Survivor (franchise): Difference between revisions
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{{short description| Reality television franchise}} |
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{{Hatnote|Not to be confused with [[Survivors (1975 TV series)|Survivors]], a British post-apocalyptic series.}} |
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{{About|the international reality TV series||Survivor (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Infobox television |
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{{Use mdy dates|date= November 2019}} |
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| show_name = Survivor |
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{{Globalize|date=October 2021}} |
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| image = 400px-Survivor.borneo.logo.png |
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{{Infobox media franchise |
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| caption = A recreation of the logo for the first U.S. ''Survivor'' season, ''[[Survivor: Borneo]]''. |
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| title = Survivor |
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| show_name_2 = ''Expedition Robinson''<br>''Koh-Lanta'' |
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| image = 400px-Survivor.borneo.logo.png |
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| genre = [[Entertainment]]<br>[[Reality television]] |
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| caption = A recreation of the logo for the first American ''Survivor'' season, ''[[Survivor: Borneo]]''. |
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| creator = [[Charlie Parsons]] |
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| creator = [[Charlie Parsons]], [[Waheed Alli, Baron Alli]] and [[Planet 24]] |
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| based_on = |
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| origin = ''[[Robinson (TV series)|Expedition Robinson]]'' (Sweden) |
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| developer = [[Planet 24]] |
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| owner = [[Banijay Entertainment (company)|Banijay Entertainment]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://deadline.com/2017/07/banijay-group-raises-416-million-castaway-survivor-acquisition-1202125847/|title=Banijay Raises $416M To Help Finance Acquisition Of 'Survivor's Castaway Prods|first=Nancy|last=Tartaglione|date=July 10, 2017}}</ref> |
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| distributor = Castaway Television Productions Ltd |
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| years = 1997–present |
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| channel = [[Sveriges Television]] (SVT) |
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| composer = |
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| country = [[United Kingdom]] |
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| first_run = [[Sweden]] |
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| first_aired = {{Start date|1997|09|13|df=y}} |
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| last_aired = present |
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| production_website = http://www.castawaytelevision.com/home/ |
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}} |
}} |
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'''''Survivor''''' is a [[ |
'''''Survivor''''' is a [[reality competition|reality-competition]] television franchise produced globally. The show features a group of contestants deliberately marooned in an isolated location, where they must provide basic survival necessities for themselves. The contestants compete in challenges for rewards and [[immunity (reality television)|immunity]] from elimination. The contestants are progressively eliminated from the game as they are voted out by their fellow contestants until only one remains to be awarded the grand prize and named the "Sole Survivor". |
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The |
The British television producer [[Charlie Parsons]] developed the format for ''Survivor'' in 1992 for [[Planet 24]], a United Kingdom television production company; the Swedish version, which debuted in September 1997 as ''[[Robinson (TV series)|Expedition Robinson]]'', became the first ''Survivor'' series to be broadcast on television. Since its launch in 2000, the flagship [[Survivor (American TV series)|American version of ''Survivor'']] has aired [[Lists of Survivor (American TV series) episodes|46 seasons of the show]], with the [[Survivor 47|47th]] season premiering in September 2024. |
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==Format== |
==Format== |
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''Survivor'', through its seasons and various international versions, has maintained the basic premise of the game despite several new rules and gameplay twists introduced in later seasons. In the game, |
''Survivor'', through its seasons and various international versions, has maintained the basic premise of the game despite several new rules and gameplay twists introduced in later seasons. In the game, the contestants, known as castaways, are split into tribes and assigned separate camps at the filming location, typically a tropical setting. As a tribe, the castaways must survive the elements, construct shelter, build fire, look for water, and scrounge for food and other necessities for the entire length of the game, which is generally around 39 days for most versions including the American version, but has ranged from 20 days (as in [[Koh-Lanta#Special seasons|some French special seasons]]) to over 150 days (as in [[Survivor Turkey#Season Nine (2015): All-Stars|some seasons of the Turkish edition]]). In the first half of the game, the tribes face off in challenges, some for rewards of food, shelter, or luxury items, while others are for immunity, preventing the winning tribe from having to go to the next Tribal Council. At Tribal Council, the tribes discuss the events of the last few days with the host asking questions, and then vote out one of their own players, eliminating them from the game. |
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In the second half of the game, the tribes are merged into a single tribe, and challenges are played at an individual level for individual rewards and immunity. At subsequent Tribal Councils, those eliminated start to form the jury, who sit in on all subsequent Tribal Councils but otherwise do not participate. When only two or three castaways remain, those castaways attend |
In the second half of the game, the tribes are merged into a single tribe, and challenges are played at an individual level for individual rewards and immunity. At subsequent Tribal Councils, those eliminated start to form the jury, who sit in on all subsequent Tribal Councils but otherwise do not participate. When only two or three castaways remain, those castaways attend the Final Tribal Council, where the jury is given the opportunity to ask them questions. After this, the jury members then vote to decide which of the remaining castaways should be declared the Sole Survivor and be awarded the grand prize. |
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Episodes typically cover the events that occurred over two to three days since the start of the game or previous Tribal Council, including Challenges and events that occur at the tribes' camps. Each episode typically ends with the Tribal Council and subsequent elimination of the voted-out player. |
Episodes typically cover the events that occurred over two to three days since the start of the game or previous Tribal Council, including Challenges and events that occur at the tribes' camps. Each episode typically ends with the Tribal Council and the subsequent elimination of the voted-out player. The final episode will typically speed up the gameplay of the final couple of eliminations (which occur daily), followed by the Final Tribal Council on the final day of the completion. Many versions of the show will follow the final episode with a live reunion, during which the votes from the Jury are counted, and a "Sole Survivor" is declared, and the players reunite to discuss their experience on the island. |
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The following description of the show is based primarily on the [[Survivor ( |
The following description of the show is based primarily on the [[Survivor (American TV series)|American version]] of ''Survivor'', though the general format applies to all international versions. |
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===Castaways and tribes=== |
===Castaways and tribes=== |
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[[File:Survivor-camp.jpg|right|thumb|The tribe camp near the end of ''[[Survivor: Borneo]]''. Tribes must build themselves basic shelters from natural resources and through reward items earned during the competition.]] |
[[File:Survivor-camp.jpg|right|thumb|The tribe camp near the end of ''[[Survivor: Borneo]]''. Tribes must build themselves basic shelters from natural resources and through reward items earned during the competition.]] |
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Players for each season are selected through applicants and casting calls, down-selecting to between |
Players for each season are selected through applicants and casting calls, down-selecting to between 16 and 20 players and additional alternates. American version host [[Jeff Probst]] noted that while 16 castaways assist in splitting the tribes with respect to age and sex, they have used 18 or 20 to provide them "wiggle room" in case of player injury or if one should want to quit the game.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = http://popwatch.ew.com/2009/10/23/jeff-probst-blogs-survivor-samoa-episode-6/ | title = Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Samoa': episode #6 | first = Jeff | last = Probst |author-link1=Jeff Probst | magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]] | date = October 23, 2009 | access-date = October 23, 2009}}</ref> These players undergo physical and psychological evaluation to make sure they are physically and mentally fit for the survival endurance and will not likely quit during the filming period, replacing those that are questionable with the alternates. In one case, ''Fiji'', on the day before filming was to start after they had dismissed their alternates, one of the castaways opted out of the competition, forcing production to start with 19 players and adapting the activities of the first few days to accommodate the odd number of players.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://asapblogs.typepad.com/theslug/2007/01/jeff_probst_tal.html|title=Jeff Probst Talks "Survivor: Fiji"|access-date=January 12, 2007}}</ref> |
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Tribes may be predetermined by production before filming starts. Often this is done to equalize the sexes and age ranges within both tribes. Other seasons have had the tribes separated by age, gender, or |
Tribes may be predetermined by production before filming starts. Often this is done to equalize the sexes and age ranges within both tribes. Other seasons have had the tribes separated by age, gender, race or other characteristics. In other cases, the tribes may be created by the castaways through schoolyard picks. Most often, only two tribes are featured, but some seasons have begun with three or four tribes. Once assigned a tribe, each castaway is given a [[Neck gaiter|buff]] in their tribe color to aid the viewers in identifying tribal allocation. Tribes are then subsequently given names, often inspired by the local region and culture, and directions to their camps. |
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At their camps, tribes are expected to build shelter against the elements from the local trees and other resources. |
At their camps, tribes are expected to build a shelter against the elements from the local trees and other resources. Tribes are typically given minimal resources, such as a machete, water canteens, cooking pots, and staples of rice and grains, though this varies from season to season. Sometimes, tribes are provided with a water well near the camp, but require the water to be boiled to make it [[Drinking water|potable]], necessitating the need for the tribe to build a fire. The tribes are encouraged to forage off the land for food, including fruits, wild animals, and fish. |
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====Tribe swaps==== |
====Tribe swaps==== |
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In some seasons, tribe swaps |
In some seasons, tribe swaps occur where one or more players shift from one tribe to another. These new tribal designations are often determined by random draw or schoolyard pick. When these occur, those players that shift tribes are given new buffs for their new tribe and return to that tribe's camp, with any personal possessions from their former camp moved with them. In seasons with more than two tribes, tribe swaps often reduce the number of tribes to two. In ''[[Survivor: Cambodia]]'', a tribe swap increased the number of tribes from two to three; a second tribe swap later in the season reduced the number of tribes back to two. |
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Tribes that have lost too many members may be absorbed by the other remaining tribes, as seen with the Ulong tribe in ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'' and the Matsing tribe of ''[[Survivor: Philippines]]''; in the former case, the lone remaining Ulong member joined the opposing Koror tribe and the tribes were treated as if they were merged, whereas in the later case the two remaining Matsing members were randomly assigned to the two remaining tribes. Alternatively, in ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'', the tribe that placed third in a designated challenge was disbanded, with the members reallocated to the other two tribes by schoolyard pick. |
Tribes that have lost too many members may be absorbed by the other remaining tribes, as seen with the Ulong tribe in ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'' and the Matsing tribe of ''[[Survivor: Philippines]]''; in the former case, the lone remaining Ulong member joined the opposing Koror tribe and the tribes were treated as if they were merged, whereas in the later case the two remaining Matsing members were randomly assigned to the two remaining tribes. Alternatively, in ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'', the tribe that placed third in a designated challenge was disbanded, with the members reallocated to the other two tribes by schoolyard pick. |
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====Tribal merge==== |
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At a point in the middle of the game, the remaining tribes are merged into one. All of the players then live in a single camp, and are given new buffs and instructed to select a new tribe name and paint a tribe flag. The merge is often signified with a feast. Though the merge often occurs when approximately 10 to 12 players remain, the tribes have been merged with as many as 13 players (as |
At a point in or around the middle of the game, the remaining tribes are merged into one. All of the players then live in a single camp, and are given new buffs and instructed to select a new tribe name and paint a tribe flag. The merge is often signified with a feast. Though the merge often occurs when approximately 10 to 12 players remain, the tribes have been merged with as many as 13 players (as many of the seasons since ''[[Survivor: Cambodia]]'') and as few as eight (as in ''[[Survivor: Thailand]]''). |
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===Challenges=== |
===Challenges=== |
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[[File:Survivor-pi-challenge.jpg|right|thumb|Tribes compete frequently in both mental and physical challenges to win rewards or immunity, such as this race to pull cannons during the first episode of ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]''.]] |
[[File:Survivor-pi-challenge.jpg|right|thumb|Tribes compete frequently in both mental and physical challenges to win rewards or immunity, such as this race to pull cannons during the first episode of ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]''.]] |
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During both pre- and post-merge parts of the game, the castaways compete in a series of challenges. Tribes are alerted to these upcoming challenges by a message, often in rhyme, delivered to camp by the production team at a basket or box on a nearby tree; this message has come to be called "treemail", playing off the word "e-mail". The message typically hints at what the challenge might be. The message may also provide props to demonstrate this, practice equipment for the players, or a sampling of the reward. Challenges can last from a few minutes to a couple of hours. The longest Survivor challenge was 11 hours and 55 minutes in the final immunity challenge in ''Survivor: Palau''. |
During both pre- and post-merge parts of the game, the castaways compete in a series of challenges. Tribes are alerted to these upcoming challenges by a message, often in rhyme, delivered to camp by the production team at a basket or box on a nearby tree; this message has come to be called "treemail", playing off the word "e-mail". The message typically hints at what the challenge might be. The message may also provide props to demonstrate this, practice equipment for the players, or a sampling of the reward. Challenges can last from a few minutes to a couple of hours. The longest Survivor challenge was 11 hours and 55 minutes in the final immunity challenge in ''[[Survivor: Palau]]''. |
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====Tribal challenges==== |
====Tribal challenges==== |
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Prior to the merge, tribes compete against each other in challenges. These most often are multi-segment obstacle courses that include both physical and mental elements with the tribe that finishes first declared the winner; commonly, these start with tribe members collecting |
Prior to the merge, tribes compete against each other in challenges. These most often are multi-segment obstacle courses that include both physical and mental elements with the tribe that finishes first declared the winner; commonly, these start with tribe members collecting puzzle pieces that are then used to solve a puzzle by other tribe members. Other challenges may be based on winning a number of rounds of head-to-head competitions. Challenges are normally held with equal numbers of all tribes participating and in some cases equal splits of gender. Tribes with more players will be asked to sit out as many players as needed to balance the numbers, with the stipulation that those players cannot sit out in back-to-back reward and immunity challenges.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/02/26/jeff-probst-blogs-survivor-episode-3/ | title = Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Heroes vs Villains': Episode 3 | date =February 26, 2010 | access-date = February 26, 2010 | first = Jeff | last = Probst | magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]] }}</ref> When one tribe has more than twice the other tribe members, then players in the larger tribe cannot participate in back-to-back challenges. Tribes are given time to strategically decide who should sit out and who will perform the various duties on a challenge. |
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====Individual challenges==== |
====Individual challenges==== |
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After the merge, challenges are generally performed on an individual basis. These include similar obstacle courses as for team challenges, but will often also include endurance challenges, having players maintain the balance under precarious situations for as long as possible, with the last player remaining winning the challenge. |
After the merge, challenges are generally performed on an individual basis. These include similar obstacle courses as for team challenges, but will often also include endurance challenges, having players maintain the balance under precarious situations for as long as possible, with the last player remaining winning the challenge. In some cases, during post-merge challenges, the individuals will be split into separate teams, with only the winning team eligible for reward or immunity. |
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====Types of challenges==== |
====Types of challenges==== |
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Challenges can be played for rewards, immunity, or both. Rewards include food, survival equipment like flint, tarps, or fishing gear, luxury items, and short getaways from camp. Before the merge, the entire winning tribe will enjoy these rewards. Post-merge, only one player may win the reward but will be given the opportunity to select one or more other players to bring along with them on it. Individual challenge rewards may also include an advantage that can be used at the subsequent immunity challenge, such as advancing directly into the final round of the challenge without having to participate in the first round. |
Challenges can be played for rewards, immunity, or both. Rewards include food, survival equipment like flint, tarps, or fishing gear, luxury items, and short getaways from camp. Before the merge, the entire winning tribe will enjoy these rewards. Post-merge, only one player may win the reward but will be given the opportunity to select one or more other players to bring along with them on it. Individual challenge rewards may also include an advantage that can be used at the subsequent immunity challenge, such as advancing directly into the final round of the challenge without having to participate in the first round. |
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Immunity challenges provide the winning tribe or team with immunity from Tribal Council. Immunity is usually represented in a form of an idol prior to the merge, and a necklace afterwards. Prior to the merge, tribes with immunity do not attend Tribal Council, allowing them to stay intact. In seasons featuring more than two tribes, immunity will be available for all but the last place finishers, forcing this one tribe to Tribal Council. With individual immunity, those castaways still attend Tribal Council with the rest of the merged tribe, but, unless they assign immunity to someone else, are ineligible to be voted for. Winning immunity is only good for one Tribal Council; at the next immunity challenge, the tribe or castaway will be asked to give up the idol or necklace, making immunity "up for grabs". There have been a few cases in which individual immunity challenges have taken place prior to the merge whereupon usually one castaway in each tribe will be given immunity, after which both tribes will attend Tribal Council, one after the other. This is used to quickly dwindle the number of remaining castaways. |
Immunity challenges provide the winning tribe or team with immunity from Tribal Council. Immunity is usually represented in a form of an idol prior to the merge, and a necklace afterwards. Prior to the merge, tribes with immunity do not attend Tribal Council, allowing them to stay intact. In seasons featuring more than two tribes, immunity will be available for all but the last place finishers, forcing this one tribe to Tribal Council. With individual immunity, those castaways still attend Tribal Council with the rest of the merged tribe, but, unless they assign immunity to someone else, are ineligible to be voted for. Winning immunity is only good for one Tribal Council; at the next immunity challenge, the tribe or castaway will be asked to give up the idol or necklace, making immunity "up for grabs". There have been a few cases in which individual immunity challenges have taken place prior to the merge whereupon usually, one castaway in each tribe will be given immunity, after which both tribes will attend Tribal Council, one after the other. This is used to quickly dwindle the number of remaining castaways. |
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Though a wide variety of challenges have been used across the ''Survivor''{{'}}s broadcast, several challenges are frequently reused: |
Though a wide variety of challenges have been used across the ''Survivor''{{'}}s broadcast, several challenges are frequently reused: |
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* A food eating challenge, involving food items that may be local delicacies but are considered gross or revolting by the castaways. |
* A food eating challenge, involving food items that may be local delicacies but are considered gross or revolting by the castaways. These were more often seen in earlier seasons but in recent years have become much less frequent. |
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* A trivia or "know your tribe" quiz, where castaways who provide correct answers are allowed to knock other castaways out of the challenge and prevent them from winning. |
* A trivia or "know your tribe" quiz, where castaways who provide correct answers are allowed to knock other castaways out of the challenge and prevent them from winning. |
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* A "Survivor Auction", used in place of a reward challenge, in which the players are given a sum of money to use to bid on food items (both known and unknown at the time of bidding), other momentary luxuries like a bath, or advantages in the game, such as a clue to a hidden immunity idol or an advantage in the upcoming immunity challenge. |
* A "Survivor Auction", used in place of a reward challenge, in which the players are given a sum of money to use to bid on food items (both known and unknown at the time of bidding), other momentary luxuries like a bath, or advantages in the game, such as a clue to a hidden immunity idol or an advantage in the upcoming immunity challenge. |
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===Tribal Council=== |
===Tribal Council=== |
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Tribal Council is a |
Tribal Council is a special production stage located near the tribe camps. Tribes sit across a fire pit from the host while the jury members, if present, sit off to the side. A small alcove adjoins the structure for the players to cast their votes in private. Tribal Council almost always serves as an episode's finale. |
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The first time |
The first time each player attends Tribal Council, he or she takes a torch and lights it from the fire pit while the host reminds them "fire represents life in this game". During the jury phase of the game, the host will call in the jury after the tribe is seated and remind jurors they are there to gather information but not speak or otherwise participate. The host will then proceed to ask the tribe questions about what has transpired since their last visit to Tribal Council (or the beginning of the game). The host asks these questions in hopes of bringing tribal dynamics to light, and players in precarious situations may reveal information or bargain with others to keep themselves in the game. Though the viewing audience typically sees only a few minutes of each Tribal Council, some have gone on for hours. |
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The host ends the formal discussion by declaring that it is time to vote. During the second half of the game, the host then gives the immunity challenge winner(s) the choice to keep their immunity necklace for themselves or give it to another player, then reminds players they cannot cast a vote for the player(s) who finally end up wearing the necklace(s). The host then directs the players to vote in the alcove one-by-one. After writing their vote, each player has the opportunity to address the camera before placing their vote in the ballot urn. Once all players have cast their votes, the host collects the urn, tallies the votes, and returns to the fire pit with the urn. Beginning from '''''Survivor: Fiji''''', the host then offers players the opportunity to play an immunity idol prior to announcing the votes. If a player produces an idol, he or she must declare which player the idol protects (typically a player can protect anyone, including themselves). The host then confirms if the idol is legitimate, and if it is, the host declares that any vote for the protected player will not count. The host then reminds the tribe that once the votes are read, the decision is final, and the eliminated player must leave the Tribal Council area immediately. |
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When enough votes have been read to eliminate one player, any additional votes remain unread and unknown to the players (in almost all cases, the leftover votes are also for the eliminated player). The host instructs the eliminated player to bring their torch, snuffs it out, and tells the player that "the tribe has spoken" (or in rare cases, a fitting variation thereof) and "it's time for you to go." As the eliminated player walks off, the host makes a final observation before telling the remainder of the tribe to "grab your torches and head back to camp" and wishes them a good night. Occasionally, tribes who have not made fire on their own or earned it in a challenge will have to douse their torches or leave the torches at Tribal Council. |
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The eliminated player is given the opportunity to speak to a camera about their feelings of being eliminated before they are secluded with other eliminated castaways until the end of filming. Those players that will become jury members are sequestered until the end of the final Tribal Council, and are generally not allowed to discuss their voting or issues with the remaining contestants, other jury members, or the final players, in order to prevent any possible cooperation or collusion from subgroups within the jury. |
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The eliminated player has a final confessional to express their feelings about being eliminated before they are sequestered with other eliminated players until the end of filming. Later eliminated players join the jury who will decide the winner. Jurors are sequestered until the end of the Final Tribal Council. While sequestered, jurors cannot discuss their jury vote or experiences with other jurors to prevent any possible cooperation or collusion from subgroups within the jury. After casting their vote at Final Tribal Council, jurors also cannot discuss their vote with anyone lest they spoil the surprise reveal at the season finale. |
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Ties may occur. Normally, a second vote is held, with only the tied players eligible to be voted for. If this second vote does not break the stalemate, a tiebreaker is used, the nature of which has changed throughout the seasons. In ''[[Survivor: The Australian Outback]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Africa]]'', ties were resolved by eliminating the player with the higher number of previous votes cast against them. If the players had the same number of previous votes cast against them, as seen in ''Africa'', the tie was resolved by a trivia quiz about nature, with the loser eliminated. In subsequent seasons, the non-tied voters are given several minutes to deliberate, and must come to a unanimous agreement about which tied castaway to eliminate. If they are successful, their chosen castaway is eliminated; if not, all non-immune deliberators draw concealed rocks from a bag, and the castaway who draws the odd-colored rock is eliminated. This is done to punish the deliberators for not resolving the tie, and to encourage castaways to change their votes to avoid a tie. The rock draw tiebreaker has only occurred twice: in ''[[Survivor: Marquesas]]'' and in ''[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water]]''. In the case of ''Survivor: Marquesas'', the rock draw occurred with four players remaining, and the tied castaways were both involved in the deliberation and eligible for the rock draw; host Jeff Probst later revealed that this was a mistake, and that this tiebreaker should only be used when six or more players are involved.<ref>{{cite news | url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1024612_3,00.html| title = The Host Has Spoken| date = 2005-02-07 | accessdate = 2008-06-04 | publisher = Entertainment Weekly | first = Dalton | last = Ross }}</ref> Following ''Survivor: Marquesas'', all tiebreakers with four players remaining have been resolved by a firemaking challenge, in which the first tied castaway to build a small fire high enough to burn through a rope remained in the game. The firemaking tiebreaker was also used in ''Survivor: Palau'' at a Tribal Council where the losing tribe had only two members remaining. |
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Ties occasionally occur. Normally, the players vote a second time with only the tied players eligible for elimination. If this second vote does not break the tie, various tiebreakers have broken the stalemates. These tiebreakers have changed throughout the seasons. In ''[[Survivor: The Australian Outback]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Africa]]'', stalemates were broken by eliminating the player with the highest number of previous votes cast against them. If the players had the same number of previous votes cast against them, as seen in ''Africa'', the tie was resolved by a sudden-death challenge (in this case a trivia quiz about nature), with the loser eliminated. This soon led to alliances choosing a player to eliminate based on their vote history over other relevant factors. To put all players on even ground in subsequent seasons, the non-tied voters have several minutes to deliberate and must come to a unanimous decision about which tied castaway to eliminate. If they succeed, their chosen castaway is eliminated; if they do not, all non-immune deliberators draw concealed rocks from a bag, and the castaway who draws the odd-colored rock is eliminated. This encourages players to change their votes to avoid a stalemate and punishes deliberators for stalemating. The rock-draw tiebreaker has occurred three times: in ''[[Survivor: Marquesas]],'' ''[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water]]'', and ''[[Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X|Survivor: ''Millennials vs. Gen X'']]''. In ''Survivor: Marquesas'', the rock draw occurred with four players remaining, and the tied castaways were both involved in the deliberation and eligible for elimination; host Jeff Probst later revealed that this was a mistake and that this tiebreaker should only be used when six or more players are involved.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = http://www.ew.com/article/2005/02/08/jeff-probst-survivor-seasons-i-loved-and-hated | title = The Host Has Spoken | date = February 7, 2005 | access-date = June 4, 2008 | magazine = Entertainment Weekly | first = Dalton | last = Ross | archive-date = August 30, 2009 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090830083714/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,1024612_3,00.html | url-status = live }}</ref> Following ''Survivor: Marquesas'', all stalemates with four remaining players have been resolved by a fire-making duel where the first tied castaway to build a small fire high enough to burn through a rope remained in the game. The fire-making tiebreaker was also used in ''Survivor: Palau'' at a Tribal Council where the losing tribe had only two members remaining. |
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====Final Tribal Council==== |
====Final Tribal Council==== |
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When only two—or, in later seasons, three—players remain in the game, the finalists and jurors convene for Final Tribal Council. The change to three finalists presents more of a challenge to the castaway who wins the final immunity challenge: while that person has clinched their spot as a finalist, they cannot unilaterally decide which of the other remaining castaways they will compete against for jurors' votes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvguide.com/special/fallpreview07/returning5a.aspx#survivor|title=Returning Shows|access-date=September 21, 2007}}</ref> |
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At Final Tribal Council, each remaining castaway makes an opening statement to the jury. One-by-one, each juror then addresses any or all of the finalists, asking questions or commenting on the finalists' behavior in the game. Jurors often ask questions hoping for answers that will help make their decision, while comments and speeches are generally an effort to sway other jurors. The finalists are usually free to respond to these questions and comments as they see fit, though jurors can expressly forbid them to respond. Beginning with ''[[Survivor: Game Changers]]'' in the U.S., the process shifted from each juror receiving the floor one-by-one toward a moderated discussion highlighting the show's three major tentpoles: "Outwit", "Outplay" and "Outlast". After the interrogation, finalists often have one last chance to make their case. The host then reminds the jurors that they are writing their choice to win (versus writing their choice to eliminate, as in all other votes) and, for the last time, declares that it is time to vote. One-by-one, jurors vote privately in the alcove. As with regular elimination votes, jurors can choose to address the camera to explain their vote. The host then collects the urn, and in most seasons, leaves the votes unread until a live finale months later, at the conclusion of the season's broadcast, where they read the votes publicly and crown the Sole Survivor. |
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The Final Tribal Council occurs when there are only two—or, in later seasons, three—players left in the game. The change to three finalists was made so that the endgame would present more of a challenge to the castaway who wins the final immunity challenge: while that person has clinched their spot at the Final Tribal Council, they are not able to decide alone which of the other remaining castaways they will compete against for the jury's votes.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tvguide.com/special/fallpreview07/returning5a.aspx#survivor|title=Returning Shows|accessdate=2007-09-21}}</ref> |
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Since the 41st season of the American version of the show, the structure of Final Tribal Council has been permanently changed. When the votes are cast now, Jeff Probst simply reads off the votes and announces on the spot who won the game. The reunion show also now takes place immediately after this vote at the FTC site, with all of the contestants sitting and talking over the season with themselves and Jeff. |
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At the Final Tribal Council, each remaining castaway is given time to make a statement to the jury. Then each jury member in turn addresses them, asking each a question or commenting on their behavior in the game in an effort to sway the other jury members; the castaways are free to respond to these as they see fit. The remaining castaways may be given time for a concluding speech. After this, the host has each jury member in turn go to vote in the alcove, this time for the person that they feel should be named the Sole Survivor. As with regular elimination votes, the jurors are given an opportunity to speak to the camera to explain their vote. The host then collects the urn, and in most seasons, leaves the votes unread until a live finale months later, at the conclusion of the season's broadcast, where the Sole Survivor is announced. |
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At the finale of ''[[Survivor: Micronesia]]'', the only season to date with two finalists and eight jurors, host Jeff Probst reportedly had a white envelope containing the tiebreaker, but the exact nature of this tiebreaker is not known publicly, as a tie did not occur.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.realitytvworld.com/news/exclusive-amanda-kimmel-discusses-micronesia-losing-survivor-twice-7096.php | title = Exclusive: Amanda Kimmel discusses 'Micronesia,' losing 'Survivor' twice | publisher = Reality TV World | date= May 12, 2008 | access-date = May 12, 2008 | first = Christopher | last = Rocchio}}</ref> This contingency plan was also in place for three-way ties involving three finalists and nine jurors. At the ''[[Survivor: Game Changers]]'' reunion, Probst revealed that a two-way tie in a final three would be broken with the third-place finisher casting the deciding vote.<ref>''Survivor: Game Changers'' reunion show, CBS, May 24, 2017</ref> This first happened in ''[[Survivor: Ghost Island]]'' when Wendell Holland and Domenick Abbate each received 5 votes to win. Laurel Johnson, the third-place finisher, became the 11th and final juror and cast the deciding vote. |
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In [[Koh-Lanta|the French series]], ties between two finalists are resolved by crowning them co-winners, as seen in their [[Koh-Lanta |
In [[Koh-Lanta|the French series]], ties between two finalists are resolved by crowning them co-winners, as seen in their [[Koh-Lanta: Bocas del Toro|third]], [[Koh-Lanta: Palawan|seventh]] and [[Koh-Lanta: Le Totem Maudit|twenty-third]] seasons. |
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====Evacuation and quitting==== |
====Evacuation and quitting==== |
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Some players have been eliminated from the game by other means than being voted out. Castaways who suffer severe injuries or exhaustion are evaluated by the medical team which is always on call. The medical team may provide treatment and give the player the option to continue in the game, warning them of the health risks involved. However, if the medical doctor determines that the player is at risk of permanent injury or death and needs to be removed from the game for their own health, they will be removed and taken to a nearby hospital. In ''[[Survivor: Cambodia]]'', the producers were notified that one of the remaining castaways' children had been hospitalized, and the castaway was pulled from the game to return home and be with their family. Survivor: |
Some players have been eliminated from the game by other means than being voted out. Castaways who suffer severe injuries or exhaustion are evaluated by the medical team which is always on call. The medical team may provide treatment and give the player the option to continue in the game, warning them of the health risks involved. However, if the medical doctor determines that the player is at risk of permanent injury or death and needs to be removed from the game for their own health, they will be removed and taken to a nearby hospital. In ''[[Survivor: Cambodia]]'', the producers were notified that one of the remaining castaways' children had been hospitalized, and the castaway was pulled from the game to return home and be with their family. ''[[Survivor: Kaôh Rōng]]'' has had the most evacuations to date, with three. |
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Occasionally, castaways who are not in need of medical treatment have decided to quit the game, without waiting to be voted out, due to physical or emotional exhaustion—either by making an announcement at a Tribal Council, in which case they are let out of the game without any vote, or by being recovered from camp after making their intentions clear to producers and being interviewed by the host. When a player leaves the game without being voted off, the other tribes are notified of the departed player's removal, and the next Tribal Council may be cancelled. After the players merge into one tribe, any who have been removed from the game by medical evacuation are still eligible to participate as jury members once the medical examiners deem them healthy enough to do so. Those that have quit the game voluntarily may also still be eligible for the jury and, if their reasons for leaving are considered sufficient, they may also still be allowed to make a farewell speech to the camera. |
Occasionally, castaways who are not in need of medical treatment have decided to quit the game, without waiting to be voted out, due to physical or emotional exhaustion—either by making an announcement at a Tribal Council, in which case they are let out of the game without any vote, or by being recovered from camp after making their intentions clear to producers and being interviewed by the host. When a player leaves the game without being voted off, the other tribes are notified of the departed player's removal, and the next Tribal Council may be cancelled. After the players merge into one tribe, any who have been removed from the game by medical evacuation are still eligible to participate as jury members once the medical examiners deem them healthy enough to do so. Those that have quit the game voluntarily may also still be eligible for the jury and, if their reasons for leaving are considered sufficient, they may also still be allowed to make a farewell speech to the camera. |
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First seen in ''[[Survivor: Guatemala]]'', several seasons have used different iterations of the idol: |
First seen in ''[[Survivor: Guatemala]]'', several seasons have used different iterations of the idol: |
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* An idol that can be played before the votes are cast, thus preventing all other players from voting against the player who cast it (As seen in ''Guatemala'') |
* An idol that can be played before the votes are cast, thus preventing all other players from voting against the player who cast it (As seen in ''Guatemala'') |
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* An idol that can be played after the votes are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in ''Panama'' |
* An idol that can be played after the votes are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in ''Panama'' and ''Cook Islands''. Also seen in ''Cagayan'', ''Kaôh Rōng'' and ''Heroes v Healers v Hustlers '' as the "Super Idol") |
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* An idol that can be played after the votes are cast but before they are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in all seasons from ''Fiji'' onward) |
* An idol that can be played after the votes are cast but before they are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in all seasons from ''Fiji'' onward) |
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The third type of idol is seen as a "happy medium" relative to the two previous versions,<ref name="theslug-jeff-interview"> |
The third type of idol is seen as a "happy medium" relative to the two previous versions,<ref name="theslug-jeff-interview">{{cite web|url=http://asapblogs.typepad.com/theslug/2007/01/jeff_probst_tal.html|website=asapblogs.typepad.com|title=The Slug: Jeff Probst Talks "Survivor: Fiji" |access-date=September 13, 2018}}</ref> and forces both the voters and the idol holder to make a more complicated strategic decision: the voters may have to vote without knowing whether the person they are voting for has a hidden immunity idol or without knowing whether that person will choose to play it, and the person with the idol must decide whether to play it without knowing whether enough votes have been cast to vote them out of the game. This type of idol may be "wasted" if a player uses it and does not receive the highest number of votes, and other times idol holders may choose not to use the idol, intending to save it to use at a later time, but will be eliminated with their idol unplayed. Though this third idol continues to be used, two seasons have used the two latter forms of idols concurrently: in ''Cagayan'', clues were given to the third type of idol, but an idol with the second power was hidden with no clues; this idol could not be transferred.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cbs.com/shows/survivor/video/F34BC4D1-389B-D12C-93EE-2BC3E1C25614/survivor-cagayan-preview-special/|title=Survivor: Cagayan Preview Special|date=February 12, 2014|work=CBS|access-date=February 13, 2014}}</ref> In ''Kaôh Rōng'', all hidden idols were of the third type, but two idols could be combined into a single idol of the second type, referred to as a "super idol".<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.ew.com/article/2016/01/11/survivor-kaoh-rong-jeff-probst-super-idol|title=Survivor host Jeff Probst reveals latest twist: a new 'super idol'|magazine=Entertainment Weekly|first=Dalton|last=Ross|date=January 11, 2015|access-date=January 11, 2015}}</ref> |
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Strategically, castaways have used the idol as a bargaining chip to align other players with them and swing pending votes in a specific direction; as a result, some players have been inspired to create fake hidden immunity idols, either leaving them the spot that the original idol was found, or carrying them around as a bluff to attempt to alter people's voting strategies in advance of Tribal Council. If a fake idol is played at Tribal Council, the host notes that it is not |
Strategically, castaways have used the idol as a bargaining chip to align other players with them and swing pending votes in a specific direction; as a result, some players have been inspired to create fake hidden immunity idols, either leaving them the spot that the original idol was found (most commonly), or carrying them around as a bluff to attempt to alter people's voting strategies in advance of Tribal Council. If a fake idol is played at Tribal Council, the host notes that it is not a hidden immunity idol and throws it in the fire. In the American version of the show, the producers have encouraged players to make fake idols by providing decorative materials—such as beads, string, and paint—through props within the game.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = http://popwatch.ew.com/popwatch/2009/04/jeff-probst-blo.html#comment-151891767 | title = Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Tocantins' (episode 6) | magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]] | date = April 3, 2009 | access-date = April 3, 2009 | first = Jeff | last = Probst}}</ref> In ''Cambodia'', all idols were deliberately made to look different from each other to further encourage castaways to make fake idols.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.ew.com/article/2015/08/24/survivor-cambodia-second-chance-immunity-idols-challenges|title=Survivor exclusive: Immunity idols to be hidden at challenges this season|magazine=Entertainment Weekly|first=Dalton|last=Ross|date=January 11, 2015|access-date=February 6, 2016}}</ref> |
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To help castaways find the idol, a series of clues are given to them in succession in a number of different ways. A clue may be given to the winner of a reward challenge, hidden among the reward prizes, announced by the host to all remaining castaways, or provided to a castaway who has been sent to Exile Island or temporarily sent to live with the other tribe. Castaways are under no obligation to share the idol clues with other players. Clues continue to be provided even after a player has secretly found the idol. Each successive clue includes all the previous clues given for that location. Only once a new idol is hidden are new clues provided to the players. In later seasons, players have been very aware that hidden idols may be in play from the start of the game and some have started to look for them near apparent landmarks before any clues have been provided. One castaway, [[Russell Hantz]], was able to find two idols during ''Survivor: Samoa'' without the aid of clues. In light of this so-called "Russell factor," producers subsequently began hiding the idols in more difficult-to-find locations,<ref>{{cite |
To help castaways find the idol, a series of clues are given to them in succession in a number of different ways. A clue may be given to the winner of a reward challenge, hidden among the reward prizes, announced by the host to all remaining castaways, or provided to a castaway who has been sent to Exile Island or temporarily sent to live with the other tribe. Castaways are under no obligation to share the idol clues with other players. Clues continue to be provided even after a player has secretly found the idol. Each successive clue includes all the previous clues given for that location. Only once a new idol is hidden are new clues provided to the players. In later seasons, players have been very aware that hidden idols may be in play from the start of the game and some have started to look for them near apparent landmarks before any clues have been provided. One castaway, [[Russell Hantz]], was able to find two idols during ''Survivor: Samoa'' without the aid of clues. In light of this so-called "Russell factor," producers subsequently began hiding the idols in more difficult-to-find locations,<ref>{{cite magazine | url = http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/04/30/jeff-probst-blog-survivor-heroes-vs-villains-ep-11/ | title = Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains' episode 11 | first = Jeff | last = Probst | date =April 30, 2010 | access-date = April 30, 2010 | magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]] }}</ref> and, in ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]'', clues contained a [[rebus|rebus puzzle]] rather than text,<ref name="EW Intro">{{cite magazine |url=http://popwatch.ew.com/2010/08/09/survivor-nicaragua-new-cast|title='Survivor: Nicaragua': New cast and new twists revealed!|access-date=August 9, 2010|magazine=Entertainment Weekly|last=Ross|first=Dalton|date=August 9, 2010}}</ref> though this did not carry into the next season or beyond. |
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===Exile Island=== |
===Exile Island=== |
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Exile Island is a remote location away from the tribal camps, where one or two castaways are sent to live in isolation from the rest of their tribe. Exile Island was first introduced in ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'' |
Exile Island is a remote location away from the tribal camps, where one or two castaways are sent to live in isolation from the rest of their tribe. Exile Island was first introduced in ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'' when a single contestant was made to stay alone on a beach for a day as a result of being the first to drop out of an Immunity Challenge. This twist was not used regularly until ''[[Survivor: Panama]]''; it was also used in ''Cook Islands'', ''Fiji'', ''Micronesia'', ''Gabon'', ''Tocantins'', and ''San Juan del Sur''. The first contestant to send him/herself to Exile Island was [[Yau-Man Chan]]. |
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A selected player is exiled to a location (typically a small island) apart from the main tribe camps. Typically, the castaway is exiled after the reward challenge, leaving the challenge location for Exile Island, and usually returns immediately before the following immunity challenge. The exiled castaway is chosen as a result of the reward challenge: in the tribal phase, a member of the losing tribe is exiled (usually exiled by the winning tribe), while in the individual phase, the reward challenge winner holds the sole right to choose. Unless stated otherwise, players who win the right to decide who goes to Exile Island may also choose to go themselves. In ''Micronesia'', ''Tocantins'', and ''San Juan del Sur'', one person from each tribe was sent to Exile Island. In several seasons with Exile Island, there |
A selected player is exiled to a location (typically a small island) apart from the main tribe camps. Typically, the castaway is exiled after the reward challenge, leaving the challenge location for Exile Island, and usually returns immediately before the following immunity challenge. The exiled castaway is chosen as a result of the reward challenge: in the tribal phase, a member of the losing tribe is exiled (usually exiled by the winning tribe), while in the individual phase, the reward challenge winner holds the sole right to choose. Unless stated otherwise, players who win the right to decide who goes to Exile Island may also choose to go themselves. In ''Micronesia'', ''Tocantins'', and ''San Juan del Sur'', one person from each tribe was sent to Exile Island. In several seasons with Exile Island, there were tribe swaps with an uneven number of castaways remaining, as in ''Panama'', ''Fiji'', ''Gabon'', ''David vs. Goliath''; the leftover contestant was treated as "tribeless" and exiled immediately after formation. In this case, the contestant was immune until following the next Tribal Council, joining the tribe that lost the next immunity challenge. |
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Once selected, the exiled contestant is immediately sent there. They are given minimal survival tools, typically a water canteen, a machete, a pot, and a limited amount of shelter. The two main disadvantages of being on Exile Island are the lack of food and water, which can weaken a player and make them less effective in challenges, and the isolation from other contestants, which can cause a player to become out of the loop and weaken their position in their tribe. Contestants are often sent to Exile Island for one or both of these strategic reasons. |
Once selected, the exiled contestant is immediately sent there. They are given minimal survival tools, typically a water canteen, a machete, a pot, and a limited amount of shelter. The two main disadvantages of being on Exile Island are the lack of food and water, which can weaken a player and make them less effective in challenges, and the isolation from other contestants, which can cause a player to become out of the loop and weaken their position in their tribe. Contestants are often sent to Exile Island for one or both of these strategic reasons. |
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In certain seasons, exiled castaways receive a consolation prize: in all seasons with Exile Island, the exiled castaway receives a clue to the hidden immunity idol, which may or may not be located on the island. On ''Survivor: Gabon'', the exiled castaway was given the option to give up their idol clue for "instant comfort," and in ''Survivor: Tocantins'', the exiled castaway had the right to change tribes. Occasionally |
In certain seasons, exiled castaways receive a consolation prize: in all seasons with Exile Island, the exiled castaway receives a clue to the hidden immunity idol (or the idol nullifier on ''David vs Goliath''.), which may or may not be located on the island. On ''Survivor: Gabon'', the exiled castaway was given the option to give up their idol clue for "instant comfort," and in ''Survivor: Tocantins'', the exiled castaway had the right to change tribes. Occasionally the exiled castaway is instructed to return after the next Tribal Council, earning them automatic immunity. |
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====Other exile twists==== |
====Other exile twists==== |
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Two seasons of the |
Two seasons of the American version have used different variations on the Exile twists. In ''China'', tribes who won reward challenges earned the right to "kidnap" a member of the losing tribe, who would stay with them until the next immunity challenge. The kidnapped person was given a clue to the hidden immunity idol which he or she must give to one member of the winning tribe. In ''Samoa'' a reverse version of the kidnapping rule was used, called "spy expedition" (also known as "observing"). The winning tribe had to send one of their own to accompany the other tribe until the immunity challenge. Both of these twists were retired after the merge. In ''Kaôh Rōng'', the three tribes were shuffled into two tribes with 13 players remaining; the leftover castaway, Julia Solowski, was exiled to the now-defunct third camp and joined the tribe that lost the next immunity challenge the day after their Tribal Council. In ''Game Changers'', the tribes switched with 15 players remaining, with Debbie being exiled for not being put on a tribe. Unlike other visitors to Exile Island, Debbie was sent to a luxury yacht. |
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The [[Survivor: Ghost Island|36th season]] of the American version introduced the titular Ghost Island, which was similar to Exile Island but featured mementos and props from previous seasons of ''Survivor'', including several misplayed advantages. Banished castaways were given the opportunity to acquire these advantages in a game of chance where they could either win the advantage or lose their vote at their next Tribal Council (represented as a parchment stating "No Vote"). However, not every episode has advantages given out at Ghost Island. |
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===Redemption Island=== |
===Redemption Island=== |
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Redemption Island is a twist used in ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'', ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water]]'', in which voted out contestants remain in the game, exiled from the other castaways, competing in challenges for a chance to return to the game. It was first used in several international editions, including the [[Expedition Robinson|Swedish version]], the [[Survivor ( |
Redemption Island is a twist used in ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'', ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water]]'', in which voted out contestants remain in the game, exiled from the other castaways, competing in challenges for a chance to return to the game. It was first used in several international editions, including the [[Expedition Robinson|Swedish version]], the [[Survivor (Israeli TV series)|Israeli version]] as "The Island of the Dead", [[Survivor Philippines|Philippine version]]'s [[Survivor Philippines: Palau|second season]] as "Isla Purgatoryo" (Purgatory Island), the [[Survivor Srbija|Serbian version]]'s [[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|second season]] as "Ghost Island" and the [[Supraviețuitorul|Romanian version]]'s [[Supraviețuitorul: Filipine|first season]] as "Exile Island". |
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After being voted out, contestants are exiled to Redemption Island, where they will fend for themselves like the castaways in the game proper until the next person is voted out. The day following Tribal Council, there is a duel in which the winner remains on the island and the losers are eliminated for good; upon elimination, the duel losers must remove their buff and throw it into a small fire pit. There are two places where the winner of the duel returns to the game: at the merge, where Redemption Island is cleared and reset; and when there are four players remaining in the main game, at which point Redemption Island is retired. |
After being voted out, contestants are exiled to Redemption Island, where they will fend for themselves like the castaways in the game proper until the next person is voted out. The day following Tribal Council, there is a duel in which the winner remains on the island and the losers are eliminated for good; upon elimination, the duel losers must remove their buff and throw it into a small fire pit. There are two places where the winner of the duel returns to the game: at the merge, where Redemption Island is cleared and reset; and when there are four players remaining in the main game, at which point Redemption Island is retired. |
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Redemption Island in ''Blood vs. Water'' featured additional alterations to fit with the game's primary twist of featuring pairs of loved ones. Prior to any duel, the castaways with loved ones on Redemption Island are given the choice to replace their loved one on Redemption Island, with their loved one returning to the main game and taking their place in the tribe. In addition, the first-place winner of the duel must give a clue to a hidden immunity idol to any castaway in the main game. |
Redemption Island in ''Blood vs. Water'' featured additional alterations to fit with the game's primary twist of featuring pairs of loved ones. Prior to any duel, the castaways with loved ones on Redemption Island are given the choice to replace their loved one on Redemption Island, with their loved one returning to the main game and taking their place in the tribe. In addition, the first-place winner of the duel must give a clue to a hidden immunity idol to any castaway in the main game. |
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A short-term variation of the Redemption Island twist is used on ''[[Australian Survivor]]'', where at Tribal Council, the castaways are informed that the next two players voted-off (the castaway voted for that night and at the following Tribal Council) will not be eliminated from the game, but rather they will be Exiled. In Exile, the two castaways will compete in a "Redemption Island" style duel with the winner returning to the tribe and remaining in the game, and the loser being officially eliminated. This twist was used ''[[Australian Survivor season 5|Australian Survivor 2018]]'' and ''[[Australian Survivor season 6|Australian Survivor 2019]]''. Two variations of the Exile Twist was used during the ''[[Australian Survivor: All Stars]]'' - The first was during a Double Tribal Council, in which both tribes voted out a player, who would compete in a Fire Making Duel. The winner returns to the tribe and the loser is eliminated. The second variation had 3 players voted out in 2 tribal councils - the 6 players would compete in 2 challenges to return to the game - the 3 who remained would face a tribal council vote to determine who is eliminated. |
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Other seasons have featured alternate twists in which voted out players can return to the game. In 2003, ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]'' featured the Outcast twist, in which the six eliminated castaways competed as the Outcast tribe against the two remaining tribes; as the Outcast tribe won the challenge, they earned the right to vote two of their own back into the game, while the other two tribes had to vote players out; following this, the tribes merged. In the [[Survivor: Honduras (Israel)|seventh season]] of the Israeli version, voted out players remained in the game as "zombies", challenging their former tribe-mates to stay in the game and vote in their stead at Tribal Council; similar to Redemption Island, zombies returned to the game at the merge and near the end of the game. |
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Other seasons have featured alternate twists in which voted out players can return to the game. In 2003, ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]'' featured the Outcast twist, in which the six eliminated castaways competed as the Outcast tribe against the two remaining tribes; as the Outcast tribe won the challenge, they earned the right to vote two of their own back into the game, while the other two tribes had to vote players out; following this, the tribes merged. In the [[Survivor: Honduras (Israel)|seventh season]] of the Israeli version, voted out players remained in the game as "zombies", challenging their former tribemates to stay in the game and vote in their stead at Tribal Council; similar to Redemption Island, zombies returned to the game at the merge and near the end of the game. The 2019 season ''[[Survivor: Edge of Extinction]]'' allowed eliminated players the decision of either leaving the game, or going to the titular island. Once there, the contestants survived on fewer supplies than were available in the main game, but had the option to quit at any time. The players on the island competed in an individual challenge at the merge, and with five players remaining, with the winner returning to the main game. This twist returned two seasons later for ''Survivor: Winners at War''. |
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===Prizes=== |
===Prizes=== |
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The Sole Survivor receives a cash prize of $1,000,000 prior to taxes and sometimes also receives a car provided by the show's sponsor. Every player receives a prize for participating on ''Survivor'' depending on how long |
The Sole Survivor receives a cash prize of $1,000,000 prior to taxes and sometimes also receives a car provided by the show's sponsor. Every player receives a prize for participating on ''Survivor'' depending on how long they last in the game. In most seasons, the runner-up receives $100,000, and third place wins $85,000. All other players receive money on a sliding scale, though specific amounts have rarely been made public. Sonja Christopher, the first player voted off ''[[Survivor: Borneo]]'', received $2,500.<ref name="seniorwomen">{{cite web|url=http://www.seniorwomen.com/articles/cullison/articlesCullisonSonja.html|website=seniorwomen.com|title=Senior Women Web > Articles > Margaret Cullison |access-date=September 13, 2018}}</ref> In ''[[Survivor: Fiji]]'', the first season with tied runners-up, the two runners-up received $100,000 each, and [[Yau-Man Chan]] received $60,000 for his fourth-place finish.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.insidebayarea.com/sanmateocountytimes/ci_5899608|title=He lost a million, won our hearts on 'Survivor'|access-date=May 15, 2007}}</ref> All players also receive an additional $10,000 for their appearance on the reunion show.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.realitynewsonline.com/cgi-bin/ae.pl?mode=1&article=article1588.art&page=1 |title=Survivor's Lindsey Discusses Fame, Fortune, and the AIDS Benefit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927204014/http://www.realitynewsonline.com/cgi-bin/ae.pl?mode=1&article=article1588.art&page=1 |archive-date=September 27, 2007 |work=Reality News Online}}</ref> In the [[Survivor: Winners at War|40th season of the American version]] (an all winners edition), winner Tony Vlachos received $2,000,000, the biggest cash prize in the show's history. |
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Most seasons between ''The Australian Outback'' and ''Fiji'' have featured a late-season reward challenge where the winner receives a car. This reward was infamous for what was later dubbed the "car curse,"<ref>{{cite news | url = |
Most seasons between ''The Australian Outback'' and ''Fiji'' have featured a late-season reward challenge where the winner receives a car. This reward was infamous for what was later dubbed the "car curse,"<ref>{{cite news | url = https://www.cbsnews.com/news/car-curse-in-cruise-control/ | title = Car Curse In Cruise Control | date = December 9, 2006 | access-date = May 12, 2008 | publisher = CBS News | first = Stephan | last = Smith }}</ref> referring to the fact that no player who won the car ever went on to win the game during his, her or their original season. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: The Australian Outback]]'', [[Colby Donaldson]] won a [[Pontiac Aztek]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: The Australian Outback]]'', [[Colby Donaldson]] won a [[Pontiac Aztek]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Africa]]'', |
* In ''[[Survivor: Africa]]'', Lex van den Berghe won a [[Chevrolet Avalanche]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Marquesas]]'', |
* In ''[[Survivor: Marquesas]]'', Sean Rector won a [[Saturn VUE]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Thailand]]'', Ted Rogers won a [[Chevrolet TrailBlazer]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Thailand]]'', Ted Rogers won a [[Chevrolet TrailBlazer]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: The Amazon]]'', Matthew von Ertfelda won a [[Saturn Ion]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: The Amazon]]'', Matthew von Ertfelda won a [[Saturn Ion]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]'', |
* In ''[[Survivor: Pearl Islands]]'', Burton Roberts won a [[GMC Envoy XUV]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'', [[Rob Mariano]] won a [[Chevrolet Colorado]]. In addition, Rob was allowed to bring another contestant with him on a trip; he chose [[Amber Brkich]], who received a [[Chevrolet Malibu]] as a result. |
* In ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'', [[Rob Mariano]] won a [[Chevrolet Colorado]]. In addition, Rob was allowed to bring another contestant with him on a trip; he chose [[Amber Brkich]], who received a [[Chevrolet Malibu]] as a result. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Vanuatu]]'', [[Eliza Orlins]] won a [[Pontiac G6]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Vanuatu]]'', [[Eliza Orlins]] won a [[Pontiac G6]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'', [[Ian Rosenberger]] won a [[Chevrolet Corvette]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Palau]]'', [[Ian Rosenberger]] won a [[Chevrolet Corvette]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Guatemala]]'', [[Cindy Hall]] won a 2006 [[Pontiac Torrent]]; she was given the option to relinquish her reward to give the other remaining players, but declined. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Guatemala]]'', [[Cindy Hall]] won a 2006 [[Pontiac Torrent]]; she was given the option to relinquish her reward to give the other remaining players each a car, but declined. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Panama]]'', [[Terry Deitz]] won a [[Chevrolet Tahoe|GMC Yukon]]. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Panama]]'', [[Terry Deitz]] won a [[Chevrolet Tahoe|GMC Yukon]]. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: Fiji]]'', [[Yau-Man Chan]] won a 2008 [[Ford Super Duty]] but gave it to fellow contestant Andria "Dreamz" Herd as part of a strategic deal. |
* In ''[[Survivor: Fiji]]'', [[Yau-Man Chan]] won a 2008 [[Ford Super Duty]] but gave it to fellow contestant Andria "Dreamz" Herd as part of a strategic deal. Herd would renege on the deal and neither won. |
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Other |
Other prizes are given out post-game, usually at the live reunion that immediately follows the coronation of the winner. |
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* At the ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'' |
* At the ''[[Survivor: All-Stars]]'' reunion, Amber Brkich, as the Sole Survivor, was asked to select one of her fellow contestants to receive a car; she selected Shii Ann Huang. |
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* In ''[[Survivor: America's Tribal Council]]'' following the ''All-Stars'' finale, [[Rupert Boneham]] was selected by a popularity poll of ''Survivor'' viewers to win $1,000,000. |
* In ''[[Survivor: America's Tribal Council]]'' following the ''All-Stars'' finale, [[Rupert Boneham]] was selected by a popularity poll of ''Survivor'' viewers to win $1,000,000. |
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* For two seasons, viewers of ''Survivor'' voted their favorite player to win a new car. |
* For two seasons, viewers of ''Survivor'' voted their favorite player to win a new car. |
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** ''[[Survivor: Panama]]'': [[Cirie Fields]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Panama]]'': [[Cirie Fields]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: Cook Islands]]'': [[Ozzy Lusth]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Cook Islands]]'': [[Ozzy Lusth]] |
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* |
* At the ''[[Survivor: China]]'' reunion, series creator [[Mark Burnett]] awarded Denise Martin $50,000 to help her out financially, but this gift was later donated to charity. |
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* From ''[[Survivor: China]]'' to ''[[Survivor: Caramoan]]'', viewers of the show voted their favorite player to win $100,000 as the [[Sprint Corporation|Sprint]] Player of the Season. |
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** ''[[Survivor: China]]'': [[James Clement]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: China]]'': James Clement |
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** ''[[Survivor: Micronesia]]'': James Clement |
** ''[[Survivor: Micronesia]]'': James Clement |
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** ''[[Survivor: Gabon]]'': [[Robert Crowley (Survivor contestant)|Robert "Bob" Crowley]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Gabon]]'': [[Robert Crowley (Survivor contestant)|Robert "Bob" Crowley]] |
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Line 166: | Line 168: | ||
** ''[[Survivor: Samoa]]'': [[Russell Hantz]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Samoa]]'': [[Russell Hantz]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains]]'': Russell Hantz |
** ''[[Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains]]'': Russell Hantz |
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** ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]'': |
** ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]'': Jane Bright |
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** ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'': [[Rob Mariano]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'': [[Rob Mariano]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]'': [[Ozzy Lusth]] |
** ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]'': [[Ozzy Lusth]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: One World]]'': [[Kim Spradlin]] |
** ''[[Survivor: One World]]'': [[Kim Spradlin]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: Philippines]]'': [[Lisa Whelchel]] |
** ''[[Survivor: Philippines]]'': [[Lisa Whelchel]] |
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** ''[[Survivor: Caramoan]]'': |
** ''[[Survivor: Caramoan]]'': Malcolm Freberg |
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* Beginning with ''[[Survivor: Kaôh Rōng]]'', pop singer [[Sia]] has personally given select castaways a monetary gift, also known as the Sia Award, at irregular intervals. |
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** ''[[Survivor: Kaôh Rōng]]'': Tai Trang received $50,000 for himself, plus an additional $50,000 was donated to a charity of his choosing. |
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** ''[[Survivor: Ghost Island]]'': Donathan Hurley received $10,000, which Sia later upgraded to $14,000. |
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** ''[[Survivor: David vs. Goliath]]'': Davie Rickenbacker received $14,000. |
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** ''[[Survivor: Edge of Extinction]]'': Rick Devens received $100,000. Aurora McCreary received $15,000 and Joe Anglim received $15,000 for cutting his hair off for a children's cancer charity, which he donated.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Murphy |first=Helen |date=16 May 2019 |title=Sia Gifts Her Favorite Survivor Contestant $100,000 During Season Finale |url=https://people.com/tv/sia-rick-devens-survivor-season-finale/ |access-date=2024-01-02 |website=People |language=en}}</ref> |
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** ''[[Survivor: Island of the Idols]]'': Jamal Shipman received $15,000, while Elaine Stott and Janet Carbin received $100,000 each. |
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** ''[[Survivor 42]]'': Drea Wheeler received $100,000.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Travis |first=Emlyn |date=2022-06-01 |title=Watch Sia Surprise Survivor Contestant Drea Wheeler With $100,000 |url=https://www.eonline.com/news/1333025/watch-sia-surprise-survivor-contestant-drea-wheeler-with-s100-000 |access-date=2024-01-02 |website=E! Online}}</ref> |
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** ''[[Survivor 43]]'': Jesse Lopez received $100,000, while Owen Knight and Ryan Medrano each received $50,000.<ref>{{Cite magazine |last=Chan |first=Anna |date=2022-12-23 |title=Sia Gives Her Favorite 'Survivor' Season 43 Players Major Cash Prizes |url=https://www.billboard.com/culture/tv-film/sia-gives-survivor-season-43-contestants-200000-1235191321/ |access-date=2024-01-02 |magazine=Billboard |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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** ''[[Survivor 44]]'': Carolyn Wiger received $100,000, with Carson Garrett and Lauren Harpe each receiving $15,000.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Trepany |first=Charles |date=25 May 2023 |title='Survivor' 44: Sia awards $130K in prize money to these three losing contestants |url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/tv/2023/05/25/survivor-44-sia-awards-130k-in-prizes-favorite-contestants/70259222007/ |access-date=2024-01-02 |website=USA Today |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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==Variations in the format== |
==Variations in the format== |
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{{original research|section|date=July 2023}} |
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Aside from the U .S. version, other franchises introduced variations and twists for the game. Most of these twists and variations are used in other franchises as well: |
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Aside from the American version, other franchises introduced variations and twists for the game. Most of these twists and variations are used in other franchises as well: |
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;''[[Robinson (TV series)|Expedition Robinson Sweden]]'' |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1998|1998]] and [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] seasons, during the pre-merge portion of the competition when a tribe lost an immunity challenge the opposing tribe would vote to eliminate one of their members. |
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* In the [[Expedition Robinson 1998|1998]] season a "Joker" joined the game midway through. Since then this twist has become very common among Survivor versions around the world, either as a twist or as a contingency plan. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] season the contestants were initially divided into four tribes. This twist would later be used in the American version of [[Survivor (American TV series)|Survivor]] during ''[[Survivor: Exile Island]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Cook Islands]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] season the twist of "The Black Vote" was introduced. During the merge portion of the competition whenever someone was voted out before they left tribal council they would cast one more vote. This vote would then be carried over to the next tribal council and whoever received the vote, assuming they didn't have immunity, would have an extra vote against them. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2002|2002]] season when a contestant was voted out they were sent to a secret island where they would take part in a duel with another eliminated contestant. The contestant who lost said duel would be eliminated for good while the winner remained on the island. The person still inhabiting the island when there were only three contestants left in the game would re-enter the competition. This twist would later be used in several different versions of the show and has recently been used on ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'' and ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2003|All-Stars]] version of Expedition Robinson the tribes were initially divided into two tribes, one composed of "Veterans" and the other of "Fans". This type of twist was also used in the American version of Survivor during ''[[Survivor: Micronesia]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2004|2004]] season the twist known as "Team X" was introduced. Shortly after the competition began a new group of contestants entered the game and lived separately and secretly away from the other contestants until a certain point in the game. This twist has since also been used in [[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Norway]]'s [[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2009|2009]] season. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2004|2004]] and [[Expedition Robinson 2005|2005]] seasons a former contestant entered the game. This twist has since been used in many different Survivor versions around the world. |
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* During the 2005 season the tribes were initially divided up into a "Rich" tribe and a "Poor" tribe. This twist has since been used in the [[Robinson Ekspeditionen|Danish]], [[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Norwegian]], and American versions, most notably in ''[[Survivor: Fiji]]''. |
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;''[[Expeditie Robinson|Expeditie Robinson Belgium/Netherlands]]'' |
;''[[Expeditie Robinson|Expeditie Robinson Belgium/Netherlands]]'' |
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* During the [[Expeditie Robinson 2005|2005]] season the tribes were initially divided up by age into "Old" and "Young", with the old contestants being forty and older and the young contestants being under the age of thirty. This twist was later used during ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]'' and [[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2009]]. |
* During the [[Expeditie Robinson 2005|2005]] season the tribes were initially divided up by age into "Old" and "Young", with the old contestants being forty and older and the young contestants being under the age of thirty. This twist was later used during ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]'' and [[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2009]]. |
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* During the pre-merge portion of the [[Expeditie Robinson 2006|2006]] season two former contestants returned to the game to lead the tribes. As leader they were allowed to give individual immunity to any member of their tribe when they went to tribal council. Neither of these two contestants |
* During the pre-merge portion of the [[Expeditie Robinson 2006|2006]] season two former contestants returned to the game to lead the tribes. As the leader, they were allowed to give individual immunity to any member of their tribe when they went to tribal council. Neither of these two contestants was eligible to win and both left shortly before the merge. A similar twist occurred in ''[[Survivor South Africa: Champions]]'', except with sporting champions in the place of former contestants. |
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* When there were only three contestants left during the 2006 season all of the contestants that had lost on "Losers Island" voted to eliminate one of the finalists. |
* When there were only three contestants left during the 2006 season all of the contestants that had lost on "Losers Island" voted to eliminate one of the finalists. |
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* The [[Expeditie Robinson 2007|2007]] season began with one hundred contestants. Because many of these contestants weren't on the show for more than a couple of episodes many of their surnames are unknown. |
* The [[Expeditie Robinson 2007|2007]] season began with one hundred contestants. Because many of these contestants weren't on the show for more than a couple of episodes many of their surnames are unknown. |
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* When it came time to reveal the winner of the [[Expeditie Robinson 2008|2008]] season it was revealed that the jury vote was tied at 3-3. This led to seventy four former contestants voting for a winner. |
* When it came time to reveal the winner of the [[Expeditie Robinson 2008|2008]] season it was revealed that the jury vote was tied at 3-3. This led to seventy four former contestants voting for a winner. |
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* During the [[Expeditie Robinson 2009|2009]] season the two tribes were initially composed of only women while a smaller tribe of men were hidden on a secluded beach. The men eventually entered the main competition in episode four. A similar twist was later used during [[Robinson 2011]]. |
* During the [[Expeditie Robinson 2009|2009]] season the two tribes were initially composed of only women while a smaller tribe of men were hidden on a secluded beach. The men eventually entered the main competition in episode four. A similar twist was later used during [[Robinson 2011]]. |
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* The 2014 run saw the introduction of a 3-way tribe contest: Heaven, Earth and Hell. Hell being placed in the middle of the mangrove bush. During the first episodes the losing tribe would vote off a member and relocate to Hell. |
* The 2014 run saw the introduction of a 3-way tribe contest: Heaven, Earth and Hell. Hell being placed in the middle of the mangrove bush. During the first episodes, the losing tribe would vote off a member and relocate to Hell. |
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* The 2015 season started with an individual format. It started with 17 players, but the challenges had to be played in two even teams. So, before the first three challenges, one person was sent to a separate island and the rest of them created two teams. So the challenges were played with two teams of eight, seven and six. After that, only 11 players were left on the island. They had to make one group of seven and one group of four, which would join the three people sent to Tayak. From that point, it was Kamp Noord versus Kamp Zuid again. |
* The 2015 season started with an individual format. It started with 17 players, but the challenges had to be played in two even teams. So, before the first three challenges, one person was sent to a separate island and the rest of them created two teams. So the challenges were played with two teams of eight, seven and six. After that, only 11 players were left on the island. They had to make one group of seven and one group of four, which would join the three people sent to Tayak. From that point, it was Kamp Noord versus Kamp Zuid again. |
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;''[[Koh-Lanta|Koh-Lanta (France)]]'' |
;''[[Koh-Lanta|Koh-Lanta (France)]]'' |
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* In every season of Koh-Lanta, just before the tribe merge, an ambassador is chosen in each tribe. Through season 8, they had the power to give one more vote to any contestant for the first Tribal Council of the merged tribe. In season 9 and later seasons |
* In every season of Koh-Lanta, just before the tribe merge, an ambassador is chosen in each tribe. Through season 8, they had the power to give one more vote to any contestant for the first Tribal Council of the merged tribe. In season 9 and later seasons (including the two All-Stars seasons), they were able to directly eliminate a contestant. However, if none of the ambassadors agrees to vote for/eliminate one contestant, they must draw one pearl from a bag. The one who gets the black pearl loses and either gets a vote or is directly eliminated depending on the season. |
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* During [[Koh-Lanta |
* During [[Koh-Lanta: Bocas del Toro|season 3 (Bocas del Toro)]], the oldest man and woman had the option to choose the composition of their respective tribes, as long as gender parity was respected. |
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* During [[Koh-Lanta |
* During [[Koh-Lanta: Panama|season 4 (Panama)]], the two tribes were divided by gender. However, after 8 days, the tribes were mixed. A variation was used during [[Koh-Lanta: Viêtnam|season 10 (Vietnam)]], where the tribes were divided by gender except that one person per tribe was of the opposite gender. |
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* During [[Koh-Lanta |
* During [[Koh-Lanta: Pacifique|season 5 (Pacific)]] and [[Koh-Lanta: Vanuatu|season 6 (Vanuatu)]], the tribes were divided by age: older or younger than 31 years old. |
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* During [[Koh-Lanta |
* During [[Koh-Lanta: Palawan|season 7 (Palawan)]] and [[Koh-Lanta: Caramoan|season 8 (Caramoan)]], there was a challenge before the tribes' composition was decided: the best man and woman got the privilege to decide on the composition of their tribes, while the last man and woman were directly eliminated. The latter rule was also applied in [[Koh-Lanta: Palau|season 9 (Palau)]] and in the first All-Stars season. |
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* During the second All-Stars season, seven previous contestants were part of one tribe, while the other tribe was composed of famous French sportsmen. |
* During the second All-Stars season, seven previous contestants were part of one tribe, while the other tribe was composed of famous French sportsmen. |
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* In [[Koh-Lanta |
* In [[Koh-Lanta: Raja Ampat|season 11 (Raja Ampat)]], two new rules were introduced: the hidden immunity idol, known from its appearance in the US version, and a new rule called the "''vote noir''" (black vote). After a contestant gets voted out at the Tribal Council, he or she can vote one more time against one of the remaining contestants of his or her tribe before quitting the game. This vote is counted at the tribe's next Tribal Council. |
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* The third All-Stars season featured sixteen former contestants who, despite their performances, hasn't previously become the Sole Survivor. |
* The third All-Stars season featured sixteen former contestants who, despite their performances, hasn't previously become the Sole Survivor. |
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* In [[Koh-Lanta |
* In [[Koh-Lanta: Malaisie|season 12 (Malaysia)]], four contestants out of the starting 20 won't initially be part of either of the two starting tribes. Instead, they will be on a version of "Exile Island", and will need to prove themselves in order to be integrated into one of the two tribes. Also, for the first time in the history of the program, two contestants will be eliminated at once in a single Tribal Council. |
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* Due to an accidental death during the first day of shooting season 13, those in charge of producing the show decided to cancel the 2013 season. Following a fierce discussion of these events in the media regarding the medical conditions, the show's doctor took his own life. However, this didn't stop the show entirely, coming back in 2014 with a fourth all-stars season. |
* Due to an accidental death during the first day of shooting season 13, those in charge of producing the show decided to cancel the 2013 season. Following a fierce discussion of these events in the media regarding the medical conditions, the show's doctor took his own life. However, this didn't stop the show entirely, coming back in 2014 with a fourth all-stars season. |
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;''[[Baltic Robinson|Robinsonid (Estonia), Robinsoni (Latvia), Robinzonai (Lithuania)]]'' |
;''[[Baltic Robinson|Robinsonid (Estonia), Robinsoni (Latvia), Robinzonai (Lithuania)]]'' |
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* Because a representative from each participating country was necessary for the finale, the last remaining member of each tribe was immune from all remaining eliminations. |
* Because a representative from each participating country was necessary for the finale, the last remaining member of each tribe was immune from all remaining eliminations. |
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* In all seasons of Baltic Robinson the jury would vote for who they didn't want to win as opposed to who they did. These votes would be added along with those given to the losers of plank (in all seasons) and those of the public (in the first two seasons) or of the finalists (in season 3). |
* In all seasons of Baltic Robinson the jury would vote for who they didn't want to win as opposed to who they did. These votes would be added along with those given to the losers of the plank (in all seasons) and those of the public (in the first two seasons) or of the finalists (in season 3). |
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;''[[Survivor ( |
;''[[Survivor (Israeli TV series)|Survivor Israel]]'' |
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* Introduced the ''"Double-Power Challenge"'' in ''[[Survivor 10: The Caribbean]]''. The double-power challenge is an individual challenge, which is played after the Immunity challenge. Every person going to Tribal Council had to compete, and the winner of the challenge won an additional power at Tribal Council. |
* Introduced the ''"Double-Power Challenge"'' in ''[[Survivor 10: The Caribbean]]''. The double-power challenge is an individual challenge, which is played after the Immunity challenge. Every person going to Tribal Council had to compete, and the winner of the challenge won an additional power at Tribal Council. |
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* Introduced the ''"Veto Armlet"'' in ''[[Survivor 10: Pearl Islands]]''. Aside from the Immunity Challenge, where the winner of the challenge wins the immunity, the |
* Introduced the ''"Veto Armlet"'' in ''[[Survivor 10: Pearl Islands]]''. Aside from the Immunity Challenge, where the winner of the challenge wins the immunity, the Israeli version introduced the Armlet Veto, wherein the winner of the Veto Challenge gets the armlet. The Veto Armlet is used to prevent a castaway from voting in the tribal council. In the last tribal council the Veto Armlet is used to prevent a jury member from voting instead. |
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;''[[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Robinsonekspedisjonen Norway]] |
;''[[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Robinsonekspedisjonen Norway]]'' |
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* In November 2011 it was announced that the 2012 season of Robinsonekspedisjonen will be known as "Robinson: Vinter" (Robinson: Winter) and it will be the first ever season of Robinson or Survivor to ever take place in a cold climate as it will be filmed in Norway. |
* In November 2011 it was announced that the 2012 season of Robinsonekspedisjonen will be known as "Robinson: Vinter" (Robinson: Winter) and it will be the first ever season of Robinson or Survivor to ever take place in a cold climate as it will be filmed in Norway. |
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;''[[Survivor Philippines]]'' |
;''[[Survivor Philippines]]'' |
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* Introduced the ''"Cursed and White Pearls"'', both roughly the size of a standard billiard ball. During the merge stage, the person voted out, before having his/her torch snuffed out, will receive either one or both of the Pearls and give each Pearl to one of the remaining castaways. The castaway who receives the Cursed Pearl gets one vote in the following Tribal Council. In case the Cursed Pearl is lost, the holder would then receive two votes. In-show, the Cursed Pearl is called the "Black Pearl" (though in the first season, its actual color is really silver). On the other hand, the White Pearl will have one vote subtracted from the count in the receiver's favor in the next Tribal Council, should at least one such vote comes up. This was introduced in the ''[[Survivor Philippines |
* Introduced the ''"Cursed and White Pearls"'', both roughly the size of a standard billiard ball. During the merge stage, the person voted out, before having his/her torch snuffed out, will receive either one or both of the Pearls and give each Pearl to one of the remaining castaways. The castaway who receives the Cursed Pearl gets one vote in the following Tribal Council. In case the Cursed Pearl is lost, the holder would then receive two votes. In-show, the Cursed Pearl is called the "Black Pearl" (though in the first season, its actual color is really silver). On the other hand, the White Pearl will have one vote subtracted from the count in the receiver's favor in the next Tribal Council, should at least one such vote comes up. This was introduced in the ''[[Survivor Philippines season 1|first season]]'' of Survivor Philippines. |
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* Introduced the ''"Blood Pearl"'' in ''[[Survivor Philippines: Palau]]''. The Blood Pearl served the same purpose as the Cursed Pearl, only, the holder would receive two votes in the next Tribal Council. In case the Blood Pearl is lost, three votes would be counted against the holder. |
* Introduced the ''"Blood Pearl"'' in ''[[Survivor Philippines: Palau]]''. The Blood Pearl served the same purpose as the Cursed Pearl, only, the holder would receive two votes in the next Tribal Council. In case the Blood Pearl is lost, three votes would be counted against the holder. |
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* Introduced the Isla Purgatorio, which is called the Redemption Island in |
* Introduced the Isla Purgatorio, which is called the Redemption Island in American version. |
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* Introduced the ''"doubles format"'' in ''[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown]]'', wherein castaways are grouped as couples with preexisting relationships. In this format, the couple is treated as one castaway, wherein both members get immunity after winning Immunity Challenges, both win the reward from the Reward Challenges, and both are voted out in the Tribal Council. |
* Introduced the ''"doubles format"'' in ''[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown]]'', wherein castaways are grouped as couples with preexisting relationships. In this format, the couple is treated as one castaway, wherein both members get immunity after winning Immunity Challenges, both win the reward from the Reward Challenges, and both are voted out in the Tribal Council. |
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* Also in Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown, the ''"Temptation Reward"'' was introduced. The winning tribe in a Reward Challenge would choose one or two of their own to be the only one/s partaking in the Temptation Reward. After being shown the Temptation Reward, the chosen one/s were then also presented with the consequence that comes upon accepting the Temptation Reward. Declining from the Temptation Reward is also an option |
* Also in ''Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown'', the ''"Temptation Reward"'' was introduced. The winning tribe in a Reward Challenge would choose one or two of their own to be the only one/s partaking in the Temptation Reward. After being shown the Temptation Reward, the chosen one/s were then also presented with the consequence that comes upon accepting the Temptation Reward. Declining from the Temptation Reward is also an option if those chosen would deem accepting it be too harmful to their life in the game. |
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;''Twists of unknown origins'' |
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;''[[Expedition Robinson|Expedition Robinson Sweden]]'' [[File:Robinson revanschen.png|thumb|right|The title card for '' [[Expedition Robinson]]'s'' 15th season, ''[[Robinson: Revanschen]]''.]] |
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* During the year 2002 several different versions of Survivor used the twist of gender-based tribes as the main twist for their seasons. Due to the fact that at the time the Baltic, Belgian/Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish seasons were all traveling together in order to conserve and pool their resources (a common practice for the franchise), there is no way to determine which production team came up with the idea of the twist (though it's unlikely to be the Baltic's or Norway's as neither edition has ever used this twist). The same twist was used a few months later in 2003 during ''[[Survivor: The Amazon]]'' and a couple years later in 2004 during ''[[Survivor: Vanuatu]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1998|1998]] and [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] seasons, during the pre-merge portion of the competition when a tribe lost an immunity challenge the opposing tribe would vote to eliminate one of their members. |
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* In the [[Expedition Robinson 1998|1998]] season a "Joker" joined the game midway through. Since then this twist has become very common among Survivor versions around the world, either as a twist or as a contingency plan. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] season the contestants were initially divided into four tribes. This twist would later be used in the [[United States|American]] version of [[Survivor (U.S. TV series)|Survivor]] during ''[[Survivor: Exile Island]]'' and ''[[Survivor: Cook Islands]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 1999|1999]] season the twist of "The Black Vote" was introduced. During the merge portion of the competition whenever someone was voted out before they left tribal council they would cast one more vote. This vote would then be carried over to the next tribal council and whoever received the vote, assuming they didn't have immunity, would have an extra vote against them. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2002|2002]] season when a contestant was voted out they were sent to a secret island where they would take part in a duel with another eliminated contestant. The contestant who lost said duel would be eliminated for good while the winner remained on the island. The person still inhabiting the island when there were only three contestants left in the game would re-enter the competition. This twist would later be used in several different versions of the show and has recently been used on ''[[Survivor: Redemption Island]]'' and ''[[Survivor: South Pacific]]''. |
|||
* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2003|All-Stars]] version of Expedition Robinson the tribes were initially divided into two tribes, one composed of "Veterans" and the other of "Fans". This type of twist was also used in the American version of Survivor during ''[[Survivor: Micronesia]]''. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2004|2004]] season the twist known as "Team X" was introduced. Shortly after the competition began a new group of contestants entered the game and lived separately and secretly away from the other contestants until a certain point in the game. This twist has since also been used in [[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Norway]]'s [[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2009|2009]] season. |
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* During the [[Expedition Robinson 2004|2004]] and [[Expedition Robinson 2005|2005]] seasons a former contestant entered the game. This twist has since been used in many different Survivor versions around the world. |
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* During the 2005 season the tribes were initially divided up into a "Rich" tribe and a "Poor" tribe. This twist has since been used in the [[Robinson Ekspeditionen|Danish]], [[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Norwegian]], and American versions, most notably in ''[[Survivor: Fiji]]''. |
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==''Survivor'' around the world== |
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;''Twists with unknown origins'' |
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The ''Survivor'' format has been adapted for numerous international versions of the show, some named after the original ''[[Robinson (TV series)|Expedition Robinson]]''. |
|||
* During the year 2002 several different versions of Survivor used the twist of gender based tribes as a main twist for their seasons. Due to the fact that at the time the Baltic, Belgian/Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish seasons were all traveling together in order to conserve and pool their resources, there is no way to determine which production team came up with the idea of the twist (though it's unlikely to be the Baltic's or Norway's as neither edition has ever used this twist). The same twist was used a few months later in 2003 during ''[[Survivor: Amazon]]'' and a couple years later in 2004 during ''[[Survivor: Vanuatu]]''. |
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'''Legend:''' |
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==Game rules== |
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{{unreferenced section|date=August 2013}} |
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* Conspiring to split winnings will result in immediate expulsion from the game. |
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* Except for the occasional challenges which involve wrestling or limited combat, any physical violence between players will result in immediate expulsion from the game. |
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* At Tribal Council, players are not permitted to vote for themselves, nor can they spoil their ballots or decline to cast a vote. Players must also show whom they voted for to the camera inside the voting booth. |
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* Contestants must abide by U.S. law as well as local law. Breaking any of these laws will result in immediate removal from the game. |
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* A regular hidden immunity idol can be played after the votes have been cast but before they are read. |
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* A special hidden immunity idol can be played after the votes are read. |
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* Hidden immunity idols cannot be stolen by another player. |
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* If a contestant plays the hidden immunity idol, any votes cast for that contestant will not count, and the person with the next largest number of votes will be eliminated. |
|||
* Contestants may not skip any tribal councils, nor can they refuse to participate in any immunity or reward challenge, unless the game offers them the opportunity to do so. This rule was allowed to be broken by [[Phillip Sheppard]] in [[Survivor: Caramoan]] and by Missy Payne in [[Survivor: San Juan del Sur]] (due to injury). |
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* Tribe members may not raid or visit the campsite of another tribe unless they are doing so as part of an immunity challenge, reward challenge or tribal merger activity with the other tribe. They also may not visit the TV crew compound. Exceptions to this rule have been made, though, as a result of accident (as seen in [[Survivor: Cook Islands]]) or challenge victories. In [[Survivor: Guatemala]] one tribe intentionally visited the other to invite them over to lounge in their lake pool. |
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* If a contestant becomes seriously injured or sick, the player, fellow contestants, the host, or even the crew filming the players may call in a medical team for help. In some cases, the player can be treated at their camp, but the player may also be deemed unable to participate further by the medical team and then be taken from camp to a medical facility, and removed from the game. Often, the players may decide for themselves whether their health will allow them to continue. |
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* Contestants deciding to quit the contest for any reason not health - or other-emergency-related may or may not be called back for the final jury, pending the producers' decision, and may or may not get their closing speech aired, if their reasons are sufficient enough. (This rule was added after the end of ''[[Survivor: Nicaragua]]''.) If a player decides to quit prior to Redemption Island, they are allowed to keep their buff instead of throwing it in the fire pit upon exiting (as was the case in ''[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water]]''). |
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* Depending on which country the show takes place in, contestants may be barred from killing local wildlife. |
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==''Survivor'' series== |
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The ''Survivor'' format has been adapted for numerous international versions of the show, some named after the original ''[[Expedition Robinson]]''.<br> |
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{{Legend|#90EE90|outline=darkgray|Currently airing franchise}} |
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{{Legend|#E0B0FF|outline=darkgray|Franchise with an upcoming season}} |
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'''Legend:''' |
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{{Legend|#FFC0CB|outline=darkgray|Franchise no longer aired}} |
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:{{colorbox|#90EE90}} Currently airing franchise |
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{{Legend|#FFFFFF|outline=darkgray|Status unknown}} |
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:{{colorbox|#E0B0FF}} Franchise with an upcoming season |
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<section begin="Survivor series" /> |
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:{{colorbox|#FFC0CB}} Franchise no longer aired |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left; line-height:18px; width:100%;" |
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{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
! scope="col" width="15%" | {{nowrap|Country/Region}} |
|||
! Region/Country |
|||
! |
! scope="col" width="22%" | Local title<br>{{small|English title}} |
||
! scope="col" width="15%" | Network(s) |
|||
! Networks |
|||
! Winners |
! scope="col" width="28%" | Winners |
||
! scope="col" width="20%" | Host(s) |
|||
! style="text-align:center;"| Grand Prize |
|||
! style="text-align:center;"| Hosts |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, Zambia, Zimbabwe |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Africa: Panama|Survivor Africa]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[M-Net]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[M-Net]] |
||
| [[Survivor Africa: Panama|Season 1, 2006]]: Tsholofelo Gasenelwe |
| [[Survivor Africa: Panama|Season 1, 2006]]: Tsholofelo Gasenelwe |
||
| Anthony Oseyemi |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[American Dollar|$]]100,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Anthony Oseyemi<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#FFFFFF;" rowspan=2| Argentina |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" rowspan=1| ''[[Expedición Robinson (Argentine TV series)|Expedición Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| rowspan="1" style="text-align:center;" | [[El Trece|Canal 13]] |
||
| Season 1, 2005: Hussein El-Abass |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Saudi riyal|SR]]1,000,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Tareq Mounir<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| '''Argentina''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Expedición Robinson]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Canal 13 (Argentina)|Canal 13]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Expedición Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Sebastián Martino<br> |
[[Expedición Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Sebastián Martino<br> |
||
[[Expedición Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: María Victoria Fernández |
[[Expedición Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: María Victoria Fernández |
||
| Julián Weich |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Argentine peso|$]]100,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Julián Weich<br><small>(Season 1–2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" rowspan=1| ''[[Survivor, Expedición Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor, Expedition Robinson''}} |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#90EE90;"| '''Australia''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="1" style="text-align:center;" | [[Telefe]] |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Nine Network]] <br> (Season 1)<br>[[Network Ten]] <br> (Season 3) |
|||
[[Survivor, Expedición Robinson 2024|Season 3, 2024]]: Eugenia Propedo |
|||
| [[Australian Survivor (season 1)|Season 1, 2002]]: [[Rob Dickson]] <br> [[Australian Survivor (season 3)|Season 3, 2016]]: ''Current Season'' |
|||
| [[Alejandro Wiebe|Marley]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|{{nowrap|[[Australian dollar|A$]]500,000 & [[Ford Escape]]}}<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br>[[Australian dollar|A$]]500,000<br><small>(Season 3)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Lincoln Howes<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br>[[Jonathan LaPaglia]] <br><small>(Season 3) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="3" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Australia |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| '''[[Celebrity Survivor|Australian Celebrity Survivor]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Australian Survivor]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Nine Network]] |
|||
| [[Australian Survivor season 1|Season 1, 2002]]: [[Rob Dickson]] |
|||
| Lincoln Howes |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Network 10]] |
|||
| {{plainlist|1= |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor season 3|Season 3, 2016]]: Kristie Bennett |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor season 4|Season 4, 2017]]: Jericho Malabonga |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor season 5|Season 5, 2018]]: [[Shane Gould]] |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor season 6|Season 6, 2019]]: [[Pia Miranda]] |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor: All Stars|Season 7, 2020]]: David Genat |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor: Brains V Brawn|Season 8, 2021]]: Hayley Leake |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor: Blood V Water|Season 9, 2022]]: [[Mark Wales]] |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor: Heroes V Villains|Season 10, 2023]]: [[Liz Parnov]] |
|||
* [[Australian Survivor: Titans V Rebels|Season 11, 2024]]: Feras Basal |
|||
* Season 12, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
* Season 13, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
}} |
|||
| [[Jonathan LaPaglia]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Australian Survivor season 2|Australian Celebrity Survivor]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Seven Network]] |
|||
| [[Celebrity Survivor|Season 2, 2006]]: [[Guy Leech]] |
| [[Celebrity Survivor|Season 2, 2006]]: [[Guy Leech]] |
||
| [[Ian Dickson (music mogul)|Ian "Dicko" Dickson]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Australian dollar|A$]]100,000 <br><small>(For charity)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Ian Dickson (music mogul)|Ian "Dicko" Dickson]]<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Austria, Germany |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedition Robinson (Central Europe)|Expedition Robinson]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ORF (broadcaster)|ORF]]<br>RTL 2 |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[ORF (broadcaster)|ORF]]<br>[[RTL Zwei|RTL 2]] |
||
| [[Expedition Robinson (Central Europe)|Season 1, 2000]]: Melanie Lauer{{efn|name=AustriaGermanySurvivor|The German RTL2 created their own version of ''Survivor'', ''Gestrandet – Zeig, was in dir steckt!'', after airing a co-production of Austrian-German ''Survivor'' in season 1. Austria had not continued its own series nor co-produced an Austrian-German ''Survivor'' after season 1.}} |
|||
| [[Expedition Robinson (Central Europe)|Season 1, 2000]]: Melanie{{ref|1|1}} |
|||
| Volker Piesczek |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[German mark|DEM]]100,000 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;;" | Azerbaijan |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Extreme Azerbaijan|Ekstrim Azərbaycan]]''<br>{{small|''Extreme Azerbaijan''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | Space TV |
||
| [[Extreme Azerbaijan|Season 1, 2011]]: |
| [[Extreme Azerbaijan|Season 1, 2011]]: Kemal Cenk İçten |
||
| Emin Əhmədov |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Sports car |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Emin Əhmədov<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#E0B0FF;" |[[Balkans]]<br>Croatia<br>Serbia |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Srbija|Survivor]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[RTL (Croatian TV channel)|RTL Televizija]] {{small|(Croatia)}}<br>[[Prva Srpska Televizija]] {{small|(Serbia)}} |
|||
| [[Survivor VIP: Costa Rica|Season 1, 2012]]: Vlada Vuksanović{{efn|Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the second season of ''Survivor'' to air in Croatia and the fourth season to air in Serbia.|name=SerbiaSeason4}} |
|||
| [[Andrija Milošević]]<br>Marijana Batinić<br>Antonija Blaće<br>Milan Kalinić |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Nova BH]] {{small|(Bosnia and Herzegovina)}}<br>[[Nova M]] {{small|(Montenegro)}}<br>[[Nova S]] {{small|(Serbia)}}<br>[[Nova TV (Croatia)|Nova TV]] {{small|(Croatia)}} |
|||
| |
|||
[[Survivor: Dominican Republic|Season 2, 2022]]: Stefan Nevistić and Nevena Blanuša{{efn|Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the third season of ''Survivor'' to air in Croatia and the fifth season to air in Serbia.|name=SerbiaSeason5}}<br> |
|||
Season 3, 2023: Nataša Kondić and Antonia Ivić{{efn|Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the fourth season of ''Survivor'' to air in Croatia and the sixth season to air in Serbia.|name=SerbiaSeason6}}<br> |
|||
Season 4, 2024: Tijana Jeremić and Luka Rimac{{efn|Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the fifth season of ''Survivor'' to air in Croatia and the seventh to air in Serbia.|name=SerbiaSeason7}}<br> |
|||
Season 5, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| Bojan Perić<br>Mario Mlinarić<br>Danijela Buzurović {{efn|Is host of the Tv show Survivor plus, which is aired on Nova S and Nova M}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Baltic Robinson|Robinsonid]] / [[Baltic Robinson|Robinsoni]] / [[Baltic Robinson|Robinzonai]]''<br>{{small|''Robinson''}} |
||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[TV3 Estonia]] |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | {{nowrap|[[TV3 (Estonia)|TV3 Estonia]]}}<br>{{nowrap|[[TV3 (Latvia)|TV3 Latvia]]}}<br>{{nowrap|[[TV3 (Lithuania)|TV3 Lithuania]]}} |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2000: Zane |
[[Baltic Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Zane Mukāne<br> |
||
[[Baltic Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: Māris Šveiduks<br> |
[[Baltic Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: Māris Šveiduks<br> |
||
[[Baltic Robinson 2002|Season 3, 2002]]: Rimas Valeikis |
[[Baltic Robinson 2002|Season 3, 2002]]: Rimas Valeikis |
||
| |
| Emil Rutiku<br>[[Mārtiņš Freimanis]]<br><small>(Season 1)<br></small>Pauls Timrots<br><small>(Seasons 2-3)<br></small>[[Vytautas Kernagis]] |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|Emil Rutiku<small><br>(Season 1-3)</small><br>Pauls Timrots<small><br>(Season 1-3)<br></small>{{nowrap|Vytautas Kernagis}}<small><br>(Season 1-3)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Džunglistaar, Džungļu zvaigznes, Džiungles|Džunglistaar]] / [[Džunglistaar, Džungļu zvaigznes, Džiungles|Džungļu zvaigznes]] / [[Džunglistaar, Džungļu zvaigznes, Džiungles|Džiungles]]''<br>{{small|''Jungle Stars''}} |
||
|[[ |
| [[Baltic Robinson 2004|Season 1, 2004]]: [[Dagmāra Legante]] |
||
| [[Tõnu Kark]]<br>{{nowrap|Raimond Dombrovskis}}<br>{{nowrap|Vytautas Kernagis}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Euros|€]]10,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Tenu Karks<br>{{nowrap|Raimond Dombrovskis}}<br>{{nowrap|Vytautas Kernagis}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Belgium, Flanders |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Expeditie Robinson''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Play4 (TV channel)|VIER]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[VT4]] <small><br>(Season 1–5)</small> <br>[[KANAALTWEE|2BE]] <small><br>(Season 6–13)</small> <br>[[NET 5]] <small><br>(Season 1–5)</small><br>[[Tien (TV channel)|Tien]] <small><br>(Season 6–7)</small> <br>[[RTL 5]] <small><br>(Season 6–13)</small> |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2018 (Belgium)|Season 1, 2018]]: Robbe De Backer<br> |
|||
|[[:nl:Bartel Van Riet|Bartel Van Riet]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="5" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Belgium, Netherlands |
|||
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expeditie Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | VT4<br>[[Net5|NET 5]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Karin Lindenhovius<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Karin Lindenhovius<br> |
||
Line 348: | Line 375: | ||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2003|Season 4, 2003]]: Jutta Borms<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2003|Season 4, 2003]]: Jutta Borms<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2004|Season 5, 2004]]: Frank de Meulder<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2004|Season 5, 2004]]: Frank de Meulder<br> |
||
| |
|||
[[Ernst-Paul Hasselbach]] {{small|(1–5)}}<br> |
|||
Désiré Naessens {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Roos Van Acker|Roos Van Acker]] {{small|(2–5)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Tien (TV channel)|Tien]] <br>[[VTM 2|2BE]]<br>[[RTL 5]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2005|Season 6, 2005]]: Marnix Allegaert<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2005|Season 6, 2005]]: Marnix Allegaert<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2006|Season 7, 2006]]: Olga Urashova<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2006|Season 7, 2006]]: Olga Urashova<br> |
||
| |
|||
Ernst-Paul Hasselbach {{small|(6–7)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Lotte Verlackt|Lotte Verlackt]] {{small|(6–7)}}<br> |
|||
[[Evi Hanssen]] {{small|(7)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | 2BE<br>RTL 5 |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2007|Season 8, 2007]]: Vinncent Arrendell<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2007|Season 8, 2007]]: Vinncent Arrendell<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2008|Season 9, 2008]]: Yin Oei Sian<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2008|Season 9, 2008]]: Yin Oei Sian<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2009|Season 10, 2009]]: Marcel Vandezande<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2009|Season 10, 2009]]: Marcel Vandezande<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2010|Season 11, 2010]]: Regina Romeijn<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2010|Season 11, 2010]]: Regina Romeijn<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2011|Season 12, 2011]]: |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2011|Season 12, 2011]]: Tanja Dexters<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2012|Season 13, 2012]]: [[Fatima Moreira de Melo]] |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2012|Season 13, 2012]]: [[Fatima Moreira de Melo]] |
||
| |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"| [[Euro|€]]50,000<br><small>(Season 3 – present)</small><br>[[Belgian franc|BFr]]2,000,000/[[Dutch guilder|ƒ]]100,000<br><small>(Season 1–2)</small> |
|||
Ernst-Paul Hasselbach {{small|(8–9)}}<br> |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"| Ernst-Paul<br>Hasselbach<br><small>(Season 1–9)</small><br> Désiré Naessens<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> Roos Van Acker<br><small>(Season 2–5)</small><br> Lotte Verlackt<br><small>(Season 6–7)</small><br>Evi Hanssen<br><small>(Season 7–13)</small><br>Eddy Zoey<br><small>(Season 10–12)</small><br>Dennis Weening<br><small>(Season 13)</small> |
|||
Evi Hanssen {{small|(8–13)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Eddy Zoëy|Eddy Zoëy]] {{small|(10–12)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Dennis Weening|Dennis Weening]] {{small|(13)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | VIER<br>[[Videoland (Netherlands)|Videoland]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2020 (Belgium vs. Netherlands)|Season 21, 2020]]: Thomas Roobrouck<br> |
|||
| |
|||
Bartel Van Riet<br> |
|||
[[Geraldine Kemper]]<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expeditie Robinson: Battle of the Titans|Expeditie Robinson: Strijd der Titanen]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson: Battle of the Titans''}} |
||
|[[Expeditie Robinson: Battle of the Titans|Season 1, 2006]]: Ryan van Esch |
| style="text-align:center;" | Tien<br>2BE |
||
| [[Expeditie Robinson: Battle of the Titans|Season 1, 2006]]: Ryan van Esch |
|||
| Ernst-Paul Hasselbach<br>Lotte Verlackt |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| Brazil |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[No Limite]]''<br>{{small|''On the Edge''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV Globo]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[No Limite 1|Season 1, 2000]]: Elaine de Melo<br> |
[[No Limite 1|Season 1, 2000]]: Elaine de Melo<br> |
||
Line 370: | Line 423: | ||
[[No Limite 3|Season 3, 2001]]: Rodrigo Trigueiro<br> |
[[No Limite 3|Season 3, 2001]]: Rodrigo Trigueiro<br> |
||
[[No Limite 4|Season 4, 2009]]: Luciana de Araújo<br> |
[[No Limite 4|Season 4, 2009]]: Luciana de Araújo<br> |
||
[[No Limite season 5|Season 5, 2021]]: Paula Amorim<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Brazilian Real|R$]] 500,000 |
|||
[[No Limite season 6|Season 6, 2022]]: Charles Gama<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Zeca Camargo<br><small>(Season 1–4)</small> |
|||
[[No Limite season 7|Season 7, 2023]]: Dedé Macedo |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br>[[Fernando Fernandes de Pádua|Fernando Fernandes]] {{small|(6–present)}}<br>'''Former'''<br>[[André Marques (actor)|André Marques]] {{small|(5)}}<br>Zeca Camargo {{small|(1–4)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Bulgaria |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor BG|Сървайвър БГ]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor BG''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[bTV (Bulgaria)|bTV]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2006: Neli Ivanova<br> |
[[Survivor BG Season 1|Season 1, 2006]]: Neli Ivanova<br> |
||
[[Survivor BG: Expedition Robinson|Season 2, 2007]]: Georgi Kostadinov<br> |
[[Survivor BG: Expedition Robinson|Season 2, 2007]]: Georgi Kostadinov<br> |
||
Season 3, 2008: Nikolay Martinov<br> |
Season 3, 2008: Nikolay Martinov<br> |
||
[[Survivor Bulgaria 4|Season 4, 2009]]:<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8076832.stm | work=BBC News | title=Bulgaria Survivor contestant dies | date=2009 |
[[Survivor Bulgaria 4|Season 4, 2009]]:<ref>{{cite news| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8076832.stm | work=BBC News | title=Bulgaria Survivor contestant dies | date=June 1, 2009 | access-date=March 27, 2010}}</ref> Georgi Kehaiov<br> |
||
Season 5, 2014: [[Vanja Džaferović]]<br> |
Season 5, 2014: [[Vanja Džaferović]]<br> |
||
[[Survivor BG: The Hidden Idol|Season 6, 2022]]: Zoran Petrovski<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|250,000 [[Bulgarian lev|BGN]]<br><small>(Season 1-4)</small><br>100,000 [[Bulgarian lev|BGN]]<br><small>(Season 5)</small> |
|||
[[Survivor BG: In Unknown Waters|Season 7, 2023]]: [[Blagoy Georgiev]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
| |
|||
Kamen<br>Vodenicharov<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Kamen Vodenicharov {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
[[Vladimir Karamazov]] {{small|(2–3; 4 [from day 21]–6)}}<br> |
|||
Evtim Miloshev<br><small>(Season 4)</small><br> |
|||
Evtim Miloshev {{small|(4 [to day 20])}}<br> |
|||
[[Vanja Džaferović]] {{small|(7)}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:# |
| style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Canada<br>([[Quebec]]) |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Survivor Québec'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Noovo]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bellmedia.ca/the-lede/alerts/noovo-to-air-the-quebec-adaptation-of-survivor/|title=Noovo, Banijay Rights Strike Deal to Launch SURVIVOR in French-Speaking Canada|work=[[Bell Media]]|date=December 7, 2021|access-date=December 7, 2021}}</ref> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[China Central Television|CCTV]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Survivor Québec 2023|Season 1, 2023]]: Nicolas Brunette<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Québec 2024|Season 2, 2024]]: Ghyslain Octeau-Piché<br>Season 3, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| Patrice Bélanger |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | China |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Into The Shangri-La|走入香格里拉]]''<br>''Into the Shangri-La'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[China Central Television|CCTV]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2001: [[Into The Shangri-La|Members of Sun Village]] |
| Season 1, 2001: [[Into The Shangri-La|Members of Sun Village]] |
||
| {{N/A|''Unknown''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|<small>A chance to <br>fulfill their dreams</small> |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Chile |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedición Robinson: La Isla Vip|Expedición Robinson: La Isla VIP]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson: The VIP Island''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Canal 13 ( |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Canal 13 (Chilean TV channel)|Canal 13]] |
||
| [[Expedición Robinson: La Isla Vip|Season 1, 2006]]: Marcela Roberts |
| [[Expedición Robinson: La Isla Vip|Season 1, 2006]]: Marcela Roberts |
||
| Sergio Lagos <br>Karla Constant |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Chilean peso|$]]50,000,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Sergio Lagos<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Karla Constant<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Colombia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedición Róbinson (Colombia)|Expedición Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Caracol |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Caracol Televisión|Caracol TV]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2001: Rolando Patarroyo<br> |
Season 1, 2001: Rolando Patarroyo<br> |
||
Season 2, 2002: Cristóbal Echevarría |
Season 2, 2002: Cristóbal Echevarría |
||
| [[Margarita Rosa de Francisco|Margarita Francisco]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[Colombian peso|COL$]]200,000,000 <small><br>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
[[Colombian peso|COL$]]250,000,000 <small><br>(Season 2)</small><br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Margarita Rosa de Francisco|Margarita Francisco]]<br><small>(Season 1–2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''La Isla de Los Famos.o.s.'' (1–4)<br>{{small|''The Island of the Famous''}}<br>''Survivor: La Isla de Los Famosos'' (5) |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[RCN TV]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[RCN Televisión|RCN TV]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2004: María Cecilia Sánchez<br> |
Season 1, 2004: María Cecilia Sánchez<br> |
||
Line 422: | Line 481: | ||
Season 3, 2006: Lucas Jaramillo<br> |
Season 3, 2006: Lucas Jaramillo<br> |
||
Season 4, 2007: José Javier Ramírez<br> |
Season 4, 2007: José Javier Ramírez<br> |
||
Season 5, 2023: Juan del Mar |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Colombian peso|COL$]]300,000,000 |
|||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
Guillermo Prieto <br><small>(Season 1–4)</small><br> |
|||
Tatán Mejía {{small|(5–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Guillermo Prieto {{small|(1–4)}}<br> |
|||
Katerine Porto {{small|(1)}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Croatia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Croatia|Survivor: Odisejev Otok]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor: Odyssey Island''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[HRT 2]] |
|||
| [[Croatian Radiotelevision|HRT]]<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
| Season 1, 2005: Vazmenko |
| Season 1, 2005: Vazmenko Pervan |
||
| Kristijan Potočki |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€100,000 <small><br>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" rowspan="2"|Antonija Blaće <br><small>(Season 2)</small><br>Milan Kalinić <br><small>(Season 2)</small><br>Andrija Milošević <br><small>(Season 2)</small><br>Marijana Batinić <br><small>(Season 2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Czech Republic |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor Croatia|Survivor Croatia VIP]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[:cs:Trosečník (reality show)|Trosečník]]'' |
|||
| [[RTL Televizija]]<br><small>(Season 2)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV Prima|Prima televize]] |
|||
| Season 2, 2012: Vladimir "Vlada" Vuksanović{{ref|4|4}} |
|||
| Season 1, 2006: Ingrid Golasová |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|50,000[[Euro|€]]<small><br>(Season 2)</small><br> |
|||
| [[Marek Vašut]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Robinsonův ostrov]]''<br>{{small|''Robinson Island''}} |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#E0B0FF;"| '''Czech Republic''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV Nova (Czech Republic)|TV Nova]] |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TV Prima]] |
|||
[[Robinsonův ostrov 2017|Season 1, 2017]]: Marek Orlík<br> |
|||
[[Robinsonův ostrov 2018|Season 2, 2018]]: Martin Složil<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|5,000,000 [[Czech koruna|CZK]] |
|||
| Ondřej Novotný |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Marek Vašut]]<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Czechia<br>Slovakia |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Robinsonův ostrov]]''' |
|||
| |
|style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Česko & Slovensko]]'' |
||
|style="text-align:center;" | '''Current'''<br>[[TV Nova (Czech Republic)|TV Nova]]<br>Voyo SK (2)<br>'''Former'''<br>[[Markíza]] (1) |
|||
| [[Robinsonův ostrov|Season 1, 2016]]: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|2,500,000 [[Czech koruna|CZK]] |
|||
[[Survivor Česko & Slovensko 2022|Season 1, 2022]]: Vladimír Čapek<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Ondřej Novotný<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
[[Survivor Česko & Slovensko: Hrdinové vs. Rebelové|Season 2, 2023]]: Tomáš Weimann<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Česko & Slovensko: Titáni vs. Lovci|Season 3, 2024]]: Martin "Mikýř" Mikyska<br> |
|||
Season 4, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
|'''Current'''<br>Ondřej Novotný<br>'''Former'''<br>Martin Šmahel (1) |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Denmark |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Robinson Ekspeditionen]]''<br>{{small|''Robinson Expedition''}} |
||
| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 (Denmark)|TV3]] |
||
| {{plainlist|1= |
|||
|| |
|||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 1998|Season 1, 1998]]: Regina Pedersen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 1998|Season 1, 1998]]: Regina Pedersen |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 1999|Season 2, 1999]]: Dan Marstrand |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 1999|Season 2, 1999]]: Dan Marstrand |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2000|Season 3, 2000]]: Sonny Pedersen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2000|Season 3, 2000]]: Sonny Rønne Pedersen |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2001|Season 4, 2001]]: Malene Hasselblad |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2001|Season 4, 2001]]: Malene Hasselblad |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2002|Season 5, 2002]]: Henrik Ørum |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2002|Season 5, 2002]]: Henrik Ørum |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2003|Season 6, 2003]]: Frank Quistgard |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2003|Season 6, 2003]]: Frank Quistgard |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2004|Season 7, 2004]]: Mette Frandsen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2004|Season 7, 2004]]: Mette Frandsen |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2005|Season 8, 2005]]: Mogens Brandstrup |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2005|Season 8, 2005]]: Mogens Brandstrup |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2006|Season 9, 2006]]: Diego Tur |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2006|Season 9, 2006]]: [[Diego Tur]] |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2007|Season 10, 2007]]: Rikke Gøransson |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2007|Season 10, 2007]]: Rikke Gøransson |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2008|Season 11, 2008]]: Daniela Hansen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2008|Season 11, 2008]]: Daniela Hansen |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2009|Season 12, 2009]]: Villy Eenberg |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2009|Season 12, 2009]]: Villy Eenberg |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2010|Season 13, 2010]]: Søren Engelbret |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2010|Season 13, 2010]]: Søren Engelbret |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2011|Season 14, 2011]]: Hugo Kleister |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2011|Season 14, 2011]]: Hugo Kleister |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2013|Season 15, 2013]]: Jeppe Bruun Hansen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2013|Season 15, 2013]]: Jeppe Bruun Hansen |
||
[[Robinson |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2014|Season 16, 2014]]: Stina Herbenö |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2015|Season 17, 2015]]: Kenneth Mikkelsen |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2015|Season 17, 2015]]: Kenneth Mikkelsen |
||
[[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2016|Season 18, 2016]]: |
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2016|Season 18, 2016]]: Henrik Oltmann Andersen |
||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2017|Season 19, 2017]]: Marlene Berardino |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| 1,000,000 [[Danish Krone|DKK]] <small>(Season 5-9)</Small><br><br>500,000 [[Danish Krone|DKK]] <small>(Season 10-Present)</Small><br><br>250,000 [[Danish Krone|DKK]] <small>(Season 1-4)</Small><br> |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2018|Season 20, 2018]]: Jamil Faizi |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2019|Season 21, 2019]]: Nis Andreas Prio Sørensen |
|||
Thomas Mygind<br><small>(Season 1–6)</small><br> |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2021|Season 22, 2021]]: Katrine Ørskov Hedeman |
|||
Jakob Kjeldbjerg<br><small>(Season 7–Present)</small><br> |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2022|Season 23, 2022]]: Mikkel Bertelsen |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2023|Season 24, 2023]]: Majbritt Fejfer Olsen |
|||
* [[Robinson Ekspeditionen 2024|Season 25, 2024]]: Nicolaj Schrøder |
|||
* Season 26, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
}} |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
[[Jakob Kjeldbjerg]] {{small|(7–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Thomas Mygind {{small|(1–6)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Ecuador |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedición Robinson Ecuador|Expedición Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Teleamazonas]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Teleamazonas]] |
||
| Season 1, 2003: Tito Grefa |
| Season 1, 2003: Tito Grefa |
||
| Marisa Sánchez |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[American Dollar|$]]30,000<br>and a car |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Marisa Sánchez<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan=" |
| rowspan="3" style="background:#FFFFFF;" | Finland |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Suomen Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Finnish Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Nelonen]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Nelonen (TV channel)|Nelonen]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Suomen Robinson 2004|Season 1, 2004]]: Marjaana Valkeinen<br> |
[[Suomen Robinson 2004|Season 1, 2004]]: Marjaana Valkeinen<br> |
||
[[Suomen Robinson 2005|Season 2, 2005]]: Mira Jantunen |
[[Suomen Robinson 2005|Season 2, 2005]]: Mira Jantunen |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€100,000 |
|||
Jarmo Mäkinen {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Arttu Harkki {{small|(2)}} |
|||
Jarmo Mäkinen<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Arttu Harkki<br><small>(Season 2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Selviytyjät Suomi]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor Finland''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[MTV3]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[MTV3]] |
||
| Season 1, 2013: Jarkko Kortesoja |
| Season 1, 2013: Jarkko Kortesoja |
||
| Heikki Paasonen |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€50,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Heikki Paasonen<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="text-align:center;" | Nelonen |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Koh-Lanta]]''' |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[TF1]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi 2018|Season 2, 2018]]: [[Jounin Kauppa|Sampo Kaulanen]]<br> |
||
Season 3, 2019: Miska Haakana<br> |
|||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 4|Season 4, 2019]]: Kai Fagerlund<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 5|Season 5, 2021]]: Kristian Heiskari<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 6|Season 6, 2021]]: [[Shirly Karvinen]]<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 7|Season 7, 2022]]: [[Sami Helenius]]<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 8|Season 8, 2023]]: Teemu Roivainen<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Selviytyjät Suomi season 9|Season 9, 2024]]: Mia "Millu" Haataja<br> |
||
| '''Current'''<br>[[Riku Rantala]] {{small|(8–present)}}<br/>'''Former'''<br>[[:fi:Juuso Mäkilähde|Juuso Mäkilähde]] {{small|(2–7)}} |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 9)|Season 9, 2009]]: Christina Chevry<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 10)|Season 10, 2010]]: Philippe Duron<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 11)|Season 11, 2011]]: Gérard Urdampilleta<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 12)|Season 12, 2012]]: Ugo Lartiche<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 13)|Season 13, 2013]]: ''Cancelled''<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 14)|Season 14, 2015]]: Marc Rambaud<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 15)|Season 15, 2016]]: Wendy Gervois<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (season 16)|Season 16, 2016]]: ''Current season''<br> |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"| €100,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Hubert Auriol<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Denis Brogniart<br><small>(Season 2 – Present)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | France<br>(Belgium){{efn|name=BelgianApplicants|Starting from the 11th season, Belgians were eligible to apply for the French series.}}<br>(Switzerland){{efn|name=SwissApplicants|Starting from the 10th season, the Swiss were eligible to apply for the French series.}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Koh-Lanta|Koh-Lanta: All-Stars]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Koh-Lanta]]'' |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[TF1]] |
|||
| {{plainlist|1= |
|||
* [[Les Aventuriers de Koh-Lanta|Season 1, 2001]]: Gilles Nicolet |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Nicoya|Season 2, 2002]]: Amel Fatnassi |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Bocas del Toro|Season 3, 2003]]: Isabelle Seguin and Delphine Bano |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Panama|Season 4, 2004]]: Philippe Bordier |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Pacifique|Season 5, 2005]]: Clémence Castel |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Vanuatu|Season 6, 2006]]: François-David Cardonnel |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Palawan|Season 7, 2007]]: Jade Handi and Kevin Cuoco |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Caramoan|Season 8, 2008]]: Christelle Gauzet |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Palau|Season 9, 2009]]: Christina Chevry |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Viêtnam|Season 10, 2010]]: Philippe Duron |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Raja Ampat|Season 11, 2011]]: Gérard Urdampilleta |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Malaisie|Season 12, 2012-13]]: Ugo Lartiche |
|||
* Season 13, 2013: ''Cancelled'' |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Johor|Season 14, 2015]]: Marc Rambaud |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Thaïlande|Season 15, 2016]]: Wendy Gervois |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: L'Île au Trésor|Season 16, 2016]]: Benoît Assadi |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Cambodge|Season 17, 2017]]: Frédéric Blancher |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Fidji|Season 18, 2017]]: André Deleplace |
|||
* Season 19, 2018: ''Cancelled'' |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: La Guerre des Chefs|Season 20, 2019]]: Maud Bamps |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Les 4 Terres|Season 21, 2020]]: Alexandra Pornet |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Les Armes Secrètes|Season 22, 2021]]: Maxine Eouzan |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Le Totem Maudit|Season 23, 2022]]: Bastien San Pedro and François Descamp |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Le Feu Sacré|Season 24, 2023]]: Frédéric Khouvilay |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: Les Chasseurs d'Immunité|Season 25, 2024]]: Léa Sahin |
|||
* [[Koh-Lanta: La Tribu Maudite|Season 26, 2024]]: Thibault Bélanger |
|||
* Season 27, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (special season 1)|Season 1, 2009]]: Romuald Lafite<br> |
|||
[[Denis Brogniart]] {{small|(2–present)}}<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (special season 2)|Season 2, 2010]]: Grégoire Delachaux<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (special season 3)|Season 3, 2012]]: Bertrand Bolle<br> |
|||
[[Hubert Auriol]] {{small|(1)}} |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta (special season 4)|Season 4, 2014:]] Laurent Maistret<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Denis Brogniart<br><small>(Season 1–4)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style=" |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Koh-Lanta|Koh-Lanta: All-Stars]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''უკანასკნელი<br>გმირი'''<br>'''[[GMiri|Ukanaskneli Gmiri]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Rustavi 2]] |
|||
| [[GMiri|Season 1, 2007–2008]]: Tamar Chanturashvili |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2009: Romuald Lafite<br> |
|||
Season 2, 2010: Grégoire Delachaux<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta: La Revanche des Héros|Season 3, 2012]]: Bertrand Bolle<br> |
|||
Season 4, 2014: Laurent Maistret<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta: Le Combat des héros|Season 5, 2018]]: Clémence Castel<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta: L'Île des héros|Season 6, 2020]]: Naoil Tita<br> |
|||
[[Koh-Lanta: La Légende|Season 7, 2021]]: ''No Winner''<ref name="no winner">{{cite web|url=https://www.20minutes.fr/arts-stars/television/koh_lanta/3197715-20211214-finale-koh-lanta-direct-entre-deux-pains-chocolat-trois-poteaux-soiree-annonce-mouvementee|website=20minutes.fr|title="Koh-Lanta" : En raison des tricheries, aucun candidat n'est déclaré vainqueur de "La Légende" |date=December 14, 2021 |access-date=December 15, 2021}}</ref><br> |
|||
| Denis Brogniart |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Georgia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|''' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[GMiri|უკანასკნელი გმირი]]''<br>{{small|''The Last Hero''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Rustavi 2]] |
||
| [[GMiri|Season 1, 2007–08]]: Tamar Chanturashvili |
|||
| |
|||
| Giorgi Korkia |
|||
Season 2, 2001: Alexander Kolo{{ref|1|1}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
[[Survivor (GER TV series)|Season 3, 2007]]: Volker |
|||
| rowspan="7" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Germany |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[German mark|DM]]100,000 <small><br>(Season 2)</small><br>[[Euro|€]]250,000<small><br>(Season 3)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Das Inselduell'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Sat.1]] |
|||
| Unofficial adaption, 2000: Michael |
|||
| Holger Speckhahn |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedition Robinson (Central Europe)|Expedition Robinson]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ORF<br>RTL 2 |
|||
| [[Expedition Robinson 2000 (Central Europe)|Season 1, 2000]]: Melanie Lauer |
|||
| Volker Piesczek |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Gestrandet – Zeig, was in dir steckt!''{{ref|1|1}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | RTL 2 |
|||
| Season 1, 2001: Alexander Kolo |
|||
| Pierre Geisensetter |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Outback'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[RTL (German TV channel)|RTL]] |
|||
| Unofficial adaption of ''[[Survivor: The Australian Outback]]'', 2002: Sergej Schmidt |
|||
| Markus Lanz |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | ''Survivor'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[ProSieben]] |
|||
| [[Survivor (German season 1)|Season 1, 2007]]: Volker Kreuzner |
|||
| Sascha Kalupke |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[VOX (German TV channel)|VOX]] |
|||
| [[Survivor (German season 2)|Season 2, 2019]]: Lara Grünfeld |
|||
| Florian Weber |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Sport1 (Germany)|Sport1]] |
|||
| [[Survivor (German season 3)|Season 3, TBA]]: ''Upcoming season''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.banijay.com/blog/2024/10/23/banijay-entertainment-superbrands-masterchef-and-survivor-heading-to-germany/|title=Banijay Entertainment Superbrands, MasterChef and Survivor, Heading to Germany|first=Mariah|last=John-Leighton|date=Oct 23, 2024|accessdate=Oct 23, 2024}}</ref> |
|||
| TBA |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="6" style="background:white;" | Greece<br>Cyprus |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Greece|Survivor]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Mega Channel|Mega TV]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Greece 1|Season 1, 2003]]: Evaggelia Dermetzoglou<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece 2|Season 2, 2004]]: Konstantinos Christodoulopoulos |
|||
| [[Grigoris Arnaoutoglou]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Skai TV]]<br> [[Sigma TV]] |
|||
| rowspan=3 style="background:#E0B0FF;"| '''Greece''' |
|||
| rowspan=2 style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor Greece|Survivor]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Mega Channel|Mega TV]] |
|||
|style="text-align:center;"|[[Survivor Greece 1|Season 1, 2003]]: Evagelina Dermetzoglou<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece 2|Season 2, 2004]]: Konstantina Golias<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€200,000 |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Greece (2017)|Season 5, 2017]]: Giorgos Angelopoulos<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece (2018)|Season 6, 2018]]: Ilias Gotsis<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece season 8|Season 8, 2020-21]]: Sakis Katsoulis<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece season 9|Season 9, 2021-22]]: Stathis Schizas<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece (season 11) |Season 11, 2024]]: Daniel Nurka<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Greece season 12|Season 12, 2024]]: Ninos Nikolaidis |
|||
| '''Current'''<br>Giorgos Lianos {{small|(6–present)}}<br>'''Former'''<br>[[Sakis Tanimanidis]] {{small| (5-6)}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Greece|Survivor Patagonia]]''<br>{{small|''The Edge of the World''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;" |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Mega TV |
||
| Season 4, 2010: Vaggelis Gerasimou |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|TBA |
|||
| Giannis Aivazis |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|TBA |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Greece|Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey]]''{{efn|name=GreeceTurkey|''Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey'' is a co-production between the Greek and Turkish ''Survivor'' franchises.}} |
||
| Season 3, 2006: Derya Durmuşlar |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Mega Channel|Mega TV]]<br>[[Show TV]] |
|||
| [[Konstantinos Markoulakis]] |
|||
|style="text-align:center;"|[[Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey|Season 3, 2006]]: Derya Durmuşlar{{ref|3|3}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€250,000 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[Skai TV]]<br>[[Sigma TV]] |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| '''Hungary''' |
|||
| Season 7, 2019: [[Katerina Dalaka]] & Yusuf Karakaya |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor – A Sziget]]''' |
|||
| Sakis Tanimanidis<br>Giorgos Lianos |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[RTL Klub]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Greece|Survivor All Star]]'' |
|||
| [[Survivor Greece season 10|Season 10, 2023]]: Sakis Katsoulis |
|||
| Giorgos Lianos |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFFFFF" | Hungary |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor – A sziget]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor - The Island''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[RTL (Hungarian TV channel)|RTL]]{{Efn|Channel name was RTL Klub for seasons 1-5 before the station's name change to RTL starting with season 6.|name=RTL|group=}} |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor – A |
[[Survivor – A sziget season 1|Season 1, 2003]]: Tünde Molnár<br> |
||
[[Survivor – A |
[[Survivor – A sziget season 2|Season 2, 2004]]: Dávid Hankó<br> |
||
[[Survivor – A sziget season 3|Season 3, 2017]]: Iliász Shweirif<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|10,000,000 [[Hungarian forint|Ft]]<br>and a car |
|||
[[Survivor - A sziget season 4|Season 4, 2018]]: Dávid Tömböly<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|András Stohl<br><small>(Season 1–2)</small> |
|||
Season 5, 2021: Dániel Pintér<br> |
|||
[[Survivor - A sziget season 6|Season 6, 2023]]: Viktória Kiss |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
Miklós Varga {{small|(5–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
[[András Stohl]] {{small|(1–2)}}<br> |
|||
[[:hu:Istenes Bence|Istenes Bence]] {{small|(3-4)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | India<br>([[Hindi language|Hindi]]) |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor India – The Ultimate Battle]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[StarPlus|Star Plus]] |
|||
| [[Survivor India season 1|Season 1, 2012]] : Raj Rani |
|||
| [[Sameer Kochhar]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | India<br>([[Tamil language|Tamil]]) |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (Tamil TV series)|Survivor Tamil]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Zee Tamil]] |
||
|[[Survivor |
| [[Survivor Tamil season 1|Season 1, 2021]]: [[Vijayalakshmi Feroz]] |
||
| [[Arjun Sarja]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| {{Indian Rupee}} 1 [[crore]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Sameer Kochhar]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan=" |
| rowspan="5" style="background:#90EE90;" | Israel |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (Israeli TV series)|הישרדות]]''<br>{{small|''Survival''}} |
||
| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Channel 10 (Israeli TV channel)|Channel 10]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor 10: The Caribbean|Season 1, |
[[Survivor 10: The Caribbean|Season 1, 2007–08]]: Na'ama Kaesari<br> |
||
[[Survivor 10: Pearl Islands|Season 2, |
[[Survivor 10: Pearl Islands|Season 2, 2008–09]]: Erik Alper<br> |
||
[[Survivor 10: Philippine Islands|Season 3, 2009]]: Shay Arel<br> |
[[Survivor 10: Philippine Islands|Season 3, 2009]]: Shay Arel<br> |
||
[[Survivor 10: Fans vs. Favorites|Season 4, 2010]]: Natan Bashevkin<br> |
[[Survivor 10: Fans vs. Favorites|Season 4, 2010]]: Natan Bashevkin<br> |
||
[[Survivor 10: Camarines|Season 5, 2011]]: Irit Rahamim Basis |
[[Survivor 10: Camarines|Season 5, 2011]]: Irit Rahamim Basis |
||
| rowspan="5" | [[Guy Zu-Aretz]] |
|||
[[Survivor: Honduras (Israel)|Season 7, 2015-2016]]: Liron "Tiltil" Orfali <br> |
|||
Season 8, 2016: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[Israeli new sheqel|₪]]1,000,000 |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[Guy Zu-Aretz]]<br><small>(Season 1 – Present)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Channel 2 (Israeli TV channel)|Channel 2]] |
||
| |
|||
| [[Survivor 10: V.I.P|Season 6, 2012]]: Itay Segev<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Honduras (Israel)|Season 7, 2015–16]]: Liron "Tiltil" Orfali<br> |
|||
[[Survivor (Israel): Palawan|Season 8, 2017]]: Inbar Pinievsky Basson |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Channel 13 (Israel)|Reshet 13]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#E0B0FF;"| '''Italy''' |
|||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''Survivor Italia''' |
|||
Season 12, 2022-23: Elit Musayof<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Italia 1]] |
|||
Season 13, 2024-25: ''Current season'' |
|||
|- |
|||
|rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (Israeli TV series)|הישרדות VIP]]''<br>{{small|''Survival VIP''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Channel 10 (Israel)|Channel 10]] |
|||
| [[Survivor: VIP (2012 Israeli season)|Season 6, 2012]]: Itay Segev |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" |[[Channel 13 (Israel)|Reshet 13]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Survivor: VIP (2019 Israeli season)|Season 9, 2019]]: [[Đovani Roso]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: VIP (2020 Israeli season)|Season 10, 2020]]: [[Asi Buzaglo]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: VIP (2021 Israeli season)|Season 11, 2021-22]]: Alla Eibinder |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="3" style="background:#FFFFFF;" | Italy |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Survivor Italia'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Italia 1]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2001: Milica Miletic |
| Season 1, 2001: Milica Miletic |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€200,000 |
|||
Pietro Suber<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Benedetta Corbi {{small|(Studio)}} |
|||
Pietro Suber<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Benedetta Corbi<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[L'Isola dei Famosi]]''<br>{{small|''The Island of the Famous''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Rai |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Rai 2]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 2003: Walter Nudo<br> |
[[L'isola dei famosi season 1|Season 1, 2003]]: Walter Nudo<br> |
||
Season 2, 2004: Sergio Múñiz<br> |
[[L'isola dei famosi season 2|Season 2, 2004]]: Sergio Múñiz<br> |
||
Season 3, 2005: |
[[L'isola dei famosi season 3|Season 3, 2005]]: [[Lory Del Santo]]<br> |
||
Season 4, 2006: Luca Calvani<br> |
Season 4, 2006: Luca Calvani<br> |
||
Season 5, 2007: Manuela Villa<br> |
Season 5, 2007: Manuela Villa<br> |
||
Line 624: | Line 792: | ||
Season 7, 2010: Daniele Battaglia<br> |
Season 7, 2010: Daniele Battaglia<br> |
||
Season 8, 2011: [[Giorgia Palmas]]<br> |
Season 8, 2011: [[Giorgia Palmas]]<br> |
||
Season 9, 2012: Antonella Elia |
[[L'isola dei famosi season 9|Season 9, 2012]]: Antonella Elia |
||
| |
|||
[[Simona Ventura]] {{small|(Studio, 1–8)}}<br> |
|||
Marco Mazzocchi {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
Massimo Caputi {{small|(2–3)}}<br> |
|||
Paolo Brosio {{small|(4)}}<br> |
|||
Francesco Facchinetti {{small|(5)}}<br> |
|||
Filippo Magnini {{small|(6)}}<br> |
|||
Rossano Rubicondi {{small|(7)}}<br> |
|||
Daniele Battaglia {{small|(8)}}<br> |
|||
Nicola Savino {{small|(Studio, 9)}}<br> |
|||
Vladimir Luxuria {{small|(9)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Canale 5]] |
|||
| |
|||
Season 10, 2015: [[Donatella (group)|Donatella]]<br> |
Season 10, 2015: [[Donatella (group)|Donatella]]<br> |
||
Season 11, 2016: [[Giacobbe Fragomeni]]<br> |
[[L'isola dei famosi season 11|Season 11, 2016]]: [[Giacobbe Fragomeni]]<br> |
||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 12|Season 12, 2017]]: [[Raz Degan]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€200,000 |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 13|Season 13, 2018]]: [[:it:Nino Formicola|Nino "Gaspare" Formicola]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 14|Season 14, 2019]]: [[Marco Maddaloni]]<br> |
|||
Simona Ventura<br><small>(Season 1–8)</small><br> |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 15|Season 15, 2021]]: Simone Paciello<br> |
|||
Marco Mazzocchi<br><small>(Season 1–3)</small><br> |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 16|Season 16, 2022]]: [[Nicolas Vaporidis]]<br> |
|||
Paolo Brosio<br><small>(Season 4)</small><br> |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 17|Season 17, 2023]]: [[Marco Mazzoli]]<br> |
|||
Francesco<br>Facchinetti <br><small>(Season 5)</small><br> |
|||
[[L'isola dei famosi season 18|Season 18, 2024]]: Aras Şenol |
|||
Filippo Magnini<br><small>(Season 6)</small><br> |
|||
| |
|||
Rossano Rubicondi<br><small>(Season 7)</small><br> |
|||
'''Current'''<br> [[Vladimir Luxuria]] {{small|(Studio, 18–present)}}<br> |
|||
Daniele Battaglia<br><small>(Season 8)</small><br> |
|||
[[Elenoire Casalegno]] {{small|(18–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Vladimir Luxuria<br><small>(Season 9)</small><br> |
|||
Alessia Marcuzzi |
[[Alessia Marcuzzi]] {{small|(Studio, 10–14)}}<br> |
||
Alberto 'Alvin' Bonato |
Alberto 'Alvin' Bonato {{small|(10–11, 14,16-17)}}<br> |
||
Stefano Bettarini {{small|(12)}}<br> |
|||
[[Stefano De Martino]] {{small|(13)}}<br> |
|||
[[Ilary Blasi]] {{small|(Studio, 15-17)}}<br> |
|||
[[Massimiliano Rosolino]] {{small|(15)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Japan |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (Japanese TV series)|サバイバー]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Tokyo Broadcasting System|TBS]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Tokyo Broadcasting System|TBS]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Japan: Palau|Season 1, 2002]]: Eri Minoshima<br> |
[[Survivor Japan: Palau|Season 1, Spring 2002]]: Eri Minoshima<br> |
||
[[Survivor Japan: Hokkaido|Season 2, 2002]]: Asami Kawamura<br> |
[[Survivor Japan: Hokkaido|Season 2, Summer 2002]]: Asami Kawamura<br> |
||
[[Survivor Japan: Philippines|Season 3, |
[[Survivor Japan: Philippines|Season 3, Fall 2002]]: Yasuhito Ebisawa<br> |
||
[[Survivor Japan: North Mariana|Season 4, 2003]]: Kōshin Gunji |
[[Survivor Japan: North Mariana|Season 4, Winter 2003]]: Kōshin Gunji |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Japanese yen|¥]]10,000,000 |
|||
Neptune<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Munehiro Tokita |
|||
Neptune<br><small>(Season 1–4)</small><br> |
|||
Munehiro Tokita<br><small>(Season 1–4)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Lebanon |
||
| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''سرفايفر''<br>{{small|''Survivor''}} |
||
| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation International|LBC]] |
||
| Season 1, 2004: Hussein El-Abass |
|||
| Tareq Mounir |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFFFFF; | Mexico |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Survivor México''<br>{{small|''Survivor Mexico''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Azteca Uno]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, |
Season 1, 2020: Eduardo Urbina<br> |
||
Season 2, |
Season 2, 2021: Pablo Martí<br> |
||
Season 3, |
Season 3, 2022: Julian Huergo<br> |
||
Season 4, |
Season 4, 2023: Pablo Martí<br> |
||
Season 5, |
Season 5, 2024: Esmeralda Zamora<br> |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[mexican peso|$]]2,000,000 |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Alejandro Lukini |
|||
[[:es:Carlos Guerrero (comentarista deportivo)|Carlos Guerrero]] {{small|(2–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Arturo Islas Allende {{small|(1)}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#90EE90;"| |
| rowspan="3" style="background:#90EE90;" | Netherlands |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expeditie Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[RTL 5]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[RTL 5]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 14, 2013: [[Edith Bosch]]<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2013|Season 14, 2013]]: [[Edith Bosch]]<br> |
||
Season 15, 2014: Kay Nambiar<br> |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2014|Season 15, 2014]]: Kay Nambiar<br> |
||
Season 16, 2015: Amara Onwuka<br> |
[[:nl:Expeditie Robinson 2015|Season 16, 2015]]: Amara Onwuka<br> |
||
Season 17, 2016: |
[[Expeditie Robinson 2016|Season 17, 2016]]: Bertie Steur<br> |
||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2017|Season 18, 2017]]: Carlos Platier Luna<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Euro|€]]50,000<br /><small>(Season 14)</small><br />[[Euro|€]]30,000<br /><small>(Season 15)</small><br />[[Euro|€]]25,000<br /><small>(Season 16 - present)</small> |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2018|Season 19, 2018]]: Jan Bronninkreef<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Dennis Weening<br />Evi Hanssen<br><small>(Season 14)</small><br>Nicolette Kluijver<br><small>(Season 15 - present)</small> |
|||
| rowspan="2" | |
|||
'''Current'''<br>[[Nicolette Kluijver]] {{small|(15–present)}}<br> |
|||
[[Art Rooijakkers]] {{small|(25–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Evi Hanssen {{small|(14)}}<br> |
|||
Dennis Weening {{small|(14–19)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Kaj Gorgels|Kaj Gorgels]] {{small|(20–22)}}<br> |
|||
[[:nl:Rick Brandsteder|Rick Brandsteder]] {{small|(24)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style=" |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[RTL 4]] |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor New Zealand]]''' |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2019|Season 20, 2019]]: [[Hugo Kennis]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TV2 (New Zealand)|TV2]] |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2021|Season 22, 2021]]: Robbert Rodenburg<br> |
|||
| Season 1, TBA: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2022|Season 24, 2022]]: Dennis Wilt<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|TBA |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2023|Season 25, 2023]]: Willem Voogd<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Matt Chisholm |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson 2024|Season 26, 2024]]: ''Current season'' |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|style="text-align:center;" | ''Expeditie Robinson: All Stars''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson: All Stars''}} |
|||
| style="background:#E0B0FF;"|'''Norway''' |
|||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Robinsonekspedisjonen|Robinson-]]'''<br>'''[[Robinsonekspedisjonen|ekspedisjonen]]''' |
|||
[[Expeditie Robinson: All Stars|Season 23, 2022]]: Niels Gomperts |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[TV3 (Norway)|TV3]] <small><br>(Season 1 - 14)</small><br>[[TV2 (Norway)|TV2]] <small><br>(Season 15-present)<small> |
|||
| |
|||
Art Rooijakkers<br>Geraldine Kemper |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | New Zealand |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor NZ]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TVNZ 2]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Survivor NZ: Nicaragua|Season 1, 2017]]: Avi Duckor-Jones<br> |
|||
[[Survivor NZ: Thailand|Season 2, 2018]]: Lisa Stanger |
|||
| Matt Chisholm |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Norway |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Robinsonekspedisjonen]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 (Norway)|TV3]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 1999|Season 1, 1999]]: Christer Falch<br> |
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 1999|Season 1, 1999]]: Christer Falch<br> |
||
Line 701: | Line 919: | ||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen Vinter (2012)|Season 12, 2012]]: Elisabeth Nielsen<br> |
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen Vinter (2012)|Season 12, 2012]]: Elisabeth Nielsen<br> |
||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2013|Season 13, 2013]]: Bjørn Tore Bekkeli<br> |
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2013|Season 13, 2013]]: Bjørn Tore Bekkeli<br> |
||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2021|Season 16, 2021]]: Maiken Charlotte Hetle<br> |
|||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2022|Season 17, 2022]]: Are Lundby Kvaal<br> |
|||
| rowspan="2" | |
|||
[[Nils Ole Oftebro]] {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
Christer Falck {{small|(2–15)}}<br> |
|||
[[Silje Torp]] {{small|(16-17)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV 2 (Norway)|TV2]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2015|Season 14, 2015]]: Maiken Sæther Olsen<br> |
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2015|Season 14, 2015]]: Maiken Sæther Olsen<br> |
||
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2016|Season 15, 2016]]: Thomas Larsen<br> |
[[Robinsonekspedisjonen 2016|Season 15, 2016]]: Thomas Larsen<br> |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Norwegian krone|NOK]]300,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Nils Ole Oftebro<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
Christer Falch<br><small>(Season 2 – Present)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Pakistan |
|||
|- |
|||
| style=" |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Pakistan]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Pakistan Television Corporation|PTV]]<br>[[ARY Television Network|ARY]]<br>[[TV One Pakistan|TVOne]] |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Pakistan Television Corporation|PTV]]<br>[[ARY Television Network|ARY]]<br>[[TVOne Global|TVOne]] |
|||
| [[Survivor Pakistan|Season 1, 2006]]: Muhammad Ziad |
| [[Survivor Pakistan|Season 1, 2006]]: Muhammad Ziad |
||
| {{N/A|''Unknown''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[United States dollar|US$]]100,000 |
|||
| |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Philippines |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Philippines]]'' |
||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|[[GMA Network |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | [[GMA Network]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Philippines |
[[Survivor Philippines season 1|Season 1, 2008]]: [[JC Tiuseco|John Carlo "JC" Tiuseco]]<br> |
||
[[Survivor Philippines: Palau|Season 2, 2009]]: Amanda Coolley Van Cooll |
[[Survivor Philippines: Palau|Season 2, 2009]]: Amanda Coolley Van Cooll |
||
| [[Paolo Bediones]] |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|{{Philippine peso|3,000,000}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Paolo Bediones]]<br><small>(Season 1–2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Philippines|Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Showdown]]'' |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Showdown|Season 3, 2010]]: [[Akihiro Sato (model)|Akihiro Sato]]<br> |
[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Showdown|Season 3, 2010]]: [[Akihiro Sato (model)|Akihiro Sato]]<br> |
||
[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown|Season 4, |
[[Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown|Season 4, 2011–12]]: [[Betong Sumaya|Albert "Betong" Sumaya Jr.]]<br> |
||
| |
| [[Richard Gutierrez]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Poland |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Wyprawa Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TVN ( |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TVN (Polish TV channel)|TVN]] |
||
| |
| Season 1, 2004: Katarzyna Drzyżdżyk |
||
| [[Hubert Urbański]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|100,000 [[Polish złoty|zł]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Hubert Urbański<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Wyspa przetrwania: Fidżi|Wyspa przetrwania]]''<br>{{small|''Island of Survival''}} |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| '''Portugal''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Polsat]] |
||
| [[Wyspa Przetrwania: Fidżi|Season 2, 2017]]: Katarzyna Cebula |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TVI (Portugal)|TVI]] |
|||
| Damian Michałowski |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Portugal |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Survivor'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Televisão Independente|TVI]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2001: Pedro Besugo |
| Season 1, 2001: Pedro Besugo |
||
| Paulo Salvador<br>Teresa Guilherme |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Portuguese escudo|Esc]]10,000,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="4" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Romania |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Rătăciți în Panama''<br>{{small|''Lost in Panama''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Kanal D (Romania)|Kanal D]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2009: Aly Elsiddig |
|||
| Andrei Gheorghe |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Supraviețuitorul]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Pro TV]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Supraviețuitorul: Filipine|Season 1, 2016]]: Lucian "Zapp" Lupu<br> |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Dragoș Bucurenci]] {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style=" |
|rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor România]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor Romania''}} |
||
| |
|style="text-align:center;" | [[Kanal D (Romania)|Kanal D]] |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Pro TV]] |
|||
[[Survivor România 2020|Season 1, 2020]]: [[Elena Ionescu]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor România 2021|Season 2, 2021]]: [[Edmond Zannidache]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Euro|€]]100,000 |
|||
|rowspan="2"| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Dragoş Bucurenci]] <br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
Daniel Pavel {{small|(2–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Dan Cruceru {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Pro TV]], <br>[[Voyo]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Survivor România 2022|Season 3, 2022]]: Alex Delea<br> |
|||
[[Survivor România 2023|Season 4, 2023]]: Dan Ursa<br> |
|||
[[Survivor România All Stars|Season 5, 2024]]: [[Edmond Zannidache]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor România 2025|Season 6, 2025]]: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:# |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFFFFF;" | Russia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Last Hero|Последний герой]]''<br>{{small|''The Last Hero''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Channel One |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Channel One Russia|C1R]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Last Hero 1|Season 1, 2001]]: Sergey Odintsov<br> |
[[Last Hero 1|Season 1, 2001]]: Sergey Odintsov<br> |
||
[[Last Hero 2|Season 2, |
[[Last Hero 2|Season 2, 2002–03]]: Veronika Norkina<br> |
||
[[Last Hero 3|Season 3, 2003]]: Vladimir Presnyakov |
[[Last Hero 3|Season 3, 2003]]: [[Vladimir Presnyakov Jr.]]<br> |
||
[[Last Hero 4: End Game|Season 4, |
[[Last Hero 4: End Game|Season 4, 2003–04]]: Yana Volkova<br> |
||
[[Last Hero 5: Super Game|Season 5, 2004]]: |
[[Last Hero 5: Super Game|Season 5, 2004]]: Aleksandr Matveev<br> |
||
[[Last Hero |
[[Last Hero 7: Lost in the Paradise|Season 6, 2008–09]]: Vladimir Lysenko<br> |
||
| |
|||
[[Last Hero 7: Lost in the Paradise|Season 7, 2008-2009]]: Vladimir Lysenko<br> |
|||
[[Sergei Bodrov Jr.]] {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|3,000,000 [[Russian ruble|RUB]] |
|||
[[Dmitry Pevtsov]] {{small|(2)}}<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[ |
[[Nikolai Fomenko]] {{small|(3)}}<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Aleksandr Domogarov]] {{small|(4)}}<br> |
||
[[ |
[[Vladimir Menshov]] {{small|(5)}}<br> |
||
[[Ksenia Sobchak]] {{small|(6)}} |
|||
Aleksandr<br>Domagarov<br><small>(Season 4)</small><br> |
|||
|- |
|||
[[Vladimir Menshov]]<br><small>(Season 5)</small><br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV-3 (Russia)|TV-3]] |
|||
[[Kseniya Sobchak]]<br><small>(Season 7)</small><br> |
|||
| |
|||
Season 7, 2019: [[Anfisa Chernykh]]<br> |
|||
Season 8, 2020: Nadezhda Angarskaya<br> |
|||
[[Last Hero: Champions vs Newcomers|Season 9, 2021]]: Roman Nikkel<br> |
|||
[[Last Hero: Stay as a Family|Season 10, 2023]]: Alexey Lukin<br> |
|||
[[Last Hero: Russian Season|Season 11, 2024]]: Dmitriy Konyshev |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
[[Kseniya Borodina]] {{Small|(10–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
[[Yana Troyanova]] {{Small|(7-9)}} |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Denmark, Norway, Sweden |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedition Robinson 2005 (VIP)|Expedition Robinson: VIP]]''{{efn|name=ExpedRobScandinavia2005|Expedition Robinson 2005 (VIP) was a pan-regional version of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TV3 (Denmark)|TV3 Denmark]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 (Denmark)|TV3 Denmark]]<br>[[TV3 (Norway)|TV3 Norway]]<br>[[TV3 (Sweden)|TV3 Sweden]] |
||
| [[Expedition Robinson 2005 (VIP)|Season 1, 2005]]: Tilde Fröling |
| [[Expedition Robinson 2005 (VIP)|Season 1, 2005]]: [[Tilde Fröling]] |
||
| Mikkel Beha Erichsen {{small|(Denmark)}}<br>Christer Falck {{small|(Norway)}}<br>Robert Aschberg {{small|(Sweden)}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Swedish krona|SEK]]500.000<br><small>SEK250.000<br>to charity</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| Mikkel Beha<br>Erichsen<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Serbia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Srbija]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor Serbia''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | Prva Srpska Televizija |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|{{flag icon|Srbija}} [[Prva]]<small>(''1-2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}[[Alternativna Televizija]]<small>(''1-2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}} [[NTV Hayat]]<small>(''2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Slovenia}} [[TV3 Slovenia|TV 3]]<small>(''2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Macedonia}} [[Sitel (TV channel)|Sitel]]<small>(''2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Macedonia}} [[A1 TV channel (Macedonia)|A1 Televizija]]<small>(''1'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Montenegro}} [[TV In]] <small>(''2'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Montenegro}} [[PRO TV]] <small>(''1'')</small> |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Srbija: Panama|Season 1, |
[[Survivor Srbija: Panama|Season 1, 2008–09]]: Nemanja Pavlov<br> |
||
[[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Season 2, |
[[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Season 2, 2009–10]]: Aleksandar Krajišnik<br> |
||
[[Survivor Srbija VIP: Philippines|Season 3, 2010–11]]: Andrej Maričić |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
| [[Andrija Milošević]] |
|||
[[Nissan Patrol]] <small><br>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
[[Euro|€]]100,000 <small><br>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
[[Euro|€]]100,000 <small><br>(Season 2)</small><br> |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;"|Andrija Milošević<br><small>(Season 1 - 4)</small><br>Marijana Batinić<br><small>(Season 4)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Slovakia |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor Srbija|Survivor Srbija: VIP]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Celebrity Camp]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|{{flag icon|Srbija}} [[Prva]]<small>(''3-4'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}[[Televizija OBN|OBN]]<small>(''3-4'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Croatia}} [[RTL Televizija|RTL]] <small>(''4'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Macedonia}} [[Sitel (TV channel)|Sitel]]<small>(''3-4'')</small><br>{{flag icon|Montenegro}} [[TV In]] <small>(''3-4'')</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV JOJ]] |
|||
| [[Survivor Srbija VIP: Philippines|Season 3, 2010-2011]]: Andrej Maričić<br>[[Survivor Srbija VIP: Costa Rica|Season 4, 2012]]: Vladimir "Vlada" Vuksanović{{ref|4|4}} |
|||
| [[Celebrity Camp|Season 1, 2007]]: Aneta Parišková |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Euro|€]]50,000 |
|||
| [[Janko Kroner]]<br>[[Petra Polnišová]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Ostrov (Slovak TV series)|Ostrov]]''<br>{{small|''Island''}} |
|||
| rowspan="1" style="background:#90EE90;"| '''Slovakia''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Markíza]] |
||
| [[Ostrov (Slovak TV series)|Season 1, 2016]]: Filip Ferianec |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Markíza]] |
|||
| [[Marián Mitaš]] |
|||
| [[Ostrov (Slovak TV series)|Season 1, 2016]]: ''Current Season'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|100 000 € |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Marián Mitaš<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan="2" style="background:# |
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Slovenia |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Survivor Srbija]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor Serbia''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[TV3 Slovenia|TV 3]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 Slovenia|TV 3]] |
||
| Season 1 : [[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Survivor Srbija 2 |
| [[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Season 1, 2009–10]]: See ''[[Survivor Srbija: Philippines|Survivor Srbija 2]]'' |
||
| [[:sl:Ula Furlan|Ula Furlan]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|100 000 € |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Ula Furlan |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'' |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Slovenija: Filipini|Survivor Slovenija]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor Slovenia''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[POP TV]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Pop (Slovenian TV channel)|POP TV]] |
||
| Season 2, 2016: |
| Season 2, 2016: Alen Perklič |
||
| [[:sl:Miran Stanovnik|Miran Stanovnik]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|50 000 € |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Miran Stanovnik<br><small>(Season 1)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | South Africa |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor South Africa]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[M-Net]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[M-Net]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor South Africa: Panama|Season 1, 2006]]: Vanessa Marawa<br> |
[[Survivor South Africa: Panama|Season 1, 2006]]: Vanessa Marawa<br> |
||
Line 824: | Line 1,075: | ||
[[Survivor South Africa: Santa Carolina|Season 3, 2010]]: Perle "GiGi" van Schalkwyk<br> |
[[Survivor South Africa: Santa Carolina|Season 3, 2010]]: Perle "GiGi" van Schalkwyk<br> |
||
[[Survivor South Africa: Maldives|Season 4, 2011]]: Hykie Berg<br> |
[[Survivor South Africa: Maldives|Season 4, 2011]]: Hykie Berg<br> |
||
[[Survivor South Africa: Champions|Season 5, 2014]]: Graham Jenneker |
[[Survivor South Africa: Champions|Season 5, 2014]]: Graham Jenneker<br> |
||
[[Survivor South Africa: Philippines|Season 6, 2018]]: Tom Swartz<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[South African rand|R]]1,000,000 |
|||
[[Survivor South Africa: Island of Secrets|Season 7, 2019]]: Robert "Rob" Bentele<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[Survivor South Africa: Immunity Island|Season 8, 2021]]: Nicole Wilmans<br> |
|||
Mark Bayly<br><small>(Season 1 - 2)</small><br> |
|||
[[Survivor South Africa: Return of the Outcasts|Season 9, 2022]]: Dino Paulo |
|||
Nico Panagio<br><small>(Season 3 - 5)</small><br> |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
[[Nico Panagio]] {{small|(3–9)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
Mark Bayly {{small|(1–2)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|rowspan="5" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Spain |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Spain|Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson]]''<br>{{small|''Survivors: Expedition Robinson''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Telecinco]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Telecinco]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Xavier Monjonell<br> |
[[Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson 2000|Season 1, 2000]]: Xavier Monjonell<br> |
||
[[Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: Alfredo "Freddy" Cortina |
[[Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson 2001|Season 2, 2001]]: Alfredo "Freddy" Cortina |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|20,000,000 [[Spanish peseta|₧]] |
|||
[[Juan Manuel López Iturriaga]] {{small|(1–2)}}<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[Paco Lobatón]] {{small|(2)}}<br> |
|||
Paco Lobaton<br><small>(Season 2)</small><br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''La Isla de los FamoS.O.S.''<br>{{small|''The Island of the Famou-S.O.S.''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Antena 3 ( |
| style="text-align:center;" rowspan=3 | [[Antena 3 (Spanish TV channel)|Antena 3]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[La Isla de los FamoS.O.S. 1|Season 3, 2003]]: Daniela Cardone<br> |
[[La Isla de los FamoS.O.S. 1|Season 3, 2003]]: Daniela Cardone<br> |
||
[[La Isla de los FamoS.O.S. 2|Season 4, 2003]]: Felipe López |
[[La Isla de los FamoS.O.S. 2|Season 4, 2003]]: Felipe López |
||
| |
|||
[[La Selva de los FamoS.O.S.|Season 5, 2004]]: [[Jose Antonio Canales Rivera]]<br> |
|||
[[Paula Vázquez]]<br> |
|||
[[Alonso Caparrós]] {{small|(3)}}<br> |
|||
[[Nuria Roca]] {{small|(4)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | |
|||
''La Selva de los FamoS.O.S.''<br>{{small|''The Jungle of the Famou-S.O.S.''}} |
|||
| |
|||
[[La Selva de los FamoS.O.S.|Season 5, 2004]]: [[Jose Antonio Canales Rivera]] |
|||
| |
|||
Paula Vázquez<br> |
|||
Nuria Roca |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | |
|||
''Aventura en África''<br>{{small|''Adventure in Africa''}} |
|||
| |
|||
[[Aventura en África|Season 6, 2005]]: Víctor Janeiro |
[[Aventura en África|Season 6, 2005]]: Víctor Janeiro |
||
| |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€300,000 |
|||
Paula Vázquez<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Nuria Roca |
|||
Paula Vázquez<br><small>(Season 3 - 6)</small><br> |
|||
Alonso Caparrós<br><small>(Season 3)</small><br> |
|||
Nuria Roca<br><small>(Season 4 - 6)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Spain|Supervivientes]]''<br>{{small|''Survivors''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | Telecinco |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en el Caribe (2006)|Season 7, 2006]]: [[Carmen Russo]]<br> |
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en el Caribe (2006)|Season 7, 2006]]: [[Carmen Russo]]<br> |
||
Line 865: | Line 1,133: | ||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2014)|Season 13, 2014]]: Abraham García<br> |
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2014)|Season 13, 2014]]: Abraham García<br> |
||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2015)|Season 14, 2015]]: Christopher Mateo<br> |
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2015)|Season 14, 2015]]: Christopher Mateo<br> |
||
Season 15, 2016: Jorge Díaz |
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2016)|Season 15, 2016]]: Jorge Díaz<br> |
||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2017)|Season 16, 2017]]: José Luis Losa<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|€200,000 |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2018)|Season 17, 2018]]: [[Sofía Suescun]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2019)|Season 18, 2019]]: [[Omar Montes]]<br> |
|||
[[Jesús Vázquez (television presenter)|Jesús Vázquez]]<br><small>(Season 7 - 11)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2020)|Season 19, 2020]]: Jorge Pérez<br> |
|||
[[José María Íñigo|José Mª Íñigo]]<br><small>(Season 7)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2021)|Season 20, 2021]]: Olga Moreno<br> |
|||
Mario Picazo<br><small>(Season 8 - 10)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2022)|Season 21, 2022]]: Alejandro Nieto<br> |
|||
[[Eva González]]<br><small>(Season 11)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2023)|Season 22, 2023]]: Bosco Blach Martínez-Bordiú<br> |
|||
[[Jorge Javier Vázquez|Jorge Javier<br>Vázquez]]<br><small>(Season 12 - 15)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2024)|Season 23, 2024]]: [[Pedro García Aguado]]<br> |
|||
[[Raquel Sánchez Silva|Raquel Sánchez]]<br><small>(Season 12 - 14)</small><br> |
|||
[[Supervivientes: All Stars|Season 24, 2024]]: Marta Peñate<br> |
|||
Lara Álvarez<br><small>(Season 14 - 15)</small> |
|||
Season 25, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| |
|||
'''Main host:'''<br> |
|||
[[Jesús Vázquez (television presenter)|Jesús Vázquez]] {{small|(7–11)}}<br> |
|||
[[Christian Gálvez (TV presenter)|Christian Gálvez]] {{small|(10)}}<br> |
|||
[[Jorge Javier Vázquez]] {{small|(12–)}}<br> |
|||
[[Carlos Sobera]] {{small|(22)}}<br> |
|||
'''Island host:'''<br> |
|||
[[José María Íñigo]] {{small|(7)}}<br> |
|||
Mario Picazo {{small|(8–10)}}<br> |
|||
[[Eva González]] {{small|(11)}}<br> |
|||
[[Raquel Sánchez Silva]] {{small|(12–13)}}<br> |
|||
[[Lara Álvarez]] {{small|(14–21)}}<br> |
|||
Laura Madrueño {{small|(22–)}}<br> |
|||
'''Tuesday gala:'''<br> |
|||
[[Jorge Javier Vázquez]] {{small|(16–17)}}<br> |
|||
[[Carlos Sobera]] {{small|(18–)}}<br> |
|||
'''Debate:'''<br> |
|||
Lucía Riaño {{small|(8)}}<br> |
|||
Emma García {{small|(9; 11)}}<br> |
|||
Daniel Domenjó {{small|(10)}}<br> |
|||
[[Christian Gálvez (TV presenter)|Christian Gálvez]] {{small|(12)}}<br> |
|||
Álvaro de la Lama {{small|(13)}}<br> |
|||
[[Raquel Sánchez Silva]] {{small|(14)}}<br> |
|||
[[Sandra Barneda]] {{small|(15–17; 23-)}}<br> |
|||
[[Jordi González]] {{small|(18–20)}}<br> |
|||
[[Ion Aramendi]] {{small|(21–22)}}<br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:# |
| rowspan="4" style="background:#E0B0FF;"| Sweden |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedition Robinson]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Sveriges Television|SVT]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Sveriges Television|SVT]] |
||
| |
| |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 1997|Season 1, 1997]]: Martin Melin<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 1997|Season 1, 1997]]: [[Martin Melin]]<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 1998|Season 2, 1998]]: [[Alexandra Zazzi]]<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 1998|Season 2, 1998]]: [[Alexandra Zazzi]]<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 1999|Season 3, 1999]]: Jerker Dalman<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 1999|Season 3, 1999]]: Jerker Dalman<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 2000|Season 4, 2000]]: Mattias Dalerstedt<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 2000|Season 4, 2000]]: Mattias Dalerstedt<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 2001|Season 5, |
[[Expedition Robinson 2001|Season 5, 2001–02]]: [[Jan Emanuel Johansson]]<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 2002|Season 6, 2002]]: Antoni Matacz<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 2002|Season 6, 2002]]: Antoni Matacz<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 2003|Season 7, |
[[Expedition Robinson 2003|Season 7, 2003–04]]: [[Emma Andersson]] |
||
| |
|||
[[Harald Treutiger]] {{small|(1–2)}}<br> |
|||
[[Anders Lundin]] {{small|(3–7)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 (Sweden)|TV3]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expedition Robinson 2004|Season 8, 2004]]: Jerry Forsberg<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 2004|Season 8, 2004]]: Jerry Forsberg<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson 2005|Season 9, 2005]]: Karolina Conrad<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 2005|Season 9, 2005]]: Karolina Conrad<br> |
||
| [[Robert Aschberg]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV4 (Sweden)|TV4]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Expedition Robinson 2009|Season 10, 2009]]: Ellenor Pierre<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 2009|Season 10, 2009]]: Ellenor Pierre<br> |
||
[[Robinson Karibien|Season 11, |
[[Robinson Karibien|Season 11, 2009–10]]: Hans Brettschneider<br> |
||
[[Robinson 2010|Season 12, 2010]]: [[Erik Svedberg]]<br> |
[[Robinson 2010|Season 12, 2010]]: [[Erik Svedberg]]<br> |
||
[[Robinson 2011|Season 13, 2011]]: Mats Kemi<br> |
[[Robinson 2011|Season 13, 2011]]: Mats Kemi<br> |
||
[[Robinson: Revanschen|Season 14, 2012]]: Mariana "Mirre" Hammarling<br> |
[[Robinson: Revanschen|Season 14, 2012]]: Mariana "Mirre" Hammarling<br> |
||
[[Robinson: |
[[Robinson: Fiji|Season 16, 2018]]: Daniel "DK" Westlund<br> |
||
[[Robinson 2019|Season 17, 2019]]: Klas Beyer<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| various<br>amounts |
|||
[[Robinson 2020|Season 18, 2020]]: [[Michael Björklund|Michael "Micke" Björklund]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[ |
[[Robinson 2021|Season 19, 2021]]: Dennis Johansson<br> |
||
[[Robinson 2022|Season 20, Spring 2022:]] Filip Johansson<br> |
|||
[[Anders Lundin]]<br><small>(Season 3 - 7)</small><br> |
|||
[[ |
[[Robinson: Malaysia|Season 21, Fall 2022]]: Lars-Olov Johansson<br> |
||
[[Robinson 2023|Season 22, 2023]]: Oskar Hammarstedt<br> |
|||
[[Linda Isacsson]]<br><small>(Season 10)</small><br> |
|||
[[Robinson: Philippines|Season 23, 2023]]: Pelle Lilja<br> |
|||
[[Paolo Roberto]]<br><small>(Season 11 - 14)</small> |
|||
[[Robinson 2024|Season 24, 2024]]: Olivia Lindegren<br> |
|||
[[Robinson: Palawan|Season 25, 2024]]: Ida Jensen Krogstad<br> |
|||
[[Robinson 2025|Season 26, 2025]]: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| |
|||
'''Current'''<br> |
|||
[[Anders Lundin]] {{small|(3–7, 22–present)}}<br> |
|||
Petra Malm {{small|(21, 23–present)}}<br> |
|||
'''Former'''<br> |
|||
[[Anders Öfvergård]] {{small|(16-20)}}<br> |
|||
[[Linda Isacsson]] {{small|(10)}}<br> |
|||
[[Paolo Roberto]] {{small|(11–14)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Sjuan]] |
|||
| [[Robinson: Love Edition|Season 15, 2015]]: Dan Spinelli Scala & [[Jennifer Egelryd]] |
|||
| Linda Lindorff |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| |
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Switzerland |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Expedition Robinson (Swiss TV series)|Expedition Robinson]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|TV3 |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV3 (Swiss TV channel)|TV3]] |
||
| |
| |
||
Season 1, 1999: Andreas Widmer<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson 1999 (Switzerland)|Season 1, 1999]]: Andreas Widmer<br> |
||
[[Expedition Robinson (Switzerland) 2000|Season 2, 2000]]: Stefanie Ledermann<br> |
[[Expedition Robinson (Switzerland) 2000|Season 2, 2000]]: Stefanie Ledermann<br> |
||
Season 3, 2002: ''Carole Haari''{{Efn|The season never aired due to the television network being shut down. The winner was only revealed later in a news article.|name=Carole|group=}}<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nzz.ch/article9FJL5-ld.291953?reduced=true|title=Der verlorene Sieg|date=29 February 2004|access-date=2023-09-30|website=[[Neue Zürcher Zeitung]]}}</ref> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Swiss franc|CHF]]100,000 |
|||
| |
| Silvan Grütter |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| rowspan=" |
| rowspan="9" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Turkey |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Turkey|Survivor: Büyük Macera]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor: Great Adventure''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Kanal D]] |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Kanal D]] |
||
| [[Survivor Turkey|Season 1, 2005]]: [[Uğur Pektaş]] |
|||
| Ahmet Utlu<ref>{{cite news |last= Semercioğlu|first= Cengiz|date= May 20, 2005|title= Ahmet Utlu bir kez bile denize girmedi|url= http://hurarsiv.hurriyet.com.tr/goster/haber.aspx?id=320721|newspaper= [[Hürriyet]]|access-date= May 1, 2015}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan=2 style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Turkey|Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Show TV]] |
|||
| [[Survivor Turkey|Season 2, 2006]]: Derya Durmuşlar |
|||
| [[Acun Ilıcalı]] {{small|(2)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[TV8 (Turkish TV channel)|TV8]] |
|||
| Season 13, 2019: Yusuf Karakaya & [[Katerina Dalaka]] |
|||
| Acun Ilıcalı<br>Murat Ceylan |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Turkey|Survivor]]'' |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | Show TV |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 3, 2007]]: Taner Özdeş<br> |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 4, 2010]]: Merve Oflaz |
||
| Acun Ilıcalı {{small|(3–4)}}<br>Hanzade Ofluoğlu {{small|(4)}} |
|||
[[Survivor: Aslanlar vs. Kanaryalar|Season 3, 2007]]: Taner Özdeş<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Kizlar vs. Erkekler|Season 4, 2010]]: Merve Oflaz |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
150,000[[Euro|€]] <br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
250,000[[Euro|€]] <br><small>(Season 2 - 3)</small><br> |
|||
500,000[[Turkish lira|TL]] <br><small>(Season 4)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|Ahmet Utlu<ref>{{cite news |last= Semercioğlu|first= Cengiz|date= 20 May 2005|title= Ahmet Utlu bir kez bile denize girmedi|url= http://hurarsiv.hurriyet.com.tr/goster/haber.aspx?id=320721|newspaper= [[Hürriyet]]|location= |access-date= 1 May 2015}}</ref> <br><small>(Season 1)</small><br>Acun Ilıcalı <br><small>(Season 2-4)</small><br> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| rowspan="4" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Turkey|Survivor: Ünlüler vs. Gönüllüler]]''<br>{{small|''Survivor: Celebrities vs. Volunteers''}} |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Show TV]] <small><br>(Season 5-6)</small><br>[[Star TV (Turkey)|Star TV]] <small><br>(Season 7-8)</small> |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 5, 2011]]: [[Derya Büyükuncu]]<br> |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 6, 2012]]: Nihat Altınkaya<br> |
||
| Acun Ilıcalı<br>[[Burcu Esmersoy]] {{small|(6)}} |
|||
[[Survivor: Ünlüler vs. Gönüllüler 3|Season 7, 2013]]: Hilmi Cem İntepe<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Ünlüler vs. Gönüllüler 4|Season 8, 2014]]: Turabi Çamkıran<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|500,000[[Turkish lira|TL]] <br><small>(Season 5-present)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
[[Acun Ilıcalı]] <br><small>(Season 5-8)</small><br> |
|||
Hanzade Ofluoğlu <br><small>(Season 5)</small><br> |
|||
[[Burcu Esmersoy]] <br><small>(Season 6)</small><br> |
|||
[[Alp Kırşan]] <br><small>(Season 7-8)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Star TV (Turkish TV channel)|Star TV]] |
||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[Tv8 (Turkey)|tv8]] <small><br>(Season 9-present)</small> |
|||
|[[Survivor Turkey|Season 9, 2015]]: Turabi Çamkıran<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|500,000[[Turkish lira|TL]] <br><small>(Season 9-present)</small> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Acun Ilıcalı <br><small>(Season 9-present)</small><br> |
|||
Alp Kırşan <br><small>(Season 9-present)</small><br> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;"| '''Ukraine''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''Oстанній герой'''<br>'''Ostanniy Geroy'''<br>'''Last Hero''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ICTV (Ukraine)|ICTV]] |
|||
| |
|||
Season 1, 2011: Andrey Kovalski<br> |
|||
Season 2, 2012: [[:ru:Дивеев-Церковный, Алексей|Alexei Diveyeff-Tserkovny]]<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Euro|€]]75,000 |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 7, 2013]]: Hilmi Cem İntepe<br> |
|||
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 8, 2014]]: Turabi Çamkıran |
|||
| rowspan="2" | Acun Ilıcalı<br>[[Alp Kırşan]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style=" |
| rowspan="3" style="text-align:center;" | TV8 |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor (UK TV series)|Survivor]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 10, 2016]]: Çağan Atakan Arslan <br> |
||
[[Survivor |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 11, 2017]]: Ogeday Girişken <br> |
||
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 12, 2018]]: [[Adem Kılıççı]] |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Pound sterling|£]]1,000,000 |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| |
|||
Mark Austin<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
John Leslie<br><small>(Season 1)</small><br> |
|||
[[Mark Nicholas]]<br><small>(Season 2)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
|||
| style="background:#90EE90;"| '''United States''' |
|||
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 14, 2020]]: Cemal Can Canseven<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Survivor (U.S. TV series)|Survivor]]''' |
|||
Season 15, 2021: İsmail Balaban<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[CBS]] |
|||
Season 17, 2023: Nefise Karatay<br> |
|||
| [[Survivor: Borneo|Season 1, 2000]]: [[Richard Hatch (Survivor contestant)|Richard Hatch]]<br> |
|||
Season 19, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
[[Survivor: The Australian Outback|Season 2, 2001]]: [[Tina Wesson]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Africa|Season 3, 2001-2002]]: [[Ethan Zohn]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Marquesas|Season 4, 2002]]: [[Vecepia Towery]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Thailand|Season 5, 2002]]: [[Brian Heidik]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: The Amazon|Season 6, 2003]]: [[Jenna Morasca]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Pearl Islands|Season 7, 2003]]: [[Sandra Diaz-Twine]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: All-Stars|Season 8, 2004]]: [[Amber Brkich]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Vanuatu|Season 9, 2004]]: [[Chris Daugherty]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Palau|Season 10, 2005]]: [[Tom Westman]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Guatemala|Season 11, 2005]]: [[Danni Boatwright]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Panama|Season 12, 2006]]: [[Aras Baskauskas]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Cook Islands|Season 13, 2006]]: [[Yul Kwon]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Fiji|Season 14, 2007]]: [[Earl Cole]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: China|Season 15, 2007]]: [[Todd Herzog]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Micronesia|Season 16, 2008]]: [[Parvati Shallow]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Gabon|Season 17, 2008]]: [[Robert Crowley (Survivor contestant)|Robert "Bob" Crowley]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Tocantins|Season 18, 2009]]: [[J. T. Thomas (Survivor contestant)|James "J.T." Thomas Jr.]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Samoa|Season 19, 2009]]: [[Natalie White]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains|Season 20, 2010]]: [[Sandra Diaz-Twine]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Nicaragua|Season 21, 2010]]: [[Jud Birza|Jud "Fabio" Birza]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Redemption Island|Season 22, 2011]]: [[Rob Mariano]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: South Pacific|Season 23, 2011]]: [[Sophie Clarke]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: One World|Season 24, 2012]]: [[Kim Spradlin]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Philippines|Season 25, 2012]]: [[Denise Stapley]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Caramoan|Season 26, 2013]]: [[John Cochran (writer)|John Cochran]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Blood vs. Water|Season 27, 2013]]: [[Tyson Apostol]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Cagayan|Season 28, 2014]]: [[Tony Vlachos]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: San Juan del Sur|Season 29, 2014]]: [[Nadiya and Natalie Anderson|Natalie Anderson]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Worlds Apart|Season 30, 2015]]: [[Mike Holloway (Survivor contestant)|Mike Holloway]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Cambodia|Season 31, 2015]]: [[Jeremy Collins]]<br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Kaôh Rōng|Season 32, 2016]]: [[Michele Fitzgerald]] <br> |
|||
[[Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X|Season 33, 2016]]: Current Season <br> |
|||
| Acun Ilıcalı<br>Murat Ceylan |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|US$1,000,000 & a car (Seasons 1–12)<br/>US$1,000,000 (Season 13 – present) |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Jeff Probst]]<br><small>(Season 1 – present)</small> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| style=" |
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor Turkey|Survivor All Star]]'' |
||
| style="text-align:center;"|'''[[Robinson: La Gran Aventura|Robinson]]'''<br>[[Robinson: La Gran Aventura|La Gran Aventura]]''' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|[[Venevisión]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[ |
[[Survivor Turkey|Season 9, 2015]]: Turabi Çamkıran<br> |
||
Season 16, 2022: Nisa Bölükbaşı<br> |
|||
Season 18, 2024: Ogeday Girişken |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"|100,000,000 [[Venezuelan Bolivar|VEB]] |
|||
| Acun Ilıcalı<br>Alp Kırşan<br>Murat Ceylan |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#E0B0FF;" | Ukraine |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''Oстанній герой''<br>{{small|''The Last Hero''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[ICTV (Ukraine)|ICTV]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2011: Andrey Kovalski<br>Season 2, 2012: [[:ru:Дивеев-Церковный, Алексей|Alexei Diveyeff-Tserkovny]] |
|||
| [[:uk:Ступка Остап Богданович|Ostap Stupka]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;"| [[1+1 (TV channel)|1+1]] |
|||
| Season 3, ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
| TBA |
|||
|- |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="background:#FFFFFF;" | United Kingdom |
|||
| rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (British TV series)|Survivor]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] |
|||
| |
| |
||
[[Survivor (British series 1)|Series 1, 2001]]: Charlotte Hobrough<br> |
|||
[[Survivor (British series 2)|Series 2, 2002]]: Jonny Gibb |
|||
| |
|||
[[Mark Austin (journalist)|Mark Austin]] {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
[[John Leslie (TV presenter)|John Leslie]] {{small|(1)}}<br> |
|||
[[Mark Nicholas]] {{small|(2)}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" |[[BBC One]] |
|||
| [[Survivor (British series 3)|Series 3, 2023]]: Matthew Haywood |
|||
|[[Joel Dommett]]<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/2023/survivor-host-joel-dommett/|title=The tribe has spoken and Joel Dommett is confirmed to host Survivor, lighting a torch on BBC One and BBC iPlayer|website=www.bbc.co.uk|date=17 February 2023|access-date=17 February 2023}}</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#E0B0FF;" | United States<br> |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Survivor (American TV series)|Survivor]]'' |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[CBS]]<br> |
|||
| {{plainlist|1= |
|||
* [[Survivor: Borneo|Season 1, 2000]]: [[Richard Hatch (Survivor contestant)|Richard Hatch]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: The Australian Outback|Season 2, 2001]]: [[Tina Wesson]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Africa|Season 3, 2001–02]]: [[Ethan Zohn]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Marquesas|Season 4, Spring 2002]]: [[Vecepia Towery]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Thailand|Season 5, Fall 2002]]: [[Brian Heidik]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: The Amazon|Season 6, Spring 2003]]: [[Jenna Morasca]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Pearl Islands|Season 7, Fall 2003]]: [[Sandra Diaz-Twine]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: All-Stars|Season 8, Spring 2004]]: [[Amber Mariano|Amber Brkich]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Vanuatu|Season 9, Fall 2004]]: [[Chris Daugherty]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Palau|Season 10, Spring 2005]]: [[Tom Westman]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Guatemala|Season 11, Fall 2005]]: [[Danni Boatwright]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Panama|Season 12, Spring 2006]]: [[Aras Baskauskas]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Cook Islands|Season 13, Fall 2006]]: [[Yul Kwon (television personality)|Yul Kwon]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Fiji|Season 14, Spring 2007]]: [[Earl Cole]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: China|Season 15, Fall 2007]]: [[Todd Herzog]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Micronesia|Season 16, Spring 2008]]: [[Parvati Shallow]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Gabon|Season 17, Fall 2008]]: [[Bob Crowley (Survivor contestant)|Robert "Bob" Crowley]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Tocantins|Season 18, Spring 2009]]: [[J. T. Thomas (Survivor contestant)|James "J.T." Thomas Jr.]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Samoa|Season 19, Fall 2009]]: [[Natalie White]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains|Season 20, Spring 2010]]: Sandra Diaz-Twine |
|||
* [[Survivor: Nicaragua|Season 21, Fall 2010]]: [[Jud Birza|Jud "Fabio" Birza]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Redemption Island|Season 22, Spring 2011]]: [[Rob Mariano]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: South Pacific|Season 23, Fall 2011]]: [[Sophie Clarke]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: One World|Season 24, Spring 2012]]: [[Kim Spradlin]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Philippines|Season 25, Fall 2012]]: [[Denise Stapley]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Caramoan|Season 26, Spring 2013]]: [[John Cochran (Survivor contestant)|John Cochran]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Blood vs. Water|Season 27, Fall 2013]]: [[Tyson Apostol]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Cagayan|Season 28, Spring 2014]]: [[Tony Vlachos]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: San Juan del Sur|Season 29, Fall 2014]]: [[Natalie and Nadiya Anderson|Natalie Anderson]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Worlds Apart|Season 30, Spring 2015]]: [[Mike Holloway (Survivor contestant)|Mike Holloway]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Cambodia|Season 31, Fall 2015]]: [[Jeremy Collins]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Kaôh Rōng|Season 32, Spring 2016]]: [[Michele Fitzgerald]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X|Season 33, Fall 2016]]: [[Adam Klein (Survivor contestant)|Adam Klein]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Game Changers|Season 34, Spring 2017]]: [[Sarah Lacina]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Heroes vs. Healers vs. Hustlers|Season 35, Fall 2017]]: [[Ben Driebergen]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Ghost Island|Season 36, Spring 2018]]: [[Wendell Holland|Wendell Holland Jr.]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: David vs. Goliath|Season 37, Fall 2018]]: [[Nick Wilson (Survivor contestant)|Nick Wilson]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Edge of Extinction|Season 38, Spring 2019]]: [[Chris Underwood]] |
|||
* [[Survivor: Island of the Idols|Season 39, Fall 2019]]: Tommy Sheehan |
|||
* [[Survivor: Winners at War|Season 40, 2020]]: Tony Vlachos |
|||
* [[Survivor 41|Season 41, 2021]]: [[Erika Casupanan]] |
|||
* [[Survivor 42|Season 42, Spring 2022]]: [[Maryanne Oketch]] |
|||
* [[Survivor 43|Season 43, Fall 2022]]: [[Mike Gabler]] |
|||
* [[Survivor 44|Season 44, Spring 2023]]: Yamil "Yam Yam" Arocho |
|||
* [[Survivor 45|Season 45, Fall 2023]]: Dee Valladares |
|||
* [[Survivor 46|Season 46, Spring 2024]]: Kenzie Petty |
|||
* [[Survivor 47|Season 47, 2024]]: Rachel LaMont |
|||
* Season 48, 2025: ''Upcoming season'' |
|||
}} |
|||
| [[Jeff Probst]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Venezuela |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''[[Robinson: La Gran Aventura]]''<br>{{small|''Robinson: The Great Adventure''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[Venevisión]] |
|||
| |
|||
[[Robinson 2001|Season 1, 2001]]: Gabriel Pérez<br> |
|||
[[Robinson 2003|Season 2, 2002]]: Graciela Boza |
|||
| [[Roberto Messuti]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| style="background:#FFC0CB;" | Vietnam |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | ''Tôi là người dẫn đầu''<br>{{small|''I am the Leader''}} |
|||
| style="text-align:center;" | [[HTV7]] |
|||
| Season 1, 2012: Quách Văn Đen |
|||
| Phan Anh |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
;Notes |
|||
{{notelist|2}}<section end="Survivor series"/> |
|||
===Notes=== |
|||
{{refbegin}} |
|||
{{note|1|1}} The German ''Survivor'' created their own version after airing a co-production of Austrian-German ''Survivor'' in season 1. Austria had not continued its own series nor co-produced an Austrian-German ''Survivor'' after season 1.<br/> |
|||
{{note|2|2}} Expedition Robinson 2005 (VIP) was a pan-regional version of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. <br/> |
|||
{{note|3|3}} ''Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey'' is a co-production between the Greek and Turkish ''Survivor'' franchises. It was the third season of the popular show ''Survivor'' to air in Greece and the second season to air in Turkey. This was the first time that either country's franchise competed with another country and because of this the major twist this season was that the tribes were divided up by country of origin.<br/> |
|||
{{note|4|4}} Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the second season of ''Survivor'' to air in Croatia and the fourth season to air in Serbia. |
|||
{{refend}} |
|||
===Current series=== |
===Current series=== |
||
:{{ |
:{{Color box|#E0FFFF|border=darkgray}} Season currently being aired. |
||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left; width: |
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left; width: 95%; font-size:95%; line-height:20px;" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! Country |
! Country |
||
Line 1,035: | Line 1,393: | ||
! Launch date |
! Launch date |
||
! Finale date |
! Finale date |
||
! Network |
|||
! Days |
! Days |
||
! Survivors |
! Survivors |
||
! Host |
|||
! Grand prize |
! Grand prize |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| Argentina |
|||
| Bulgaria |
|||
| ''[[Survivor |
| ''[[Survivor, Expedición Robinson 2024]]'' |
||
| 15 July 2024 |
|||
| September 15, 2014 |
|||
| September 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Telefe]] |
|||
| 52 |
|||
| |
| 60 |
||
| 25 |
|||
| 100,000 лв |
|||
| [[Alejandro Wiebe]] |
|||
| [[Argentine peso|$]]1,000,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Australia |
|||
| ''[[Australian Survivor]]'' |
|||
| January 2025 |
|||
| March 2025 |
|||
| [[Network 10|10]] |
|||
| 47 |
|||
| 24 |
|||
| [[Jonathan LaPaglia]] |
|||
| [[Australian dollar|A$]]500,000 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| Canada (Quebec) |
|||
| France |
|||
| '' |
| ''[[Survivor Québec 2024]]'' |
||
| |
| 31 March 2024 |
||
| Spring 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Noovo]] |
|||
| 42 |
| 42 |
||
| 20 |
| 20 |
||
| Patrice Bélanger |
|||
| [[United States dollar|$]]100,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Colombia |
|||
| ''Survivor: La Isla de Los Famosos'' |
|||
| 2024 |
|||
| 2024 |
|||
| [[RCN Televisión|RCN TV]] |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| Tatán Mejía |
|||
| TBA |
|||
|- |
|||
| Denmark |
|||
| ''[[Robinson Ekspeditionen]]'' |
|||
| September 2024 |
|||
| November 2024 |
|||
| [[TV3 (Denmark)|TV3]] |
|||
| 42 |
|||
| 22 |
|||
| [[Jakob Kjeldbjerg]] |
|||
| 500,000 [[Danish krone|DKK]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| Czech Republic<br>Slovakia |
|||
| ''Survivor Česko & Slovensko 2024'' |
|||
| 25 January 2024 |
|||
| 17 May 2024 |
|||
| [[TV Nova (Czech Republic)|TV Nova]]<br>Voyo SK |
|||
| 74 |
|||
| 24 |
|||
| Ondřej Novotný |
|||
| 2,500,000 [[Czech koruna|Kč]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| Ex-Yugoslavia |
|||
*Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|||
*Croatia |
|||
*Montenegro |
|||
*Serbia |
|||
| ''Survivor Hrvatska & Srbija 2024'' |
|||
| 4 March 2024 |
|||
| May 2024 |
|||
| [[Nova BH]]<br>[[Nova (Croatia)|Nova TV]]<br>[[Nova M]]<br>[[Nova S]] |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| 20 |
|||
| Bojan Perić<br>Mario Mlinarić |
|||
|€100.000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Finland |
|||
| ''[[Selviytyjät Suomi]]'' |
|||
| August 2024 |
|||
| December 2024 |
|||
| [[Nelonen (television)|Nelonen]] |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| [[Riku Rantala]] |
|||
| [[Euro sign|€]]30,000 |
|||
|- style="background:#e0ffff;" | |
|||
| France |
|||
| ''[[Koh-Lanta]]'' |
|||
| 13 February 2024 |
|||
| 2024 |
|||
| [[TF1]] |
|||
| 40 |
|||
| 22 |
|||
| [[Denis Brogniart]] |
|||
| €100,000 |
| €100,000 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| Greece |
|||
| [[Survivor Greece season 11|''Survivor Greece'' (season 11)]] |
|||
| 7 January 2024 |
|||
| July 2024 |
|||
| [[Skai TV]] |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| 36 |
|||
| Giorgos Lianos |
|||
| €100,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Hungary |
|||
| ''[[Survivor - A Sziget]]'' |
|||
| 2024 |
|||
| 2024 |
|||
| [[RTL (Hungarian TV channel)|RTL]] |
|||
| 39 |
|||
| TBA |
|||
| Miklós "Joe" Varga |
|||
| 20,000,000 [[Hungarian forint|Ft]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| Israel |
| Israel |
||
| |
| [[Survivor (Israeli TV series)|''Survivor Israel'' (season 12)]] |
||
| 17 December 2022 |
|||
| November 1, 2015 |
|||
| 1 April 2023 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Reshet 13]] |
|||
| 46 |
|||
| 45 |
|||
| 18 |
| 18 |
||
| Guy Zu-Aretz |
|||
| ₪1,000,000 |
|||
| [[Israeli shekel|₪]]1,000,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
|- style="background:#e0ffff;" | |
|||
| Italy |
| Italy |
||
| ''[[L' |
| ''[[L'isola dei Famosi]]'' |
||
| Spring 2024 |
|||
| February 2, 2015 |
|||
| Summer 2024 |
|||
| March 23, 2015 |
|||
| [[Canale 5]] |
|||
| 50 |
|||
| |
| TBD |
||
| TBD |
|||
| €200,000 |
|||
| Alberto 'Alvin' Bonato<br>[[Vladimir Luxuria]] |
|||
|- |
|||
| €100,000 |
|||
|- style="background:#e0ffff;" | |
|||
| Mexico |
| Mexico |
||
| ''Survivor México'' (season 5) |
|||
| ''La Isla, el reality'' |
|||
| |
| 11 March 2024 |
||
| 7 June 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Azteca Uno]] |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| TBD |
||
| 20 |
|||
| $2,000,000 |
|||
| Carlos "Warrior" Guerrero |
|||
| $2,000,000 [[Mexican peso|MXN]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| Netherlands |
| Netherlands |
||
| ''[[Expeditie Robinson]]'' |
| ''[[Expeditie Robinson]]'' |
||
| September |
| 1 September 2024 |
||
| December 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[RTL 4]] |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| 35 |
||
| 20 |
|||
| [[Nicolette Kluijver]]<br>[[Art Rooijakkers]] |
|||
| €25,000 |
| €25,000 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| Romania |
|||
| Slovakia |
|||
| ''[[Survivor România All Stars]]'' |
|||
| ''Ostrov'' |
|||
| 16 January 2024 |
|||
| 2016 |
|||
| 30 May 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Pro TV]] |
|||
| 42 |
|||
| |
| TBD |
||
| 26 |
|||
|€100,000 |
|||
| Daniel Pavel |
|||
| €100,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Russia |
|||
| ''Последний герой. Остаться семьёй''<br>''Last Hero: Stay as a Family'' |
|||
| 28 October 2023 |
|||
| 30 December 2023 |
|||
| [[TV-3 (Russia)|TV-3]] |
|||
| 30 |
|||
| 14 |
|||
| [[Kseniya Borodina]] |
|||
| 5.000.000 ₽ |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| Spain |
| Spain |
||
| ''[[ |
| ''[[Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2024)]]'' |
||
| 7 March 2024 |
|||
| 2015 |
|||
| June 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[Telecinco]]<br>[[Cuatro (TV channel)|Cuatro]] |
|||
| |
|||
| TBD |
|||
| |
|||
| 19 |
|||
| Laura Madrueño |
|||
| €200,000 |
| €200,000 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| Sweden |
| Sweden |
||
| ''[[ |
| ''[[Robinson 2024]]'' |
||
| 17 March 2024 |
|||
| Spring 2015 |
|||
| 19 May 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| [[TV4 (Sweden)|TV4]] |
|||
| |
|||
| 42 |
|||
| |
|||
| 22 |
|||
| 500,000 SEK |
|||
| [[Anders Lundin]] |
|||
| 500,000 [[Swedish krona|SEK]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| Turkey |
| Turkey |
||
| |
| [[Survivor Turkey|''Survivor Turkey'' (season 18)]] |
||
| 1 January 2024 |
|||
| 2016 |
|||
| |
| TBA |
||
| [[TV8 (Turkish TV channel)|TV8]] |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| TBD |
||
| 35 |
|||
| 500,000TL |
|||
| Acun Ilicali<br>Murat Ceylan |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[Turkish lira|₺]] 500,000 |
|||
|- style="background:#e0ffff;" | |
|||
| United States |
| United States |
||
| ''[[Survivor |
| ''[[Survivor 47]]'' |
||
| September |
| September 18, 2024 |
||
| December 2024 |
|||
| |
|||
| |
| [[CBS]] |
||
| |
| 26 |
||
| $1,000,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Slovenia |
|||
| ''Survivor Slovenija: Filipini'' |
|||
| August 31, 2016 |
|||
| |
|||
| 42 |
|||
| 18 |
| 18 |
||
| [[Jeff Probst]] |
|||
| €50,000 |
|||
| [[United States dollar|$]]1,000,000{{efn|On the 40th season of the American version of ''Survivor'', a season where all contestants were winners of previous seasons, the prize was increased to US$2 million.}} |
|||
|- |
|||
| Romania |
|||
| ''[[Supraviețuitorul: Filipine]]'' |
|||
| September 12, 2016 |
|||
| |
|||
|44 |
|||
|18 |
|||
| €100,000 |
|||
|- |
|||
| Czech Republic |
|||
| ''Robinsonův Ostrov'' |
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| 2016 |
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| |
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|45 |
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|18 |
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| 2,500,000 CZK |
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|- |
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|} |
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;Notes |
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{{notelist}} |
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==Other media== |
==Other media== |
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===Thrill ride=== |
===Thrill ride=== |
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One of the more novel merchandising items has been the interactive ''[[Survivor: The Ride]]'' thrill ride at [[California's Great America]] in [[Santa Clara, California|Santa Clara]], California. The ride includes a rotating platform on which riders are divided into one of four "tribes." As the ride moves along an undulating track, riders can be sprayed by water guns hidden in oversized tribal masks while drums and other familiar Survivor musical accents play in the background. Other theming includes Survivor memorabilia throughout the queue line and other merchandise for sale in nearby gift shops.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://themeparks.lovetoknow.com/Survivor:_The_Ride|title = Survivor: The Ride – LoveToKnow Themeparks}}</ref> The ride has since been rethemed as [[Tiki Twirl]]. |
One of the more novel merchandising items has been the interactive ''[[Survivor: The Ride]]'' thrill ride at [[California's Great America]] in [[Santa Clara, California|Santa Clara]], California. The ride includes a rotating platform on which riders are divided into one of four "tribes." As the ride moves along an undulating track, riders can be sprayed by water guns hidden in oversized tribal masks while drums and other familiar ''Survivor'' musical accents play in the background. Other theming includes ''Survivor'' memorabilia throughout the queue line and other merchandise for sale in nearby gift shops.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://themeparks.lovetoknow.com/Survivor:_The_Ride|title = Survivor: The Ride – LoveToKnow Themeparks|access-date = April 27, 2010|archive-date = May 24, 2009|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090524031035/http://themeparks.lovetoknow.com/Survivor:_The_Ride|url-status = dead}}</ref> The ride has since been rethemed as [[Tiki Twirl]]. |
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===Online games=== |
===Online games=== |
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During the first ''Survivor'' seasons many online games based on forums were created. |
During the first ''Survivor'' seasons many online games based on forums were created. More specific ''Survivor'' online games appeared later. |
||
In late 2013, a former contestant of the American version of the show, Erik Reichenbach, launched a [[Kickstarter]] campaign for a ''Survivor''-styled online mobile app called "Islands of Chaos". |
In late 2013, a former contestant of the American version of the show, Erik Reichenbach, launched a [[Kickstarter]] campaign for a ''Survivor''-styled online mobile app called "Islands of Chaos". The app pits players from all over the world in a battle of challenges and strategy to be the last one standing. If the campaign is successful, the plan is to release the game free of charge on a range of platforms including on [[Apple Inc.|Apple]] and [[Android (operating system)|Android]] devices.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1022705222/islands-of-chaos-the-strategic-adventure-mobile-ap?ref=banner= |website=kickstarter.com|title=Islands of Chaos: The Strategic Adventure Mobile App}}</ref> |
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''Survivor: Castaway Island'', a video game in partnership with [[Microids]] is slated for release on 3 October 2023.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.microids.com/microids-announces-a-partnership-with-banijay-brands-for-the-video-game-survivor-castaway-island/ | title=Microids announces a partnership with Banijay Brands for the video game Survivor: Castaway Island | date=July 17, 2023 }}</ref> |
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===Parody Series=== |
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Beginning on July 8, 2007, a parody of ''Survivor'' called ''[[Total Drama Island]]'' appeared on the television network [[Cartoon Network]]. This animated show included 22 summer campers who signed up to stay at a 5-star resort, which actually turned out to be a cruddy summer camp on an island somewhere in Muskoka, Ontario. The host, Chris McLean, is modeled after ''Survivor'' host Jeff Probst. The campers are taken to the island on boats to meet their fellow competitors, being heartbroken at the sight of their wasted summer. The campers were separated into two teams: The "Screaming Gophers" and the "Killer Bass". Every three days there would be a challenge for the campers to face, from jumping off a 1,000-foot high cliff into a lake to survival skills. The losing team of each challenge would go to the Bonfire Ceremony the night of the challenge, and vote someone off the team, like ''Survivor''. Each team member still in the game would receive a marshmallow, leaving one team member without one. The member who does not receive a marshmallow (the symbol of life on the island) would have to walk the Dock of Shame and board the Boat of Losers to leave the island, and "Never ever ever ever ever" return (which turned out to be a lie in the episode "No Pain, No Game"). After 12 members of the island were voted off, the teams were merged. Two competitors were brought back into the game for another chance at the grand prize, C$100,000. When only three members are left, there is a sudden-death challenge. The person who does not accept a dare is immediately taken off the island. For the final challenge, the 20 campers voted off the island are brought back to root for one of the two survivors. The winner receives a check for the C$100,000 and the final marshmallow. The show then ends with Chris thrown off the Dock of Shame. The show aired in 188 countries and also appeared on the channels of [[Cartoon Network]] and [[Jetix]]. The show became a critical and commercial success and it spun off into a [[Total Drama|series]]. |
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===Parody=== |
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Beginning on July 8, 2007, a parody of ''Survivor'' called ''[[Total Drama Island]]'' appeared on the Canadian television network [[Teletoon]]. This animated show included 22 summer campers who signed up to stay at a five-star resort, which actually turned out to be a cruddy summer camp on an island somewhere in Muskoka, Ontario. The host, Chris McLean, is modeled after ''Survivor'' host Jeff Probst. The campers are taken to the island on boats to meet their fellow competitors, being heartbroken at the sight of their wasted summer. The campers were separated into two teams: The "Screaming Gophers" and the "Killer Bass". Every three days there would be a challenge for the campers to face, from jumping off a {{convert|1000|ft|m|adj=on}} high cliff into a lake to survival skills. The losing team of each challenge would go to the Bonfire Ceremony the night of the challenge, and vote someone off the team, like ''Survivor''. Each team member still in the game would receive a marshmallow, leaving one team member without one. The member who does not receive a marshmallow (the symbol of life on the island) would have to walk the Dock of Shame and board the Boat of Losers to leave the island, and "Never ever ever ever ever" return (which turned out to be a lie in the episode "No Pain, No Game"). After 12 members of the island were voted off, the teams were merged. The winner receives a check for the C$100,000 and the final marshmallow. The show then ends with Chris thrown off the Dock of Shame. The show aired in 188 countries and also appeared on the channels of [[Cartoon Network]] and [[Jetix]]. The show became a critical and commercial success and it spun off into a [[Total Drama|series]]. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
||
* [[List of television show franchises]] |
* [[List of television show franchises]] |
||
* [[Total Drama]] |
* ''[[Total Drama]]'' |
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* [[Get Out Alive with Bear Grylls]] |
* ''[[Get Out Alive with Bear Grylls]]'' |
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* ''[[Takeshi's Castle]]'' |
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* ''[[The Hunger Games]]'' |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist |
{{Reflist}} |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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'''United Kingdom Season #1 (2001) |
'''United Kingdom Season #1 (2001)''' |
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* Waddell, Dan. ''Survivor: Trust No One: The Official Inside Story of TV's Toughest Challenge''. London: Carlton, [December,] 2001. |
* Waddell, Dan. ''Survivor: Trust No One: The Official Inside Story of TV's Toughest Challenge''. London: Carlton, [December, ] 2001. |
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'''United Kingdom Season #2: Survivor: Panama (2002) |
'''United Kingdom Season #2: Survivor: Panama (2002)''' |
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* Waddell, Dan. ''Survivor: Panama''. London: Carlton, [June,] 2002. |
* Waddell, Dan. ''Survivor: Panama''. London: Carlton, [June, ] 2002. |
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'''United States Season #1: Survivor: Pulau Tiga, Borneo (2000)''' |
'''United States Season #1: Survivor: Pulau Tiga, Borneo (2000)''' |
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* Boesch, Rudy, and Jeff Herman. ''The Book of Rudy: The Wit and Wisdom of Rudy Boesch''. No location: Adams Media Corporation, 2001. |
* [[Rudy Boesch|Boesch, Rudy]], and Jeff Herman. ''The Book of Rudy: The Wit and Wisdom of Rudy Boesch''. No location: Adams Media Corporation, 2001. |
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* Burnett, Mark, with Martin Dugard. ''Survivor: The Ultimate Game: The Official Companion Book to the CBS Television Show''. New York: TV Books, 2000. |
* Burnett, Mark, with Martin Dugard. ''Survivor: The Ultimate Game: The Official Companion Book to the CBS Television Show''. New York: TV Books, 2000. |
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* Hatch, Richard. ''101 Survival Secrets: How to Make $1,000,000, Lose 100 Pounds, and Just Plain Live Happily''. New York: Lyons Press, 2000. |
* [[Richard Hatch (Survivor contestant)|Hatch, Richard]]. ''101 Survival Secrets: How to Make $1,000,000, Lose 100 Pounds, and Just Plain Live Happily''. New York: Lyons Press, 2000. |
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* Lance, Peter. ''Stingray: Lethal Tactics of the Sole Survivor: The Inside Story of How the Castaways were Controlled on the Island and Beyond''. Portland, Oregon: R.R. Donnelley, 2000. |
* Lance, Peter. ''Stingray: Lethal Tactics of the Sole Survivor: The Inside Story of How the Castaways were Controlled on the Island and Beyond''. Portland, Oregon: R.R. Donnelley, 2000. |
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'''United States Season #2: Survivor: The Australian Outback (2001)''' |
'''United States Season #2: Survivor: The Australian Outback (2001)''' |
||
* Burnett, Mark. ''Dare to Succeed: How to Survive and Thrive in the Game of Life''. No location: Hyperion, 2001. |
* [[Mark Burnett|Burnett, Mark]]. ''Dare to Succeed: How to Survive and Thrive in the Game of Life''. No location: Hyperion, 2001. |
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* ''Survivor II: The Field Guide: The Official Companion to the CBS Television Show''. New York: TV Books, 2001. |
* ''Survivor II: The Field Guide: The Official Companion to the CBS Television Show''. New York: TV Books, 2001. |
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* ChillOne, The. ''The Spoiler: Revealing the Secrets of Survivor''. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse, 2003. |
* ChillOne, The. ''The Spoiler: Revealing the Secrets of Survivor''. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse, 2003. |
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'''United States Season #9: Survivor: Vanuatu -Islands of Fire (2004) |
'''United States Season #9: Survivor: Vanuatu -Islands of Fire (2004)''' |
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* Burnett, Mark. ''Jump In!: Even If You Don't Know How to Swim''. New York: Ballantine Books, 2005. |
* Burnett, Mark. ''Jump In!: Even If You Don't Know How to Swim''. New York: Ballantine Books, 2005. |
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'''Various Seasons, esp. United States 1–6 |
'''Various Seasons, esp. United States 1–6''' |
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* ''Survivor Lessons'', edited by Matthew J. Smith and Andrew F. Wood. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2004. |
* ''Survivor Lessons'', edited by Matthew J. Smith and Andrew F. Wood. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2004. |
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* Wright, Christopher J. ''Tribal Warfare: Survivor and the Political Unconscious of Reality Television'' (Series: Critical Studies in Television). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006. |
* Wright, Christopher J. ''Tribal Warfare: Survivor and the Political Unconscious of Reality Television'' (Series: Critical Studies in Television). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{commons category|Survivor (TV series)}} |
{{commons category|Survivor (TV series)}} |
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* [http:// |
* [http://tenplay.com.au/channel-ten/australian-survivor Australian Survivor] |
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* [https://archive.today/20131201071900/http://www.mnetafrica.co.za/survivor/ Survivor Africa] |
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* [https://www.vier.be/expeditie-robinson Expedition Robinson Belgium] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180502211249/https://www.vier.be/expeditie-robinson |date=May 2, 2018 }} |
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* [http://survivor.btv.bg/ Survivor Bulgaria] |
* [http://survivor.btv.bg/ Survivor Bulgaria] |
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* [http:// |
* [http://survivor.hr/ Survivor Croatia] |
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* [http:// |
* [http://robinson.nova.cz/ Expedition Robinson Czech Republic] |
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* [ |
* [https://voyo.nova.cz/titul/5986-survivor Survivor Czech Republic & Slovakia] |
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* [http://www.tv3.dk/robinson-ekspeditionen Expedition Robinson Denmark] |
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* [http://www.nelonen.fi/ohjelmat/selviytyjat-suomi Survivor Finland] |
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* [https://www.tf1.fr/tf1/koh-lanta Survivor France] |
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* [https://www.vox.de/cms/sendungen/survivor.html Survivor Germany] |
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* [http://survivor.skai.gr/ Survivor Greece] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170416212958/http://survivor.skai.gr/ |date=April 16, 2017 }} |
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* [http://rtl.hu/rtlklub/survivor Survivor Hungary] |
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* [http://survivorindia.citesap.com/ Survivor India] |
* [http://survivorindia.citesap.com/ Survivor India] |
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* [http://survivor.nana10.co.il/ Survivor Israel] |
* [http://survivor.nana10.co.il/ Survivor Israel] |
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* [http://www.isola.rai.it/ (Celebrity) Survivor Italy] |
* [http://www.isola.rai.it/ (Celebrity) Survivor Italy] |
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* [ |
* [https://www.tvazteca.com/aztecauno/survivor Survivor Mexico] |
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* [http://www. |
* [http://www.expeditierobinson.nl/ Expedition Robinson Netherlands] |
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* [ |
* [https://www.tvnz.co.nz/shows/survivor-new-zealand/ Survivor New Zealand] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060513090531/http://www.dewsurvivorpak.com.pk/ Survivor Pakistan] |
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* [http://www.1tv.ru/hero/ Last Hero Russia] |
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* [http://www. |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090224112218/http://www.survivorphilippines.tv/ Survivor Philippines] |
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* [http://www. |
* [http://www.polsat.pl/program/wyspa-przetrwania/ Survivor Poland] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110821071838/http://www.1tv.ru/hero/ Last Hero Russia] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081205175233/http://survivor.rs/ Survivor Serbia] |
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* [http://ostrov.markiza.sk/ Survivor Slovakia] |
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* [https://m-net.dstv.com/show/survivor-sa-philippines Survivor South Africa] |
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* [http://www.telecinco.es/supervivientes/ Survivor Spain] |
* [http://www.telecinco.es/supervivientes/ Survivor Spain] |
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* [http://www.tv4.se/robinson/ Expedition Robinson Sweden] |
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* [http://www.acunn.com/survivor Survivor Turkey] |
* [http://www.acunn.com/survivor Survivor Turkey] |
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* [http://hero.ictv.ua/ Last Hero Ukraine] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110408100905/http://hero.ictv.ua/ Last Hero Ukraine] |
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* [ |
* [https://www.cbs.com/shows/survivor/ Survivor United States] |
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{{Survivor (British TV series)}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Survivor ( |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Survivor (TV Series)}} |
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[[Category:Survivor ( |
[[Category:Survivor (franchise)|Survivor ]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Banijay franchises]] |
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[[Category:Reality television series franchises]] |
Latest revision as of 06:39, 28 December 2024
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (October 2021) |
Survivor | |
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Created by | Charlie Parsons, Waheed Alli, Baron Alli and Planet 24 |
Original work | Expedition Robinson (Sweden) |
Owner | Banijay Entertainment[1] |
Years | 1997–present |
Survivor is a reality-competition television franchise produced globally. The show features a group of contestants deliberately marooned in an isolated location, where they must provide basic survival necessities for themselves. The contestants compete in challenges for rewards and immunity from elimination. The contestants are progressively eliminated from the game as they are voted out by their fellow contestants until only one remains to be awarded the grand prize and named the "Sole Survivor".
The British television producer Charlie Parsons developed the format for Survivor in 1992 for Planet 24, a United Kingdom television production company; the Swedish version, which debuted in September 1997 as Expedition Robinson, became the first Survivor series to be broadcast on television. Since its launch in 2000, the flagship American version of Survivor has aired 46 seasons of the show, with the 47th season premiering in September 2024.
Format
[edit]Survivor, through its seasons and various international versions, has maintained the basic premise of the game despite several new rules and gameplay twists introduced in later seasons. In the game, the contestants, known as castaways, are split into tribes and assigned separate camps at the filming location, typically a tropical setting. As a tribe, the castaways must survive the elements, construct shelter, build fire, look for water, and scrounge for food and other necessities for the entire length of the game, which is generally around 39 days for most versions including the American version, but has ranged from 20 days (as in some French special seasons) to over 150 days (as in some seasons of the Turkish edition). In the first half of the game, the tribes face off in challenges, some for rewards of food, shelter, or luxury items, while others are for immunity, preventing the winning tribe from having to go to the next Tribal Council. At Tribal Council, the tribes discuss the events of the last few days with the host asking questions, and then vote out one of their own players, eliminating them from the game.
In the second half of the game, the tribes are merged into a single tribe, and challenges are played at an individual level for individual rewards and immunity. At subsequent Tribal Councils, those eliminated start to form the jury, who sit in on all subsequent Tribal Councils but otherwise do not participate. When only two or three castaways remain, those castaways attend the Final Tribal Council, where the jury is given the opportunity to ask them questions. After this, the jury members then vote to decide which of the remaining castaways should be declared the Sole Survivor and be awarded the grand prize.
Episodes typically cover the events that occurred over two to three days since the start of the game or previous Tribal Council, including Challenges and events that occur at the tribes' camps. Each episode typically ends with the Tribal Council and the subsequent elimination of the voted-out player. The final episode will typically speed up the gameplay of the final couple of eliminations (which occur daily), followed by the Final Tribal Council on the final day of the completion. Many versions of the show will follow the final episode with a live reunion, during which the votes from the Jury are counted, and a "Sole Survivor" is declared, and the players reunite to discuss their experience on the island.
The following description of the show is based primarily on the American version of Survivor, though the general format applies to all international versions.
Castaways and tribes
[edit]Players for each season are selected through applicants and casting calls, down-selecting to between 16 and 20 players and additional alternates. American version host Jeff Probst noted that while 16 castaways assist in splitting the tribes with respect to age and sex, they have used 18 or 20 to provide them "wiggle room" in case of player injury or if one should want to quit the game.[2] These players undergo physical and psychological evaluation to make sure they are physically and mentally fit for the survival endurance and will not likely quit during the filming period, replacing those that are questionable with the alternates. In one case, Fiji, on the day before filming was to start after they had dismissed their alternates, one of the castaways opted out of the competition, forcing production to start with 19 players and adapting the activities of the first few days to accommodate the odd number of players.[3]
Tribes may be predetermined by production before filming starts. Often this is done to equalize the sexes and age ranges within both tribes. Other seasons have had the tribes separated by age, gender, race or other characteristics. In other cases, the tribes may be created by the castaways through schoolyard picks. Most often, only two tribes are featured, but some seasons have begun with three or four tribes. Once assigned a tribe, each castaway is given a buff in their tribe color to aid the viewers in identifying tribal allocation. Tribes are then subsequently given names, often inspired by the local region and culture, and directions to their camps.
At their camps, tribes are expected to build a shelter against the elements from the local trees and other resources. Tribes are typically given minimal resources, such as a machete, water canteens, cooking pots, and staples of rice and grains, though this varies from season to season. Sometimes, tribes are provided with a water well near the camp, but require the water to be boiled to make it potable, necessitating the need for the tribe to build a fire. The tribes are encouraged to forage off the land for food, including fruits, wild animals, and fish.
Tribe swaps
[edit]In some seasons, tribe swaps occur where one or more players shift from one tribe to another. These new tribal designations are often determined by random draw or schoolyard pick. When these occur, those players that shift tribes are given new buffs for their new tribe and return to that tribe's camp, with any personal possessions from their former camp moved with them. In seasons with more than two tribes, tribe swaps often reduce the number of tribes to two. In Survivor: Cambodia, a tribe swap increased the number of tribes from two to three; a second tribe swap later in the season reduced the number of tribes back to two.
Tribes that have lost too many members may be absorbed by the other remaining tribes, as seen with the Ulong tribe in Survivor: Palau and the Matsing tribe of Survivor: Philippines; in the former case, the lone remaining Ulong member joined the opposing Koror tribe and the tribes were treated as if they were merged, whereas in the later case the two remaining Matsing members were randomly assigned to the two remaining tribes. Alternatively, in Survivor: All-Stars, the tribe that placed third in a designated challenge was disbanded, with the members reallocated to the other two tribes by schoolyard pick.
Tribal merge
[edit]At a point in or around the middle of the game, the remaining tribes are merged into one. All of the players then live in a single camp, and are given new buffs and instructed to select a new tribe name and paint a tribe flag. The merge is often signified with a feast. Though the merge often occurs when approximately 10 to 12 players remain, the tribes have been merged with as many as 13 players (as many of the seasons since Survivor: Cambodia) and as few as eight (as in Survivor: Thailand).
Challenges
[edit]During both pre- and post-merge parts of the game, the castaways compete in a series of challenges. Tribes are alerted to these upcoming challenges by a message, often in rhyme, delivered to camp by the production team at a basket or box on a nearby tree; this message has come to be called "treemail", playing off the word "e-mail". The message typically hints at what the challenge might be. The message may also provide props to demonstrate this, practice equipment for the players, or a sampling of the reward. Challenges can last from a few minutes to a couple of hours. The longest Survivor challenge was 11 hours and 55 minutes in the final immunity challenge in Survivor: Palau.
Tribal challenges
[edit]Prior to the merge, tribes compete against each other in challenges. These most often are multi-segment obstacle courses that include both physical and mental elements with the tribe that finishes first declared the winner; commonly, these start with tribe members collecting puzzle pieces that are then used to solve a puzzle by other tribe members. Other challenges may be based on winning a number of rounds of head-to-head competitions. Challenges are normally held with equal numbers of all tribes participating and in some cases equal splits of gender. Tribes with more players will be asked to sit out as many players as needed to balance the numbers, with the stipulation that those players cannot sit out in back-to-back reward and immunity challenges.[4] When one tribe has more than twice the other tribe members, then players in the larger tribe cannot participate in back-to-back challenges. Tribes are given time to strategically decide who should sit out and who will perform the various duties on a challenge.
Individual challenges
[edit]After the merge, challenges are generally performed on an individual basis. These include similar obstacle courses as for team challenges, but will often also include endurance challenges, having players maintain the balance under precarious situations for as long as possible, with the last player remaining winning the challenge. In some cases, during post-merge challenges, the individuals will be split into separate teams, with only the winning team eligible for reward or immunity.
Types of challenges
[edit]Challenges can be played for rewards, immunity, or both. Rewards include food, survival equipment like flint, tarps, or fishing gear, luxury items, and short getaways from camp. Before the merge, the entire winning tribe will enjoy these rewards. Post-merge, only one player may win the reward but will be given the opportunity to select one or more other players to bring along with them on it. Individual challenge rewards may also include an advantage that can be used at the subsequent immunity challenge, such as advancing directly into the final round of the challenge without having to participate in the first round.
Immunity challenges provide the winning tribe or team with immunity from Tribal Council. Immunity is usually represented in a form of an idol prior to the merge, and a necklace afterwards. Prior to the merge, tribes with immunity do not attend Tribal Council, allowing them to stay intact. In seasons featuring more than two tribes, immunity will be available for all but the last place finishers, forcing this one tribe to Tribal Council. With individual immunity, those castaways still attend Tribal Council with the rest of the merged tribe, but, unless they assign immunity to someone else, are ineligible to be voted for. Winning immunity is only good for one Tribal Council; at the next immunity challenge, the tribe or castaway will be asked to give up the idol or necklace, making immunity "up for grabs". There have been a few cases in which individual immunity challenges have taken place prior to the merge whereupon usually, one castaway in each tribe will be given immunity, after which both tribes will attend Tribal Council, one after the other. This is used to quickly dwindle the number of remaining castaways.
Though a wide variety of challenges have been used across the Survivor's broadcast, several challenges are frequently reused:
- A food eating challenge, involving food items that may be local delicacies but are considered gross or revolting by the castaways. These were more often seen in earlier seasons but in recent years have become much less frequent.
- A trivia or "know your tribe" quiz, where castaways who provide correct answers are allowed to knock other castaways out of the challenge and prevent them from winning.
- A "Survivor Auction", used in place of a reward challenge, in which the players are given a sum of money to use to bid on food items (both known and unknown at the time of bidding), other momentary luxuries like a bath, or advantages in the game, such as a clue to a hidden immunity idol or an advantage in the upcoming immunity challenge.
- A "loved ones" challenge, where a spouse, parent, sibling, adult child or friend of each castaway has been flown out to the location to participate in the challenge with or for their castaway. The winner typically gets to spend more time with their loved one, either on a brief trip or back at camp.
- A "second chance" challenge, where elements of previous challenges are reused in a single course.
- The final immunity challenge is often a long-lasting endurance challenge, giving the remaining castaways time to make bargains and last-minute deals to get into the final Tribal Council.
Tribal Council
[edit]Tribal Council is a special production stage located near the tribe camps. Tribes sit across a fire pit from the host while the jury members, if present, sit off to the side. A small alcove adjoins the structure for the players to cast their votes in private. Tribal Council almost always serves as an episode's finale.
The first time each player attends Tribal Council, he or she takes a torch and lights it from the fire pit while the host reminds them "fire represents life in this game". During the jury phase of the game, the host will call in the jury after the tribe is seated and remind jurors they are there to gather information but not speak or otherwise participate. The host will then proceed to ask the tribe questions about what has transpired since their last visit to Tribal Council (or the beginning of the game). The host asks these questions in hopes of bringing tribal dynamics to light, and players in precarious situations may reveal information or bargain with others to keep themselves in the game. Though the viewing audience typically sees only a few minutes of each Tribal Council, some have gone on for hours.
The host ends the formal discussion by declaring that it is time to vote. During the second half of the game, the host then gives the immunity challenge winner(s) the choice to keep their immunity necklace for themselves or give it to another player, then reminds players they cannot cast a vote for the player(s) who finally end up wearing the necklace(s). The host then directs the players to vote in the alcove one-by-one. After writing their vote, each player has the opportunity to address the camera before placing their vote in the ballot urn. Once all players have cast their votes, the host collects the urn, tallies the votes, and returns to the fire pit with the urn. Beginning from Survivor: Fiji, the host then offers players the opportunity to play an immunity idol prior to announcing the votes. If a player produces an idol, he or she must declare which player the idol protects (typically a player can protect anyone, including themselves). The host then confirms if the idol is legitimate, and if it is, the host declares that any vote for the protected player will not count. The host then reminds the tribe that once the votes are read, the decision is final, and the eliminated player must leave the Tribal Council area immediately.
When enough votes have been read to eliminate one player, any additional votes remain unread and unknown to the players (in almost all cases, the leftover votes are also for the eliminated player). The host instructs the eliminated player to bring their torch, snuffs it out, and tells the player that "the tribe has spoken" (or in rare cases, a fitting variation thereof) and "it's time for you to go." As the eliminated player walks off, the host makes a final observation before telling the remainder of the tribe to "grab your torches and head back to camp" and wishes them a good night. Occasionally, tribes who have not made fire on their own or earned it in a challenge will have to douse their torches or leave the torches at Tribal Council.
The eliminated player has a final confessional to express their feelings about being eliminated before they are sequestered with other eliminated players until the end of filming. Later eliminated players join the jury who will decide the winner. Jurors are sequestered until the end of the Final Tribal Council. While sequestered, jurors cannot discuss their jury vote or experiences with other jurors to prevent any possible cooperation or collusion from subgroups within the jury. After casting their vote at Final Tribal Council, jurors also cannot discuss their vote with anyone lest they spoil the surprise reveal at the season finale.
Ties occasionally occur. Normally, the players vote a second time with only the tied players eligible for elimination. If this second vote does not break the tie, various tiebreakers have broken the stalemates. These tiebreakers have changed throughout the seasons. In Survivor: The Australian Outback and Survivor: Africa, stalemates were broken by eliminating the player with the highest number of previous votes cast against them. If the players had the same number of previous votes cast against them, as seen in Africa, the tie was resolved by a sudden-death challenge (in this case a trivia quiz about nature), with the loser eliminated. This soon led to alliances choosing a player to eliminate based on their vote history over other relevant factors. To put all players on even ground in subsequent seasons, the non-tied voters have several minutes to deliberate and must come to a unanimous decision about which tied castaway to eliminate. If they succeed, their chosen castaway is eliminated; if they do not, all non-immune deliberators draw concealed rocks from a bag, and the castaway who draws the odd-colored rock is eliminated. This encourages players to change their votes to avoid a stalemate and punishes deliberators for stalemating. The rock-draw tiebreaker has occurred three times: in Survivor: Marquesas, Survivor: Blood vs. Water, and Survivor: Millennials vs. Gen X. In Survivor: Marquesas, the rock draw occurred with four players remaining, and the tied castaways were both involved in the deliberation and eligible for elimination; host Jeff Probst later revealed that this was a mistake and that this tiebreaker should only be used when six or more players are involved.[5] Following Survivor: Marquesas, all stalemates with four remaining players have been resolved by a fire-making duel where the first tied castaway to build a small fire high enough to burn through a rope remained in the game. The fire-making tiebreaker was also used in Survivor: Palau at a Tribal Council where the losing tribe had only two members remaining.
Final Tribal Council
[edit]When only two—or, in later seasons, three—players remain in the game, the finalists and jurors convene for Final Tribal Council. The change to three finalists presents more of a challenge to the castaway who wins the final immunity challenge: while that person has clinched their spot as a finalist, they cannot unilaterally decide which of the other remaining castaways they will compete against for jurors' votes.[6]
At Final Tribal Council, each remaining castaway makes an opening statement to the jury. One-by-one, each juror then addresses any or all of the finalists, asking questions or commenting on the finalists' behavior in the game. Jurors often ask questions hoping for answers that will help make their decision, while comments and speeches are generally an effort to sway other jurors. The finalists are usually free to respond to these questions and comments as they see fit, though jurors can expressly forbid them to respond. Beginning with Survivor: Game Changers in the U.S., the process shifted from each juror receiving the floor one-by-one toward a moderated discussion highlighting the show's three major tentpoles: "Outwit", "Outplay" and "Outlast". After the interrogation, finalists often have one last chance to make their case. The host then reminds the jurors that they are writing their choice to win (versus writing their choice to eliminate, as in all other votes) and, for the last time, declares that it is time to vote. One-by-one, jurors vote privately in the alcove. As with regular elimination votes, jurors can choose to address the camera to explain their vote. The host then collects the urn, and in most seasons, leaves the votes unread until a live finale months later, at the conclusion of the season's broadcast, where they read the votes publicly and crown the Sole Survivor.
Since the 41st season of the American version of the show, the structure of Final Tribal Council has been permanently changed. When the votes are cast now, Jeff Probst simply reads off the votes and announces on the spot who won the game. The reunion show also now takes place immediately after this vote at the FTC site, with all of the contestants sitting and talking over the season with themselves and Jeff.
At the finale of Survivor: Micronesia, the only season to date with two finalists and eight jurors, host Jeff Probst reportedly had a white envelope containing the tiebreaker, but the exact nature of this tiebreaker is not known publicly, as a tie did not occur.[7] This contingency plan was also in place for three-way ties involving three finalists and nine jurors. At the Survivor: Game Changers reunion, Probst revealed that a two-way tie in a final three would be broken with the third-place finisher casting the deciding vote.[8] This first happened in Survivor: Ghost Island when Wendell Holland and Domenick Abbate each received 5 votes to win. Laurel Johnson, the third-place finisher, became the 11th and final juror and cast the deciding vote.
In the French series, ties between two finalists are resolved by crowning them co-winners, as seen in their third, seventh and twenty-third seasons.
Evacuation and quitting
[edit]Some players have been eliminated from the game by other means than being voted out. Castaways who suffer severe injuries or exhaustion are evaluated by the medical team which is always on call. The medical team may provide treatment and give the player the option to continue in the game, warning them of the health risks involved. However, if the medical doctor determines that the player is at risk of permanent injury or death and needs to be removed from the game for their own health, they will be removed and taken to a nearby hospital. In Survivor: Cambodia, the producers were notified that one of the remaining castaways' children had been hospitalized, and the castaway was pulled from the game to return home and be with their family. Survivor: Kaôh Rōng has had the most evacuations to date, with three.
Occasionally, castaways who are not in need of medical treatment have decided to quit the game, without waiting to be voted out, due to physical or emotional exhaustion—either by making an announcement at a Tribal Council, in which case they are let out of the game without any vote, or by being recovered from camp after making their intentions clear to producers and being interviewed by the host. When a player leaves the game without being voted off, the other tribes are notified of the departed player's removal, and the next Tribal Council may be cancelled. After the players merge into one tribe, any who have been removed from the game by medical evacuation are still eligible to participate as jury members once the medical examiners deem them healthy enough to do so. Those that have quit the game voluntarily may also still be eligible for the jury and, if their reasons for leaving are considered sufficient, they may also still be allowed to make a farewell speech to the camera.
Hidden immunity idols
[edit]Hidden immunity idols are pocket-sized ornaments—typically necklaces—made to fit the theme of the season, that are hidden around the tribes' camps or other locations that the castaways have access to. When played at Tribal Council, the hidden immunity idol makes the castaway who plays it immune from elimination at that Tribal Council. Idols are typically usable until the Tribal Council with five players remaining, and do not need to be declared to other castaways when found. The idol, once found by a player, cannot be stolen from them, but other castaways can look through their possessions to see if they have it. Idols can, however, be transferred to other players at any point, or be played on another player at Tribal Council. Once an idol "leaves the game", either by being played or by the holder leaving the game with their idol, a replacement idol may be hidden.
First seen in Survivor: Guatemala, several seasons have used different iterations of the idol:
- An idol that can be played before the votes are cast, thus preventing all other players from voting against the player who cast it (As seen in Guatemala)
- An idol that can be played after the votes are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in Panama and Cook Islands. Also seen in Cagayan, Kaôh Rōng and Heroes v Healers v Hustlers as the "Super Idol")
- An idol that can be played after the votes are cast but before they are read, thus negating all votes against the player who cast it and eliminating the castaway with the next-highest vote total (As seen in all seasons from Fiji onward)
The third type of idol is seen as a "happy medium" relative to the two previous versions,[9] and forces both the voters and the idol holder to make a more complicated strategic decision: the voters may have to vote without knowing whether the person they are voting for has a hidden immunity idol or without knowing whether that person will choose to play it, and the person with the idol must decide whether to play it without knowing whether enough votes have been cast to vote them out of the game. This type of idol may be "wasted" if a player uses it and does not receive the highest number of votes, and other times idol holders may choose not to use the idol, intending to save it to use at a later time, but will be eliminated with their idol unplayed. Though this third idol continues to be used, two seasons have used the two latter forms of idols concurrently: in Cagayan, clues were given to the third type of idol, but an idol with the second power was hidden with no clues; this idol could not be transferred.[10] In Kaôh Rōng, all hidden idols were of the third type, but two idols could be combined into a single idol of the second type, referred to as a "super idol".[11]
Strategically, castaways have used the idol as a bargaining chip to align other players with them and swing pending votes in a specific direction; as a result, some players have been inspired to create fake hidden immunity idols, either leaving them the spot that the original idol was found (most commonly), or carrying them around as a bluff to attempt to alter people's voting strategies in advance of Tribal Council. If a fake idol is played at Tribal Council, the host notes that it is not a hidden immunity idol and throws it in the fire. In the American version of the show, the producers have encouraged players to make fake idols by providing decorative materials—such as beads, string, and paint—through props within the game.[12] In Cambodia, all idols were deliberately made to look different from each other to further encourage castaways to make fake idols.[13]
To help castaways find the idol, a series of clues are given to them in succession in a number of different ways. A clue may be given to the winner of a reward challenge, hidden among the reward prizes, announced by the host to all remaining castaways, or provided to a castaway who has been sent to Exile Island or temporarily sent to live with the other tribe. Castaways are under no obligation to share the idol clues with other players. Clues continue to be provided even after a player has secretly found the idol. Each successive clue includes all the previous clues given for that location. Only once a new idol is hidden are new clues provided to the players. In later seasons, players have been very aware that hidden idols may be in play from the start of the game and some have started to look for them near apparent landmarks before any clues have been provided. One castaway, Russell Hantz, was able to find two idols during Survivor: Samoa without the aid of clues. In light of this so-called "Russell factor," producers subsequently began hiding the idols in more difficult-to-find locations,[14] and, in Survivor: Nicaragua, clues contained a rebus puzzle rather than text,[15] though this did not carry into the next season or beyond.
Exile Island
[edit]Exile Island is a remote location away from the tribal camps, where one or two castaways are sent to live in isolation from the rest of their tribe. Exile Island was first introduced in Survivor: Palau when a single contestant was made to stay alone on a beach for a day as a result of being the first to drop out of an Immunity Challenge. This twist was not used regularly until Survivor: Panama; it was also used in Cook Islands, Fiji, Micronesia, Gabon, Tocantins, and San Juan del Sur. The first contestant to send him/herself to Exile Island was Yau-Man Chan.
A selected player is exiled to a location (typically a small island) apart from the main tribe camps. Typically, the castaway is exiled after the reward challenge, leaving the challenge location for Exile Island, and usually returns immediately before the following immunity challenge. The exiled castaway is chosen as a result of the reward challenge: in the tribal phase, a member of the losing tribe is exiled (usually exiled by the winning tribe), while in the individual phase, the reward challenge winner holds the sole right to choose. Unless stated otherwise, players who win the right to decide who goes to Exile Island may also choose to go themselves. In Micronesia, Tocantins, and San Juan del Sur, one person from each tribe was sent to Exile Island. In several seasons with Exile Island, there were tribe swaps with an uneven number of castaways remaining, as in Panama, Fiji, Gabon, David vs. Goliath; the leftover contestant was treated as "tribeless" and exiled immediately after formation. In this case, the contestant was immune until following the next Tribal Council, joining the tribe that lost the next immunity challenge.
Once selected, the exiled contestant is immediately sent there. They are given minimal survival tools, typically a water canteen, a machete, a pot, and a limited amount of shelter. The two main disadvantages of being on Exile Island are the lack of food and water, which can weaken a player and make them less effective in challenges, and the isolation from other contestants, which can cause a player to become out of the loop and weaken their position in their tribe. Contestants are often sent to Exile Island for one or both of these strategic reasons.
In certain seasons, exiled castaways receive a consolation prize: in all seasons with Exile Island, the exiled castaway receives a clue to the hidden immunity idol (or the idol nullifier on David vs Goliath.), which may or may not be located on the island. On Survivor: Gabon, the exiled castaway was given the option to give up their idol clue for "instant comfort," and in Survivor: Tocantins, the exiled castaway had the right to change tribes. Occasionally the exiled castaway is instructed to return after the next Tribal Council, earning them automatic immunity.
Other exile twists
[edit]Two seasons of the American version have used different variations on the Exile twists. In China, tribes who won reward challenges earned the right to "kidnap" a member of the losing tribe, who would stay with them until the next immunity challenge. The kidnapped person was given a clue to the hidden immunity idol which he or she must give to one member of the winning tribe. In Samoa a reverse version of the kidnapping rule was used, called "spy expedition" (also known as "observing"). The winning tribe had to send one of their own to accompany the other tribe until the immunity challenge. Both of these twists were retired after the merge. In Kaôh Rōng, the three tribes were shuffled into two tribes with 13 players remaining; the leftover castaway, Julia Solowski, was exiled to the now-defunct third camp and joined the tribe that lost the next immunity challenge the day after their Tribal Council. In Game Changers, the tribes switched with 15 players remaining, with Debbie being exiled for not being put on a tribe. Unlike other visitors to Exile Island, Debbie was sent to a luxury yacht.
The 36th season of the American version introduced the titular Ghost Island, which was similar to Exile Island but featured mementos and props from previous seasons of Survivor, including several misplayed advantages. Banished castaways were given the opportunity to acquire these advantages in a game of chance where they could either win the advantage or lose their vote at their next Tribal Council (represented as a parchment stating "No Vote"). However, not every episode has advantages given out at Ghost Island.
Redemption Island
[edit]Redemption Island is a twist used in Survivor: Redemption Island, Survivor: South Pacific and Survivor: Blood vs. Water, in which voted out contestants remain in the game, exiled from the other castaways, competing in challenges for a chance to return to the game. It was first used in several international editions, including the Swedish version, the Israeli version as "The Island of the Dead", Philippine version's second season as "Isla Purgatoryo" (Purgatory Island), the Serbian version's second season as "Ghost Island" and the Romanian version's first season as "Exile Island".
After being voted out, contestants are exiled to Redemption Island, where they will fend for themselves like the castaways in the game proper until the next person is voted out. The day following Tribal Council, there is a duel in which the winner remains on the island and the losers are eliminated for good; upon elimination, the duel losers must remove their buff and throw it into a small fire pit. There are two places where the winner of the duel returns to the game: at the merge, where Redemption Island is cleared and reset; and when there are four players remaining in the main game, at which point Redemption Island is retired.
Double elimination cycles, or any other disruption of the game's pattern, leads to three or four duelists instead of two. In Survivor: Redemption Island only the loser of the duel was eliminated, resulting in four players competing in the final duel due to two double elimination cycles, with two Tribal Councils and no duels in between. For Survivor: South Pacific, the rules were changed so only the winner remained in the game while all others were eliminated. In Survivor: Blood vs. Water, there were three competitors at every duel, with only one player eliminated at each duel except for ones in which a sole winner returned to the main game.
Redemption Island in Blood vs. Water featured additional alterations to fit with the game's primary twist of featuring pairs of loved ones. Prior to any duel, the castaways with loved ones on Redemption Island are given the choice to replace their loved one on Redemption Island, with their loved one returning to the main game and taking their place in the tribe. In addition, the first-place winner of the duel must give a clue to a hidden immunity idol to any castaway in the main game.
A short-term variation of the Redemption Island twist is used on Australian Survivor, where at Tribal Council, the castaways are informed that the next two players voted-off (the castaway voted for that night and at the following Tribal Council) will not be eliminated from the game, but rather they will be Exiled. In Exile, the two castaways will compete in a "Redemption Island" style duel with the winner returning to the tribe and remaining in the game, and the loser being officially eliminated. This twist was used Australian Survivor 2018 and Australian Survivor 2019. Two variations of the Exile Twist was used during the Australian Survivor: All Stars - The first was during a Double Tribal Council, in which both tribes voted out a player, who would compete in a Fire Making Duel. The winner returns to the tribe and the loser is eliminated. The second variation had 3 players voted out in 2 tribal councils - the 6 players would compete in 2 challenges to return to the game - the 3 who remained would face a tribal council vote to determine who is eliminated.
Other seasons have featured alternate twists in which voted out players can return to the game. In 2003, Survivor: Pearl Islands featured the Outcast twist, in which the six eliminated castaways competed as the Outcast tribe against the two remaining tribes; as the Outcast tribe won the challenge, they earned the right to vote two of their own back into the game, while the other two tribes had to vote players out; following this, the tribes merged. In the seventh season of the Israeli version, voted out players remained in the game as "zombies", challenging their former tribemates to stay in the game and vote in their stead at Tribal Council; similar to Redemption Island, zombies returned to the game at the merge and near the end of the game. The 2019 season Survivor: Edge of Extinction allowed eliminated players the decision of either leaving the game, or going to the titular island. Once there, the contestants survived on fewer supplies than were available in the main game, but had the option to quit at any time. The players on the island competed in an individual challenge at the merge, and with five players remaining, with the winner returning to the main game. This twist returned two seasons later for Survivor: Winners at War.
Prizes
[edit]The Sole Survivor receives a cash prize of $1,000,000 prior to taxes and sometimes also receives a car provided by the show's sponsor. Every player receives a prize for participating on Survivor depending on how long they last in the game. In most seasons, the runner-up receives $100,000, and third place wins $85,000. All other players receive money on a sliding scale, though specific amounts have rarely been made public. Sonja Christopher, the first player voted off Survivor: Borneo, received $2,500.[16] In Survivor: Fiji, the first season with tied runners-up, the two runners-up received $100,000 each, and Yau-Man Chan received $60,000 for his fourth-place finish.[17] All players also receive an additional $10,000 for their appearance on the reunion show.[18] In the 40th season of the American version (an all winners edition), winner Tony Vlachos received $2,000,000, the biggest cash prize in the show's history.
Most seasons between The Australian Outback and Fiji have featured a late-season reward challenge where the winner receives a car. This reward was infamous for what was later dubbed the "car curse,"[19] referring to the fact that no player who won the car ever went on to win the game during his, her or their original season.
- In Survivor: The Australian Outback, Colby Donaldson won a Pontiac Aztek.
- In Survivor: Africa, Lex van den Berghe won a Chevrolet Avalanche.
- In Survivor: Marquesas, Sean Rector won a Saturn VUE.
- In Survivor: Thailand, Ted Rogers won a Chevrolet TrailBlazer.
- In Survivor: The Amazon, Matthew von Ertfelda won a Saturn Ion.
- In Survivor: Pearl Islands, Burton Roberts won a GMC Envoy XUV.
- In Survivor: All-Stars, Rob Mariano won a Chevrolet Colorado. In addition, Rob was allowed to bring another contestant with him on a trip; he chose Amber Brkich, who received a Chevrolet Malibu as a result.
- In Survivor: Vanuatu, Eliza Orlins won a Pontiac G6.
- In Survivor: Palau, Ian Rosenberger won a Chevrolet Corvette.
- In Survivor: Guatemala, Cindy Hall won a 2006 Pontiac Torrent; she was given the option to relinquish her reward to give the other remaining players each a car, but declined.
- In Survivor: Panama, Terry Deitz won a GMC Yukon.
- In Survivor: Fiji, Yau-Man Chan won a 2008 Ford Super Duty but gave it to fellow contestant Andria "Dreamz" Herd as part of a strategic deal. Herd would renege on the deal and neither won.
Other prizes are given out post-game, usually at the live reunion that immediately follows the coronation of the winner.
- At the Survivor: All-Stars reunion, Amber Brkich, as the Sole Survivor, was asked to select one of her fellow contestants to receive a car; she selected Shii Ann Huang.
- In Survivor: America's Tribal Council following the All-Stars finale, Rupert Boneham was selected by a popularity poll of Survivor viewers to win $1,000,000.
- For two seasons, viewers of Survivor voted their favorite player to win a new car.
- At the Survivor: China reunion, series creator Mark Burnett awarded Denise Martin $50,000 to help her out financially, but this gift was later donated to charity.
- From Survivor: China to Survivor: Caramoan, viewers of the show voted their favorite player to win $100,000 as the Sprint Player of the Season.
- Survivor: China: James Clement
- Survivor: Micronesia: James Clement
- Survivor: Gabon: Robert "Bob" Crowley
- Survivor: Tocantins: James "J.T." Thomas, Jr.
- Survivor: Samoa: Russell Hantz
- Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains: Russell Hantz
- Survivor: Nicaragua: Jane Bright
- Survivor: Redemption Island: Rob Mariano
- Survivor: South Pacific: Ozzy Lusth
- Survivor: One World: Kim Spradlin
- Survivor: Philippines: Lisa Whelchel
- Survivor: Caramoan: Malcolm Freberg
- Beginning with Survivor: Kaôh Rōng, pop singer Sia has personally given select castaways a monetary gift, also known as the Sia Award, at irregular intervals.
- Survivor: Kaôh Rōng: Tai Trang received $50,000 for himself, plus an additional $50,000 was donated to a charity of his choosing.
- Survivor: Ghost Island: Donathan Hurley received $10,000, which Sia later upgraded to $14,000.
- Survivor: David vs. Goliath: Davie Rickenbacker received $14,000.
- Survivor: Edge of Extinction: Rick Devens received $100,000. Aurora McCreary received $15,000 and Joe Anglim received $15,000 for cutting his hair off for a children's cancer charity, which he donated.[20]
- Survivor: Island of the Idols: Jamal Shipman received $15,000, while Elaine Stott and Janet Carbin received $100,000 each.
- Survivor 42: Drea Wheeler received $100,000.[21]
- Survivor 43: Jesse Lopez received $100,000, while Owen Knight and Ryan Medrano each received $50,000.[22]
- Survivor 44: Carolyn Wiger received $100,000, with Carson Garrett and Lauren Harpe each receiving $15,000.[23]
Variations in the format
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (July 2023) |
Aside from the American version, other franchises introduced variations and twists for the game. Most of these twists and variations are used in other franchises as well:
- During the 1998 and 1999 seasons, during the pre-merge portion of the competition when a tribe lost an immunity challenge the opposing tribe would vote to eliminate one of their members.
- In the 1998 season a "Joker" joined the game midway through. Since then this twist has become very common among Survivor versions around the world, either as a twist or as a contingency plan.
- During the 1999 season the contestants were initially divided into four tribes. This twist would later be used in the American version of Survivor during Survivor: Exile Island and Survivor: Cook Islands.
- During the 1999 season the twist of "The Black Vote" was introduced. During the merge portion of the competition whenever someone was voted out before they left tribal council they would cast one more vote. This vote would then be carried over to the next tribal council and whoever received the vote, assuming they didn't have immunity, would have an extra vote against them.
- During the 2002 season when a contestant was voted out they were sent to a secret island where they would take part in a duel with another eliminated contestant. The contestant who lost said duel would be eliminated for good while the winner remained on the island. The person still inhabiting the island when there were only three contestants left in the game would re-enter the competition. This twist would later be used in several different versions of the show and has recently been used on Survivor: Redemption Island and Survivor: South Pacific.
- During the All-Stars version of Expedition Robinson the tribes were initially divided into two tribes, one composed of "Veterans" and the other of "Fans". This type of twist was also used in the American version of Survivor during Survivor: Micronesia.
- During the 2004 season the twist known as "Team X" was introduced. Shortly after the competition began a new group of contestants entered the game and lived separately and secretly away from the other contestants until a certain point in the game. This twist has since also been used in Norway's 2009 season.
- During the 2004 and 2005 seasons a former contestant entered the game. This twist has since been used in many different Survivor versions around the world.
- During the 2005 season the tribes were initially divided up into a "Rich" tribe and a "Poor" tribe. This twist has since been used in the Danish, Norwegian, and American versions, most notably in Survivor: Fiji.
- During the 2005 season the tribes were initially divided up by age into "Old" and "Young", with the old contestants being forty and older and the young contestants being under the age of thirty. This twist was later used during Survivor: Nicaragua and Robinsonekspedisjonen 2009.
- During the pre-merge portion of the 2006 season two former contestants returned to the game to lead the tribes. As the leader, they were allowed to give individual immunity to any member of their tribe when they went to tribal council. Neither of these two contestants was eligible to win and both left shortly before the merge. A similar twist occurred in Survivor South Africa: Champions, except with sporting champions in the place of former contestants.
- When there were only three contestants left during the 2006 season all of the contestants that had lost on "Losers Island" voted to eliminate one of the finalists.
- The 2007 season began with one hundred contestants. Because many of these contestants weren't on the show for more than a couple of episodes many of their surnames are unknown.
- When it came time to reveal the winner of the 2008 season it was revealed that the jury vote was tied at 3-3. This led to seventy four former contestants voting for a winner.
- During the 2009 season the two tribes were initially composed of only women while a smaller tribe of men were hidden on a secluded beach. The men eventually entered the main competition in episode four. A similar twist was later used during Robinson 2011.
- The 2014 run saw the introduction of a 3-way tribe contest: Heaven, Earth and Hell. Hell being placed in the middle of the mangrove bush. During the first episodes, the losing tribe would vote off a member and relocate to Hell.
- The 2015 season started with an individual format. It started with 17 players, but the challenges had to be played in two even teams. So, before the first three challenges, one person was sent to a separate island and the rest of them created two teams. So the challenges were played with two teams of eight, seven and six. After that, only 11 players were left on the island. They had to make one group of seven and one group of four, which would join the three people sent to Tayak. From that point, it was Kamp Noord versus Kamp Zuid again.
- In every season of Koh-Lanta, just before the tribe merge, an ambassador is chosen in each tribe. Through season 8, they had the power to give one more vote to any contestant for the first Tribal Council of the merged tribe. In season 9 and later seasons (including the two All-Stars seasons), they were able to directly eliminate a contestant. However, if none of the ambassadors agrees to vote for/eliminate one contestant, they must draw one pearl from a bag. The one who gets the black pearl loses and either gets a vote or is directly eliminated depending on the season.
- During season 3 (Bocas del Toro), the oldest man and woman had the option to choose the composition of their respective tribes, as long as gender parity was respected.
- During season 4 (Panama), the two tribes were divided by gender. However, after 8 days, the tribes were mixed. A variation was used during season 10 (Vietnam), where the tribes were divided by gender except that one person per tribe was of the opposite gender.
- During season 5 (Pacific) and season 6 (Vanuatu), the tribes were divided by age: older or younger than 31 years old.
- During season 7 (Palawan) and season 8 (Caramoan), there was a challenge before the tribes' composition was decided: the best man and woman got the privilege to decide on the composition of their tribes, while the last man and woman were directly eliminated. The latter rule was also applied in season 9 (Palau) and in the first All-Stars season.
- During the second All-Stars season, seven previous contestants were part of one tribe, while the other tribe was composed of famous French sportsmen.
- In season 11 (Raja Ampat), two new rules were introduced: the hidden immunity idol, known from its appearance in the US version, and a new rule called the "vote noir" (black vote). After a contestant gets voted out at the Tribal Council, he or she can vote one more time against one of the remaining contestants of his or her tribe before quitting the game. This vote is counted at the tribe's next Tribal Council.
- The third All-Stars season featured sixteen former contestants who, despite their performances, hasn't previously become the Sole Survivor.
- In season 12 (Malaysia), four contestants out of the starting 20 won't initially be part of either of the two starting tribes. Instead, they will be on a version of "Exile Island", and will need to prove themselves in order to be integrated into one of the two tribes. Also, for the first time in the history of the program, two contestants will be eliminated at once in a single Tribal Council.
- Due to an accidental death during the first day of shooting season 13, those in charge of producing the show decided to cancel the 2013 season. Following a fierce discussion of these events in the media regarding the medical conditions, the show's doctor took his own life. However, this didn't stop the show entirely, coming back in 2014 with a fourth all-stars season.
- Because it was originally thought that the fifth season of Robinson would be the last to air in Denmark, Robinson Ekspeditionen 2002 was the first ever "All-Stars" version of Survivor to be broadcast worldwide. Since then there have been several All-Stars versions including ones in America, Belgium/Netherlands, France, Israel, and Sweden.
- During the 2005 season the contestants were divided up into tribes based on where they were from within Denmark.
- During the 2006 season all of the contestants were well known Danish athletes.
- In keeping with the theme of the season, during the 2006 season all of the contestants were eliminated through duels rather than voting.
- During the 2007 season the tribes were composed of past contestants from Robinson Ekspeditionen and contestants of another show known as Paradise Hotel.
- During the 2008 season the tribes were composed of fans of Robinson Ekspeditionen and former contestants from Paradise Hotel.
- During the 2009 season the tribes were initially divided into "Smart" and "Dumb" based on the results of an IQ test the contestants took prior to the start of the competition.
- During the 2010 season the contestants took part in a challenge that would ultimately divide them into "Masters" and "Slaves" within their own tribes (one tribe was composed of male masters and female slaves while the other was composed of female masters and male slaves).
- Because a representative from each participating country was necessary for the finale, the last remaining member of each tribe was immune from all remaining eliminations.
- In all seasons of Baltic Robinson the jury would vote for who they didn't want to win as opposed to who they did. These votes would be added along with those given to the losers of the plank (in all seasons) and those of the public (in the first two seasons) or of the finalists (in season 3).
- Introduced the "Double-Power Challenge" in Survivor 10: The Caribbean. The double-power challenge is an individual challenge, which is played after the Immunity challenge. Every person going to Tribal Council had to compete, and the winner of the challenge won an additional power at Tribal Council.
- Introduced the "Veto Armlet" in Survivor 10: Pearl Islands. Aside from the Immunity Challenge, where the winner of the challenge wins the immunity, the Israeli version introduced the Armlet Veto, wherein the winner of the Veto Challenge gets the armlet. The Veto Armlet is used to prevent a castaway from voting in the tribal council. In the last tribal council the Veto Armlet is used to prevent a jury member from voting instead.
- In November 2011 it was announced that the 2012 season of Robinsonekspedisjonen will be known as "Robinson: Vinter" (Robinson: Winter) and it will be the first ever season of Robinson or Survivor to ever take place in a cold climate as it will be filmed in Norway.
- Introduced the "Cursed and White Pearls", both roughly the size of a standard billiard ball. During the merge stage, the person voted out, before having his/her torch snuffed out, will receive either one or both of the Pearls and give each Pearl to one of the remaining castaways. The castaway who receives the Cursed Pearl gets one vote in the following Tribal Council. In case the Cursed Pearl is lost, the holder would then receive two votes. In-show, the Cursed Pearl is called the "Black Pearl" (though in the first season, its actual color is really silver). On the other hand, the White Pearl will have one vote subtracted from the count in the receiver's favor in the next Tribal Council, should at least one such vote comes up. This was introduced in the first season of Survivor Philippines.
- Introduced the "Blood Pearl" in Survivor Philippines: Palau. The Blood Pearl served the same purpose as the Cursed Pearl, only, the holder would receive two votes in the next Tribal Council. In case the Blood Pearl is lost, three votes would be counted against the holder.
- Introduced the Isla Purgatorio, which is called the Redemption Island in American version.
- Introduced the "doubles format" in Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown, wherein castaways are grouped as couples with preexisting relationships. In this format, the couple is treated as one castaway, wherein both members get immunity after winning Immunity Challenges, both win the reward from the Reward Challenges, and both are voted out in the Tribal Council.
- Also in Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Doubles Showdown, the "Temptation Reward" was introduced. The winning tribe in a Reward Challenge would choose one or two of their own to be the only one/s partaking in the Temptation Reward. After being shown the Temptation Reward, the chosen one/s were then also presented with the consequence that comes upon accepting the Temptation Reward. Declining from the Temptation Reward is also an option if those chosen would deem accepting it be too harmful to their life in the game.
- Twists of unknown origins
- During the year 2002 several different versions of Survivor used the twist of gender-based tribes as the main twist for their seasons. Due to the fact that at the time the Baltic, Belgian/Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish seasons were all traveling together in order to conserve and pool their resources (a common practice for the franchise), there is no way to determine which production team came up with the idea of the twist (though it's unlikely to be the Baltic's or Norway's as neither edition has ever used this twist). The same twist was used a few months later in 2003 during Survivor: The Amazon and a couple years later in 2004 during Survivor: Vanuatu.
Survivor around the world
[edit]The Survivor format has been adapted for numerous international versions of the show, some named after the original Expedition Robinson.
Legend:
Country/Region | Local title English title |
Network(s) | Winners | Host(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria, Zambia, Zimbabwe | Survivor Africa | M-Net | Season 1, 2006: Tsholofelo Gasenelwe | Anthony Oseyemi |
Argentina | Expedición Robinson Expedition Robinson |
Canal 13 |
Season 1, 2000: Sebastián Martino |
Julián Weich |
Survivor, Expedición Robinson Survivor, Expedition Robinson |
Telefe |
Season 3, 2024: Eugenia Propedo |
Marley | |
Australia | Australian Survivor | Nine Network | Season 1, 2002: Rob Dickson | Lincoln Howes |
Network 10 |
|
Jonathan LaPaglia | ||
Australian Celebrity Survivor | Seven Network | Season 2, 2006: Guy Leech | Ian "Dicko" Dickson | |
Austria, Germany | Expedition Robinson | ORF RTL 2 |
Season 1, 2000: Melanie Lauer[a] | Volker Piesczek |
Azerbaijan | Ekstrim Azərbaycan Extreme Azerbaijan |
Space TV | Season 1, 2011: Kemal Cenk İçten | Emin Əhmədov |
Balkans Croatia Serbia |
Survivor | RTL Televizija (Croatia) Prva Srpska Televizija (Serbia) |
Season 1, 2012: Vlada Vuksanović[b] | Andrija Milošević Marijana Batinić Antonija Blaće Milan Kalinić |
Nova BH (Bosnia and Herzegovina) Nova M (Montenegro) Nova S (Serbia) Nova TV (Croatia) |
Season 2, 2022: Stefan Nevistić and Nevena Blanuša[c] |
Bojan Perić Mario Mlinarić Danijela Buzurović [f] | ||
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania | Robinsonid / Robinsoni / Robinzonai Robinson |
TV3 Estonia TV3 Latvia TV3 Lithuania |
Season 1, 2000: Zane Mukāne |
Emil Rutiku Mārtiņš Freimanis (Season 1) Pauls Timrots (Seasons 2-3) Vytautas Kernagis |
Džunglistaar / Džungļu zvaigznes / Džiungles Jungle Stars |
Season 1, 2004: Dagmāra Legante | Tõnu Kark Raimond Dombrovskis Vytautas Kernagis | ||
Belgium, Flanders | Expeditie Robinson Expedition Robinson |
VIER |
Season 1, 2018: Robbe De Backer |
Bartel Van Riet |
Belgium, Netherlands | Expeditie Robinson Expedition Robinson |
VT4 NET 5 |
Season 1, 2000: Karin Lindenhovius |
Ernst-Paul Hasselbach (1–5) |
Tien 2BE RTL 5 |
Season 6, 2005: Marnix Allegaert |
Ernst-Paul Hasselbach (6–7) | ||
2BE RTL 5 |
Season 8, 2007: Vinncent Arrendell |
Ernst-Paul Hasselbach (8–9) | ||
VIER Videoland |
Season 21, 2020: Thomas Roobrouck |
Bartel Van Riet | ||
Expeditie Robinson: Strijd der Titanen Expedition Robinson: Battle of the Titans |
Tien 2BE |
Season 1, 2006: Ryan van Esch | Ernst-Paul Hasselbach Lotte Verlackt | |
Brazil | No Limite On the Edge |
TV Globo |
Season 1, 2000: Elaine de Melo |
Current |
Bulgaria | Сървайвър БГ Survivor BG |
bTV |
Season 1, 2006: Neli Ivanova |
Kamen Vodenicharov (1) |
Canada (Quebec) |
Survivor Québec | Noovo[25] |
Season 1, 2023: Nicolas Brunette |
Patrice Bélanger |
China | 走入香格里拉 Into the Shangri-La |
CCTV | Season 1, 2001: Members of Sun Village | Unknown |
Chile | Expedición Robinson: La Isla VIP Expedition Robinson: The VIP Island |
Canal 13 | Season 1, 2006: Marcela Roberts | Sergio Lagos Karla Constant |
Colombia | Expedición Robinson Expedition Robinson |
Caracol TV |
Season 1, 2001: Rolando Patarroyo |
Margarita Francisco |
La Isla de Los Famos.o.s. (1–4) The Island of the Famous Survivor: La Isla de Los Famosos (5) |
RCN TV |
Season 1, 2004: María Cecilia Sánchez |
Current | |
Croatia | Survivor: Odisejev Otok Survivor: Odyssey Island |
HRT 2 | Season 1, 2005: Vazmenko Pervan | Kristijan Potočki |
Czech Republic | Trosečník | Prima televize | Season 1, 2006: Ingrid Golasová | Marek Vašut |
Robinsonův ostrov Robinson Island |
TV Nova |
Season 1, 2017: Marek Orlík |
Ondřej Novotný | |
Czechia Slovakia |
Survivor Česko & Slovensko | Current TV Nova Voyo SK (2) Former Markíza (1) |
Season 1, 2022: Vladimír Čapek |
Current Ondřej Novotný Former Martin Šmahel (1) |
Denmark | Robinson Ekspeditionen Robinson Expedition |
TV3 |
|
Current |
Ecuador | Expedición Robinson Expedition Robinson |
Teleamazonas | Season 1, 2003: Tito Grefa | Marisa Sánchez |
Finland | Suomen Robinson Finnish Robinson |
Nelonen |
Season 1, 2004: Marjaana Valkeinen |
Jarmo Mäkinen (1) |
Selviytyjät Suomi Survivor Finland |
MTV3 | Season 1, 2013: Jarkko Kortesoja | Heikki Paasonen | |
Nelonen |
Season 2, 2018: Sampo Kaulanen |
Current Riku Rantala (8–present) Former Juuso Mäkilähde (2–7) | ||
France (Belgium)[g] (Switzerland)[h] |
Koh-Lanta | TF1 |
|
Current |
Koh-Lanta: All-Stars |
Season 1, 2009: Romuald Lafite |
Denis Brogniart | ||
Georgia | უკანასკნელი გმირი The Last Hero |
Rustavi 2 | Season 1, 2007–08: Tamar Chanturashvili | Giorgi Korkia |
Germany | Das Inselduell | Sat.1 | Unofficial adaption, 2000: Michael | Holger Speckhahn |
Expedition Robinson | ORF RTL 2 |
Season 1, 2000: Melanie Lauer | Volker Piesczek | |
Gestrandet – Zeig, was in dir steckt!1 | RTL 2 | Season 1, 2001: Alexander Kolo | Pierre Geisensetter | |
Outback | RTL | Unofficial adaption of Survivor: The Australian Outback, 2002: Sergej Schmidt | Markus Lanz | |
Survivor | ProSieben | Season 1, 2007: Volker Kreuzner | Sascha Kalupke | |
VOX | Season 2, 2019: Lara Grünfeld | Florian Weber | ||
Sport1 | Season 3, TBA: Upcoming season[27] | TBA | ||
Greece Cyprus |
Survivor | Mega TV |
Season 1, 2003: Evaggelia Dermetzoglou |
Grigoris Arnaoutoglou |
Skai TV Sigma TV |
Season 5, 2017: Giorgos Angelopoulos |
Current Giorgos Lianos (6–present) Former Sakis Tanimanidis (5-6) | ||
Survivor Patagonia The Edge of the World |
Mega TV | Season 4, 2010: Vaggelis Gerasimou | Giannis Aivazis | |
Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey[i] | Season 3, 2006: Derya Durmuşlar | Konstantinos Markoulakis | ||
Skai TV Sigma TV |
Season 7, 2019: Katerina Dalaka & Yusuf Karakaya | Sakis Tanimanidis Giorgos Lianos | ||
Survivor All Star | Season 10, 2023: Sakis Katsoulis | Giorgos Lianos | ||
Hungary | Survivor – A sziget Survivor - The Island |
RTL[j] |
Season 1, 2003: Tünde Molnár |
Current |
India (Hindi) |
Survivor India – The Ultimate Battle | Star Plus | Season 1, 2012 : Raj Rani | Sameer Kochhar |
India (Tamil) |
Survivor Tamil | Zee Tamil | Season 1, 2021: Vijayalakshmi Feroz | Arjun Sarja |
Israel | הישרדות Survival |
Channel 10 |
Season 1, 2007–08: Na'ama Kaesari |
Guy Zu-Aretz |
Channel 2 |
Season 7, 2015–16: Liron "Tiltil" Orfali | |||
Reshet 13 |
Season 12, 2022-23: Elit Musayof | |||
הישרדות VIP Survival VIP |
Channel 10 | Season 6, 2012: Itay Segev | ||
Reshet 13 |
Season 9, 2019: Đovani Roso | |||
Italy | Survivor Italia | Italia 1 | Season 1, 2001: Milica Miletic |
Pietro Suber |
L'Isola dei Famosi The Island of the Famous |
Rai 2 |
Season 1, 2003: Walter Nudo |
Simona Ventura (Studio, 1–8) | |
Canale 5 |
Season 10, 2015: Donatella |
Current | ||
Japan | サバイバー Survivor |
TBS |
Season 1, Spring 2002: Eri Minoshima |
Neptune |
Lebanon | سرفايفر Survivor |
LBC | Season 1, 2004: Hussein El-Abass | Tareq Mounir |
Mexico | Survivor México Survivor Mexico |
Azteca Uno |
Season 1, 2020: Eduardo Urbina |
Current |
Netherlands | Expeditie Robinson Expedition Robinson |
RTL 5 |
Season 14, 2013: Edith Bosch |
Current |
RTL 4 |
Season 20, 2019: Hugo Kennis | |||
Expeditie Robinson: All Stars Expedition Robinson: All Stars |
Season 23, 2022: Niels Gomperts |
Art Rooijakkers | ||
New Zealand | Survivor NZ | TVNZ 2 |
Season 1, 2017: Avi Duckor-Jones |
Matt Chisholm |
Norway | Robinsonekspedisjonen Expedition Robinson |
TV3 |
Season 1, 1999: Christer Falch |
Nils Ole Oftebro (1) |
TV2 |
Season 14, 2015: Maiken Sæther Olsen | |||
Pakistan | Survivor Pakistan | PTV ARY TVOne |
Season 1, 2006: Muhammad Ziad | Unknown |
Philippines | Survivor Philippines | GMA Network |
Season 1, 2008: John Carlo "JC" Tiuseco |
Paolo Bediones |
Survivor Philippines: Celebrity Showdown |
Season 3, 2010: Akihiro Sato |
Richard Gutierrez | ||
Poland | Wyprawa Robinson Expedition Robinson |
TVN | Season 1, 2004: Katarzyna Drzyżdżyk | Hubert Urbański |
Wyspa przetrwania Island of Survival |
Polsat | Season 2, 2017: Katarzyna Cebula | Damian Michałowski | |
Portugal | Survivor | TVI | Season 1, 2001: Pedro Besugo | Paulo Salvador Teresa Guilherme |
Romania | Rătăciți în Panama Lost in Panama |
Kanal D | Season 1, 2009: Aly Elsiddig | Andrei Gheorghe |
Supraviețuitorul Survivor |
Pro TV |
Season 1, 2016: Lucian "Zapp" Lupu |
Dragoș Bucurenci (1) | |
Survivor România Survivor Romania |
Kanal D |
Season 1, 2020: Elena Ionescu |
Current | |
Pro TV, Voyo |
Season 3, 2022: Alex Delea | |||
Russia | Последний герой The Last Hero |
C1R |
Season 1, 2001: Sergey Odintsov |
Sergei Bodrov Jr. (1) |
TV-3 |
Season 7, 2019: Anfisa Chernykh |
Current | ||
Denmark, Norway, Sweden | Expedition Robinson: VIP[k] | TV3 Denmark TV3 Norway TV3 Sweden |
Season 1, 2005: Tilde Fröling | Mikkel Beha Erichsen (Denmark) Christer Falck (Norway) Robert Aschberg (Sweden) |
Serbia | Survivor Srbija Survivor Serbia |
Prva Srpska Televizija |
Season 1, 2008–09: Nemanja Pavlov |
Andrija Milošević |
Slovakia | Celebrity Camp | TV JOJ | Season 1, 2007: Aneta Parišková | Janko Kroner Petra Polnišová |
Ostrov Island |
Markíza | Season 1, 2016: Filip Ferianec | Marián Mitaš | |
Slovenia | Survivor Srbija Survivor Serbia |
TV 3 | Season 1, 2009–10: See Survivor Srbija 2 | Ula Furlan |
Survivor Slovenija Survivor Slovenia |
POP TV | Season 2, 2016: Alen Perklič | Miran Stanovnik | |
South Africa | Survivor South Africa | M-Net |
Season 1, 2006: Vanessa Marawa |
Current |
Spain | Supervivientes: Expedición Robinson Survivors: Expedition Robinson |
Telecinco |
Season 1, 2000: Xavier Monjonell |
Juan Manuel López Iturriaga (1–2) |
La Isla de los FamoS.O.S. The Island of the Famou-S.O.S. |
Antena 3 |
Season 3, 2003: Daniela Cardone |
Paula Vázquez | |
La Selva de los FamoS.O.S. |
Paula Vázquez | |||
Aventura en África |
Season 6, 2005: Víctor Janeiro |
Paula Vázquez | ||
Supervivientes Survivors |
Telecinco |
Season 7, 2006: Carmen Russo |
Main host: | |
Sweden | Expedition Robinson | SVT |
Season 1, 1997: Martin Melin |
Harald Treutiger (1–2) |
TV3 |
Season 8, 2004: Jerry Forsberg |
Robert Aschberg | ||
TV4 |
Season 10, 2009: Ellenor Pierre |
Current | ||
Sjuan | Season 15, 2015: Dan Spinelli Scala & Jennifer Egelryd | Linda Lindorff | ||
Switzerland | Expedition Robinson | TV3 |
Season 1, 1999: Andreas Widmer |
Silvan Grütter |
Turkey | Survivor: Büyük Macera Survivor: Great Adventure |
Kanal D | Season 1, 2005: Uğur Pektaş | Ahmet Utlu[29] |
Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey | Show TV | Season 2, 2006: Derya Durmuşlar | Acun Ilıcalı (2) | |
TV8 | Season 13, 2019: Yusuf Karakaya & Katerina Dalaka | Acun Ilıcalı Murat Ceylan | ||
Survivor | Show TV |
Season 3, 2007: Taner Özdeş |
Acun Ilıcalı (3–4) Hanzade Ofluoğlu (4) | |
Survivor: Ünlüler vs. Gönüllüler Survivor: Celebrities vs. Volunteers |
Season 5, 2011: Derya Büyükuncu |
Acun Ilıcalı Burcu Esmersoy (6) | ||
Star TV |
Season 7, 2013: Hilmi Cem İntepe |
Acun Ilıcalı Alp Kırşan | ||
TV8 |
Season 10, 2016: Çağan Atakan Arslan | |||
Season 14, 2020: Cemal Can Canseven |
Acun Ilıcalı Murat Ceylan | |||
Survivor All Star |
Season 9, 2015: Turabi Çamkıran |
Acun Ilıcalı Alp Kırşan Murat Ceylan | ||
Ukraine | Oстанній герой The Last Hero |
ICTV | Season 1, 2011: Andrey Kovalski Season 2, 2012: Alexei Diveyeff-Tserkovny |
Ostap Stupka |
1+1 | Season 3, Upcoming season | TBA | ||
United Kingdom | Survivor | ITV |
Series 1, 2001: Charlotte Hobrough |
Mark Austin (1) |
BBC One | Series 3, 2023: Matthew Haywood | Joel Dommett[30] | ||
United States |
Survivor | CBS |
|
Jeff Probst |
Venezuela | Robinson: La Gran Aventura Robinson: The Great Adventure |
Venevisión |
Season 1, 2001: Gabriel Pérez |
Roberto Messuti |
Vietnam | Tôi là người dẫn đầu I am the Leader |
HTV7 | Season 1, 2012: Quách Văn Đen | Phan Anh |
- Notes
- ^ The German RTL2 created their own version of Survivor, Gestrandet – Zeig, was in dir steckt!, after airing a co-production of Austrian-German Survivor in season 1. Austria had not continued its own series nor co-produced an Austrian-German Survivor after season 1.
- ^ Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the second season of Survivor to air in Croatia and the fourth season to air in Serbia.
- ^ Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the third season of Survivor to air in Croatia and the fifth season to air in Serbia.
- ^ Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the fourth season of Survivor to air in Croatia and the sixth season to air in Serbia.
- ^ Is a season co-produced by the Croatian and Serbian franchises. It was the fifth season of Survivor to air in Croatia and the seventh to air in Serbia.
- ^ Is host of the Tv show Survivor plus, which is aired on Nova S and Nova M
- ^ Starting from the 11th season, Belgians were eligible to apply for the French series.
- ^ Starting from the 10th season, the Swiss were eligible to apply for the French series.
- ^ Survivor: Greece vs. Turkey is a co-production between the Greek and Turkish Survivor franchises.
- ^ Channel name was RTL Klub for seasons 1-5 before the station's name change to RTL starting with season 6.
- ^ The season never aired due to the television network being shut down. The winner was only revealed later in a news article.
Current series
[edit]- Season currently being aired.
Country | Season name | Launch date | Finale date | Network | Days | Survivors | Host | Grand prize |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argentina | Survivor, Expedición Robinson 2024 | 15 July 2024 | September 2024 | Telefe | 60 | 25 | Alejandro Wiebe | $1,000,000 |
Australia | Australian Survivor | January 2025 | March 2025 | 10 | 47 | 24 | Jonathan LaPaglia | A$500,000 |
Canada (Quebec) | Survivor Québec 2024 | 31 March 2024 | Spring 2024 | Noovo | 42 | 20 | Patrice Bélanger | $100,000 |
Colombia | Survivor: La Isla de Los Famosos | 2024 | 2024 | RCN TV | TBD | TBD | Tatán Mejía | TBA |
Denmark | Robinson Ekspeditionen | September 2024 | November 2024 | TV3 | 42 | 22 | Jakob Kjeldbjerg | 500,000 DKK |
Czech Republic Slovakia |
Survivor Česko & Slovensko 2024 | 25 January 2024 | 17 May 2024 | TV Nova Voyo SK |
74 | 24 | Ondřej Novotný | 2,500,000 Kč |
Ex-Yugoslavia
|
Survivor Hrvatska & Srbija 2024 | 4 March 2024 | May 2024 | Nova BH Nova TV Nova M Nova S |
TBD | 20 | Bojan Perić Mario Mlinarić |
€100.000 |
Finland | Selviytyjät Suomi | August 2024 | December 2024 | Nelonen | TBD | TBD | Riku Rantala | €30,000 |
France | Koh-Lanta | 13 February 2024 | 2024 | TF1 | 40 | 22 | Denis Brogniart | €100,000 |
Greece | Survivor Greece (season 11) | 7 January 2024 | July 2024 | Skai TV | TBD | 36 | Giorgos Lianos | €100,000 |
Hungary | Survivor - A Sziget | 2024 | 2024 | RTL | 39 | TBA | Miklós "Joe" Varga | 20,000,000 Ft |
Israel | Survivor Israel (season 12) | 17 December 2022 | 1 April 2023 | Reshet 13 | 45 | 18 | Guy Zu-Aretz | ₪1,000,000 |
Italy | L'isola dei Famosi | Spring 2024 | Summer 2024 | Canale 5 | TBD | TBD | Alberto 'Alvin' Bonato Vladimir Luxuria |
€100,000 |
Mexico | Survivor México (season 5) | 11 March 2024 | 7 June 2024 | Azteca Uno | TBD | 20 | Carlos "Warrior" Guerrero | $2,000,000 MXN |
Netherlands | Expeditie Robinson | 1 September 2024 | December 2024 | RTL 4 | 35 | 20 | Nicolette Kluijver Art Rooijakkers |
€25,000 |
Romania | Survivor România All Stars | 16 January 2024 | 30 May 2024 | Pro TV | TBD | 26 | Daniel Pavel | €100,000 |
Russia | Последний герой. Остаться семьёй Last Hero: Stay as a Family |
28 October 2023 | 30 December 2023 | TV-3 | 30 | 14 | Kseniya Borodina | 5.000.000 ₽ |
Spain | Supervivientes: Perdidos en Honduras (2024) | 7 March 2024 | June 2024 | Telecinco Cuatro |
TBD | 19 | Laura Madrueño | €200,000 |
Sweden | Robinson 2024 | 17 March 2024 | 19 May 2024 | TV4 | 42 | 22 | Anders Lundin | 500,000 SEK |
Turkey | Survivor Turkey (season 18) | 1 January 2024 | TBA | TV8 | TBD | 35 | Acun Ilicali Murat Ceylan |
₺ 500,000 |
United States | Survivor 47 | September 18, 2024 | December 2024 | CBS | 26 | 18 | Jeff Probst | $1,000,000[a] |
- Notes
- ^ On the 40th season of the American version of Survivor, a season where all contestants were winners of previous seasons, the prize was increased to US$2 million.
Other media
[edit]Thrill ride
[edit]One of the more novel merchandising items has been the interactive Survivor: The Ride thrill ride at California's Great America in Santa Clara, California. The ride includes a rotating platform on which riders are divided into one of four "tribes." As the ride moves along an undulating track, riders can be sprayed by water guns hidden in oversized tribal masks while drums and other familiar Survivor musical accents play in the background. Other theming includes Survivor memorabilia throughout the queue line and other merchandise for sale in nearby gift shops.[31] The ride has since been rethemed as Tiki Twirl.
Online games
[edit]During the first Survivor seasons many online games based on forums were created. More specific Survivor online games appeared later.
In late 2013, a former contestant of the American version of the show, Erik Reichenbach, launched a Kickstarter campaign for a Survivor-styled online mobile app called "Islands of Chaos". The app pits players from all over the world in a battle of challenges and strategy to be the last one standing. If the campaign is successful, the plan is to release the game free of charge on a range of platforms including on Apple and Android devices.[32]
Survivor: Castaway Island, a video game in partnership with Microids is slated for release on 3 October 2023.[33]
Parody
[edit]Beginning on July 8, 2007, a parody of Survivor called Total Drama Island appeared on the Canadian television network Teletoon. This animated show included 22 summer campers who signed up to stay at a five-star resort, which actually turned out to be a cruddy summer camp on an island somewhere in Muskoka, Ontario. The host, Chris McLean, is modeled after Survivor host Jeff Probst. The campers are taken to the island on boats to meet their fellow competitors, being heartbroken at the sight of their wasted summer. The campers were separated into two teams: The "Screaming Gophers" and the "Killer Bass". Every three days there would be a challenge for the campers to face, from jumping off a 1,000-foot (300 m) high cliff into a lake to survival skills. The losing team of each challenge would go to the Bonfire Ceremony the night of the challenge, and vote someone off the team, like Survivor. Each team member still in the game would receive a marshmallow, leaving one team member without one. The member who does not receive a marshmallow (the symbol of life on the island) would have to walk the Dock of Shame and board the Boat of Losers to leave the island, and "Never ever ever ever ever" return (which turned out to be a lie in the episode "No Pain, No Game"). After 12 members of the island were voted off, the teams were merged. The winner receives a check for the C$100,000 and the final marshmallow. The show then ends with Chris thrown off the Dock of Shame. The show aired in 188 countries and also appeared on the channels of Cartoon Network and Jetix. The show became a critical and commercial success and it spun off into a series.
See also
[edit]- List of television show franchises
- Total Drama
- Get Out Alive with Bear Grylls
- Takeshi's Castle
- The Hunger Games
References
[edit]- ^ Tartaglione, Nancy (July 10, 2017). "Banijay Raises $416M To Help Finance Acquisition Of 'Survivor's Castaway Prods".
- ^ Probst, Jeff (October 23, 2009). "Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Samoa': episode #6". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved October 23, 2009.
- ^ "Jeff Probst Talks "Survivor: Fiji"". Retrieved January 12, 2007.
- ^ Probst, Jeff (February 26, 2010). "Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Heroes vs Villains': Episode 3". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved February 26, 2010.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (February 7, 2005). "The Host Has Spoken". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 30, 2009. Retrieved June 4, 2008.
- ^ "Returning Shows". Retrieved September 21, 2007.
- ^ Rocchio, Christopher (May 12, 2008). "Exclusive: Amanda Kimmel discusses 'Micronesia,' losing 'Survivor' twice". Reality TV World. Retrieved May 12, 2008.
- ^ Survivor: Game Changers reunion show, CBS, May 24, 2017
- ^ "The Slug: Jeff Probst Talks "Survivor: Fiji"". asapblogs.typepad.com. Retrieved September 13, 2018.
- ^ "Survivor: Cagayan Preview Special". CBS. February 12, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2014.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (January 11, 2015). "Survivor host Jeff Probst reveals latest twist: a new 'super idol'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 11, 2015.
- ^ Probst, Jeff (April 3, 2009). "Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Tocantins' (episode 6)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 3, 2009.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (January 11, 2015). "Survivor exclusive: Immunity idols to be hidden at challenges this season". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
- ^ Probst, Jeff (April 30, 2010). "Jeff Probst blogs 'Survivor: Heroes vs. Villains' episode 11". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 30, 2010.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (August 9, 2010). "'Survivor: Nicaragua': New cast and new twists revealed!". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
- ^ "Senior Women Web > Articles > Margaret Cullison". seniorwomen.com. Retrieved September 13, 2018.
- ^ "He lost a million, won our hearts on 'Survivor'". Retrieved May 15, 2007.
- ^ "Survivor's Lindsey Discusses Fame, Fortune, and the AIDS Benefit". Reality News Online. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
- ^ Smith, Stephan (December 9, 2006). "Car Curse In Cruise Control". CBS News. Retrieved May 12, 2008.
- ^ Murphy, Helen (May 16, 2019). "Sia Gifts Her Favorite Survivor Contestant $100,000 During Season Finale". People. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ Travis, Emlyn (June 1, 2022). "Watch Sia Surprise Survivor Contestant Drea Wheeler With $100,000". E! Online. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ Chan, Anna (December 23, 2022). "Sia Gives Her Favorite 'Survivor' Season 43 Players Major Cash Prizes". Billboard. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ Trepany, Charles (May 25, 2023). "'Survivor' 44: Sia awards $130K in prize money to these three losing contestants". USA Today. Retrieved January 2, 2024.
- ^ "Bulgaria Survivor contestant dies". BBC News. June 1, 2009. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
- ^ "Noovo, Banijay Rights Strike Deal to Launch SURVIVOR in French-Speaking Canada". Bell Media. December 7, 2021. Retrieved December 7, 2021.
- ^ ""Koh-Lanta" : En raison des tricheries, aucun candidat n'est déclaré vainqueur de "La Légende"". 20minutes.fr. December 14, 2021. Retrieved December 15, 2021.
- ^ John-Leighton, Mariah (October 23, 2024). "Banijay Entertainment Superbrands, MasterChef and Survivor, Heading to Germany". Retrieved October 23, 2024.
- ^ "Der verlorene Sieg". Neue Zürcher Zeitung. February 29, 2004. Retrieved September 30, 2023.
- ^ Semercioğlu, Cengiz (May 20, 2005). "Ahmet Utlu bir kez bile denize girmedi". Hürriyet. Retrieved May 1, 2015.
- ^ "The tribe has spoken and Joel Dommett is confirmed to host Survivor, lighting a torch on BBC One and BBC iPlayer". www.bbc.co.uk. February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
- ^ "Survivor: The Ride – LoveToKnow Themeparks". Archived from the original on May 24, 2009. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
- ^ "Islands of Chaos: The Strategic Adventure Mobile App". kickstarter.com.
- ^ "Microids announces a partnership with Banijay Brands for the video game Survivor: Castaway Island". July 17, 2023.
Further reading
[edit]United Kingdom Season #1 (2001)
- Waddell, Dan. Survivor: Trust No One: The Official Inside Story of TV's Toughest Challenge. London: Carlton, [December, ] 2001.
United Kingdom Season #2: Survivor: Panama (2002)
- Waddell, Dan. Survivor: Panama. London: Carlton, [June, ] 2002.
United States Season #1: Survivor: Pulau Tiga, Borneo (2000)
- Boesch, Rudy, and Jeff Herman. The Book of Rudy: The Wit and Wisdom of Rudy Boesch. No location: Adams Media Corporation, 2001.
- Burnett, Mark, with Martin Dugard. Survivor: The Ultimate Game: The Official Companion Book to the CBS Television Show. New York: TV Books, 2000.
- Hatch, Richard. 101 Survival Secrets: How to Make $1,000,000, Lose 100 Pounds, and Just Plain Live Happily. New York: Lyons Press, 2000.
- Lance, Peter. Stingray: Lethal Tactics of the Sole Survivor: The Inside Story of How the Castaways were Controlled on the Island and Beyond. Portland, Oregon: R.R. Donnelley, 2000.
United States Season #2: Survivor: The Australian Outback (2001)
- Burnett, Mark. Dare to Succeed: How to Survive and Thrive in the Game of Life. No location: Hyperion, 2001.
- Survivor II: The Field Guide: The Official Companion to the CBS Television Show. New York: TV Books, 2001.
United States Season #6: Survivor: Amazon (2003)
- ChillOne, The. The Spoiler: Revealing the Secrets of Survivor. Lincoln, Nebraska: iUniverse, 2003.
United States Season #9: Survivor: Vanuatu -Islands of Fire (2004)
- Burnett, Mark. Jump In!: Even If You Don't Know How to Swim. New York: Ballantine Books, 2005.
Various Seasons, esp. United States 1–6
- Survivor Lessons, edited by Matthew J. Smith and Andrew F. Wood. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2004.
- Wright, Christopher J. Tribal Warfare: Survivor and the Political Unconscious of Reality Television (Series: Critical Studies in Television). Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2006.
External links
[edit]- Australian Survivor
- Survivor Africa
- Expedition Robinson Belgium Archived May 2, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
- Survivor Bulgaria
- Survivor Croatia
- Expedition Robinson Czech Republic
- Survivor Czech Republic & Slovakia
- Expedition Robinson Denmark
- Survivor Finland
- Survivor France
- Survivor Germany
- Survivor Greece Archived April 16, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
- Survivor Hungary
- Survivor India
- Survivor Israel
- (Celebrity) Survivor Italy
- Survivor Mexico
- Expedition Robinson Netherlands
- Survivor New Zealand
- Survivor Pakistan
- Survivor Philippines
- Survivor Poland
- Last Hero Russia
- Survivor Serbia
- Survivor Slovakia
- Survivor South Africa
- Survivor Spain
- Expedition Robinson Sweden
- Survivor Turkey
- Last Hero Ukraine
- Survivor United States