Great season. And a great ending.
Great season. And a great ending.
In my head, Keith makes the final two and reveals to the jury that he is actually a board certified neurosurgeon with a fellowship from John Hopkins. He detests spitting, and hopes to finally obtain the title of Sole Survivor so he can return to his thriving practice on the banks of the Seine river.
Monday morning quarterback: In Joe's shoes, I'd make the argument that I gave my all in physical challenges, but the tank finally ran out of fuel, so worry about a social threat instead. Also, trying to get someone thrown out because of their "goat" potential is a non-starter as an argument. However, since he didn't…
In retrospect, I wonder if Fish's obsession with Joe brought down Jeremy as well. Jeremy was sitting pretty- head of an alliance with superior numbers and two idols. But Fish convinced Jeremy he was at the bottom, and Jeremy then started cannibalizing his own alliance. Now he has only one idol, a target on his back,…
Disagree. Ciera started stirring up trouble publicly after seeing Kass start and nearly got booted for it. Plotting in private gains allies and changes the game. Talking strategy in front of everyone just annoys people and puts a target on your back.
I'm more surprised that Fish convinced Jeremy to flip up the alliance to go after Joe (and in proxy, Joe's friend Wiggleswoth) instead of knocking off the witches. As alliance leader with a clear majority, Jeremy was in the driver's seat and had a good idea in using Joe as a late game shield.
San Juan had a lot of unpleasant people, and the few real competitors pushed each other out mid-game. Overly high goat quotient.
Keith is narrowly defeated by Joe in the spitting challenge.
Joe has been wearing that necklace so long I keep forgetting he's not actually the king of Cambodia.
"If I don't make it out of Survivor, tell my girlfriend I said… hello."