Survivor has always been a show about who can be the shittiest person
to intervene in situations where they should. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy: producers think seeing the worst of people makes for the best TV, in part, because it’s provided as the only option. And throughout the 39 seasons ofa show in which contestants are prone to sacrificing castmates, their own personal wellbeing, and any semblance of truth and reality—there have been plenty of opportunities for intervention.
“I was sexually violated,” Hawk said, in response to Probst’s dodge. “It wasn’t sorta, Jeff.” Probst, seemingly, asked the other tribe if they witnessed this behavior, although Hawk and Hatch were completely obstructed from their view. After fumbling for a few minutes, Probst ultimately did nothing except ask that a boat be brought quickly to escort her off the island since she’d chosen to remove herself from the game.
Physical harassment isn’t the only low contestants have stooped to in an attempt to win the game. In Season 34, Jeff Varner outed fellow competitor Zeke Smith as transgender—an attempt to paint Smith as a liar who could not be trusted. Varner cited Smith’s decision to not come out as trans on the show as the basis for his elimination; in a rare moment of human decency, his cohort responded by eliminating Varner instead.
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