
Rick's like, honestly, I just don't see it, man.
And I said, you don't see my game?
He's like, no.
And I was like, thank you for being honest.
At least now I know who I have to sit at the end with.
And these conversations, which were essentially about that special corollary to rule one
that I had mentioned earlier with Aubrey helped shape Rizzo's plan going forward.
He took in this information and he was like, okay, this is what I need to do.
Us watching it, we didn't know exactly why he decided to go with Jonathan and Joe.
I mean, let me, we knew why everyone wanted to go with Joe.
That was not a surprise.
But now we have this understanding that it was an intentional move to try to get himself
into the best possible circumstance for the end.
Yeah, and I think it's interesting that that was the decision that he made here as opposed to,
well, now I need to do something flashy and I need to make a big move.
So that way I have this resume builder, if you will, and I have something to point to.
Instead, he was like, it might be too late for that.
So if it's too late for that, I have to shift and I need to change my end game plan.
And then hopefully in the final three, explain to everyone what I was doing.
And so I think it's interesting that that was the, the,
way in which he responded to that information as opposed to, I need to pull a Rick Devons move here.
Right.
All right.
Finally, we get to Tiffany.
And we unfortunately did not get to see a ton of Tiffany's strategic game.
Obviously, she was tight with Ceree, but we didn't see it happen.
It just was.
And apparently it was similar even in Fiji, as Emily told Mike Bloom, you wake up one day and suddenly
Tiffany and Ceree are like attached to the hip.
That wasn't really explained or shown.
as deeply as I think maybe it was felt on the island.
And Tiffany explained it just kind of happened.
They bonded instantly.
So of course, Tiffany was involved in the decisions.
Surrey was guiding.
And we saw some of those discussions.
Again, she was not a passive Joe there.
She was active in those conversations.
She also helped push Jonathan to take out Ozzie in the split tribal council to help
further her own agenda.
So, you know, even though Jonathan was claiming that as his move,
not only did you have Aubrey who actually pushed it the most,
you even had Tiffany pushing it as well.
Yeah, and I think it's interesting because I was curious
how Tiffany was going to respond in that moment,
knowing her relationship with Surrey.
And she probably knew that Surrey was close with Ozzy.
And so now Tiffany is in this circumstance where she could say,
no, we're not going to vote out Ozzie because I'm going to help Surrey
or I'm going to help myself in this moment and recognize that Ozzie's got to
So I think that that shows the level of strategy that was also working through her game because it was more of a selfish decision in that moment, as opposed to putting her relationship with Surrey above the decision as to what's going to be best to further her own game.
Right.
Now, you mentioned the word selfish.
And the one main strategic flaw Tiffany had was that she was not selfish when it came to the very end game because she was willing to go to the end with Surrey.
she was yeah look i understand the non-game reasons for it and certainly i don't think too many people
watching would have complained if it happened right but we have to look at it the same way here as any
other decision and it would have been an extremely poor one in the context of the game yeah and it
it would have been fascinating because i do think that to see if it was a tiffany ozzie surrey combo
what the response from the viewers would be
because there is,
there does seem to be like a very heavy,
Surrey is not a well-rounded player kind of idea.
And someone might say someone like Tiffany is more well-rounded,
but still,
I mean,
you cannot get past who Seria is and how she runs these,
the games.
Every time she plays them,
she's very much in charge of what's going on.
Is she winning challenges?
No.
But is she manipulating the people
in the way that she needs to manipulate them?
and making things happen, yes.
And I think overall, that's much more significant than a challenge win.
And I think people would struggle with that greatly.
Yeah, I think when you say there's a, I can't remember what word you use,
but there's people saying that.
I think that's one of those very vocal minority situation.
Oh, and I'm sure it is because there is this,
because it's something you hear.
I think there's more of the chorus is chanting for seri.
And then there's this little tiny contingent over here that's like,
No, no, no, no.
And we want Joe because he's honest and he does well in challenges.
Right.
So, yeah, so I do think that it would have been just an interesting thing to hear the response to that.
But I do think that would have been a huge detriment to both Ozzy and Tiffany's end game.
Yeah.
Well, the second rule says not to scheme and plot too much and to keep your scheming secret.
After all that time we spent on rule one, this is going to
go very quickly because I just didn't see very much from any of these five that they did particularly
wrong here. Aubrey had a few issues very early in the game when it was claimed that she'd
thrown Genevieve's name around as being dangerous. But we mentioned this already. That was
in a specific context of different people talking about other players. It wasn't like she just came out
nowhere and said, let me tell you about Genevieve.
Now, should she have realized that this could happen?
Yeah.
You know, she should know this sort of thing can get blown up.
You just don't expect it, especially right at the start of the game.
And, you know, Genevieve's allies just, you know, told her what may have ended up being
tall tales compared to what actually happened.
And that meant when she found out, she had to go into damage control mode.
but she was almost immediately on the bottom of the tribe along with Angelina.
And to make matters worse,
Angelina was going around telling people Aubrey was her number one.
And Aubrey had to try to undo that damage because she didn't want to be seen as anybody's number one.
Right, right.
She knows what happens with duos in this game.
And even Q told Gordon Holmes how she came to him and tried to dispel that idea.
Now, again, I'm not sure it worked.
But luckily for her, it wasn't put to the test.
because while Angelina was probably the person who would have been voted out if that tribe
lost immunity, wasn't a guarantee.
Yes, for sure.
All very valid points.
Agreed.
Now, one other topic to bring up for Aubrey is in relation to the way she was kind of
hovering right around the problem of the special corollary to Rule 1 that we already
discussed.
People not realizing she was making the moves that she did.
In final tribal council, Rizzo asked her if she understood,
why people thought she didn't have agency.
And she said that she did,
but she didn't want to over-correct that
because she didn't want them to think
she was plotting out each move she was making.
She let it be her cover as she moved from group to group.
And this is a like a balancing act
to try to avoid being seen as scheming too much
while also wanting to ensure you get credit for the work you do.
It is a difficult thing to accomplish.
But Aubrey nailed it this season.
Yes, completely agreed.
All right.
Well, as for the other four,
I am finding it hard to think of any situations
where they, you know, particularly overskinned.
Certainly not the case for Joe.
And Rizzo kept his strategizing pretty much on the down low
for most of the game, as did Tiffin.
Jonathan may have been a bit too much
when he was taking credit for things around camp
and then describing it at Final Tribal Council,
but those are items we'll hit in Rule 5 in a peasant,
be. Can you think of anything that I'm missing for them for this rule?
No, I think that that's a very fair assessment. They all seem to be weirdly aware of what they
needed to do in a more public sense as opposed to a more private sense. And so, yeah,
I don't think anyone really struggled too badly with this rule here. Okay. All right, well,
the third rule tells players to be flexible. And I know we spoke a lot in rule one.
about Aubrey playing the middle and having an open door policy and moving back and forth.
So a lot of that obviously applies here.
Now, aside from or adding on to that, what did you think of Aubrey in terms of being flexible?
I think Aubrey, in addition to what we've already talked about,
was incredibly flexible in recognizing when she needed to make decisions for other moves
that she might not have considered initially.
she was responding to what was happening around her all of the time.
And I think that that was such an interesting thing to watch because it's very similar to what
we saw Devin's do in that tribal council where he kind of like dropped a bomb and threw people
under the bus.
And then when other people started jumping in, he just sat back, right?
And that's kind of what we saw Aubrey doing, where it was like she was seeing things
that were happening, responded, and then just said, okay.
Now I just need to be like she actually said in her final travel she had to play dead after she did this thing then she had to play dead and so I think those types of of ideas were so great for Aubrey's game because she was recognizing I can do this much to make this decision but then I also need to remember to pull back a little bit and and kind of weave through the game in a way that was really impressive because it wasn't so much in your face but it was responsive to what was happening around her but it was all.
also responsive in a way that was the best for her own game.
So it was a really incredible balancing act,
as you indicated,
that we got to see her do,
not only with her willingness to play with other people,
but the decisions that she was making
with those other people as well.
Yeah.
I like the way Surrey described,
part of Aubrey's flexibility in Final Tribal Council,
saying she played a game of hopscotch.
She hopped the line is just the way she should have.
And Surrey also said,
the way Aubrey moved throughout the game,
not committing to any singular alliance,
is the new school era way of playing.
I like the way she combined those,
the new school era.
You have to be fluid and flexible.
The old school era way is what she said she used to do.
Find your alliance of three or four people,
stay there no matter what,
stay loyal to them.
But what she actually did was play a new era game
by being fluid and flexible
and moving when she needed to.
Yeah.
I do have to say,
much as we all love
Sarie
I do think she was
oversimplifying things a bit
by
you know
because of course
being flexible
in this way
has been in my rule
since literally
the very beginning
being fluid
and flexible
not a new concept
and sticking to a solid
alliance is not
only an old school
concept
she could have just
asked Dee
who was sitting
you know
right there
on the jury
with her about
yeah
how did you win your game
Dee
oh
yes
I see
what she's saying and it definitely applied to the way Aubrey played. Yeah. Now, of course,
we talked about one of the alliances that she jumped into and out of with Christian Devons and
Emily. And Devons told Mike Bloom, Aubrey was kind of the swing. And Aubrey and I had really
gotten a deeper relationship when we were tied together. Oh, I talked about this quote already.
So, you know, he already mentioned that she was more into it than him.
And that runs parallel to when Aubrey would later say in an interview,
you have to know when to put your foot on the gas,
when to slow down,
which goes to what you were saying.
And there were a lot of times when I was like,
this is happening over there,
let the attention go here.
Like Jeff was talking about so you can remain in the pocket
and wait to strike until it's your moment.
And we saw her do that specifically with Devons
when she knew he was doomed and was out,
obviously idle hunting.
She told us it was great for her because she could sit back and let him draw all the attention.
One of those times she took her foot off the guess.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then she made sure to set herself up for those alliance jumps.
She explained in Final Tribal Council,
I would selectively share information that I thought would build trust with the other side
so that they would have enough trust in me that they would welcome me in,
that I had currency in the game that would be useful to them.
Yes.
took a few tries of explanations for certain jury members to get it, but those jurors weren't voting
for her anyway, and it almost felt to me like they were purposely misunderstanding.
Yeah, and I think that this is a very, again, difficult thing to do when it comes to the sharing
of information and how you share it and when you share it, because you don't want to be like an
Emily. I'm not trying to speak ill of Emily, but Emily would, it was kind of like a knee-jerk reaction
when Emily would, she would, she would spill the information because she was like,
appalled at that moment over there.
And now I'm going to go tell on these people and then realize later, oh, I shouldn't have done that.
Right.
Whereas where Aubrey was very calculated and how she was going to share the information,
when she was going to share it, and with who.
And I think that that is another aspect to her game that made her very successful.
Yeah.
And, you know, all of this is also very interesting.
when we consider that Aubrey talked about learning from Michelle's game.
Because looking back, to quote myself again,
I said in the Why Michelle One podcast,
we saw Michelle move from one alliance to the other
or stay in the middle.
The winds of the game were blowing in different directions at different times.
On many of those occasions,
it looked like the wind would snap Michelle right out of the game.
But instead, she bent with those wins
and then came back standing up straight and tall.
Michelle said she stayed in the middle
and knew when to bounce.
In the meantime,
she wasn't being blamed for anything
and wasn't on the chopping block.
Does that sound a little familiar?
That 10-year-old thing that I said?
That's kind of crazy how it all comes back around, right?
It's almost like, David, you're right.
Yes, it is.
Yes, I agree.
I agree.
Look at that.
Right, David, you're right.
So, all right.
All right, so moving on to Jonathan, how do you think he did in terms of flexibility?
Oof.
Well, it's a good start.
Yeah, I do think that Jonathan wanted to be flexible.
And I think Jonathan thought that he was being flexible.
But the way in which he was actually playing the game wasn't in that he was very tied to his core group.
group, which I've already talked about that that can be a benefit for sure.
If you're able to find the balance of being tied with the core group and then working outside
of that group, which I think Jonathan was trying to do.
But he also was a little short-sighted with some of the decisions that he was making and
some of the targets that he really wanted to focus on where there's been some discussion about
perhaps he should have taken Aubrey out sooner as opposed to focusing like on a
Surrey because Surrey isn't going to win a challenge, whereas Aubrey might have a better chance.
And so there were, I think, places where he kind of locked himself into what he wanted the result
to be, as opposed to that long-term thinking that I think Aubrey was doing, where it was like,
I have to think about who I'm going to take out when because of the domino effect, right?
Like, then who are they going to be looking at after this happens?
And, you know, his idea of wanting to take Ozzy out as badly as he did wasn't necessarily something that was going to be beneficial for him in that moment.
But overall, he thought, well, Ozzy's got to go.
Well, if Ozzy's got to go, you have to figure out the best time for Ozzy to go if you think it's going to improve your game.
So I do think that there was components of his wanting to be flexible and he was trying to be.
but he was also very locked into a particular idea of what he wanted his game to look like and to
and to feel like and who he wanted to play that game with.
And because of that, I think it constrained him just a little bit as far as the flexibility is concerned.
Yeah.
I will defend Jonathan a little bit on the Surrey aspect of things.
And we'll talk about that later in like Appendix B because there were a lot of threats to
take out. Oh, yes. And I think part of it was, you know, I think he saw probably Aubrey and
Surrey as both equally likely to win a challenge and, and Surrey as much more likely to win the
game. Yeah. And that's fair. And that's fair. I'm not saying that that's the only, like,
but it's just this idea of how he was kind of getting to the end goal and the things that he
wanted that sometimes didn't seem as flexible as it needed to be because it wasn't reacting
to what was happening around him as opposed to what he just thought was best for his game.
And it might not have been best at that particular time.
Yeah, I don't really think he fully understood flexibility.
We know he needed an explanation of what playing in the middleman.
And Sam also mentioned in the finale recap that in Final Tribal Council, when he was asked for
examples of adaptability.
He talked about changing this time from last time.
They were really asking, like, what did you do this season?
How did you adapt to what was happening this season?
Right.
And I do think we talked a bit about some flexibility earlier,
like understanding he couldn't just play the honor and integrity way.
And he said at final tribal council that he played with different people differently.
Like coach was a straight shooter, but Ozzy was one.
emotional. But it wasn't what I would call a huge amount of flexibility. He said back in episode one,
I'm going to be way more flexible because I know I have to be more strategic. But again,
that's flexibility compared to his last time playing. Right. As for this time, as D said to Mike Bloom,
when you're playing with Jonathan, you know who he's going for, you know who he's with and he's
going to stick by those people. Yes. Absolutely. But then as we
move on to Joe, even Jonathan criticized Joe's game to us, talking about how if you play a straight
and narrow game, you'll get left in the dirt. And Joe, of course, showed about as much flexibility
as he did in his first outing. I think Ceres said it best when she was talking to Rob.
Quote, Joe is a strong personality. Joe is a man's man. Those types of alpha males, it's hard to tell
them what to do or have them go against what they think is right. Joe, to his credits, stands on
his principles. But to me and Survivor, sometimes you have to be a little more flexible.
And I think Joe's inflexibility, sometimes it took a lot of prodding to get him to go with the flow
if he didn't 100% agree with it. If you believe something, stand on that. Will it work on Survivor?
I don't know. I think she was being nice at that point. But, you know, because we do know. And the answer is,
no, it won't work on Survivor. Right. Right. Yeah. I mean, all of those things we've already talked about
with Joe. He's kind of locked into who he is and how he looks at life. And that's how he plays
Survivor. Yes. Now, Rizzo was in an interesting position in that, as Kelly Wentworth and Rob
pointed out in a podcast a couple weeks ago, he had to very much change the way he played the game
in just a matter of essentially a few days. But like we said for Jonathan, that's, it's really
flexible flexibility within the game that matters because nobody else knew what his last game was like.
Yeah. With that said, he mentioned that he mentioned that he,
was playing in the middle, not letting people know who his true allies were.
And we saw that he was willing to change direction when it became necessary.
Yeah.
I mean, he clearly did that towards the end.
I think some of, to his, like, it was almost like a benefit that people didn't know much
about what his game was like because it did allow him to be a little more like flexible,
I guess, and in the decisions he was going to make with where he was going to end up.
because you don't have those preconceived ideas of who you are or friendships that you might have.
I mean, he's kind of like, nobody knows anything about him except he calls himself Risgod.
And so I think that enabled him to kind of keep his options open when the game started
and really continue to do that as the game progressed because he was an unknown.
And that can be very scary for players to sign up with.
But then also it can be beneficial to the person that they don't know anything about
because then it does give him that ability to adapt and change.
And he could have changed completely from his last time,
which we didn't necessarily see a whole lot of change from his last game.
But it wasn't as necessary because they didn't know anything about him from his previous season.
Right.
All right.
Well, what did you think of Tiffany in terms of this rule?
Well, I think Tiffany is interesting because she's,
I think she's very much like,
I'm going to be completely honest with how I feel.
about whatever I'm feeling. And so she was willing to talk through options with players and point
out to players why this is a bad idea, why we shouldn't do this, why we should focus on this
person. And so it was like the honest information that she was providing really showed how
flexible she was because she was willing to change things up and do things differently. And I
know we talked already about her willingness to take out Ozzy, even though Surrey was like her
number one, she was still willing to take Ozzy out because it was beneficial for her.
So I think she was always considering all of the options and she was considering them
both for like her own benefit.
Like this is better for me.
But I want other people to think about it too in the way that I'm thinking about it.
But I'm going to, as we discussed, turn it into a wee idea.
And so I think her flexibility really was in response to what was happening around her.
And I think she was keeping options open for herself.
but she found herself in a really tough spot too, right?
Because she is kind of locked in with particular people.
People know that she's close with Surrey.
And she isn't willing to take herself away from Surrey.
And so that is where her flexibility really kind of stunted because you've tied yourself to someone
who is deemed one of the best survivor players ever.
And you are willing to like go to the end and you're even willing to lose to
Surrey because that's how locked in you are with her.
So that is where her flexibility kind of stopped.
It's like it made it as far as Surrey.
And I was like, okay, now I'm good.
Yeah, I agree.
I think she was very flexible up to that point.
She came into the swap and then the merge and she had to keep changing things up.
As just one example, she wanted to work with both Aubrey and Genevieve, but quickly
saw that was going to be impossible.
So she made her choice of Aubrey as her tightest ally.
But once the merge hit, she, like you said, clearly moved to be with Surrey, while also keeping that Aubrey door open.
Of course, one area where she was not willing was what you just mentioned about Surrey.
So we could go into the fourth rule, which tells players not to let their emotions control them.
It's clear that Aubrey did well here, as it was pretty much necessary to play the type of game she did.
If you're going to jump from alliance to alliance, you have to be willing to cut people you were just working with,
even if you like them.
So she could be palling around with Devin's one minute and targeting him the next.
And the same was true pretty much down the line.
Even with Surrey, both of them had strong feelings of friendship for the other.
But they also knew they needed to vote the other one out.
Yeah.
I think that she certainly was able to balance having so many relationships because she's been around Survivor for so long.
She's known a lot of people.
She's interacted with a lot of people outside of the game and also played the game with people who are playing the game with her now.
And so I do think that her ability to be mindful of that and utilize it if she needed to.
But at the same time, no, when like, nope, this is not the correct decision for me in this time because that's not what I'm basing my game on.
I think was really, it was the same type of balance that we saw with her, you know, the strategic in the middle gameplay.
it was very similar here as well.
Yeah.
Now, one thing that someone may question
was what appeared to be emotion
that was evolved in bringing Joe to the end
because that was a very, well, emotional scene
when she told him.
But I have no doubt.
She knew exactly what she was doing.
She wasn't bringing him along
because of how much she liked him.
She wanted Rizzo out.
She knew Jonathan could probably make a fire quickly
and she almost certainly knew Joe would get zero vote.
All of those were very good strategic reasons for making that decision.
However, she may have played it off to Joe.
Yes, I completely agree.
Now, Jonathan also did a good job in this area.
As far as I recall, he voted strategically according to what he thought was best, not by who his friends were.
And when he was blindsided by having Charlie voted out, he reacted as a survivor player should, calmly and talking about working together with D going forward.
which allowed him to plot his revenge against D and Camilla without anyone seeing it coming.
Yes. Agreed. Same thing.
And Joe did not so well in this area.
It was incredibly ironic to see him complaining about Tiffany getting upset after the Ceree vote
because he was quite possibly the most emotional person in the game.
He moaned and groaned so much.
He complained.
that he couldn't enjoy Survivor because of Devons.
He whined that what Rick did was extremely poor taste and inappropriate and disgusting,
all of those direct quotes.
It got so bad that Surrey told us she was tired of babysitting him.
And Tiffany said, talking him out of his emotional turmoil is just part of the package.
Heck, Joe even later admitted it, as he told Mike Bloom,
I regret ever saying a bad word about Rick Devons in the game because it was an emotional reaction.
Now, he then claimed the reason why I wanted Rick out is he's one of the best to play the game.
It wasn't personal.
Rick flip the coin for $2 million.
Rick hit a fake idol.
There's no better than that in the game.
And that's out of respect.
It wasn't like, I want you out because I hate you.
Yeah, he said that.
But really, because it sure didn't look that way with all those comments about Rick that I just mentioned.
Calling him, quote, disgusting, that has nothing to.
do with his gameplay. I'm sorry. Yeah, and I think that this is, I don't want to say that there's
like maybe a bit of jealousy that that could be happening here because you can't help but notice
Rick Devons, right? And you can't help but want to celebrate Rick Devons in those moments.
Like everyone was celebrating Rick Devons when the $2 million flip happened, except Joe.
Joe is not celebrating Rick Devons. And so I'm curious. That one picture is great.
I wish I had it to pop up here.
It's phenomenal.
Everybody jumping up and Joe sitting there like this, grumpy.
Yes, just phenomenal.
And so I do feel like there's something that's just like when you watch an individual who is having fun and doing well and getting noticed, if you're not one of those people, they can tend to rub you the wrong way, I guess.
And it just seemed like everything that was centered around Devon's just made Joe that much more angry.
for reasons that I don't understand.
Just because if someone just won you potentially another million dollars,
I think I'd be pretty happy.
That's just me.
That's just me.
And there was even more of it than we saw.
We heard in an interview that when someone told him about their advantage,
but hadn't said anything sooner,
he acted like a child and sulked and wouldn't look at them.
Joe said at the beginning of episode 11,
look, I know it's a game.
But did he?
Did he really?
Because I didn't see any signs of that in his emotional.
behavior. Plus, if it had been up to Joe, he'd have voted emotionally multiple times,
but others stopped him. That was kind of the thing they had to sit down and talk to him about,
giving him that heads up we talked about, so that they could get him to understand why he had to
vote with them. It was so bad. He wouldn't even write coach's name down when voting for him and
Chrissy. Production had to pull him back and force him to do it. Oh yeah, I forgot about that. That is
That's correct.
So, well, I don't have much to say about Rizzo here other than he did a great job.
He's a gamer, through and through.
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah, he knows he's there to take you out and you're there to take him out.
A perfect example was when Devin's mentioned at the Mr. Beast tribal council that he tried to shift the target to Rizzo.
And Rizzo was like, hey, no problem.
I appreciate it.
Right.
Thanks.
Thanks for letting me know where your head is at.
Yeah.
And I do think that, you know, the fact that we even saw him, like switch up his game, like we already said, to realize, these are the people I need to sit next to if I want a chance to win.
I mean, he's constantly just making his decisions based on I want to win as opposed to, well, I like this person better.
So I want to stay with this person until the end.
Yeah, that's not the decision he was doing.
Yeah.
Tiffany probably had the most improvement from her last season in this area.
In the pregame, she told Mike Bloom, one thing.
that I am trying to work on is giving away how I feel with my facial expressions.
Because I feel I don't have a very good poker face.
And we're going to work on that this time.
A lot of times when people get frazzled, they make mistakes.
And I did that.
I got frazzled.
And instead of sitting down and focusing on what my next steps would be, I just let my emotions guide me.
And then I ended up just cussing cue out.
And then I got mad and I was running around like a crazy person.
So we're not going to do that this time.
And she followed it up by playing exactly the way.
she said she was one of those people who did make the change that she needed to.
She said in her episode nine video that one thing she changed this time was picking her battles
better and knowing what to say and what not to say.
Time after time, we saw it in action, especially in some examples in episode seven and
eight when Jonathan blindsided Camilla and then took out Dee while Tiffany herself also
caught four votes.
She told us in confessional how mad she was, but knew she was.
but knew she could not let that show publicly because it would be a reason to target her.
Yeah, and she really did this, I think, quite a few times where they were, you know,
kind of expecting her to be, like, frustrated or angry or hurt about a vote that had happened.
And then she wasn't.
But we did see the confessionals where she was, like, expressing her anger and, and annoyance with what was happening.
But I think she really found a great response.
the only time we really
more upset recently was
after they came back from tribal council
and she was upset because of how the vote
had gone and Aubrey had
wanted to vote her out and there was
that moment between she and Aubrey
where she was like, well, you were targeting
me so I wrote your name down.
Like you're really going to give me crap for doing it
because you were going to do the same thing.
And that's really the only...
But again, that seems to be
understandable because like literally targeting each other.
So okay, that's fine.
And, you know, we talked about it earlier.
That it didn't matter.
Everyone was coming for her.
She knew it.
She knew she was the target.
And yeah, that was, you know, so, okay, by that point, fine, let it all out.
Right, right.
Now, of course, I do need to bring up one thing once again,
that the main emotional flaw Tiffany had was that she was willing to go to the end with Ceri.
Yes.
But that didn't end up coming into play anyway.
Yeah, but agreed.
Yeah.
Now, the fifth rule reminds players they need to pretend to be nice and play the social game.
And Aubrey said that public opinion was that she didn't win Co-wrong because she had a bad social game.
And that has worn on her for a decade.
I wish whoever was involved in that public opinion would have listened to the Why Michelle One podcast.
Because while I did note at the time, she didn't have as powerful a social game as Michelle.
as Michelle's, it was still pretty damn good. Still, with that in her mind, she altered the way she
played this time, finding a safe distance to have relationships with people. And by that,
I mean, she told Mike Bloom, if you get too close to people and you get to the end, they're too
hurt to vote for you. So for that reason, she told Rob, she got close, but not too close to people,
always watching and moving in the game. But she had to build relationships multiple times,
most importantly at the merge when she had very little social capital.
And she did.
Like with her strategic game, she stayed in the middle.
She was friendly with people and nobody wanted her out because they didn't like her,
but also nobody was pissed at her for voting them out.
Yeah.
And this again, it's like the term that we keep talking about with Aubrey is like finding that balance.
And I think it's such a great thing for her to recognize that sometimes a final vote can come down to
who did you hurt and that and
Khoran was that was kind of a better jury we we we saw some some very unhappy people with
with people who were in the final three and so I do think that she certainly learned from
that and recognize that those decisions can be emotional by a jury member and so you need
to be cognizant of that when you are playing the game with them and find that balance where
they will respect you in the end for the decision that you made as opposed to being hurt by the
decision that you made. Yeah. All right. I think we can move on to Jonathan. And one thing I haven't
really talked about much is that, well, I mean, you brought it up, actually. He has said in different
interviews about how confused he was. He told Mike Bloom, I truly believed I played the best game.
He wondered to Dalton Ross, I don't know what I could have done different. I keep trying. I keep going
back to what did I learn from this? And he asked Rob what he could have done better. Rob gave him an
answer, one that was very similar to one that I was thinking, winning over the hearts and minds
of the jurors. Yes. How could you make the people on the jury feel like you're doing it for them,
not for yourself? And give them goodwill for you. Be more like Survivor 42, Jonathan, making people
feel comfortable and helping them rather than being the big guy they're up against. Yeah. Jonathan replied,
well, that's why he wears baggy clothing.
He doesn't think of himself as the big god,
as if baggy pants are going to hide the fact that he literally towers over everyone.
And no shirt.
Right.
And we saw him doing things with no shirt,
like using his pecks to make the Phoenix immunity necklace bounce around.
Is that showing, you know, oh, I don't have muscles, but look what I can do.
At least the, I think most of.
the peck dancing happened in confessionals maybe, but he might have, no, he did do it to everyone.
He did.
Yes.
I think one of the first times he did it to everyone, yes.
Yeah.
So, yeah, there's that.
Yeah.
And another thing I would suggest is some humility because walking around preening about how great a job you did and voting someone out is not a good look, especially when others feel they deserved at least some of the credit, if not most of the credit.
And then there's the way he put, yes, go ahead.
Well, I was just going to say, but then that person can use that to their advantage, right?
Because, you know, let him, let him be the showbook.
That's what he needed to change, you know?
Yes, for sure.
He saw a whole scene of like Devin's.
I don't know whether Devin's was saying it or whether Devin's was egging him on,
where he said, great job there.
And Jonathan's walking around, putting his robe on, you know, like, oh, yes, I did do such a great job type of thing.
Right, right.
I think Devin just egging him on.
Yeah.
I hope he was.
Plus, the way he put some of the jurors
out of the game,
like instigating a fight with D
and then voting her out,
not good,
especially when you then tell her that
in Final Tribal Council,
jumping around and screaming
when you win a challenge
and another player knows
that means you're going home
is not a good look.
And I totally get
that you want to,
to celebrate. But there's a celebration. And then there's what Jonathan did. I mean, when he screamed,
it could be heard two islands over on Fiji. You know, he's pounding things and jumping around.
And it was, it was over the top. And it's funny because when Tiffany won against everyone at the
previous immunity challenge and people were upset with her, she went around and apologized
because she thought they were upset because she had celebrated.
Yeah.
It wasn't that.
It was because she had won.
But I'm sure it never occurred to Jonathan to apologize for his celebrations.
And these are just a few of the things he could work on.
Is it enough?
I don't know because I think he has to truly understand why.
And that's, it's something he has to put in place every day.
Well, and here's, here's the interesting part about Jonathan.
in that, excuse me, you did have people who felt a connection with him and really felt
emotionally tied to him so much so they were, they were fighting for him during that final tribal.
And so he has-
Haunting over him, however you want to call it, yes.
However you want to call it.
But I do think, you know, Chrissy did mention this.
And I think it's something that's worth noting when you have someone who is willing to,
like go to bat for you and and take the fall for you.
Like that does speak volumes as to the connection you've made with that person.
But I don't think Jonathan was able to put that into play with enough people where it was like,
oh, I have my core group and I know that we've got each other's back,
but you have to kind of spread the wealth.
You need to make those connections with people outside of that alliance.
You need to make people feel as if.
they matter to you just as much as those other people because then you're making the other people
feel like they're not part of the cool kids group, right? Like you're not sitting with us at this
table and you have to go sit over there as opposed to we can all sit together and then the four of us
can go over here later and we can have a little game talk and get closer, but you're not making
others feel like they're not as significant and important to you in both the games like space,
but also just an emotional space.
And that is a hard thing to do.
But he's clearly capable of doing it
because he did do it with his core group of people.
Yeah.
And I have to push back on what Chrissy said.
I was planning on doing it in Appendix B,
but since you brought it up,
okay, can we credit him with that for her,
you know, for someone falling on the sword for them?
I guess, but I more blame the person
who fell on their stords because that's stupid.
You don't fall on your sword for somebody else in Survivor.
I'm sorry.
And listen, and I, and I'm not saying that that was the best reaction for that person, right?
Like, they shouldn't have fallen on the sword.
They should have been like, because we were all wondering, like, why is Jonathan getting
away unscathed here?
Because it's a game for a million dollars.
You need to speak up.
And that was a moment that should have been reflective of what actually happened because
everybody was throwing everything up at the wall at that point, right?
So it's like, okay, why are you not?
And so I'm not saying that that was a good game move for that person.
However, it does show that he had created or formed a type of relationship that that person thought was so significant that they were willing to like ruin their own game for it.
That's pretty incredible.
But at the same time, you got to spread the wealth.
And so that's something about Jonathan.
You know that Jonathan needed to create bonds and relationships with more than.
just that contingent that he had surrounded himself with.
Yes, exactly.
And then there were some other aspects of the social game he could improve,
like handling talking about other people.
He said at one point that Christian, quote, was making me sick
because Christian was playing the game.
He acted like he and those he was working with could play the game,
but he got upset when other people did.
Oh, yeah, I'm listening to you.
I didn't know if there was more.
No, and again, this goes back to like the Joe comment saying someone's disgusting.
You know, there's like there's ways to react to people who you're playing this game with.
And those words can negatively affect your game.
And also if you are, if you're saying those things, is that how you're making that person feel when you're interacting with that person?
And I have a sneaking suspicion.
The answer is yes.
Yeah.
And then Jonathan also said, I got exactly the people out.
who I wanted to. I made more connections in this game tenfold than in season 42. I played a
social strategic game that no one saw coming. And I have to wonder, but did you? At least for the
social part, that is, and the connections, because those people didn't seem as connected to him as he
thought. Jonathan couldn't understand why D didn't vote for him, even though they spent a lot of time
in the same tribe. But just being on the same tribe isn't automatically going to
to get you her vote, especially when you purposely started a fight with her, like I mentioned.
He also told Mike Bloom he was, quote, disappointed in Devin's because he, quote, played a lot with him.
No, you didn't.
You didn't play with Devin's.
You played against Devin's.
And he even continued to Mike.
Next to.
Yeah, yeah.
He said, Mike, we had a rivalry.
And I thought he respected that more.
So I was disappointed.
And then he mentioned him following Devin's around to look for the idol and added,
we played closely, but just not together, I guess.
So I expected more.
So maybe that's on me.
I shouldn't expect more.
It's like, yeah, that is on you.
I don't know why on earth he would expect Devin's to vote for him for those reasons.
I really don't.
Another good example is when he talked in Final Tribal Council about how he used
heart-to-heart personal stuff to blindside people after not doing that on 42.
And I mentioned earlier, that could be good from a strategic standpoint, depending on how you do it.
But not when you're trying to win people over socially.
And this is why I truly question what he believes connections are.
Well, yeah, and this goes back to what Aubrey was talking about, where if you hurt people's feelings,
when they're then sitting on the jury, are they going to give you their vote?
And so I think that this is something he's not recognizing either.
Like D, when you were talking about him playing with her,
yeah, you literally started a fight with her in front of other people, no less.
It wasn't like you and she just had a moment where you disagreed.
It was very public.
It was very much on display.
And so I do think that there is a disconnect there with him understanding.
If someone feels hurt by you because of something that happened in the game,
and then there you are sitting in the final three.
And they're like, well, he played a really good game,
but so did Aubrey.
And Aubrey also didn't hurt my feelings.
And Aubrey didn't make me feel a particular way that was uncomfortable.
So I'm picking Aubrey over him at that point because of the emotional response
that they have to the social game that he was playing.
Yeah.
And I think the key to what you said there is so did Aubrey.
If Jonathan had played this awesome strategic game and Aubrey had been terrible,
okay, then maybe people would have voted, put aside the social aspects and voted.
Maybe.
Some would have, some wouldn't have.
We've seen people go both directions.
But when you have, first of all, you're already playing a second level rather than a top level, strategic game.
And you have done all of this socially.
You're not going to win people over that way.
Yeah.
And, you know, besides blaming D and Devons for.
not voting for him. He also blamed Surrey for rallying the votes for Aubrey instead of him.
But he needs to look at the only people who voted for him, his Zoom alliance, which included a
couple of them falling over themselves to compliment him ridiculously. Like, you know,
like you already mentioned, you know, Chrissy giving him credit for, you know, for that.
Okay, I'll give him a little credit when I really still think it was her stupidity.
but, you know, the three people who voted for him,
they were his connections that he talked about.
And it appears those were made before the game even began.
He gained no other votes at the end.
You can't blame Surrey for that.
Yeah, and I do think that, you know, this is an interesting,
and maybe we'll talk about this later,
and we probably will, as far as the jury components are concerned,
so do you want me to just hold off and talk about it again?
I don't remember what will, you know, who knows?
So if it's related to social, go for it.
I do think that it's interesting that he has this idea that people who are on the jury
shouldn't be allowed to talk to each other during that time frame.
Because I've had some commentary about how I think that they should do things differently
for the jury, which is like allow them to see like live feeds of what's going on in the
island, of the challenge.
They have the capabilities.
There's cameras everywhere, right?
So that I think would be great for a jury.
But to expect that jurors are not going to communicate and talk about what their experiences
were with each other and not try to actually fight for people, I think is another aspect of
survivor that players are not thinking about.
That happens.
And that's what we actually do as a society because that's what you do with a trial jury, right?
Like you hear all of the proof and all of the evidence and then you sit in a room and you talk about it and you work through it together.
I feel like that's something that makes sense.
But there are additional things that could be done.
But that would be inclusive of letting them talk to each other.
Yes.
Yes.
And one of the things that we will talk about later is something he said to Tiffany that was not aired that Tiffany revealed on the red carpet that was very bad for him to say just before voting her out.
We'll get to that a little bit.
Okay.
Now, moving to Joe, I realized I had literally no notes for him for this rule.
Like, was he liked?
Sure.
Did he pretend to be nice?
No, he either was nice to you if your name wasn't Rick Devons or he wasn't.
And I do guess from what we've heard, he at least hid his behavior from Rick himself.
So I guess he was nice to Rick's face, just not at all behind his back.
So yay for him there, I suppose.
but at no point do I recall Joe playing a social game
because that would require the playing the game part.
Yeah, and I think it's interesting that the commentary was made by Surrey
about the like the Jotation and having to watch Joe.
I think that really goes to his inability to really understand
that he has to control that part of his own game
because other people had to control it for him.
and so he didn't recognize that I need to be going to people and I need to be building those
relationships and talking to people as opposed to people feeling like they have to do that
for me like I's who's turn is it to watch Joe today which does sound insulting to Joe.
Oh, it totally will.
Yeah.
You know, Joe's got to step up and be like, no, I'm going to control my own relationships and
what people think of me as opposed to letting them control it for me.
Yeah. All right, quickly going to Rizzo, he has certainly proven himself to be the kind of guy who can win people over.
We mentioned that earlier, like, you know, people such as Coach and Colby came into the game wanting him gone right away, but he won them over and, you know, others as well.
However, there was one area that he didn't do so well. As he told Dalton Ross, I think my biggest flaw is not realizing how much work ethic meant to the old schoolers.
because back in the day, they had so many down days where they weren't doing challenges.
They just built rapport on picking up firewood.
Bingo.
We heard several members of the Zoom Alliance talk about that very thing.
For example, Chrissy told Mike Bloom, Rizzo did literally nothing around camp.
He didn't care.
He was like, that's not part of the game.
So I'm not going to bother doing it.
And yeah, that was an accurate representation of his thought process.
He also told Dalton, on 49, I slept in.
a boat. I couldn't care less what the shelter looked like. I'm there to gain relationships. So I
didn't really care about that. I was being lazy intentionally. It's like, why am I going to
waste my energy? Because I'm at a disadvantage and all these people have preexisting relationships.
Am I going to focus on building a shelter in the first day? Or am I going to hit the ground running
trying to build these relationships? So that's what I was trying to do. And ultimately, it pays dividends
because I make it all the way to the end.
But at the same time, it rubs a lot of the jurors the wrong way
because they felt that this young kid,
he should be working hard and he's not working hard.
Screw this guy.
So I think if I ever go back and I play with people from the old school mentality,
that's something I will be mindful of.
But if I play with a crop of new era,
I'm not going to do Jack Didley squat.
And you know what?
I got to say, Rizzo, this is not the approach you should take because
Oh, I love them.
I love the blunt honesty there.
Oh, I love the blunt honesty, but there's there's a middle ground here because you can do the things that you want to do as Rizzo and build those relationships, but you can do that while looking for firewood.
You can do that while preparing a shelter.
Like those are moments that are bonding moments between people.
And you have those are opportunities to be talking and forming alliances because you are like, oh my God, we're the only two here working on the shelter.
and I really seem to be connecting with you, let's work together.
So there is something to be said about utilizing those spaces to formulate bonds that then turn
into an alliance.
So don't do dittily squat.
Do it with the people that you are interested in connecting with and then see if that connection
is created because otherwise you could just be annoying people in the way that it came across
as annoying because you think that it's not significant for your game when an actuality,
it can be and you can see the ramifications from it.
So I think there's a balance here.
There's a middle ground for sure.
I think, you know, based on what he said,
he would agree with that going forward.
You know, you do have to modify your social behavior
according to those you're playing with.
Sure.
But on the other hand, like he said,
he made other relationships that got him a lot further in the game
than most people in the alliance who was complaining about that.
Right. Sure.
Oh, and I don't disagree with his with his,
sentiments there, but I do think that, you know, moving forward, players who are newbies, you know,
coming into this, don't discount doing things around camp because, or, you know, collecting wood,
because those are moments that you can create bonds with people.
Not to mention when you're collecting firewood, you can actually be looking for idols.
Oh, my God.
There's so many things.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to go look for coconuts.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's what you're doing.
Yeah.
Tiffany, on the other hand, had no problems at all with her social game.
We already talked some about how she pretended to be nice or at least held in her anger a few times.
But while we'll talk about her threat level and the next rule, there is a reason it was as high as it was.
And her relationships were a big part of it.
Because unlike Jonathan's, these were actual connections.
She told Dalton Ross, I was having conversations with everybody.
I was connected to everybody on the beach, even Jonathan.
And that was confusing to a lot of people too.
And while Jonathan did backstab me and blindsided me with the Camilla vote,
me and Jonathan had a lot of friction, but I never closed that door.
Me and Jonathan were constantly having conversations.
That's why I was able to work with him on the Ozzy vote.
I was being a social butterfly.
That's why at the end, Jonathan called me the sweetheart of the season.
Everybody loved me.
Yeah, and I think that this is what is such a great,
idea for someone who's playing this game to recognize that you can do all of those things.
You can still have relationships with people that you've not necessarily worked against or
that you've worked against previously because those votes require more than one person.
This is what we were talking about before.
You can't do it alone.
You need people to work with you.
And if you can still maintain a relationship with someone, even if you're not necessarily
their number one or their number two, it's going to benefit you moving forward.
again, because you need those numbers to make the votes happen.
And yes, she definitely was able to form relationships with everybody and utilize those people
for potential votes that are going to benefit her and have those honest conversations with them
at the same time.
Every time you saw her sitting down and talking to Jonathan or you saw her talking to
Surrey, there was an aspect to her game where she wasn't keeping secrets from them.
She was being very, very candid.
And like, this is what I think, and this is why it's beneficial for you.
And this is why we should do this thing.
And I think, again, she, I would, I would compare her to Aubrey in this regard, where that balance, she found that balance between forming a relationship, but using it strategically in order to further her own game.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, we'll get to some more quotes and points about how much people like Tiffany and the next rule.
But suffice it to say her social game was definitely one of the best parts of her play on Survivor.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
So we can move to that next rule now, but we'll still start with Aubrey.
It warns against being too much of a threat.
Aubrey said, from day one, I've tried to lower my target.
And I have had a resurgence at the end of this game.
That was actually very intentional.
This time, I have worked as hard as I can to put threats ahead of me
and make sure that I peaked in this game at just the right moment.
And I think that I've done that.
this is such a key element of survivor, especially these days.
But even going back in time, we talked about it with Sam last week.
As you get closer to the end, people want to take out the players they don't think they can beat.
The tallest poppy gets cut down, the biggest lion.
It happens almost every season.
And yet somehow, some viewers are still surprised by.
this. They're like, how did these people get to the end and not these strong ones? Every season it happens,
people. Yes, every season. It's one reason that even going back to the preseason, I was debating
between picking Aubrey and Tiffany for my pregame winner pick. And it came down to like a last second
decision just before we recorded that podcast because I figured those two would not be seen as big threats.
and I of course didn't even know that Aubrey was going to go out of her way to ensure that was the case.
Yeah, I mean, this is a very impressive component of her game, knowing that you got to keep people stacked in front of you.
So that way people don't look at you until all of a sudden you're like, oh, wait, we're down to five now.
Now, who do we look at?
You know, where do we go from here?
So, yes, a very, very impressive way in which she approached.
the game in this regard to manage her own threat level.
And also, she was always kind of on the fringes of like,
well, we need to get Aubrey out, right?
There was there was always that kind of discussion about Aubrey.
There was always a shift out, but.
Right.
There was always a shift that could be made.
And you always saw that shift happening where there was another option.
There was something else.
And so it was like she was always kind of present in that we need to take her out.
However, we can move over here for now and we'll do that later.
Yeah, and that's something we've talked about before, which is, as you're going through the game,
if there is someone who is talked about as a threat and they make it to the end, it's really hard to
argue against them winning.
Right.
If you're saying Aubrey is someone we need to take out before final tribal council,
even if you don't make a big effort to take them out at that moment, and then Aubrey makes
it to final tribal council, how can you say, oh, yeah, I didn't really mean that?
Right. Yeah.
You know, last week we talked about how Devin's and Surrey were huge threats who had to be taken out.
And I mentioned at the time that while they were already near the top of the chart, Aubrey hadn't been seen as that type of threat, but was steadily rising towards the end of the game.
Ozzie pointed out in Final Tribal Council that same thing you said.
Her name was constantly being thrown around, but in a Survivor Magic trick, she was able to shift the target time and time and time again.
And part of that was something that she did that I mentioned earlier.
Aubrey described it.
You have to figure out when to put your foot on the gas and when to take your foot off the pedal.
And I think some of this again goes back to looking at how Michelle played the game.
Because back again, 10 years ago when I talked about why Michelle won, I said,
for a large part of the game, many of the players thought Michelle was just floating along, not doing much.
While that isn't necessarily thought of as a good strategy, it can certainly work out when done right.
as we've seen throughout the years.
Several of the jurors talked about how Michelle was thought of
as almost a non-player early in the game.
But by being in that position, whether on purpose or by accident,
she made herself into a non-threat.
And that image stuck for a long time,
which allowed her to progress in the game.
I think that same thing was true of Aubrey early in the game.
The difference was she intentionally started rising later in the game,
as we just discussed.
Mm-hmm.
And, you know, once you get to final five,
Aubrey realized that they were talking about her as a threat.
And we saw Jonathan and Rizzo discuss voting her out if Tiffany won immunity.
Because, of course, both Rizzo and Jonathan would want to go against Joe at the end,
just like everyone else did.
And each also probably, well, I think definitely thought that going against the other one was their best bet.
And they were right.
Jonathan said,
Aubrey is the underdog story of the century.
She fought with everybody going back and forth
to make it to the final three.
These are huge plot points to talk about
at the end of the game.
Now, he said that, and it's weird how he did,
but then acted like those weren't deserving reasons
after he lost.
Kind of strange there.
Revisionous history, right?
Yeah, a little bit.
There was, of course, another way Aubrey was a threat,
And it is related to her underdog story, but it pertains to her whole 10-year story.
And you brought this up a little bit earlier.
I think they worried about that a bit at the end as well.
And certainly Jonathan complained about it in interviews afterwards.
And look, I know Rizzo did mention that aspect of things.
To my knowledge, nobody else has.
That's not to say it didn't play on their mind.
I have no way of knowing that.
I am not a mind.
Right.
Right.
we have already gone through a heck of a lot of reasons that she deserved to win this season.
Even if someone believed Aubrey might get the win because of her whole story,
well, then that makes her a threat.
Why didn't you get her out earlier then?
Well, and I think that this is an interesting nugget for the fact that like no one wanted
Surrey to get to the end because Surrey, well, she played a phenomenal game in 50.
they were thinking about all of the phenomenal games that she's played previously and the legacy that she has.
And so everyone was like, well, if Ceri gets to the end, she's going to win,
well, that wouldn't have just been based upon Ceri's 50 game.
It would have been based upon what everyone knows of Ceri.
And so I do think that discounting someone's history when it comes to the game itself can't be done.
You can't not think about it.
Right.
And I do think that it does put other plays.
at a bit of a disadvantage because, I mean, Jonathan said, I have one previous season.
I don't have as many as she does.
Rizzo had a season nobody saw.
And so this is what makes seasons like this a little more interesting because people's history
matters and what people know about them matter.
And it can work for them.
It can work against them because you've seen their gameplay.
You see how they've played the game previously.
You see what they have done to shift and move and change.
you can look at Tony.
Tony who played a game that people were shocked,
he ended up winning the first time.
The second time went out very quickly
because he kind of, it was a quick like,
I'm going to throw everything out immediately
and get voted out quick
because I didn't learn how I need to play this game.
He shifted for the third time and ended up winning.
And so all of those things become known of previous players.
And do they have an effect on the vote at the end?
They might.
but it might have a negative effect at the end as well.
So you just don't know which way people are going to view your history in the game,
your story as part of the survivor legacy that you've created.
So, yeah, I mean, it's, it is an interesting component,
but whether or not it really had that much of an effect, like you said, who knows?
Right.
And if you, Jonathan, thought that it was going to have that much of an effect, get rid of her.
Get rid of her earlier.
Make sure you do.
Yeah.
Now, Jonathan, moving to him, of course, looked like more of a threat, you know, physically.
And even though I mentioned earlier that he said he was trying to hide it.
But the other players didn't really care.
Tiffany said in her episode nine video that nobody was targeting Joe or Jonathan at that point
because while they were physical threats, they were not seen as threats to win at the end.
Quote, being a physical player is not all that scary.
And that's a major part of the reason those.
two made it so far.
Even though they might look threatening, people just were not worried about it.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's interesting because, you know, even the like immunity runs, people are not.
It doesn't seem to be a focus like it used to be.
It's certainly not something that seems to be as much of a concern now, especially now that
you have fired too.
I'm sorry.
That's kind of thrown a wrench in the works as well.
Yeah.
And, you know, I mean, we.
saw why, you know, I mean, and then especially with Joe, he was, of course, never a threat to win.
I did think Jonathan was more of a threat than Rizzo because, you know, he had been walking around,
taking all the credit for getting Ozzy out, talking about what a great job he did.
And, you know, while that did not create a lot of love for him at times, it was in a game sense.
If people didn't strike back at it, it could be seen as a positive.
for him. But Aubrey had more facts on the ground. She clearly knew she could take that
Ozzy credit as well as talking about her other moves. And then Aubrey also reconsidered
her evaluation of Rizzo as a threat. Just a couple episodes ago, she wanted to take him to final three.
But then as it got closer, I think she looked at the situation again and said Rizzo has become an
underdog sitting in the final four again after just playing.
And he's good in tribal counsel.
And his game is most similar to mine.
And I just want my story in tribal counsel.
Also, she told Dalton Russ.
He's an amazing speaker.
He's an amazing story.
I always looked at Rizzo.
I'm like, there's something you're not telling us about this guy.
He has more going on.
It turns out when I watched what he did, he's a very adept player.
I just did not want him.
and that underdog energy next to me.
The first time I played, I had someone who emerged at the right moment next to me,
and it didn't work out for me.
And I thought my game was most similar to Rizzo.
I was afraid if he was with me, some of the votes would overlap.
My worst nightmare was like a Jonathan and Rizzo situation.
I thought then Joe would vote for Jonathan and Rizzo could maybe get someone like D,
and I didn't want to take my chances.
Yeah.
And I think this is an interesting.
thought process as well because you do, we've heard this idea before.
Like either you need to take three people to the end that are all so similar that then people
are going to need to decide what the differences are between those three or you need to
bring two people with you that are completely different than your game.
Because if you only bring one person who is so similar to you, well, then you're dealing
with a situation of which one of these two do they pick.
And if you're too close, maybe they just pick.
the third. So it is a very interesting numbers situation and math really becomes significant here.
So the fact that she was recognizing that he could take votes away from her, which could then add
votes on to Jonathan. Yeah. Let's go back to a final two. Okay. So much better. Now, I still suspect
that Aubrey would have won in a situation with Jonathan and Rizzo, but it would have been closer.
certainly at least Jonathan or Joe, whoever, you know, was there, would have gotten the vote of whichever of them was in the jury, plus the Zoom Alliance.
And like Aubrey said, some people could have split the votes on Rizzo.
I don't think there was enough.
But if you don't have to take that chance, don't take that chance.
Get rid of that person.
Yeah.
Yeah, for sure.
And then there was Tiffany, who was unanimously agreed to be the biggest threat in the final five.
Jonathan said, if I sit with Tiffany, I'll lose because she has a lot of friends on the other side.
Rizzo told Tiffany she is the biggest threat to him because she has an underdog story and told us the jury is eating her game up.
Joe said, Aubrey has a good story, but Tiffany is a fierce competitor who could win her way into the final three.
And Aubrey told Dalton Ross, I really think Tiffany could have pulled out the win.
Tiffany is outplay, outwit, outplay and outlast.
she's all three of them.
She is such a magnetic personality.
She's a special person and I really thought that she could,
she would have the momentum going into the end.
I think she could have beaten me for sure.
And you want to see,
Surrey really fighting for someone to win?
There it is right there.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so for the guys, the question was at that point,
because they had let it get to that point,
which of them was the bigger threat to take out first,
Aubrey or Tiffin?
They obviously decided Tiffany.
I do still think, based on the information they had, they made the right decision.
Aubrey had been working with the guys.
And more importantly, she hadn't won a challenge in years, literally.
Right, right.
Yeah.
They had no way to know she had been practicing some motion.
The odds were pretty good that whatever came up, one of them could beat her.
That's why the topic of challenges kept coming up.
because they were comparing Tiffany and Aubrey.
And one is clearly going to have a higher chance in general of winning immunity.
But even though that dominated a lot of the discussions and arguments we saw,
it wasn't the main reason that Tiffany was a threat.
It goes back to the quotes I said a moment ago.
They knew they could not beat her at the end.
At tribal council, she wanted it to make sense,
that she was more of a threat than Joe.
but the final, the final vote had the answer.
Joe was never getting any votes.
But she would have gotten the majority.
That is why she was the bigger threat.
Like Jeff said to Tiffany on the live show,
I think we all know who you are,
and that's why they got rid of you.
And Aubrey knew it as well,
telling Mike Bloom,
that's why it was really difficult for me to make a pitch.
I do know I have friends on the jury.
And not only do I have a jury full of people
that like me, I have my closest ally in the game,
who was also one of the most influential players
to ever play this game, writing for me on the jury.
I think I said Aubrey told Mike Bloom.
This must have been Tiffany, I'm quoting here.
She said, nobody wanted to sit next to me
in the final three with Ceres sitting there on the jury.
And they were like, absolutely not she has to go.
Yeah. Yeah, because there would have been a whole lot
of Jonathan complaints about that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yes, for sure.
This is where I want to mention one thing that I hadn't before that we didn't see.
One reason Tiffany was focusing on the challenges and Joe in particular in that tribal council.
It was something that Jonathan apparently said to her.
When Tiffany was interviewed immediately after the finale by Ashley Smith of Tyson's podcast,
she said that she asked Jonathan what made her more of a threat than Joe.
And Jonathan said something to the effect, you can find the actual quote out there.
But something to the effect.
It's because she's a woman and that's different because the challenge record for women is lower than for men.
Wait, time out.
This is Jonathan saying this.
Yeah, Jonathan said this to Tiffany.
No, to Tiffany.
Oh, and then she was not interviewed.
I got you.
He was not interviewed on the red carpet.
I see.
I have understanding it now.
Yes.
So Tiffany relayed that because that obviously wasn't in the show.
And that's one reason we saw Tiffany was so pissed off.
at her last tribal council and specifically emphasizing the why me and not Joe thing.
And it's,
I think she was trying to get Jonathan to say the same thing in tribal council in front of the jury,
you know,
but he at least,
you know,
didn't say it then,
but I'm sure Tiffany related to the jury.
And,
you know,
that's just not smart to say.
I don't care if the record is lower for women or not.
You don't say,
well,
it's different for women than for men.
Yeah. No. No. Don't do that.
Period. Don't do that. Yeah. So he wondered, you know, gee, why didn't the jury like me?
I don't know. That might have had something to do with it.
Mm-hmm. For sure. 100%. Yeah. Yeah.
So, okay, how could Tiffany have addressed being seen as this big threat other than, you know, not being a woman?
Well, she told Dalton Ross, I do not believe I could have or would have done anything differently this season other than maybe get that last puzzle piece in a little bit quicker.
All right.
I would say that's not quite true.
She could have not won as many challenges earlier.
And I know that's a risk and not something that someone wants to do.
But she won three challenges.
She came within half a puzzle piece of winning another.
She possibly would have won another if she had lifted her foot at the time.
the right time. If she plays again, she's going to need to find a way to address this because
she clearly will not have the grace of being seen as not a big threat early. She needs to do
something like the Tyson strategy of, oh, I hurt my shoulder, I can't win challenges not.
Yeah, but it is interesting because it's not, it's not even just the challenge wins. And this is
what you were, I think, really speaking to earlier when there can be multiple people who are
winning challenges like Joe, but you can be winning challenges and have a great social game and
have a strategic game. And so it's like all of these components are coming together. And so, yes,
the challenges become another part of the discussion that need be had around Tiffany because
she also brings all of these other things to her game that make her a huge threat to win. And so,
yeah, could she have done something different?
It's not just the challenges.
It's everything else she's doing too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's, I mean, I focused on the challenges there because that's what she was talking about.
Right, right.
But yeah, you know, I was going to say if, but I think when she plays again,
she does need to address all of this somehow just to reduce her threat level or she will find
herself in a similar position again.
Yeah, for sure.
All right.
Well, rule seven covers idols and advantages.
game mechanics. Aubrey, of course, had the Billy Eilish boomerang idol given to her by Christian,
but everyone thought it was Devin's. What are your thoughts on how she handled that?
Well, I do like that she decided she needed to just get rid of it, even if it wasn't necessarily,
she wasn't the target of that vote, because everyone was discussing this idol. And I think when people
are looking for a reason to vote someone out, if you have a reason, then they can latch on to it.
Now, someone might say, well, Rizzo had one and nobody cared.
Well, Rizzo was in a different camp, right?
Rizzo wasn't where Aubrey was.
And so this is where the game becomes so individualized,
whereas Aubrey has an idol and it becomes a topic of discussion.
Whereas Rizzo has an idol and it has a different connotation to it, a different,
there's not as much of a concern.
And so she's responding to what she's hearing,
and this is what we've talked about with Aubrey a lot already,
is that her responses are based upon what's happening around her.
And while having an idol is a great thing to have,
it can also be a really big detriment.
And it can be a problem for your game.
And so, yeah, she burned it.
She didn't need to, but she needed to at the same time.
So I think she made the best decision based upon what it felt like having that
idol because everybody knew and everyone was talking about it.
And so it was like one less thing to concern herself with.
I'm just going to get rid of it.
So then they can't focus on that.
anymore. Yeah. Yeah. I said earlier in the season that, you know, I think she did the right thing
to say, I'm playing the idol and then not doing it when Genevieve played her shot in the dark,
except she didn't expect the reaction she got. And it was not great to tell Devin's and
Christian that she forgot to play. Yeah, that. I forgot about that. That was not great gameplay right there,
Aubrey. Sorry. She quickly realized that. I just don't think she quite expected the backlash from
pretty much everyone.
But she said it,
final tribal council,
that thing was like a stink on me.
I knew I had to give up that idol
if I was going to make
true relationships with other people.
And it worked without that idol,
her threat level sank back down again.
Yeah.
And then Jonathan didn't have any idols,
but he did gain power
from the power broker twist.
We didn't like it,
but he made the most of it.
And he said,
I have an opportunity here to make moves
that I haven't had.
And kind of like,
Yeah, exactly.
Gave him too much power.
Ironically,
and too much rice.
Well, yes, and too much rice.
But he complained about still not having enough rice the very next day.
And then Aubrey took away the power from him from the,
from the Aussie vote.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
So funny.
Yes.
Now, Joe also didn't have any idols or advantages,
but he felt like he should know about all of them.
And this is something we talked about a little earlier here and earlier in the season.
because as Devons told Mike Bloom,
I feel like as an ally,
if I'm taking care of you,
if I'm protecting you,
and if I'm never coming after you,
if I'm looking out for your interest,
but I don't think that means
I need to tell you all my secrets.
But I think Joe,
it's like he really feels,
he really wants you to tell him
all the secrets and be filled in.
Yeah, and I agree with the Rick Devin's approach here.
Yes, absolutely.
And then there was Rizzo's Idol,
which he has.
held all season long again. Rizzo told Rob that while he did hold on to it, it was because he was
so well situated that he knew where all the votes were going and never needed to use it,
which is similar to something I said last week, that there was no reason for him to play it then
because he knew the two plans in play were going after Saree or Aubrey, not him. However, Tiffany,
Jonathan, and Aubrey, and probably others all talked about how Rizzo wanted his big resume item
to be that he held on to his idol all the way till the end of the game again.
In the moment, it seemed like all someone would have to do is, if he made it to final three,
point out that he didn't need to play it because nobody cared.
But it now sounds like his argument would have been what I just mentioned.
It wasn't that nobody cared.
It's because I was so well situated and I always knew what was going on.
And it would have been interesting to see how that played out in a final tribal council situation.
Yeah, I do think that he would have put a really great spin on it because he did that already.
And what we heard from season 49, I know he didn't get to do it in a final three.
But that was the construct that came out of that season.
Again, people didn't get to see it.
They didn't know that that's what he had been doing.
But I think it would have been an interesting spend to see him do that this time.
Yes.
And of course, Rizzo also had to deal with a particular game mechanic, Final Four firemaking.
he was upset that fans voted for it
and yeah okay so are we
but based on all the other decisions
he should have realized it
just like we did it's like look
we've seen the way the fans are voting
and again this question was so slanted
so look
I know Rizzo didn't have much time
between seasons to practice firemaking
but he did have 25 days
while he was there
he just chose not to
Yes. And I think it's interesting that, I mean, he had, what, nine days in between, maybe built some fires in that nine day time frame and eat a little more food. So you've got more meat on your bones when you go out there. But I do think that the fact that he never made fire in the entire time that he was playing the game was a very bad, very bad decision for sure.
Okay. I can't think of anything for Tiffany in this rule. Can you? Any idols or advantages or game mechanics?
I don't think so because she never had anything. I mean, she knew where things were to a certain extent because she was with Ceree who knew everything.
So I think overall, no, I don't think there's much here.
Okay. We could go to Appendix A, which discusses players keeping their end goals in mind when voting.
And we talk about voting out the week, then the strong, then the week, then the strong.
And at the end game, the idea is, of course, to take out the last remaining stronger players
so you face weaker opposition in final tribal council.
And that is exactly what happened.
We've spent a lot of time discussing how they took out Tiffany first because she was the biggest
threat.
And then they wanted to get rid of Aubrey as the next biggest threat to their games.
But she foiled them by winning immunity.
So Aubrey instead took out Rizzo, whom she said.
saw as the biggest threat to her.
I would say everyone did the right thing in regard to this appendix.
Yes, and this is why, you know, best laid plans.
Sometimes when you wait too long to do certain things,
you might not end up actually having the result that you want.
And I think Rob actually referenced this with Aubrey,
where her win was very much like the Jenna win,
when, you know, everyone wanted her to get voted out.
And all of a sudden, look who wins, you know,
that final immunity challenge and it was Jenna.
And that's exactly what we saw happen here.
They were like, oh, damn it.
She wasn't supposed to win.
And she did.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, Appendix B discusses the jury phase of the game and, of course, final tribal
counsel.
I want to make sure I'm dressed appropriately for this segment or video.
Oh, goodness.
He's not taking off his shirt.
He's just putting on a new one.
Yeah.
He's layering.
Yes, I am layering here.
So it says, you know, Rizzo said earlier in the season, and I said at the time, I will buy a shirt with this quote, if anyone makes it.
And Eric Reichenbach clearly thought the same thing, so I had to get one from him.
It's still available on his website, daboodoodles.com, by the way.
But it says, of course, we slay dragons at tribal, not at camp.
I don't know that you can fully see that.
It's kind of a long shirt here.
So the thing is, if you slay dragons at tribal, you definitely do so at final tribal.
And boy, wearing two shirts is warm.
We heard a lot from Aubrey in the lead up to the finale about her thinking, which was one way it became clear in the edit that she was going to win.
She kept having confessional saying things like, tonight's vote for me is all about the end game.
It's all about who I see in my final three.
And then we'd hear her talk about Devons or Rizzo or whoever.
Indeed, she told Rob that she learned from Sarah Lascena and Sophie to be very methodical about
who she wanted to sit next to in the end.
And it wasn't just who she was going to sit next to, but the order to get there.
As she said in tribal council last week, I think a really important part of the game is
figuring out the timing.
It's almost like dismantling a bomb.
you're trying to find the people you can sit with at the end.
But you've got to be really careful about how you peel back the layers or the whole thing will explode in your face.
She got those layers, perfect, taking out threat after threat in just the right order,
using or working with Jonathan, Joe, and Rizzo to vote out people, all of them agreed would be problems at the end.
That, of course, included Tiffany, as Aubrey kept mentioning her name to them,
telling Jonathan that Tiffany would win.
Adding to us that she needed to convince them and Joe that Tiffany was, quote,
the golden girl underdog to the jury.
Hmm.
So she knew when to slay those dragons.
Yes, she knew when to slay those dragons at tribal.
Once they were in final tribal council,
Aubrey did an excellent job of making her points,
standing by what she did and explaining why
and ensuring she got the credit she deserved.
as Tiffany told Mike Bloom, Aubrey knocked it out of the park.
She said, yeah, I didn't keep any secrets.
I told all y'all business if I felt it was advantageous to me.
And I'm like, you know what?
I respect it.
Aubrey owned it.
She stood on business and I have no choice but to respect it with my vote.
Aubrey also told Rob on the red carpet that after all her studying,
she knew she had to tell her story without invalidating the jurors' stories,
which is important because, yeah, we often say it.
Everyone is the hero of their own story.
You can knock someone down and expect them to vote for you like Jonathan did with D.
Right.
Yeah.
So, yeah.
So Aubrey made sure to tell her story and show how she was the hero of it.
And I mentioned in Rule 6, it's not clear to me how much of her overall story impacted
everyone's votes.
We discussed that.
We know Rizzo talked about voting for Aubrey's overall story.
Again, I don't think that's why most of the jury gave her the win.
But even if it is, part of winning over the jury is knowing what they want to hear and how to get them there.
Again, I still don't think that's the reason.
I will need evidence to change my mind.
Like if some of the other jurors come out and say, yeah, that's why we did it, fine.
But I know some people, many of whom coincidentally didn't like Aubrey to begin,
with have said and we'll continue to say, oh, she just got the votes because of that.
But as I said earlier, we've gone through a lot of reasons.
She was easily the best out of this final three with or without that story.
And I think it's interesting when you look at the jury and the way that they were posing
the questions and the things that they were really focusing on.
They were focusing on the present, the now, what she was doing in the game.
and I think that those were the aspects that seemed to be respected the most.
It wasn't like, oh, but, you know, no one was like, Aubrey, how did you,
how did you change from the last time you played?
The questions were like about 50 and what she was doing in 50.
And the focus seemed to be on the game mechanics that were happening in 50,
as opposed to necessarily the story.
She did offer that as her story.
And she did talk about how she learned from.
those previous times and what she then did in this game.
So, yeah, well, Rizzo did reference that that was part of why he voted for her, sure.
But again, you can't forget about those things, but it has to be a combination then, right?
Where it's like, okay, that was then, but now this is what I did here.
And that's what I want credit for.
And I think that's really what she highlighted in referencing the past, but then this is what I
learned from it.
And so this is what I put into action in order to get people to vote for her.
Yes. Now, as for Jonathan's story, we saw that he stuck to it too much at times. Like, he continued to
insist he was the key driver of the Aussie vote, even after Joe had verified that he wasn't.
And he talked about the Camilla and D votes, noting that he instigated the D blowup, which
he probably should have realized would not exactly endear him to her. But I think to this day,
he still doesn't realize that. Indeed, if Jonathan really wants to know what he did wrong,
he should talk to Rizzo, who told Mike Bloom,
obviously he kind of mismanaged the jury in the earlier half of the merge,
and I knew that.
Also, Sam Phelan pointed out on the finale recap podcast
that Jonathan didn't understand what jurors wanted to hear at times.
As I mentioned in Rule 3, when they asked for examples of adaptability,
he talked about changing this time from last.
But like you were just talking about, again,
they wanted to know in this season.
Yes, yes.
When Christian asked for narratives, he didn't really give one.
And then again, he literally had to ask for an explanation of what Ozzy meant by Aubrey playing the middle.
Yeah.
And I do think that there is something to be said about owning your game,
but then also like giving other people flowers when you're sitting there.
Like talking about what, like he could have taken the Aussie vote and really flip that around and gained Ozies like
admiration by acknowledging, I knew I couldn't beat you. That's what he told Ozzy when he voted him out, right?
Like when he was like saying goodbye, he's like, I couldn't beat you. And so like, why not make Ozzy feel really great in that moment and tell Ozzy, like, the reason I was focusing on you, Ozzie was because I couldn't sit next to you in the end. Like you're an incredible player. Like build that person up. Make them feel great about who they are as a player because then Ozzy might sit there and go, oh, well, look at that. He's given, he's giving me credit for
the game I played. That's what they want to hear as a juror. So I don't think that he spent any time
recognizing the other players. Not that Aubrey necessarily was doing that, but Aubrey wasn't
dismissing other people's games or making them feel less than. And Jonathan was highlighting those
moments like the D component where he acknowledged what he had done with D. And so you can leave a bad
taste in people's mouth when you do stuff like that instead of building them up and then
expecting them to vote for you because you built them up.
Yeah.
Now, I will say, of course, tribal council highly edited, you know, down.
Yes.
So is it possible he said something like that and they just didn't show it because it ended
up not mattering?
Yeah, it's possible.
But certainly nothing we saw or had any indication about that he did that.
Right.
And of course, we've talked about this before, but we know Jonathan is blaming other people
for his loss.
I referenced it earlier, but he complained to Mike Bloom.
Miss Surrey basically rallied the troops when she got back to Ponderosa.
And that's part of the reason I think I lost.
Do you think she just has the influence in the game like she did where she's got four people
asking her, hey, how do we vote?
You don't think they're doing that at Ponderosa?
And is it by happenstance that the people that surrounded her and asked her, well, how do we
vote are the same people that didn't vote for me in the finale?
First of all, this is really insulting to everyone who didn't vote for him.
it makes it sound like they had not only no agency in their own game,
but even in their own jury votes.
Okay, working with Surrey in the game is a lot different
than assuming everyone will mindlessly listen to her in Ponderosa.
I mean, he ran every idea through her in the game.
He wouldn't do the Ozzy thing without talking to her, all of that.
But he's going to criticize other people for doing the same thing.
So is he saying that if he made a lot of,
it to jury instead, he would have just voted however she said?
Is he, you know, is he giving away his own agency in the jury?
You can't have it both ways.
Yeah.
And have it both ways.
Yeah.
And then Jonathan also complained about other things, some of which we've talked about
earlier.
He told Dalton Ross, Ozzy not voting for me.
I would have thought that he would give me the credit because he's the challenge beast.
I outsmarted Ozzie in a lot of ways.
And I didn't really get credit where credit was due.
Now, we talked previously about him saying similar things about Devons and Dee.
Like he wanted to determine how they should vote and why it was for him.
One thing Jonathan talked about in his pregame interviews was that he learned from Boston Rob
to see the game through the eyes of others.
And I do think during the season, he did a better job of that.
But he's clearly not doing so well when analyzing the juries.
He thinks various people should have voted for him, but his reasons are not good.
And they only see it through his own perspective.
of not their percent.
Yes. 100%.
Yeah.
Now, overall, Jonathan told Dalton Ross,
I believe deep in my heart that I played the better game.
I know I did.
But because Aubrey's played five times, four times,
that weighed on a lot of the jury votes.
And is that fair?
That's up to the fans and up to Survivor to decide.
But if that's a jury, then I'm confused, you know.
He did this a lot.
He would toss out something he was complaining about
and then pretend he wasn't actually complaining,
but just raising a point that other people could debate.
Like, please, don't insult our intelligence.
It's obvious what you're doing.
Just say it.
If you're not, you're not fooling anyone.
And like I said earlier,
if you were just that worried about Aubrey winning
because of her overall story arc,
you should have gotten rid of her.
Plus, Jonathan also told Dalton,
I knew that if I kept Aubrey and Tiffany around,
that it would be hard for me.
I knew that the shot for me to win was clear.
I had to get Joe and Ozzy.
I knew that if I took Tiffany or Aubrey to the end, I would lose the game.
I called it.
Like at the beginning of the finale, I said, if they make it, they win.
And it's not necessarily that I played a worse game, but I know the jury.
So I knew how it was going to go.
Okay, so let's track this.
He knew it would be the outcome.
He still went with his plan.
It seems to me we've found the problem here.
We've identified it.
Now, sure, getting rid of one of them earlier would have shifted the game board and left someone else in.
But that's exactly what Aubrey meant about diffusing the bomb in the right order.
You have to figure out who you want there at the end and who you don't.
And also, you can't say I knew it would end this way and then complain about it ending.
Well, it was all Saracel's fault.
Yes.
And D's and Ozzy's and Devons.
Yeah, it makes perfect sense.
Yeah. Another strange thing Jonathan told Dalton was,
I was going to build a ranch for women and children down in Honduras.
That's what I was going to do with the money.
But this season, they didn't even ask what you were going to do with the money.
It's so different.
If you're supposed to be able to play the game equipped to each person that you kicked out,
that's impossible because that's 11 different games if there's 11 people on the jury.
It's impossible to play 11 different games.
Okay.
first, let's address them not asking what you're going to do with the money.
Good.
They never should ask that question.
It's a dumb question.
It goes outside the scope of the game.
I hate it.
Yes.
Agreed.
Yeah.
Yeah, Jonathan acted like, oh, he even said it's so different.
Like, it should be mandatory.
No, if you go back and count the seasons,
the number of times they ask that question is much lower, thankfully,
than the number of times they don't ask that question.
Yeah.
Secondly, he's complaining.
about having to cater to the jury.
That's kind of the whole concept of a jury.
And you don't have to cater to all 11, just a majority.
But the only ones he managed to get were the ones that were with him since before the game began.
Yes.
Yeah, so really not too much catering happening there.
No.
And again, you can't complain.
Oh, the jury didn't go with me when you then later say, well, it's impossible to cater to them.
Yeah. Yeah. And it is, it's just, and I think some of it, I've already mentioned this, it's got to be really kind of a crushing moment to then realize you've lost $2 million. Right. And you were kind of hoping that you were going to pull it out. And now you're having to replay your whole game in your head and you're having to answer all of these questions of people who are interviewing you. So I can see why it would be a difficult.
thing for him to maneuver through.
But at the same time, if he's
recognizing who he's going to lose against
before he gets there, and then that's what happens,
you could be like, oh, I saw that coming.
I knew that was going to happen because you didn't do
anything to stop that from happening.
And then when you actually were speaking to the jury
in the way that you were, you weren't trying to stop that
from happening. Like he could have said, listen,
I've been worried about Aubrey for a really long time.
But this is why my game is better than hers.
And try use that to his advantage then.
Be like, I know what you're probably all thinking about Aubrey.
Well, gee, she's been here four times.
And this is her story.
And so maybe try to minimize that component in regards to Aubrey
if you knew that that was going to be a potential issue,
which he didn't do.
Yeah, that's exactly it.
If you're worried they're going to vote for her
because of her overall story.
Say something in final tribal council to knock it down.
Say, look, do I think Aubrey has a great four-season arc?
Yes, but it's not about the arc.
It's about this season.
Yes, exactly.
That's what you got to do.
You have to keep coming back to that.
Now, Aubrey was doing that.
She talked about the other seasons, but brought it back to 50.
So he needed to do the same thing.
And we've already talked about his adaptability and how he focused solely
on the adaptability from last season to this season.
So he's utilizing that same story as Aubrey trying to explain his game,
but he's not bringing it back to this season.
And so it's like he's kind of he's admonishing Aubrey for doing this thing,
but then he's doing the same thing,
but he's doing it in a different way where she's kind of coming full circle with it
and he's not.
So I can understand his frustration,
but at the same time, it's like you got to pick a side.
You got to pick one.
And if this is what you're going to do,
you need to make sure that you are responding appropriately to the concerns that you have in front of that jury.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, if you want to say, focus on this season, well, first of all, you have to come up with better arguments for this season.
But, you know, I mean, that's the other thing.
He complained that they looked in his mind, they looked at everything.
But as we've talked about, she still beat you.
this season. She was better this season than you. Whether or not it was because she's played four
times. It doesn't matter. She played better than you this season. Yeah. Yeah. So,
all right, moving on to third place, Joe, he told Mike Bloom, the second I sat on that stool,
I could tell right away. I knew. I could count. I could tell you right now, like, you're not voting
for me. It didn't matter what I said. And yeah, he was right. You know, that's why everyone wanted to
take him to the end. He still tried a bit, though it wasn't exactly a great performance. For example,
he said, I was going to play like 48, be as honest as I can and take a team to the end. But I realized
the game I played in 48, I could not do here amongst these sharks. So I allowed myself the freedom
to play the game the way it needed to be played. I had to lie. I had to betray some people. And that's
why I'm sitting at final three. Now, there's a lot of things to say in that statement. But to narrow it down,
First, note that not the reason you're sitting at final three.
And also, no, you didn't really change your game.
And, you know, when he claimed he adapted and lied because he needed to, well, that's when
Ceri hit him with the jotation, which you had mentioned earlier, that every player had to
babysit him through a vote.
And she even told him how they laughed about it and talked about whose turn it was to
watch him because it was so difficult to get him firm on any vote.
Joe claimed he was hiding the fact that he was lying and cheating.
And Chrissy said she appreciated that he just didn't go to consensus but thought about it.
Okay, but the thing is that after, quote, thinking about it, he still went with the consensus anyway.
We talked about this earlier.
Oh, I have to think about it.
Oh, I have to think about it.
Okay, I'll go your way.
Every single time.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't really have much to add.
Joe, you're, I mean, you're a great person.
you really are.
But what I thought was interesting, though,
is when the thing that he said about the stools too,
when he walked in,
you actually used the word hate.
Or like that person hates me,
hates me,
hates me, hates.
And I was like,
that's,
that's kind of aggressive to,
to feel like people hate you,
as opposed to they're just not going to vote for you.
I'm very like,
I'm kind of dumbfounded,
like why you would think someone hates you
who's sitting across from you in that jury.
I think he has,
a very difficult time separating the emotion from the game.
It has to be because that's very personal to feel that about so many individuals.
And I also think that he said that in interviews after going through a lot on social media.
And yeah, are there some people on social media who have thrown a lot of personal hate at him?
Yes, there are.
but he wasn't able to separate that from objective analysis of his game on social media either.
That is why he has blocked so many people on social media.
Even some people who literally never said anything bad about him at all.
If he heard his name mentioned, blocked.
Interesting.
I'm going to go back and check.
I mean, that doesn't come back to why he lost.
It's just, you know, but yes, I do think that he has trouble separating all of that.
And, you know, Joe just isn't good in final tribal counsel.
Even when Christian gave him the opportunity to tell his story, he talked about getting
to final three both times and how he was always willing to be vulnerable.
That's not really much of a story, you know.
And a big part of it is he still doesn't understand Survivor.
Even when Dalton asked him why he thought the jury wasn't buying what he was selling,
he said, I have very strong feelings about that.
But you know, the athlete and me, the person that I am says it's my fault.
So at the end of the day, it must have been something that I didn't do or that I didn't say
or didn't do in the game that didn't spark their results.
And sure, indeed, it was.
But now I'm kind of interested to hear what those very strong feelings are.
It may have been what he eventually said about the hate.
You know, and whatever he said, I.
sorry, I doubt, I doubt they would be particularly insightful as far as the game itself goes.
Now, even though Rizzo did not make the final three, I do want to talk about him because he was preparing for the end game and it informed the decisions he made.
We talked in Rule 1 about Rizzo having heard from Emily and Devons that they didn't see him as really playing the game, which made him decide to go to the end with Jonathan and Joe.
I can't say for sure if he would have won. I think it would have been close between him and Jonathan.
and it might have even depended on final tribal council performance,
which I think we have favored Rizzo.
But, you know, that was certainly his best chance.
Yeah, I don't disagree.
I mean, I think he realized who he needed to sit next to.
And we've talked about this already,
that he aligned himself with the correct people,
but knew when to cut them.
Right.
And, you know, Rizzo himself recognizes that it would have been close.
And also that, as he told Mike Bloom,
not all the jurors see the game like how I see the game.
So I think objectively, I made all the right moves, both seasons in a row,
and I truly feel that you can say I'm delusional.
49 had I won fire, I feel like I had a really good shot at winning.
I really do feel that way.
50, I felt like if I made it to the end with Joe and Jonathan,
I had a really good shot at winning.
And I know I was super aware that people didn't respect me.
They called me lazy.
That's why I knew I had to go to the end with Joe and Jonathan,
because we all had flaws.
People didn't like Joe's honor and integrity.
People didn't like Jonathan for whatever reason.
And people thought I was a lazy bump.
I was like, great, they got to vote for one of us.
Of course, the main problem for him was the same problem for Jonathan.
They didn't expect Aubrey to win immunity at the end.
Right, right.
I love that he says people didn't like Jonathan for whatever reason.
I mean, he talked about it for other points.
You know, I think he just didn't want to go into it at that.
that moment.
Right, right.
He talked about the early jury and stuff like that.
So, all right.
Well, we certainly showed how Aubrey slayed a dragon in final tribal council.
Mm-hmm.
And it is about time to wrap things up for Aubrey and the rest of the finalists.
So while you talk about your final thoughts on them, I will get prepared here by changing
shirts again.
I first just want to say congratulations to everyone.
who came out and participated in season 50 of Survivor.
It's hard to believe that I'm sitting here talking about season 50.
It's just, it's amazing.
And it was such an honor to get to relive so many incredible histories that so many of you have
and to be a part of your continued journey and survivors.
So thank you to everyone who came out and put themselves in front of these cameras,
yet again, to be torn apart on social media,
to be spoken about by people like David Bloomberg and myself.
And we really do appreciate the fact that you all gave it your best and really put your heart into it.
So thank you for that.
To the final five and especially to Aubrey, I have to say congratulations.
I'll start there.
Aubrey, you are just a force.
I am so impressed with your tenacity, your willingness to put yourself back into this game
that you removed yourself from the last time you played.
you really stepped away from Survivor, but now you're back in it.
And you are feeling that same feeling that so many of us have had where you become addicted
once you insert yourself again.
You've had an opportunity to do this four times.
And the fact that you pulled it out this time, I think, is incredible.
So congratulations to you.
And I'm going to limit my comments very much because I'm sure that David Bloomberg has
a significant amount of things to say about everyone.
but to Jonathan, Joe, Rizzo, and Tiffany, I think you are all incredible in your own right.
There are certain components about all of you that make you a really great person.
There are components about each of you that make you a great survivor player.
There are also components of all of you, including Aubrey, that might not work so well for the game.
And you just have to find those parts of yourself that are going to get you to the end and help you win.
You all have made it to the end twice now, like a final five.
I mean, like, well, except Tiffany.
You weren't this first time in Final Five,
but you've all managed to get to so many places in this game
that other people like myself wish we could have.
So congratulations for doing so.
Congratulations for making it as far as you did
and for the game that you played.
And thank you for putting yourself out there for all of us.
So David Bloomberg,
why don't you take it away and do your final thoughts
about all five of these incredible individuals?
Well, Aubrey came into the season,
having made some concrete changes to the way she intended to play.
And she stuck by them.
She studied the game.
She learned from past winners.
She even studied the players she'd be up against.
And she said, I don't think that anyone deserves anything in Survivor.
I believe that you earn it.
And you have a little bit of luck.
All that homework paid off to the tune of $2 million.
Did she have some luck?
Of course.
Every survivor winner needs at least some.
Whether it's a rock draw splitting the tribe or a random swine
or being picked to go on a journey or even just what starting tribe you're on.
But that's where the earning it part comes in.
She even talked about that in episode six, saying something similar and adding that you
need to be receptive to people and not close any doors, things that she based her strategy on.
And you take whatever luck you're given, good or bad, and you make the most of it.
Plus, there were certain things that definitely were not luck, even though they might have
initially appeared to be, like her winning the Final Four challenge, which we know happened because
she specifically practiced, as we have discussed. And heck, Aubrey wouldn't have even been on
Survivor 50 if it hadn't been for an interesting series of events. She did a talking with T-Bird
podcast here on RHEP that started her thinking about returning again. She was cut from 50 and then
added back when someone else dropped out or was dropped. It's all part of the ebb and flow of events
going on around the game.
Jonathan obviously would have preferred that she didn't get that callback.
Because maybe then he would have won.
Of course, there's no way to know.
I know we've been critical of certain aspects of his game, deservedly so,
and listening to him blaming so many other people in his interviews
while simultaneously trying to pretend he wasn't blaming them,
that was painful.
But putting that aside, he also did homework and changed his game.
He improved his strategy.
just not enough. He improved some of his flexibility, just not enough. As I said earlier,
just saying you did better doesn't automatically mean you were the best, especially when we add
in the areas where he still needs improvement, most especially the social game and understanding
what actual connections are about. He still might have been able to win if he had planned out
the eliminations with a bit more foresight. Then there's third place, Joe.
His strategic game was pretty much that he not only was in one alliance this time,
he was in two.
And he agreed to go along with votes he didn't like.
So, of course, if it had been up to him, he would have voted emotionally multiple times,
but others stopped him.
And then he pissed off like his whole starting tribe, which you obviously shouldn't do.
But they decided to keep him as a vote anyway.
Almost everything that happened to move him forward was in spite of his game,
not because of it.
This is why I say someone's eventual placement doesn't necessarily represent how good they are.
I see people saying like, he got third place twice.
He must be a good player.
No, no, it does not mean that.
Specifically to him, he made third place twice because he was doing things wrong.
And people knew he would be easy to beat.
So of course he took them along.
They took him along.
sorry. He's good at challenges. He's good at getting along with those who share exactly the same
viewpoints as he does. But like I said, we should not judge according to how far someone gets for
exactly this reason. People were using him as their extra vote all season long. To be perfectly
blunt, he was more of an accessory than a player. Rizzo came in fourth place, losing in firemaking,
in literal back-to-back seasons.
And he played each one differently.
This time, he had to quickly overcome what people thought of him
based on a two-second preview from 49.
And he did it.
Sure, the people who believe working at camp
is the most important aspect of Survivor
were never happy with him.
But the fact is, he's right and they're wrong.
If you're there to play Survivor, play Survivor.
Don't play Camp.
The one downside, of course, is the aspect of the game
that you really do have to adjust to those around you,
even if you disagree with them.
Another way is to find better people to be around,
like Sarihanasi.
Rizzo adapted throughout the game,
such as when he heard from Emily and Devons
how others saw him.
He knew what his potential winning conditions were,
and he almost got them,
if only Aubrey hadn't been practicing some motion.
Tiffany also did a great job in showing everyone
exactly why she was chosen to be on 50,
even though she was the player, more viewers scratched their heads about when the cast announcement came out.
Say what you want.
Casting clearly saw her potential and she lived up to it.
Looking back to the pregame, it's interesting because Savannah had an incredibly accurate read of Tiffany.
She told Mike Bloom back then, I think Tiff is going to be very under the radar, especially at the beginning.
And I think that's going to give her a huge advantage out there.
I don't think people are going to realize how big of a threat TIF actually is.
Because honestly, I feel like she will have an amazing social game.
I feel like she'll be able to hold her own in some of the challenges.
And I feel like before any of us realize, she'll end up being at the final three or something.
If I did not know for sure that that was all from the pregame, I would have thought Savannah was telling us after the fact and pretending.
But no, this was, Mike recorded it before the game began.
Tiffany did all those things, but she came half a puzzle piece away from potentially making final three, which would have given her the win.
Unfortunately, that's what can happen once you do rise up and become a threat, which is why the timing and the situation with others with around you is so important.
Back when the intro credits first aired, I noticed and pointed out.
out online, that it was kind of a funny choice to show Aubrey jumping off the platform
into the water and getting her key because she was the only one who actually missed on her
first try. So that scene actually showed her second. I was like, huh, that's odd that they would
show that. Someone, and I'm sorry, I don't remember who, pointed out at the time, well, maybe it's
because they wanted to show that although she missed, she got right back up and accomplished that.
And I was like, yeah, I hope so, but I don't believe.
it was that deep. Now I do. I absolutely think that scene was put in the intro credits for that
purpose, those sneaky, sneaky editors. In the end, I think Aubrey summed up everything well
when she was answering Christian's question about her story. She changed who she was.
She changed how she played. She did everything to get to the end. Indeed. She's
did all of those things. And that is why Aubrey 1 and Jonathan, Joe, Rizzo, and Tiffany lost.
Well, there we are. That's that. Yes. Well, that's almost that because before we head off for
Survivor's summer vacation, I want to remind everyone that the rules we just discussed are available
in poster form and, of course, poster on a T-shirt form, and in checklist form. All of those are,
at rob has a website.com slash yX lost feed.
And of course, those were drawn by Eric Reichenbach,
the same person who made the t-shirt that I was wearing about slaying dragons in tribal.
Yes.
And then Jessica, how can people reach us in the long summer off season if they just want to talk to us?
If you just want to talk to us,
you can look for me at Jessica Lewis 89 on Blue Sky and Twitter.
I am at Jessica Lewis 6-789 on Instagram.
my social media is not what it used to be.
I am a little bit busy in other aspects of my existence.
However, the gentleman who sits next to me,
David Bloomberg, is one social media guru
who continues to put content on multiple platforms.
So many platforms, he has a link tree
that allows you to find all of his incredible content.
So David Bloomberg, why don't you tell them about your link tree?
Yes, you can find all of my various accounts
at Linktree slash David Bloomberg, or you could find me directly on Blue Sky as at David
Bloomberg and on YouTube, TikTok and Instagram is at David Bloomberg TV.
I have still been posting two or three reality TV short videos per day.
Obviously, we're finishing off Survivor 50 at this point, but the Traders, New Zealand
starts in a week, basically.
And then, of course, on July 9th, Big Brother is returning.
The Traders India will be in there somewhere, so I'm sure I will have.
about all of that. And besides doing videos on those, I will be podcasting about the two international
traders seasons on the Trader and, of course, Big Brothers version of YBlank Lost right here on
RHAP. So be sure to follow me everywhere so we don't lose touch during the off season.
Yes. And as we wrap things up, I want to encourage people once again to check out the RHAPP
patron program at Rob Hessell website.com slash patron. Get access to.
to all the special podcasts
and that will continue
into Big Brother
plus Facebook groups
and Discord
and supporting shows
like ours and everything
on the network
at Robhaswebbsite.com
slash patron
and make sure you're
subscribed to all
of the RHAP
Survivor Podcasts
by going to
we knowsurvivor.com
or now that we're
transitioning to Big Brother
we know realityTV.com
you can see
all the various
RHAP podcasts there
and just
find a
ton of great content.
Yes, and thank you to everyone at RHAP for all of that amazing content that you do create.
In addition to Survivor and everything else that exists there, it's amazing how many things are
continued to be added.
And it's just amazing.
So thank you to RHAP.
Thank you to Scott St. Pierre for the editing that you do not only for this podcast, but all
of that amazing content that you did hear us discuss.
Thank you to Will from America for the theme song that you did create for the audio version of
the Y Blank Lost podcast.
And David, I don't have to do predictions.
This is amazing.
I feel so good right now.
Give me some time.
I need to cleanse my soul.
I need to like breathe for a minute and not have to concern myself with whose life I'm
about to destroy with my next prediction.
So yeah, no, we don't we don't need to go down that path just yet.
So but thank you, David, for giving you.
me some reprieve in that.
Yes, yes. Let me add my thanks.
A couple of people behind the scenes that, you know, sometimes we mention sometimes we just
include them as a group.
You know, Doug does the graphics and Jess does the production along with Scott.
And there are other people there too.
And there's just a lot of moving parts.
And of course, thank you to Rob for having this network and having us on.
Yes, thank you, Rob.
Most importantly, Jessica, thank you for all the hard work you put in and the great insights you share with us all here all season long.
I hope you have a great summer.
I know you will be watching Big Brother intently.
Hoping to have a challenge where they have to sit on bananas that are going on.
Oh, my favorite.
A special thanks to all the listeners and viewers and everyone who shares nice comments.
and thoughts with us, we obviously wouldn't be here without you, and we appreciate you all.
Yes, and I add a sentiment.
Thank you to everyone who listens to all of this and who is commenting politely about us as well.
And David, listen, you're just amazing, and I think this is great.
And I know that my mom enjoys listening to us.
So I appreciate your willingness to continue to do this.
You put so much work into this, and it's really impressive and incredible.
So thank you for allowing me along this journey with you.
All right. Well, with that, like I said, you can find us at a whole bunch of other places between now and the next Survivor season.
But if you don't watch any of those shows, we'll be right back here come probably September.
So we will see you then. Bye.
Bye.
