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Survivor:
The Amazon
Episode Recaps
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All the crap that happened in S4, S5, S6. |
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There are few things more frightening than the prospect of an expanded, 90-minute episode of Survivor. Okay, the bloated, two-hour finale episode of Survivor: The Australian Outback easily tops that in overall fear factor, we suppose. And we'll allow that, in retrospect, the first installment of S6 wasn't nearly that bad. First, thanks to CBS's excellent marketing and sales department, the extra 30 minutes were 97% filled with commercials, and second, being the first episode, there wasn't much room to fill the remainder with scenes of the contestants crying. All in all, a pretty decent deal. That is, of course, not to mention that this episode dealt with the big issue of "Can men and women compete equally on a level playing field?" Coming as it did from the Mark Burnett Production House of Artistic Excellence, that meant it approached this question by seizing the ancient stereotype that men are superior to women, wringing every last drop of video it could out of it, tossing it aside, then replacing it with hundreds of other equally ridiculous myths. Such as: "Women are incompetent at building things," "Women are squeamish around spiders," "Men are sex-obsessed, Neanderthal brutes," "Old (barely 50) men are bossy," "Non-white men are lazy (even if they're Asian-American!)," "Old (47-year-old) women can't hack it in the wild," and best of all, "Jeff Probst is a charming TV personality." But don't take our word for it, let's stroll back through and see for ourselves, shall we? We start off, as usual, with the 16 contestants trapped on a boat. Probst goes through his spiel about how forbidding the Amazon is, and how important the trees are (this is a narrative device known as "foreshadowing," because in a few minutes, most of the trees will have been hacked down by a bunch of people with machetes). Eventually, Probst stops talking, which causes the boat to stop (Probst Hot Air Power is high on the list of alternative energy sources government researchers are currently investigating). Seeing as that's as good a place is any, he drops a rope ladder down to the two canoes the boats have been towing, and starts sending the women down into the yellow one. You'd think there would be looks of shock and yelps of "WTF?" when Probst sends the fifth woman to the yellow tribe, but these are largely absent (Dave is shown glowering, but he was doing that during Probst's speech, as well), but luckily, the sound editing department saw through this problem and added some very subtle 200 dB sound effects to drive this point home: the (yellow) Jaburu tribe will be all women. Okay, so it's not entirely true that there was no reaction to this: The cameras did focus at that point on Ryan, who was staring, slack-jawed, at Probst, or possibly Heidi's chest. But judging from his post-boot interviews, that appears to be Ryan's natural state, and it was later revealed that it took rocket scientist Dave two full days to explain to Ryan that the women who were supposed to be on the tribe hadn't gotten held up at the store with the beer and the burgers, as that sneaky Rob had tried to tell him. "Okay," Ryan asked, "but what about Butch? Isn't she a lesbian?" Shaking his head, Dave explained again through gritted teeth, "No, that's his name. Okay, his real name is actually Wilbur, but haven't you noticed he has a mustache?" Ryan, after thinking it over carefully for two hours, eventually counters with "Oh, I thought that was a political statement." Apart from this, most of the early confessionals fall into one of two categories: chipper women confidently predicting they will beat the men, and chipper men openly wondering if there is a mercy rule in Survivor, like if the women lose the first seven challenges, or something. Or at least that's what goes on until the women pull up to their camp several days after the men have reached theirs, built a shelter, a barbecue pit, eight couches, a plasma TV with a satellite dish, and a basement in which they're fermenting and distilling the manioc root the producers gave them (sadly, they are unable to fashion a remote control until about the fifth episode, meaning all this work is for naught). As the women disembark at Camp Jaburu, Christy reveals she's (cue more subtle "dramatic" musical overdubbing) deaf! Sure, she can tell what everyone is saying as long as they don't wear their buffs like bank robbers, or turn away from her while talking, but Heidi and Jenna are still broken up about this. "I mean seriously," Jenna whines, "What if we want to talk about shopping from like, 2 a.m. to 4:30 a.m., while we're wearing our beauty masks, and we still haven't gotten our fire lit or anything? What will we do then? There's just no way this is going to work." Meanwhile, back at the men's camp, we're introduced to Rob. As is traditional for Survivors named Rob (this is actually part of the game rules), he has no chance of winning, and is around solely for comic relief. And by "comic," we mean talking in a cocksure manner about his chances, and saying things that he thinks are hilarious, which ends up being funny mainly because he seems so convinced of his own greatness. Okay, well that and his adventures with machetes. Naturally, being eight men armed with machetes in the middle of a rain forest, the Tambaqui tribe members are out in force, chopping down everything in sight. Because Survivor is all about helping developing countries with activities they're struggling to complete, such as deforestation of the Amazon. But mainly, we think we were shown this so that we could see Rob flailing away wildly at a sapling (while lamenting his missed career opportunity as a lumberjack), because it helps explain why his parents wouldn't let him have a machete back home. Around this time, four of the guys huddle around a stack of former rain forest, to test the important question: "Does kerosene burn?" As it turns out, it appears to do so quite well (and the other four guys are pissed off that they didn't get to participate in the experiment). In contrast, the women, always up for a challenge, content themselves with examining the flammability of damp twigs. Ever plucky, they keep at it for several hours. Which gives Heidi time to complain privately that Deena is too bossy, and way too concerned with frivolous things like fires and shelter.
By
the second day, the routine of camp life has begun to set in. The men
celebrate the completion of their shelter with a clanging of machetes
(while Roger privately mutters that Daniel and Ryan are "useless").
And the women, well, they attend to important matters, such as squashing
tarantulas and boiling lightly-soiled buffs. Bossy Deena again questions
the logic of such behavior, when there's still a shelter to be built
and food to be found. Apparently, however, she consoles herself by quietly
revisiting her joy at being able to pee in front of other women, since
no mention is made of the barely-started shelter for the remainder of
the episode. |
