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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/survivorlogo_5.png]]
2
3->''"Outwit. Outplay. Outlast."''
4-->--'''US Series {{tagline}}'''
5
6''Survivor'' is... it's...
7
8Well, if ''Series/TheRealWorld'' is the [[TropeMaker grand-daddy]] of the reality show, ''Survivor'' is [[TropeCodifier the daddy]]. It debuted in 2000, proved to be a huge hit and [[CashCowFranchise a big moneymaker]] for Creator/{{CBS}}, and launched a wave of reality shows that, even in TheNewTwenties, we're ''still'' recovering from.
9
10The story is as follows: a fixed number of men and women are stuck in a wilderness setting (typically, but not always, a [[DesertedIsland deserted tropical island]]; all the better to [[{{Fanservice}} get the contestants out of their clothes]]), where they're divided into at least two tribes (mostly random, but sometimes by [[RatingsStunt gender, age or race]]). Then they must build a shelter and make fire so they can safely eat food and drink water. Oftentimes they get to take in a luxury item from home, or they'll have to win it. Each week, the tribes compete in a series of challenges, where they win rewards and Immunity, which allows them to avoid Tribal Council. The losers (who attend Tribal Council) then have to decide which of them will be VotedOffTheIsland. When a sufficient amount of time has passed, the tribes are merged into one and nearly all the challenges, rewards, and immunities become individual, rather than tribe-based. After 39 days, 2-3 people are left for the Final Tribal Council, where the recently eliminated contestants from the merged tribe form the Jury and vote to decide who wins the $1,000,000 prize.
11
12A {{guilty pleasure|s}} if ever there was one, although some [[PeripheryDemographic actually do watch the show for sociological purposes]], like with ''Series/BigBrother''.
13
14Several podcasts dedicated to contestant interviews, remembering past seasons nostalgically, and discussing strategy exists online, including Podcast/RobHasAPodcast, Podcast/ArmchairSurvivor, Podcast/SurvivorOz, [[http://domandcolin.blogspot.com/ Dom And Colin]], and [[http://funny115.com/podcast/ Survivor Historians]].
15
16A list and summary of the US seasons can be found on [[Recap/{{Survivor}} the Recap page]].
17
18Based on a format created by Charlie Parsons. The first produced show based on the format was the Swedish reality game show ''Expedition: Robinson''. The original concept was said during ''All-Stars'' to have been inspired by William Golding's 1954 novel ''Literature/LordOfTheFlies''.
19
20[[Series/{{Survivorman}} Not to be confused with that one show that's actually about surviving.]] Or the [[Literature/SurvivorDogs third series from]] Creator/ErinHunter. Or the [[Music/{{Survivor|Band}} band]] best known for "Eye of the Tiger". Or the [[VideoGame/SurvivorFire game about trying to escape from a fire.]]
21
22'''Note''': The [[Series/AustralianSurvivor Australian]] and [[Series/SurvivorSouthAfrica South African]] versions now have their own pages.
23
24'''WARNING''': Spoilers ahead are unmarked. You have been warned.
25----
26!!Previously on... Survivor!
27
28[[foldercontrol]]
29
30[[folder:General Tropes]]
31
32* AddedAlliterativeAppeal:
33** As seen on the seasonal logos, the show's usual tagline is "Outwit, Outplay, Outlast", and in ''Heroes vs. Villains'' it was replaced with another alliteration, "Return, Revenge, Redemption". ''China'' is the only season without an alliterative tagline, as the usual one was [[BilingualBonus loosely translated into Chinese]].
34** Some subtitles and formats have it too, such as ''Fans vs. Favorites'', "Brains vs. Brawn vs. Beauty", ''Heroes vs. Healers vs. Hustlers'', ''Edge of Extinction'', and ''Island of the Idols''.
35* AllOrNothing: While all the contestants get something for their time (ranging from around $2,500 for last place to $100,000 for the runner-up,) and one can still win the Fan Favorite prize in seasons where it is offered, the prize structure is still essentially winner-take-all.
36* AndKnowingIsHalfTheBattle: Just before dismissing them from Tribal Council, Jeff Probst will add a [[OneLiner brief remark]] about that vote or the tribe's prospects in general. Most are rather [[CaptainObvious obvious]], but the best may be the line from ep. 12 of ''Micronesia'': "You guys are [[DoWrongRight perfecting the art]] of [[DidntSeeThatComing the blindside]]. That is the good news, and ''[[HoistByHisOwnPetard that is]] [[ThereCanBeOnlyOne the bad news]]''."
37* AntiRageQuitting: After two players quit at the same time in ''Nicaragua'', a rule was introduced that considers quitting a violation of the players' contract, and allows the producers to withhold their consolation prize, and if applicable, their spot on the jury.[[note]]Voted out players leaving the Edge of Extinction is considered okay.[[/note]] This may be waived if the producers feel the quitter had a valid reason for doing so, such as an injury serious enough to demand treatment, but not life-threatening to necessitate a medical evacuation. Also note that no player has reappeared on the show after quitting the game.
38* AnyoneCanDie: Well, not ''actual'' death, but anyone can get eliminated no matter how safe they seem:
39** Ever since Gretchen Cordy was booted off it was made clear that even the strongest competitors could go home.
40** Ever since Michael Skupin fell in the fire, it's been revealed that people can be medically evacuated from the game.
41** Ever since John Carroll went, even members of majority alliances could be overthrown.
42** Ever since Paschal English was voted out, the purple rock (and later, firemaking tiebreakers) ensured that people could be eliminated without receiving any votes.
43** Ever since the immunity idol was introduced in ''Fiji'', there is literally no way to call anyone completely safe[[note]]Since people will try to vote for any of their opposition to get around the idol, even if they aren't the biggest threat[[/note]] unless they happen to be wearing an [[InvincibilityPowerUp immunity necklace]]...
44*** ...most of the time, because Erik Reichenbach from ''Micronesia'' was voted out after '''giving up immunity!''' Even an immune person isn't 100% safe from themselves.
45** Cirie Fields from ''Game-Changers'' was voted out despite receiving no votes and no purple rock. Everyone else pulled out immunities and she was eliminated by default.
46** ''Gabon'' in particular is a season where '''no one''' is safe from elimination.
47* AppleOfDiscord: Some individual rewards force the winner to choose a couple of tribemates to join him/her (or put another way, has to choose a bunch of people to get nothing). "Coconut chop" challenges are also good for this, as they put the social pecking order on display. In both cases, there's a good chance for someone to get offended.
48* {{Auction}}: This was a commonly recurring "challenge" up until ''Worlds Apart'' (Season 30).
49** MysteryBox: Jeff typically pulls out several covered items during auctions. It's usually either something absolutely disgusting (pond water, plant roots), or the best thing at the auction (steak and fully loaded baked potato, a full breakfast plate).
50** ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Some seasons's auctions have sold advantages in Immunity Challenges. These bonuses may take the form of a guaranteed spot in the challenge's last stage, a second chance at its overall goal, or partial credit towards the user's progress in the challenge. In ''Worlds Apart'', one of these turned out to be not a challenge advantage but a ''Tribal Council'' advantage, an extra vote to be cast in a future Council. Unfortunately, this is probably what caused the end of the auctions, as the increasingly cutthroat nature of the game made it too common for contestants to hoard money for a possible advantage.
51** {{Zonk}}: At least one useless item shows up per auction, always hidden in one of the above-mentioned Mystery Boxes. Subverted in ''Worlds Apart'', where Will Sims bought himself a ''disqualification'' from the auction and was sent back to camp... where production had hidden a large stash of extra rations for him to find.
52* AscendedFanboy: Unsurprisingly, most people who sign up for the show are already fans of it, and thus any given cast probably has several of these. That said, it wasn't until John Cochran appeared on ''South Pacific'' and informed the audience that he had written a prize-winning essay about the show that "superfan" became one of the show's favorite casting archetypes.
53* BeachEpisode: This is more or less a Beach ''Series'', and the reasoning behind such episodes is part of why there will never be ''Survivor: The Arctic''. Even the ones not actually on beaches tend to be in tropical climates, encouraging players to show some skin.
54* BeautyIsNeverTarnished: While men are given no beauty products, women are provided the means to keep their legs and pits shaved throughout the season.
55* BilingualBonus: Most of the tribe names that aren't simply the names of local islands or cities are words in the native language. [[Recap/{{Survivor}} Our recap page]] lists all the tribe names and their meanings. In an interesting twist, occasionally a merged tribe is named something that a contestant ''claims'' to be meaningful, but is really just a bad pun or a shout-out to their family.
56* BitchAlert: If - or rather, ''when'' - there's someone that's going to spend the month in the wilderness acting nasty, the editors will let you know quickly. For example:
57-->'''Corinne Kaplan in ''Gabon'':''' I'm gonna be a total bitch, and I'm gonna get rid of who I have to get rid of, and I'm gonna hurt people's feelings and I'm gonna laugh when people cry.
58* BittersweetEnding: For everybody who lost the Final Tribal Council. As expressed by several losing finalists, it would be sad when you realize that you lost the title of the Sole Survivor, but at least it is rewarding that you have survived till the final day in an unfamiliar location, and still more cash than those who didn't make it to the jury.
59* BlessedWithSuck: Assuming they make the merge, players who are considered unimpressive or unpopular are likely to be brought to the end because they are considered easily beatable. This is occasionally subverted, as other players recognize that others wanting to take these "goats" to the end actually made them threatening because it increased one's own likelihood of getting voted out; examples include Courtney Marit from ''Panama'' and Abi Maria Gomes in ''Second Chances''.
60* ButtMonkey: Every season has at least one.
61** Poor Boo Bernis of ''Fiji'' was one. He not only hurt himself numerous times on the same day (which was actually pretty funny) but later tore his ACL - [[MoodWhiplash then it went into the unfunny territory.]]
62** The Ulong tribe in ''Palau'' lost every single immunity challenge and had the last member merely join the opposite tribe.
63** The [[MeaningfulName appropriately named]] Matsing (meaning "monkey") tribe in ''Philippines'' lost all four challenges it participated in, and ceased to exist only eleven days into the game. Ironically, one of its two surviving members went on to win the game.
64* CantCatchUp: If one tribe does poorly enough in the pre-merge game, then they wind up entering with a severe minority and are (usually) easy pickings for the majority.
65** Ulong and Ravu are the most famous and prominent examples. Ulong in ''Palau'' lost every single immunity challenge and were reduced to just one member. Ravu in ''Fiji'' was intentionally given much fewer supplies than the Moto tribe as part of a "have vs. have not" setup; and they never were able to catch up to the much better fed and rested Moto. The producers admit that ''Fiji'' [[MyGreatestFailure was a failed experiment]].
66** Matsing from ''Philippines'' did fail bad enough to be the "three tribe season" version of Ulong, but had both their surviving members make it far into the game. One of them even won!
67** More generically, when one is down a member, the other tribes are forced to sit someone out. Competing in back-to-back challenges without any rewards can easily cause tribemates to get tired out and be unable to perform in the immunity challenge. Instinctively, the players who are ahead sit out their weaker players for the immunity challenge because that's the more important one.
68** Some seasons subvert this when a winner comes from a tribe that was in a minority during the merge. Such as the awesomeness of the post-mutiny Aitu Four in ''Cook Islands'' that soundly whooped the eight-strong Raro tribe after realizing their weakness in numbers.
69* CaptainObvious: Jeff Probst whenever he announces for a challenge; usually in the form of "Player X, doing Y." After Jonathan Penner got irritated at his announcements during a ''Cook Islands'' challenge and told him to shut up, Jeff [[BreakingTheFourthWall broke the fourth wall]] for the first time with this immortal line:
70-->"Jonathan, getting frustrated by ''me!''"
71* CatchPhrase: Jeff Probst has several, almost always regarding gameplay gimmicks, to the point where he's ritualized half his dialogue. Some of the tribal council lines fall under RulesSpiel. For example, "Everybody, drop your buffs" is said by Jeff every time there's a tribal switch or merge. This one was played with a bit in ''Heroes vs. Villains'' as Jeff said "drop your expectations" due to the Villains tribe incorrectly guessing that there would be a merge with 12 castaways left; the merge was later done at 10 castaways instead.
72* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Each tribe has a color given to its buffs, flag, challenge props, etc. Starting with ''Tocantins'', a tribe's entire ''wardrobes'' are more-or-less color-coded in its color.
73* TheComplainerIsAlwaysWrong: As good as reason as any to kick someone out early, or condescedingly keep them around as a goat sure to lose in the finals. For example, why [[GlorySeeker Jimmy]] [[ItsAllAboutMe Tarantino]] was booted in ''Nicaragua''.
74* ConfessionCam: As in most reality shows, the contestants constantly give confessionals. Thanks to ManipulativeEditing, it's hard to tell when they were actually filmed. Also, the contestants give confessionals while voting, usually stating why they're voting for a specific person.
75* CoolOldGuy: Anyone who played a good game at the age of 40 and beyond. Special mention to Tina Wesson, Tom Westman, Bob Crowley and Denise Stapley for winning their respective seasons, Terry Deitz for having an awesome immunity streak and Rudy Boesch for playing ''twice'' in his seventies.
76* CurbStompBattle: Often happens (or is at least attempted) post-merge, when the larger former tribe gangs up on the smaller one.
77** ''Marquesas'', where Rotu destroyed Maraamu in all but one immunity challenge. The tribe swap was in Rotu's favor, both original and swapped, meaning Maraamu was outnumbered by the jury stage. However, once the merge hit, Rotu's majority alliance quickly collapsed and the finalist from their tribe lost the million as a result of the chaos.
78** The most infamous is most likely Koror vs. Ulong in ''Palau.'' Ulong was for a long time the only tribe in ''Survivor'' history to exist for more than a week but never win a ''single'' Immunity Challenge (and they lost all but three of the Reward Challenges as well). When the tribes merged, it consisted of eight Koror members and Stephenie [=LaGrossa=], the ''only Ulong left.'' If we're being technical, there was never even an actual ''merge''; Stephenie simply joined Koror.
79** ''Fiji'' had Ravu, which was ''0-8'' in immunity challenges (beating Ulong's streak by one loss) and 1-4 in rewards, for a total of one win and twelve losses, even after a tribe swap. This was thanks to a "have vs. have not" gimmick that gave Ravu the worst campsite in the show's history while their rival Moto had the absolute best. The only reason Moto sent anyone home was [[SadisticChoice due to a twist]] that forced them to either attend tribal council or give up the campsite that gave their edge.
80** ''Redemption Island'' was played up as a grudge match between Boston Rob and Russell, but turned into one of these when Russell's tribe unceremoniously threw a challenge to get rid of him after only a week. They were promptly Pagonged right after the merge.
81** ''Thailand'' had Sook Jai, an odd subversion. Despite being less cohesive than the opposing Chuay Gahn, they won just as many challenges. Unfortunately, most of them were ''reward'' challenges, which meant they sent home more people before the merge. Not helping matters was a fakeout merge that divided them even further. It got to the point the real merge had them outnumbered, and no chance for any of them winning except improbable individual immunity streaks. Accordingly, they all got picked off by the final five.
82** ''Philippines'' features Matsing, which became the third tribe to never win a single immunity and the first with no challenge victories at all to their name. The lost four times in a row, and last two members went to different tribes. Rival Tandang went on to be the first tribe in Survivor history to never lose a single member before the merge, winning every one-on-one challenge against (other rival) Kalabaw. The leftovers of Matsing not only produced the winner, but had both make the final four and come back at least one other time.
83** ''Gabon'''s Fang won exactly one immunity challenge, plus a handful of rewards. However, they used their losses as a great excuse to kick off any Kotas swapped onto the tribe, and ultimately went into the merge with even footing. Tika in ''44'' had the gameplan, and actually produced the winner for it.
84** Sometimes, Final Tribal Council can be this. One notable example is J.T. vs. Stephen in ''Tocantins'', where J.T. won '''7-0'''.
85*** Some players who prefer HonorBeforeReason will take a more deserving player to the end with them, in hopes that such a move will impress the jury. This [[GoodIsDumb almost always backfires]] and the losing player rarely lives it down. Examples include Woo from ''Cagayan''.
86* CursedWithAwesome: Players considered to have strong athletic, social, or strategic prowess are likely to get voted out before making it to the final jury. This [[ExecutiveMeddling led producers to move from a Final 2 to a Final 3]], so there would be more than one compelling choice in the finals.
87* DarkHorseVictory: [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Vecepia]], [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Jenna]], [[LadySwearsALot Sandra]] (twice), [[OutOfFocus Danni]], [[HypercompetentSidekick Natalie White]], [[ObfuscatingStupidity Fabio]], [[DeadpanSnarker Sophie]], [[ButtMonkey Denise]], [[EvilIsHammy Tony]] (''twice''), [[TheCameo Natalie Anderson]], [[FromNobodyToNightmare Michele]], [[UnluckyEverydude Adam]], [[DeusExMachina Ben]], and [[WinsByDoingAbsolutelyNothing Chris Underwood]] were all unexpected winners, at least from a narrative perspective. Most of them did, however, receive a suspicious amount of focus from the editors. Questionable casting choices that went on to win all-stars seasons include [[SatelliteCharacter Amber]], [[TheTease Parvati]], [[FishOutOfWater Cochran]], [[TookALevelInDumbass Tyson]], and [[DrunkWithPower Sarah]].
88* DeadlyGame:
89** While not outright life-threatening, the physical exertion required in challenges combined with the near-starvation conditions and oppressive heat present in many seasons have definitely taken their toll on the contestants.
90** Not to mention the possibility of contracting foreign diseases. Lex from ''Africa'' was apparently sick for months after the game with a variety of illnesses and Daniel Lue, an [[WeHardlyKnewYe early castoff]] from ''Amazon'' contracted malaria. Sandra was asked to return in ''All Stars'' but said she was still recovering from parasites she had contracted in ''Pearl Islands''. ''Marquesas'', while not deadly, still had discomfort caused by bugs so the location will never be used again.
91** However, some contestants have had brushes his death mid-season, including Mike Skupin in ''Australia'' who got dreary from smoke inhalation while working on a fire and partially FELL INTO IT. Fortunately for Skupin, his glasses and hat hit the fire before his face, but he still took third-degree burns to his arms and spent three weeks in a burn unit.
92** All of the [[NonGameplayElimination medical evacuations]] fall into this - Jonathan's Knee and Joe's leg probably count as well; seeing as these were considered life-threatening.
93** It's actually mentioned there's quite a bit of DangerousTerrain; which is a bit of a risk and often an obstacle to finding good places to film the show. Samoa, for example, is a good place for a show, but the contestants have been apparently ordered to stay within 20-30 feet of the shore (in the ocean) because the waters are actually quite turbulent, and there's the risk of riptides and undertow. It didn't show up much in ''Samoa'' and ''Heroes vs. Villains'', but one of the show's best swimmers (Ozzy) in the ''South Pacific'' season shows exactly how big the waves are...and [[SceneryPorn how beautiful]] the ocean around the islands are.
94** Some contestants actually have sustained injuries that followed them outside the game. The first person eliminated from Guatemala had torn his bicep in a challenge (after the hike). Months later, he was interviewed, and his arm was ''still'' in a splint. (It should be noted that he was actually one of the oldest contestants that season, which slowed down the healing process) Ian from ''Palau'' stated that he has nerve damage in parts of his feet from the nearly-12-hour-long-endurance challenge.
95** In addition to disgusting water and oppressive heat, ''Africa'' also featured the unique risk of being eaten by lions. The tribes were actually responsible for building a barrier around their camp to keep predators out and Mark Burnett actually yelled at Boran for not doing so and risking the lives of his crew.
96** In the fourth episode of ''Kaoh Rong'', '''THREE''' people went down after the reward challenge due to intense heat and strain on their bodies and the entire crew had to get involved to check on the contestants, with one ultimately getting [[NonGameplayElimination evacuated]] after his ''kidney and liver failed''.
97* DeadlyScratch: An occasional cause for medical evacuation, as limited access to medicine and bandages can make an otherwise controlled cut seriously infected. Jonathan Penner (''Micronesia'') and Neal Gottlieb (''Kaoh Rong'') both had to be pulled for infections that could have costed them their leg, if not their life, while James Clement (also ''Micronesia'') had to be removed for an infection on a cut no wider than his finger.
98* DecidedByOneVote: As a whole, the show averages about two votes per season decided on this margin[[note]]This number increases if you include two vote differences (one person in the majority is enough to force a tie), idol plays (which throw off the vote count entirely), or the penultimate vote in seasons with a final two (where only one vote is even cast)[[/note]]. Typically, such a divided vote sets a precedent where the side in the majority is in power going forward, but at times, this works the other way, kicking off a string of chaotic gameplay. A few notable examples include:
99** ''Cook Islands'' featured an unexpected turn of events, where after an offer to change tribes, Raro was up 8-4 against Aitu. However, between a winning streak and a double elimination twist, Aitu was able to make merge without losing anyone. Then, with nine players left in the game, Jonathan, who was on the bottom of his side anyway, was convinced to flip when Yul revealed he had the idol. In a 5-4 vote, Nate was sent to the jury and the remainders of Aitu went on to become the final four.
100** Three seasons later, ''Micronesia'' saw an infamous example, wherein Ozzy, a physical and strategic threat with an idol, was vulnerable, and with Jason on the outs, Parvati and Cirie were able to bring in Jason, Alexis, and Natalie, blindsiding Ozzy in a 5-4, flushing the idol, and securing power for the rest of the game.
101** ''Cagayan'' saw another infamous example, where at the merge, swap Aparri was up one member at the merge. However, Sarah, who had connections on the other side, made too big a deal out of being the swing vote and alienated Kass. When it came time to read the votes, LJ and Tony played their idols on each other, but instead, it was Jefra who got votes. Nonetheless, all three managed to survive, as Kass flipped to vote out Sarah, firmly cementing the top and bottom for the rest of the season.
102* DeliciousDistraction: Jeff Prbst pulls out a couple of variations once or twice a season during immunity challenges. In one version, he tries to get players to abandon long, uncomfortable endurance challenges by bribing them with snacks. Other times for quickly-completed challenges, he offers the choice up front: play for immunity ''or'' get to eat as long as the challenge lasts.
103* DesertedIsland: The stereotypical setting for the show is on an island, though several seasons are instead in other sections of wilderness, such as ''The Australian Outback'' and ''Gabon''.
104* DesignatedGirlFight: Some challenges require certain numbers of male and female players, especially those played in rounds of only 1 or 2 players per tribe. Unsurprisingly, the rounds are mostly man vs. man and woman vs. woman.
105* DivideAndConquer: Allowing an Individual Reward winner to bring at least one other player along for the ride isn't about generosity. It "spreads out" the resulting envy from the remaining losers (and defensive efforts of the winners) onto multiple targets, which usually makes upcoming Tribal Councils less predictable.
106* TheDogBitesBack: Players that are on the outs of the dominant alliances or are picked on by the resident SmugSnake sometimes find themselves in the position of turning the table on their abusers. See ''South Pacific'', where tribal alliances were even and both were so solid that everyone on both tribes resigned themselves to random-chance elimination by purple rock. During the revote, team ButtMonkey Cochran turned on his own tribe to avoid that situation. Jim immediately called him a coward, but Brandon said that he might not have flipped if they had treated him better than that.
107* DoUntoOthersBeforeTheyDoUntoUs: Standard operating procedure every season. Noted nearly word-for-word in episode 7 of ''Blood vs. Water'': Tina reveals to Monica that Kat wants Monica to be voted out, which would clearly break the Galang women's alliance. Monica has a grim realization:
108-->'''Monica''': I teach my kids "[[TheGoldenRule do unto others as you would want them to do unto you]]"... but you know what? In ''Survivor'', I figured it out: it's "do unto others ''before'' they do unto you".
109* DrunkWithPower: For future contestants, beware of becoming this. For example, Sarah Lacina from ''Cagayan'' and Christy Smith from ''Amazon'' fell into the trap of openly declaring their status as the swing vote and flaunting it, directly resulting in their eliminations.
110* DueToTheDead: In the earlier seasons (last seen in Season 26, ''Caramoan''), the finale usually included a part for the finalists to reflect on all the people voted out (and for said people voted out to reflect on their time in the game), which is often presented like this.
111* TheDulcineaEffect: There's occasionally a guy whose thought process amounts to "whatever the pretty girl wants to do".
112** Take Chase Rice and Sash Lenahan's loyalty to Brenda Lowe in ''Nicaragua'', for example, as [[LampshadeHanging detailed by Brenda herself]]:
113---> '''Brenda:''' "You wanna know what's funny? I have people on my side without doing ''anything''."
114** When the Villains lose ''Heroes Vs Villains'' ep. 3's combo challenge, Randy Bailey says this is one of the reasons he [[ConfessionCam predicts he'll be the next to leave]]; [[MusclesAreMeaningful the other]] is even more common. He was right, and got voted out next.
115** Parvati made this her strategy, to great effect. She's very smart, very ruthless... and very, very pretty. Men have a habit of falling in line around her (unless they're named Yul Kwon or part of the Heroes tribe).
116** This was a heavily referenced trope in the ''Amazon'' season, where the men and the women were separated into different tribes which increased the sexual tension between both.
117** Ozzy Lusth in ''South Pacific'' seemed to have an odd infatuation with Semhar. Despite this and Ozzy being the leader of their tribe, it didn't prevent Semhar from leaving first.
118* DumbBlonde: There are usually several. Kat Edorsson from ''One World'' and Heidi Strobel from ''The Amazon'' and are probably some of the best examples. Granted, the ''Amazon'' reunion that Heidi actually has an IQ of 165, she just had a habit of [[DiggingYourselfDeeper putting her foot in her mouth]]) so it's more about presentation than actual smarts. Subverted by Natalie White from ''Samoa'', who acted like a DumbBlonde but [[ObfuscatingStupidity did so deliberately because the smart ones were being targeted]]; she then used her position to manipulate Russell and she eventually won. Jud "Fabio" Birza from ''Nicaragua'', was already kind of a ditz as a person, and intentionally [[ObfuscatingStupidity flanderized himself so the other team would underestimate him]], and like Natalie, he eventually won.
119* EarnYourHappyEnding:
120** Most winners, as they have to survive all the harsh backstabbing and wilderness conditions.
121** Jerri Manthey has one of the longest, and simultaneously heartbreaking, and finally heartwarming examples over three seasons. When ''The Australian Outback'' aired, she was seen as one of the most despicable people in America thanks to contemporary aversion to strategy types. In ''All-Stars'' she became ReformedButRejected and was booed off the stage after making a fairly accurate comment about people not being the audience's playthings. Many many years later she came back for ''Heroes vs Villains'' where after being put on a tribe of Villains, being one of the nicest people out there (even compared to the Heroes), and comes ''so'' close to winning, she's finally cheered by the audience and has finally become a fan favorite.
122* EatThat: There's was usually one "disgusting food" challenge every season, before they became a lot less common after ''All-Stars''. Memorable examples include "Boston" Rob Mariano throwing up the farafu in ''Marquesas'', Denise Martin ''screaming'' at the balut in ''China'', and Tina Wesson again vomiting the cow intestine in ''The Australian Outback''.
123* EliminationCatchphrase: Among Jeff Probst's many catchphrases is the TropeCodifier: "The tribe has spoken; it's time for you to go." In seasons with Redemption Island, this is altered slightly.
124** Subverted with the game's very first quitter, ''Pearl Islands''[='=] Osten. Having never had his head in the game from the start, he asked his tribe to vote him out on Day 19. After confirming that Osten was indeed quitting, Jeff, clearly annoyed, snuffed out Osten's torch with a curt "Go home!"
125* EliminationStatement: The contestants' final words vary from being encouraging words to the remaining tribe, reminiscing over things they regret, or bitter words towards the people who voted them out.
126* EnemyMine: Sometimes people who don't get along realize they can take out a common enemy by working together. [=NaOnka=] and Fabio in ''Nicaragua'', for instance, spent weeks despising each other, but when it became clear that Brenda had achieved a dangerous level of power, they were able to work together to eliminate her. Sometimes it's somebody who has a chance of swaying a jury, but other times it's a [[NeutralityBacklash swing vote pulling stunts]].
127* EveryEpisodeEnding: Episodes almost always end up with one, or more, contestants sent home and lamenting their fate on a final ConfessionCam.
128* EvilGloating: The game is built on backstabbing equipped with a ConfessionCam, this is expected to happen. Russell Hantz took this up to eleven by using it for all of his confessionals, while Brian Heidik had a stark contrast between his confessional personality and [[BitchInSheepsClothing the one he presented to his tribemates]].
129* EvolvingMusic: The series' ThemeTune, "Ancient Voices", has [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipaNdOKYFcQ many]] [[OnceASeason seasonal]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pLp-fAxcvc remixes]]. Various regional instruments, spirited grunts, chants, shouts, and drums are woven into the main track each season. Averted with ''Nicaragua'', which defaulted to the first season's theme, and ''Island of the Idols'', which lacked it entirely. Russ Landau did create a version for ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRG26kj7VOQ Nicaragua]]'', but it was tossed out.
130* FinaleProductionUpgrade: A given for each season from Australian Outback (Season 2) onwards. The contestants/jury are brought back and cleaned up, the votes are taken back to the United States to be read at CBS Television Studios, the families of all the contestants are brought in, and in at least one occasion, the final vote reading took place in a giant theater with a giant audience.
131* TheFlameOfLife: The show symbolically has the players light torches the first time they visit Tribal Council, and whenever someone is VotedOffTheIsland their torch is snuffed out.
132-->'''Jeff Probst:''' This is part of the ritual of tribal council. In this game, fire represents your life; and when it is gone, so are you.
133* FriendOrIdolDecision: The source of the most contentious drama on the show, where contestants typically choose to cut loose from their alliance for, what they believe to be, a better shot at winning.
134* GambitPileup: The number of plots, schemes and other forms of backstabbing can become absurd, especially as the number of contestants dwindles.
135* GameShowHost: Jeff Probst is third only to Bob Barker and Alex Trebek in fame for this one...and was hosting "Rock and Roll Jeopardy" when his more famous gig began.
136* GameShowPhysicalChallenge: Most, but not all, immunity and reward challenges involve physical exertion. While the most common challenges take the form of an obstacle course with a puzzle, or a test of physical endurance, other formats may be present, such as head-to-head combat and slingshot golf. Perhaps the tamest was a self-moderated game of bocce ball, while the other extreme includes an obstacle course in the blistering heat, requiring one player to be evacuated for heat stroke while two others needed medical themselves.
137* GuileHero:
138** The "under the radar" winner archetype is the passive example, with Natalie White from ''Samoa'' being a rare subversion. They frequently are called "bad" or "undeserving winners" by the fans, ignoring that it seems they've been doing ''something'' right if they were in the finals and outlasting their rivals.
139** Tina Wesson from ''Australian Outback'' and Yul Kwon from ''Cook Islands'' both played absurdly good strategic games that won them the million dollars over flashier challenge threats Colby Donaldson and Ozzy Lusth/ Becky Lee.
140** Sandra Diaz-Twine from ''Pearl Islands'' and ''Heroes Vs Villains'' is one of the prime examples. She didn't stand out in any way, neither in challenges nor in strategy. She just flew under the radar, voted whichever way the wind blew... and won the million dollars after her rival(s) were skewered by the final juries. To her credit, she did stand out [[LadySwearsALot as a person]].
141* HamToHamCombat: Mark Burnett, the executive producer of Survivor and the one who brought the show to the United States, has said more than once that when casting the show the producers always try to pick "sixteen A-Type personalities". And of course, the entire point of "all-star" seasons is to pick the biggest LargeHam characters from previous seasons and try to see who can out-ham the others the best.
142* HardToLightFire: With fire critical for survival, nearly every season puts special focus on the effort the tribes make to first light fire at the beginning of the game (and on occasion, a second time after bad weather). A fire-making race has also been used as a challenge, both for tiebreakers at Tribal Council and, beginning in the late-30s seasons, as part of determining the Final Three.
143* HazyFeelTurn: When a "hero"/"villain" switches on their supposed "perspective". However, most of these are typically not true "turns", but strategies to gain an advantage or stay in the game.
144* HiddenInPlainSight: The hidden immunity idol is sometimes a blatantly visible item that the contestants simply don't realize is the idol, notably in the ''China'' and ''Philippines'' seasons. Adam Klein ''attempted'' to pull this off in ''Winners at War'', but the item (a fleur-de-lis decoration on Jeff's podium at the Tribal Council area) turned out to be just that: a decoration. He got voted out that night.
145* IconicItem: The contestants collectively share the tribe buffs as a signature clothing item, as they're basically required to wear them in some way or another.
146* ImNotHereToMakeFriends: Quoted word for word on more than one occasion. Ironically, the social aspects - especially alliances - mean players actually have to make friends (or at least not make enemies) to win, and those who do make lots of friends are considered huge threats. In the premiere of Season 43, Morriah quotes the trope word-for-word, saying that she is there to make friends.
147-->'''Morriah Young''': I always hear people get on this show and they say "I'm not here to make any friends." And I'm, like, "Well, I am. Be my friend. Let's have an authentic and genuine connection and bond. That way when I get to the end, you can vote me the million. And then we can go out for pizza and coffee afterwards.
148* InevitableMutualBetrayal: Theoretically, this happens within an alliance once it knocks out all opposition. In practice, it gets messy since most people have different ideas of who to betray and when.
149* InformedAttribute: A common problem when somebody's biography doesn't seem to match what they can do on the show. See TheCobblersChildrenHaveNoShoes for most examples and MusclesAreMeaningless for some that are more justifiable.
150* InterfaceSpoiler: Meta-example; if a former contestant that frequently uses some form of social networking suddenly stops using it for over a month, chances are they're going to be a returning player for an upcoming season.
151* ItsAllAboutMe: Many contestants adopt this attitude. It's clearest when jury members give their speeches at the final Tribal Council, as several either bitterly tear into the finalists for betraying them or basically ask the finalists to suck up to them. As a ''Website/TelevisionWithoutPity'' recapper put it, most final Tribal Council questions come down to, "My question is 'I want an apology'" or, "My question is 'You suck!'".
152* JerkAss: Almost every contestant, especially when you consider alternate perspectives. However, ManipulativeEditing leaves the truth of any of these questionable.
153** ''Fiji'' had a lot of these people. Sylvia Kwan wasn't very nice when the game started, plus Rocky Reid and Lisi Linares had pretty bad tempers as well. At the final jury, pretty much everybody ''except'' Yau-Man Chan and Michelle Yi was a worse JerkAss than usual to losing finalists Dreamz Herd and Cassandra Franklin.
154** There are several on every season, and it seems that in every following season, the requirement is to cast people who are even more horrible than the jerkasses of earlier seasons. One of the clearest examples was Corinne from ''Gabon'', whom many people compared to Jerri early in the season. By the time the season wrapped up, Corrine had displayed herself as one of the nastiest, most vile and despicable people in the history of the show, displaying zero redeeming qualities and even mocking Sugar's dead father. Those who compared her to Jerri ended up saying Corrine made Jerri look like a saint. She even complained at the reunion that they didn't portray her negatively enough!
155* JerkJustifications: With the best one being that it is only a game, which many contestants fail to truly digest. Depending on your perspective, every JerkAss in the show is justified. Lex van den Berghe is infamous for making paranoid or hypocritical (or both) rationalizations for why he votes the way he does, despite being otherwise compassionate.
156* KingmakerScenario: Those voted out post-merge become a jury of kingmakers for the final vote. Additionally, the player who wins the Final Immunity Challenge often gets to decide who to bring to the end with them.
157* {{Klotski}}: A regularly used challenge component throughout the history of the series but known by the more generic term 'slide puzzle'. Typically an ax or other blade is embedded in the 2x2 piece; after freeing the piece, the blade is used to cut a rope, which often unfurls a victory banner. In more recent years, an eight-piece/4x4 variant is more often used, occasionally with crate-size pieces so large that they require several people to move.
158* LesserOfTwoEvils: There isn't always a "good guy" to vote for at the end. This quote by Sean Kenniff from the very first season sums up most final tribal councils:
159-->'''Sean''': It's been a long contest. The general sentiment of the jury is that this contest has degenerated from a contest of who's more deserving to the least objectionable. I don't think either of you are truly deserving, but I'm voting for... [in this case, Richard Hatch].
160* LimitedWardrobe: Justified, since the contestants only get to bring the clothes on their back. However in some seasons contestants, typically female, use buffs in new and interesting ways to create the appearance of different clothing.
161* LockedOutOfTheLoop: This is the basic premise of a blindside. Letting a player (or their allies) know that they're getting votes runs the risk of an idol play, or outright talking their way out of trouble. On notable example came in ''Fiji'', where the majority alliance had to play around the idol. After Dreamz Herd waffled between sides too much, the majority voted the yet-unmentioned Edgardo, leaving Dreamz out of it.
162* LonersAreFreaks: Not staying with the group makes people paranoid - or at least, not inclined to save you over their friends. So isolate yourself at your peril.
163* LongRunners: Over forty one seasons (21 years) and counting. To put it in perspective: the youngest contestant from season 33 (''Millennials vs. Gen X'') was only 2 years old when the first season was airing. Starting around Survivor 41, contestants who weren't even born when Survivor first aired started to appear.
164* ManipulativeEditing: A source of contention for fans every season, who claim everything from alternative character interpretations to scenes being chronologically "adjusted". Admittedly some amount of this is a necessity, as they have to fit three days' worth of stuff into a single hour (Tribal Council alone takes hours in itself) and present a coherent "storyline" for the episode. It'd take a lot to list the examples that aren't just the most egregious ones.
165** The show showed Courtney Yates yelling "Break her arm" as {{Foreshadowing}} for when Stephenie [=LaGrossa=] dislocated her shoulder in that challenge. She had actually said it after the injury in jest of what just happened.
166** The Mary "Who?" Sartain from ''Micronesia'' was PlayedForLaughs. It looked like the cast had absolutely no idea who Mary was. They were actually asking for clarification (Kathy's case; because she was away on Exile Island) or expressing shock at how ''she'' was specifically voted out over Chet, who had underperformed (in Eliza's case, who didn't see what went down at the Fans's tribe).
167** And according to Lex van den Berghe, the shot of his [[OhCrap face]] on ''All-Stars'' after Kathy refused to give him her immunity necklace actually had nothing to do with her. It was more him expressing his disgust with Boston Rob than with him thinking that Kathy owed him or something. The shot was apparently too hilarious to resist including.
168** Christine Shields-Markowski appeared to be FlippingTheBird at Rick Nelson during a duel in ''South Pacific'', but apparently she was actually doing it to ''Jeff Probst''.
169** With the way ''41'' was edited, Xander Hastings appeared to be the big threat to win, with his loss to Erika Casupanan being treated as a major DarkHorseVictory for her. Jury members revealed in post season interviews that Xander was nowhere near as impressive of a player as editing made him look, with many admitting they had no plan of voting for Xander going into Final Tribal Council.
170* {{Metagame}}: What was once a simple game of numbers and alliances has evolved into a highly sophisticated competition that tests a variety of physical, mental, and social skills. Players now have to juggle several factors at once when they play: where a player ranks in their alliance, who's working at camp, who's an asset in tribe challenges (or a threat in individual ones), who's digging around for an idol, who is a potential goat to bring with you to the jury, who's a goat that ''someone else'' is trying to bring to the jury, who looks eager to flip on the alliance, and who can you vote off without costing you their jury vote. Oh, and by the way, you have to do this all with almost no food, water, sleep, shelter, and with TV cameras pointed at you every waking moment and all your tribemates scrutinizing every word you say. Good luck.
171* MundaneLuxury:
172** Almost all rewards are something commonplace outside the game, but they are certainly worth playing for, especially after the first few episodes when the contestants have become hungry.
173** In the first season, the contestants almost rebelled when they heard that the final reward would simply be a bottle of beer after Sean had gotten to go on a trip aboard a yacht during the last reward and the fact that the rewards were escalating in quality the more people left the game.
174* MusclesAreMeaningful: In the early stages of every single season, there's a mentality that strong young guys should be kept over old guys or women to help win immunity. In reality, physical force is rarely a deciding factor in challenges. There's also the flip side in that when the game moves into the individual stage, those seen as immunity allies become seen as immunity ''threats''. But all this said, the physical game always ends up [[MusclesAreMeaningless trumped by the social one]]; being annoying or arrogant can undermine a physical advantage and being a reliable vote can overcome a disadvantage.
175** Part of the reason is that if a guy has a bunch of muscle and no fat, then his body will start eating the muscle for energy. This was especially present with Jaison in ''Samoa'' who started very well but got weaker later on because he didn't have much fat.
176** ''One World'' has a good example of the perception vs. the reality of this. Matt, an alpha male, picked out some other alpha males to work with and believed they ran the tribe; at one point describing them as "roosters" leading the "chickens" around. Then the tribe actually had to go to Tribal Council, and it was pointed out to him that there were five "chickens" and only four "roosters". Goodbye, Matt.
177** Played straight for a change in ''Worlds Apart'', with lone-wolf Mike surviving an alliance of almost everyone else (and eventually winning) by pulling out win after win at the immunity challenges (five in total), plus one hidden immunity idol.
178* MusclesAreMeaningless: In the short run, being fit might help, but in the long run, it rarely ''stays'' like that, especially given the small food supply. Competitions deeper into each season tend to further de-emphasize physical challenges. More people have won by social skills, scheming or surviving the scheming of others than by sheer physical prowess. And there is on average at least one contestant each season who's best described as a DumbMuscle: not just in terms of being bad at strategies, but just a plain, if strong, dummy that's a liability more than a boon to the tribe.
179** Richard Hatch from ''Borneo'' is the UrExample for the whole show. A cheerful, laid-back, bit chubby gay man who spent his first day just observing his tribe... and then proceeded to outplay everyone. He even directly used his image of a weakling in the final immunity challenge, by simply letting it pass and watching Kelly sweat, with a drink in hand.
180** Yau-Man Chan from ''Fiji'' is another prominent example, further compounded by his age. While he didn't win, he consistently stayed on top of the game and in many cases proved that it doesn't matter how strong you are, but what you know. His famous crate-cracking even reached a status of minor meme.
181* MyGreatestFailure: Several players failed at the game and admit they failed. The producers likewise failed with a couple of twists, such as the "Have and have not" tribes in ''Fiji''.
182** The "Redemption Island" mechanic is considered a pretty big failure, its initial season and the follow-up, ''South Pacific'', were not well received due to several reasons, including diminishing the "finality" of Tribal Council and duels replacing Reward Challenges and taking episode time away from other things such as strategy. It and its successor, the "Edge of Extinction", are commonly considered to be among the worst twists in ''Survivor'' history.
183** ''Cook Islands'' was another massive failure, at least from an "out-of-universe" perspective, due to dividing the initial tribes by race. This lead to massive backlash and sponsors dropping the show. It especially didn't help when it was looking like it was going to end up with the Final Five being the entire white tribe.
184* NeutralityBacklash: Occasionally, a player will find themselves between two equal alliances. Ignorant ones will consider themselves a swing vote with the luxury of choosing who to align with, but in reality ''neither'' side will trust them. On multiple occasions this has ended up with the swing vote getting taken out instead. Christy Smith in ''The Amazon'' and "Big" Tom Buchanan in ''All-Stars'' were both in this position but misplayed it so badly that the two sides ''joined together'' against them.
185* NeverTrustATrailer: Discount most of what a preview or commercial tells you will happen next episode except for an injury or medical emergency. This was particularly obvious during Russell Hantz's first two seasons, where every preview made it appear that he was in mortal danger of being voted out next week and he rarely was.
186* NiceGuy: The producers seem to go out of their way to make certain contestants seem like the kind of guy/girl everyone wants to be friends with. Depending on the season, these guys are usually eliminated for being jury threats (as everyone likes them and would prefer them) or manage to make their way far into the game.
187* NonGameplayElimination: Several examples but these two deserve special mention-
188** Brandon Hantz earns himself one in ''Caramoan'' with a sudden outburst during which he pours out his tribe's rice and beans. Later, during the Immunity Challenge, his tribe announces that they wish to forfeit the challenge to vote him out. After a heated discussion, Jeff becomes worried about allowing Brandon to return to camp, so he holds the Tribal Council right there at the challenge site, having the tribe give their votes out loud with the opposing tribe watching. Brandon later states that he is proud of the way he left the game, as the "author of his own fate.".
189** In ''Island of the Idols'', Dan Spillo got ejected. He'd already been given a warning about sexual harassment earlier in the season due to fondling his female tribemates, and apparently there was an incident with a crew member that served as the last straw. Other versions of the show have had ejections for offenses of similar caliber, but this was the first time it happened in the US version.
190* NothingPersonal: Most of the eliminations that take place are strictly due to gameplay or strategic purposes. As shown on social networking sites, many players who go after each other in-game are usually on good terms with each other outside of it.
191* ObstacleExposition: Before every challenge with very few exceptions, the players (and the viewers) are informed of the challenge's rules through an expository spiel by Jeff Probst.
192* ObviousRulePatch:
193** The Hidden Immunity Idol has been subject to a few patches since its introduction:
194*** In ''Panama'' and ''Cook Islands'', the idol could be played up until the final four, and could be played '''after''' the votes were read, sending the person with the next-most votes home. This was changed for ''Fiji'' and all later seasons because the idol effectively made Yul untouchable in the latter season. The ability to play after the vote would occasionally return in later seasons, but was explicitly a more powerful but harder to obtain "Super Idol".
195*** In ''Nicaragua'', the clues were visual cues because Russell was smart and was finding them before clues were given. It was called "The Russell Factor" by producers. Even this would eventually fall by the wayside, as in nearly every season since the idols have been found almost immediately, often without clues.
196*** In the early days of the "modern" idol format (excluding ''Tocantins'',) idols expired after the final six. ''Redemption Island'' had a contestant returning to the game and becoming a member of the final 5, resulting in idols becoming playable for one more round.
197** The "purple rock" tiebreaker is used in all situations... except the final four. This is because only one person would be eligible to draw a rock, eliminating them by default.
198** One of these was announced during the ''Nicaragua'' finale in response to Naonka and "Purple" Kelly quitting and landing on the jury; in future seasons if a player quits the game on their own, they can be taken off the jury at the producers' discretion.
199** Early in the series; the contestants got a "luxury item" that was basically a personal comfort item. This practice died out over time due to players abusing the ExactWords on what items they could bring and getting a cheap source of fire or shelter or an advantage in the game. For example, Colby's flag in ''Australian Outback'' was used as part of the shelter, Kim J. used her paints to basically win the SOS challenge in ''Africa'', and Vecepia wrote down everything in her journal to help her win the "fallen comrades" challenge in ''Marquesas''. But on the other hand, "Big" Tom Buchanan kept a raccoon penis and Robb Zbacnik brought a skateboard to a beach.
200** Following Claire sitting out of every challenge in ''Survivor 44'', and the show all but ditching reward challenges, the sit out rule was changed in ''Survivor 45'' from back to back challenges in a single episode cycle, to all back to back challenges.
201** Following the trend of players 3D printing and practicing Survivor puzzles, the producers announced older puzzles would be retired.
202* OddlyNamedSequel: Most early seasons were named after their location, but then we have the returning-contestant seasons of ''All-Stars'' and ''Heroes Vs Villains''. ''Panama'' is also known by the subtitle ''Exile Island'', its gimmick. (''Micronesia'' similarly used to be known as ''Fans vs. Favorites'', but with ''Caramoan'' using the same gimmick and subtitle the location is now necessary to differentiate.) Eventually, due to most seasons filming in Samoa or Fiji, titles based on the gimmicks became commonplace and are no longer "odd". Then, in a first for the series, the season after ''Winners at War'' was simply titled ''Survivor 41''.
203* OhCrap: You can spot a couple "Oh Crap" faces, as well as people literally saying "Oh crap" when they realize they underestimated someone. Such as Russell to [[OutOfFocus Brett]], Boston Rob to [[MagikarpPower Ashley]], and Chase, Sash, and Holly to [[ObfuscatingStupidity Fabio]].
204** Lex's expression just before getting voted out during ''All Stars'' probably takes the cake as the biggest "Oh Crap" face on ''Survivor''.
205** [[http://i913.photobucket.com/albums/ac334/Exo-Raikou/4_1.gif Edgardo and Alex]] have one in ''Fiji'' that must be seen to be believed.
206** [[http://becauseicandrawbutts.tumblr.com/post/48295350150/meanwhile-brenda-without-blinking-lolz Everyone except the Three Amigos]] when Malcolm plays two idols for himself and Eddie, preventing any of them from being voted off in that tribal since Reynold had immunity.
207* OnceASeason: Outside of tribal councils and jury votes, no every ritual is used in every season. However, some of CBS's favorites include:
208** Family members showing up for a visit, often accompanied by a reward challenge where the winner gets more time to spend with their loved one. On multiple occasions, the loved ones have competed on behalf of respective contestants.
209** The "three strikes/coconut chop" challenge, where correct answers to questions (either trivia or about each other) allow the players to "hit" each other, with three "hits" leading to a loss for that player; the "last one standing" wins, as usual. This challenge was retired following ''San Juan del Sur'', where a very annoyed Jeff cancelled the challenge after watching the majority alliance negotiate who was going to win. Now most "how well do you know your fellow castmates?" challenges follow other methods.
210** The "Survivor Auction", where contestants bid for various foods or other luxury items. It was retired after ''Worlds Apart''.
211** The "Rites of Passage", where the final three or four players collect torches of their eliminated peers and say parting words about what they knew of them. A short montage of an eliminated contestant would be overlaid onto the video with parting words from said contestant shown to the viewer. However, it's been retired for years.
212** The tribe merge, where all the players are brought together into a single tribe for the rest of the game. This also includes a feast for everyone on merge day in place of a reward challenge. The only time a merge hasn't happened was during Palau, due to a severe CurbStompBattle. And even then, buffs were made in advance for a presumed merger.
213** Tribe shuffles/ swaps, where who belongs to what tribe is potentially changed. It's more common than not, but only truly guaranteed in season with more than two tribes or ones where where starting tribes are divided by a demographic attribute (like gender, race, or age). The deadline is four eliminations leads to a proper swap, or two in multi-tribe seasons.
214** Breakfast (''e.g.'', eggs, bacon, pancakes, fruit, wine, etc.) provided for cooking on the last morning for the final contestants.
215* OncePerEpisode: Every season has been so standardized that you can almost always expect the same things happening in every episode. There are scenes of camp life spread across the tribes, an Immunity Challenge, the losing tribe strategizes and then heads to Tribal Council and votes someone out of the game.
216* OneSteveLimit: Production doesn't really care whether they cast multiple people with the same or similar names on the same season: ''Africa'' had two Kims, ''Marquesas'' had two Robs, ''Pearl Islands'' had two Ryans, ''All-Stars'' had two Jennas and two Robs, ''Vanuatu'' had two Johns, ''Samoa'' had two Russells, ''Heroes vs Villains'' had two Jameses, ''Nicaragua'' had two Jimmys and two Kellys, ''Blood vs. Water'' had two Lauras, ''Cambodia'' had Kelly Wigglesworth and Kelley Wentworth, ''Millenials vs. Gen X'' had two Jessicas, ''Ghost Island'' had two Stephanies, ''David vs Goliath'' had Natalie and Natalia, ''Edge of Extinction'' had Julie and Julia, and ''Island of the Idols'' had Tom and Tommy. Usually, one or both players get around it by using their last names, initials, or nicknames.
217** If you're named "Jeff", be prepared to have a nickname. Jeff Probst isn't always referred to on a FullNameBasis, and it's why Varner is never called by his first name.
218** ''One World'' has an odd example, with Greg using the nickname "Tarzan". That peeved Troy, who wanted to be called "''Troy''zan". Both nicknames wound up being used.
219* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: It happens fairly frequently. In a lot of cases, the fact that a grown adult introduces themselves to strangers with a silly nickname is a sign of having a bit too much ego (see: "Jonny Fairplay", "Dreamz", "Shambo"). Also Cochran of ''South Pacific''; it is his last name, but he specifically requested it on grounds that Jeff Probst calls his favored contestants by ''their'' last names. "Sugar" and "Fabio" are two of the exceptions, being some of the game's nicer contestants (and the name "Fabio" wasn't his idea anyway, it was coined by his tribemates).
220** While "Boston Rob" has ego to spare, he's also justified in going by a nickname because his first two seasons (''Marquesas'' and ''All-Stars'') ran up against the OneSteveLimit. Similarly, "Coach" Wade absolutely dislikes being called Benjamin by anyone he meets, not just on the show.
221* OutOfFocus: What makes a good Survivor game does not necessarily make a good television show. In most seasons, some people get left out of the camera's focus due to a) keeping quiet and not causing trouble at camp, or b) being on a winning tribe that doesn't need to do any politics. This is much a much more prominent trope in recent seasons since more attention is paid to strategizing and twists than character development.
222** Thanks to under-the-radar players who keep quiet and don't stir up trouble, this can be unintentionally invoked when a relevant contestant doesn't give the camera much to work with. One can watch the ''entire'' season of ''Marquesas'' up until the final episode and notice that Vecepia Towery did not share as much of the camera as fellow finalists Kathy Vavrick-O'Brien and Neleh Dennis, then watch ''Samoa'' and wonder why Brett Clouser was practically invisible before he started his small immunity streak. Both of them actually kept their mouths shut, and it not only won Vecepia the game but got Brett to the final four.
223** Danni Boatwright ''weaponized'' this in order to win ''Guatemala''. She deliberately withheld her strategy from Jeff Probst, the production team, and all the other players; giving them little opportunity to give her screen time, but preventing them from hinting to the others what she was up to.
224** Andrea, Grant, Natalie, and Ashley were given this treatment in ''Redemption Island'', since more attention was given to the pagonged Zapatera tribe, Matt, Phillip and Boston Rob.
225** There's a rumor that "Purple" Kelly got the LivingProp edit in ''Nicaragua'' as punishment for quitting. Fellow quitter [=NaOnka=] didn't because she had a lot of attention-grabbing antics. Purple Kelly's was recruited for the show as little more than a glorified extra, but did surprizingly well at getting in good with the majority alliances. The only clothes production gave her were a little sundress, so she was physically suffering which is why she quit(and why the odd times you do see her she is usually wearing Fabio's jacket.).
226* {{Pixellation}}: The editors blur out part of the screen when clothes are too small or tight or slip off or a contestant otherwise gets exposed, when contestants make rude gestures, and occasionally when over somebody's mouth when a dirty word is said. But mostly for exposure. The most notable instance was in the ''Heroes Vs Villains'' premiere, when Sugar Kiper gave Sandra Diaz-Twine a double finger while topless, leading to ''three'' large blurred patches on the screen.
227* PlayerElimination: Besides the show itself taking the form of VotedOffTheIsland, several challenges feature elements of players whittling down over time:
228** Several individual endurance challenges, such as "Hands on Hard Idol" and "Simmotion" require players to hold still and/or repeat a continuous process for a long period of time, testing their willpower (and physical ability). Players who mess up are out of the challenge until only one remains, winning immunity, or occasionally, reward.
229** Several individual challenges have multiple legs, but only a finite number of players who continue onto the next one. For example, only the first four people to cross the balance beam get a shot at the puzzle.
230** One recurring challenge saw two tribes each carry a set amount of weight while pursuing each other in a loop, continuing until one caught up to the other. Players could drop front the challenge at any time, but they would leave their weight to the other players, making it important to decide when the player themself is a bigger liability than the extra weight.
231* PlayingBothSides: An effective, but tricky, strategy is to float between multiple large alliances. Done well, this gives the person in the middle a lot of leverage, but if done poorly, the player in question will effectively lose the game due to a lack of trust. Notable players to have pulled off this strategy include Rob Cesternino of ''The Amazon'', Jonny Fairplay of ''Pearl Islands'', and Tony Vlachos of ''Cagayan'' (who managed to win with it).
232* PlotTumor: In some seasons, the influence of the hidden immunity idol becomes so important that it's hard to imagine the boot order occurring even remotely like it actually did if the idol wasn't in place. It must be slightly jarring for modern viewers to imagine that once upon a time, there ''were'' no idols.
233* PreviouslyOn: There is a recap nearly every episode, but it has been accused of being biased and not very truthful.
234* ProductPlacement: The occasional reward will be provided by a sponsor, in which case the name brand will be mentioned prominently. For the most blatant example, ''Nicaragua'' had an episode where the challenge itself was themed after the then-upcoming ''Film/{{Gullivers Travels|2010}}'' movie, with the players having to drag a giant "Gulliver" dummy through an obstacle course - and of course, a movie night was the reward. The contestant not participating sat in a 10-foot-tall chair.
235* RagtagBunchOfMisfits: ''Many'' tribes on Survivor comes across this way, and even more tribes are verified as such by contestants post-show. It only makes sense, being that ''Survivor'' is an individual game at the end of the day.
236** Casaya from ''Panama'' was one of the most dysfunctional tribes the show has ever seen, with the yoga instructor who tried to start fire with his mind alone and the couch potato who was scared of leaves on her first day being the '''sanest''' members of the bunch. The other members? A {{Manchild}} with a HairTriggerTemper made ten thousand times worse by severe nicotine withdrawal, a fire dancer who moonlighted as a TalkativeLoon and {{Cloudcuckoolander}}, an easily irritated woman with the world's heaviest Boston accent, a lawyer not above DrowningMySorrows, and a ridiculously Asian guy with his own martial arts Zen garden. In spite of all this, the Casaya tribe were still able to stick together to pick off their rivals at the more harmonious La Mina tribe both before and after the merge.
237** In ''One World'', all the males on Manono who aren't "Roosters" align with each other, and [[ManipulativeBastard Colton]], the leader, refers to them as misfits, which they most definitely are. They proceed to vote out the head of the "Rooster" alliance.
238* RatingsStunt: ''Survivor'' has pulled many stunts throughout the years, to avoid [[ItsTheSameSoItSucks the usual complaint]] against such a LongRunner; the Hidden Immunity Idols and the initial tribe divisions (by gender, race, or age) are probably the [[BrokenBase most notorious]].
239* RealityShowGenreBlindness: In the beginning and midphase of the show, very few people coming on the show seem to have an idea how these things tend to work. For example:
240** Being able to start a fire.
241** Being able to swim.
242** Wearing clothes suitable for the game environment. Although, this is somewhat justified - in seasons like ''Pearl Islands'', ''Palau'', and perhaps ''China'', they weren't actually ''told'' they were going right to the game, they were told they were going to a promo event. Do you think Andrew Savage or David would have worn business suits if they knew they were going straight to the game in ''Pearl Islands'' and ''Redemption Island'' respectively, or that Ashley would have worn high-heel boots if she knew she was going directly to the game from the plane? Further justified as it's been made clear that castaways don't actually get to choose their clothes anymore.
243** Another justification for the above list is that some contestants are "recruited" to be on the show, some of which have never watched it before, such as most of ''Fiji'''s cast. This is lampshaded by Taj from ''Tocantins'':
244-->"They were casting for an NFL wife and I responded to the call".
245** They also manage to not realize that there is a social aspect to the game too. The Jury players have to ''like'' you or at least ''respect'' you if you want to have any chance of winning. They also have not figured out that the producers may be unable to fix the game, but they can ''slant'' it, so, therefore, returning players become a liability. This has become partially averted as more and more fans have been cast.
246** Returning players. One would honestly assume after ''Micronesia'' that they'd toss the returnees ASAP, yet every time they've done one returning player per tribe, they haven't (hell, in ''Redemption Island'', it's almost as if all the other castoffs ''wanted'' Boston Rob to win). This has become averted as time has gone on however - despite returning players Coach and Skupin making it to the end of their respective returnee seasons, they both lost to newbies. And in the Edge of Extinction, while the returning players were kept around for a while to serve as shields by the final 9, they had all been voted out.
247** This has become less and less relevant in the more recent seasons as now fans are overwhelmingly cast. This means that many many players are inherently aware of the meta, of former players and how to win. Of course, knowing and doing are two different things - and many times superfans can [[TooCleverByHalf get so into their head they mess up in ways that recruits wouldn't]].
248* {{Realpolitik}}: At the end of the day, everyone's in it for themselves. Good players recognize this, but too many players don't and they get offended when things happen at their expense.
249* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech:
250** Any Jury who does a TakeThat speech/statement to the finalists count. One contestant basically told another: "If I am walking across a desert and find you dying of dehydration, I will not give you water... I will just let you die."
251** In ''One World'', Colton and Alicia each gave one to Christina, harping on how hopeless her situation was and that she was going to be eliminated next, but they suffered a vicious Karmic backlash: Colton instead was eliminated in a medevac, Alicia didn't get his immunity idol, and Christina ended up making it to the Final Four and outlasting Alicia by one round.
252** In ''Blood vs Water'' Jeff gives a ''scathing'' speech to Colton Cumbie after he decides to leave the game for pretty much no reason and insinuating that he faked his ''One World'' injury.
253* RecapEpisode: Recaps were once per season for a while, up until ''South Pacific''. Usually, the fall seasons' recaps were on Thanksgiving and the spring seasons' were sometime during March Madness. Stopped, for the most part, after a change in airing schedule from Thursday to Wednesday.
254* ReunionShow: A reunion show is part of every season's finale (barring ''Winners at War'' due to the COVID-19 pandemic.) All seasons with returning players also qualify in a way.
255* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: When someone [[SixthRangerTraitor sells out their alliance]] and joins another one. The result? Your only shot to the finals is going to be individual immunity since you'll be the third wheel to "your" new alliance. If you ''do'' make it to the finals, expect to be called out on it by multiple jurors.
256* RhymesOnADime: The Treemail letters are usually written in prose, and immunity challenge notices also do this for their woes.
257* TheRunnerUpTakesItAll: Sometimes, a non-winner will be the fan favorite over the winner, or otherwise get more mileage out of their appearance. Notable examples include Elizabeth Filarski (now Hasselbeck), who went on to have a ten year gig on women's talk show ''The View'' after placing fourth on ''The Australian Outback'' and Russell Hantz, who went on to have multiple return appearances and win the fan favorite award while the actual winner of ''Samoa'' faded into obscurity.
258* SceneryPorn: The series always films in very picturesque locations. Plenty of seasons were beautiful enough even in Standard Definition (''Palau'', ''Guatemala'', ''Amazon'', ''Marquesas''), but after ''Gabon'', all the seasons have been filmed in HD - and the scenery porn was cranked up to eleven.
259* SchizophrenicDifficulty: Due to the varying nature of the game locations (namely the weather), it may go from one of the ''harder'' seasons to one of the ''easiest'' seasons within the same year.
260* SecurityBlanket: Luxury items were provided to the contestants in some of the early seasons. It's been brought back a couple times since, but mainly faded as the game focussed less on literal surviving and more about political metagame.
261* ShowTheFolksAtHome: During the Tribal vote, each castaway stands at a ConfessionCam to explain the reasoning behind his or her vote and show his or her ballot. Though time prohibits airing everybody's speech and showing all the votes would kill the tension for the ceremony itself, the remaining votes are quickly shown as a montage at the end of the show. This sometimes fuels additional drama by revealing a traitor, but it also proves that the producers didn't change the outcome.
262* SigilSpam: The current season's logo appears on quite a lot: the tribe flags, challenge props[[note]]pennants, puzzle pieces, etc.[[/note]], the Buffs, Jeff Probst's hat, and much more. Then there's the Reward Challenge maze in ''Tocantins'' episode 13: the word "SURVIVOR" was at least ''60 yards'' long.
263* SlidingScaleOfPlotVersusCharacters: For the first eight or so seasons, ''Survivor'' focused more on the players day to day lives at camp, but in later seasons, it increasingly focuses on game strategy and twists to the point where most of the characters are flat out [[LivingProp ignored]]. Early seasons had big chunks of episodes dedicated to catching fish, hunting a pig, a fight because someone ate a can of food without the tribe, someone accused of smuggling beef jerky, a mock morning radio show and lots of instances of just people living on an island. Compared to modern seasons where this is seldom shown and every scene is about who people are going to vote for.
264* SmallNameBigEgo: At least one in every season. Coach Wade had crazy stories in ''Tocantins'' about things like how he escaped angry natives in the Amazon. He at least toned this stuff down in later seasons. Russell Hantz claimed that he was the best player to ever play, only [[EpicFail to lose both of his jury votes in a landslide]] and get removed fourth on his last try. Richard Hatch was also a notorious braggart, though he backed up his claims of running the game by actually winning it before anyone else.
265* SoleSurvivor: This is the official title of the winner of the game, who is the last person left at the end.
266* SoreLoser: Several players voted out take it poorly, shown in post-Tribal Council confessionals, finale retrospective confessionals, or bitter jury speeches during the final Tribal Council.
267** Russell Hantz has to take the cake here, as his reactions to his first three losses were 1) try to buy the title from the winner, 2) complain that the rules need to be changed, and 3) threaten to sue his tribemates for throwing a challenge to get him out.
268** Also worth noting is Judd from ''Guatemala''. After being blindsided (hilariously enough after claiming it was just a game and no one should take it personally), he told the people who had just voted him out "Thanks guys! I hope you guys get bit by a freaking crocodile. Scumbags."
269* SpannerInTheWorks: When a contestant becomes contrary to the majority alliances' plan, they risk upheaving it and throwing the game out of whack. The earliest example is Kelly Wiglesworth of ''Borneo'', who defected from the majority alliance and had to go on an immunity run to stay safe.
270* SpotlightStealingSquad: One or two characters get the bulk of the screentime each season for various reasons, such as having unique mannerisms or bringing something new to the show. For instance, InUniverse, some of Rob and Amber's fellow Survivors actually called ''All-Stars'' "The Rob & Amber Show." Other examples include:
271** Rudy Boersch from the very first season, due to being endlessly quotable and the quintessential badass.
272** Rupert Boneham in ''Pearl Islands'', mainly because he was a unique fan-favourite.
273** Stephenie [=LaGrossa=] from ''Palau'', but mainly in ''Guatemala'', because of the unique situation she found herself in during both seasons.
274** Coach Wade of ''Tocantins'', for being... well, [[CloudCuckoolander "The Dragon Slayer"]].
275** Russell Hantz of ''Samoa'' and ''Heroes vs. Villains'', being a huge manipulator, backstabber, and [[SmallNameBigEgo having an ego the size of the island he's living on]].
276** Phillip Sheppard and Brandon Hantz in ''Caramoan''. Re-watch the episodes, and compare how much screen time certain players get before the two are booted. For example, [[LivingProp Brenda Lowe and Erik Reichenbach]] [[OutOfFocus had next to no screentime]] at first, but the episode after Phillip was booted their amount of screen time skyrocketed.
277* StrategyVersusTactics: Some players focus on their overall strategy and how they'll win in the finals, others focus more on the tactics of surviving round to round. Obviously, it's best to balance both - Russell Hantz and Cirie Fields are prime examples of what happens when you follow one at the expense of the other (in Russel's case, he poured all his energy into tactics with no thought to his endgame strategy, suffering total defeat in the finals ''twice,'' while Cirie is considered one of the best long-term planners the game ever had, always controlling votes stealthily from the majority with a great relationship with other players that one would think would net her a win if she got to final three, but ''always'' gets tripped up by unexpected twists and maverick players that cause her to be swiftly voted out at the height of her power, never once reaching the final tribal.)
278* SublimeRhyme: Most of the tree-mail and Immunity Idol messages are in verse. The messages [[SubvertedTrope that aren't]] usually describe something complicated that wouldn't be easy to formulate in rhyme.
279* TakeThat:
280** The jury, ''especially'' the bitter ones, are prone to do this to the finalists. The UrExample is Sue Hawk's "Rats and Snakes" [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech speech]], and just about everyone ''except'' Michelle and maybe Yau-Man pretty much said TakeThat to Dreamz in ''Fiji''. Edgardo and Lisi were ''particularly'' vicious.
281** Edna Ma from ''South Pacific'' performs one to both Mikayla and more subtly to the recurring nature of "Mactors", actors or models who seemingly don't care about ''Survivor'' and are only on the show for exposure, in her voting confessional towards her:
282---> '''Edna:''' ''(whispered)'' "I hope your time here has helped your future modeling career."
283** When Lindsey quit ''Cagayan'', someone stomped "Shame on you Lindsie" in the sand.
284* TallPoppySyndrome:
285** This guy's stronger than everyone else and charismatic enough to be liked? He's a threat. Get rid of him - even if this can setback your entire tribe.
286** All the winners that returned in ''All-Stars'' got hit by this, and again in ''Heroes vs. Villains''. Tom Westman, in particular, was targeted by the Heroes due to his impressive win in ''Palau'', while according to post-game interviews, Randy attempted to target the winners on the Villains tribe in the days before he was voted out.
287** Eventually subversions started appearing, though; as people realized that weak players were ''also'' a threat for the fact that more strategic players wanted to protect them.
288* TeamMom:
289** Tina Wesson of ''Australian Outback'' actually threatened to put Jerri and Keith in "time out" if they didn't stop bickering. In fact, being the TeamMom became a huge factor in her victory.
290** Seasons after ''Australian Outback'' tend to deconstruct this trope however especially seasons around the late 20s as the TeamMom still have to play a game of outwitting their tribemates, and many people felt hurt when the TeamMom goes on to vote them out. It's gotten to the point where many older female Survivor players now try their best to avert this trope. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQUbbZgnqA4&t= This video]] goes more into about this deconstuction.
291* ThrowTheDogABone: Whenever a player is evacuated or quits on the day of an immunity challenge, Tribal Council is usually cancelled afterwards, sparing teams the potential setback of losing two members in a single day. The only exceptions are Shamar's evacuation in ''Caramoan'' and Jackson's evacuation in ''Survivor 42'', though the latter reduced what would've been a double-elimination challenge to a single-elimination.
292* TitleDrop:
293** The show's ([[WordSaladTitle occasionally bizarre]]) [[WordOfGod official titles]] for episodes are [[InvertedTrope derived from players' quotes]] in the respective episodes. Of course, many of the [[MeaningfulName chosen quotes]] mark critical moments in the game.
294** Once ''Survivor'' stopped going to new locations they added gimmicks instead. These gimmicks get name-dropped constantly each season. In ''Worlds Apart'' everyone is constantly talking about the collar and in ''David vs Goliath'' they rarely stop talking about being "A David".
295* TooCoolToLive: The strong, cool and outstanding players are InUniverse usually the first ones to be targeted for elimination (post-merge) by their fellow castaways because they see him/her as a great threat in the game. Usually leads to a ShockingElimination.
296* TrailersAlwaysSpoil: Sometimes the previews give things away they don't mean to. If you're about to watch an immunity challenge, and the preview the week before showed a big argument that you haven't yet seen this episode? The tribe that argued is almost certainly about to lose. The trailer for the finale of ''Winners at War'' also spoiled that Natalie would return to the game from the Edge of Extinction.
297* TropicalIslandAdventure: Most of the series is set on tropical islands in Oceania and Southeast Asia, with ''Pearl Islands'', ''All-Stars'', and ''Panama'' also set in the Pearl Islands off the southern coast of Panama.
298* UnreliableNarrator: Jeff Probst, occasionally. Most blatantly in the [[PreviouslyOn previouslies]]. His intense dislike for ''Gabon'''s Fang tribe during recaps became increasingly obvious during the season, mainly because of their Ulong-reminiscent losing streak.
299** Occasionally, the editors have a bit of fun with this. In ''One World'', contestants said that Christina was lazy. Yet they overlapped this with footage of her working.
300** Debbie in ''Game Changers'' gets so bad at this at one point that they actually include flashbacks for the first and only time to make a joke out of it. For a challenge she asks to be the one to do the balance beam portion, then fails at it extremely badly and her tribe loses. Afterwards, she gets extremely mad at Brad Culpepper and says he forced her to do the balance part against her will (cue flashback to her asking to do it). Then she blames the loss on Sierra and says claims she got through the balance portion in seconds and Sierra failed (cue flashback to the Sierra having zero issues and Debbie failing).
301* VersusTitle: Common in later seasons. The list includes ''Fans vs. Favorites'' (twice), ''Heroes vs. Villains'', ''Blood vs. Water'' (also twice), and ''Millennials vs. Gen X'', ''Heroes v Healers v Hustlers'', and ''David vs Goliath''. ''Cagayan'' and ''Kaôh Rōng'' were also presented with the concept "Brawn vs. Brains vs. Beauty", though the phrase didn't make it into the titles, as does ''Worlds Apart'' with "White Collars vs. Blue Collars vs. No Collars".
302* ViewerNameConfusion: In-universe as ''Player'' Name Confusion. A variety of people means a variety of cultural backgrounds and names that someone will inevitably misspell. With first names, it happens a lot at Tribal Council.
303** Sue Hawk in ''Borneo'' and Ralph from ''Redemption Island'' purposely spelled names horribly wrong ForTheLulz.
304** Robb Zbacnik from ''Thailand''[='s=] parting words were "Two 'B's, guys" because the votes read Rob instead of Robb.
305** Clay Jordan in ''Thailand'' would write down where people were from instead of names until he wrote "Bye Bye Denver Diva" to vote for Ghandia. Jeff Probst had no idea who the vote was for and put a stop to the nicknames.
306* VillainyFreeVillain: It's a game show at the end of the day. Almost of the villains are ruthless in gameplay moreso than personality.
307* VotedOffTheIsland: The TropeNamer. Players leave the island as they are voted off by their peers.
308* WeAREStrugglingTogether:
309** Intended to be invoked in ''One World'', where the two tribes are sharing a living space, but subverted as the tribes set up separate camps next to each other instead of living as one group.
310** Subverted with the Casaya tribe in ''Panama''. Despite them being an ''extremely'' dysfunctional and combative tribe, they all managed to work together well enough in challenges to TeamKill the more peaceful and coherent La Mina tribe.
311** This was the FatalFlaw of the Timbiras in ''Tocantins'', with Coach and Brendan jockeying for the alpha male position, and Erinn and ''especially'' Sierra getting the AllOfTheOtherReindeer treatment. The tribe was in a big enough division, that come the merge, the incoming Jalapaos (who were in the minority) exploited the tribe's "factions" and easily picked off the Timbiras one-by-one.
312* WinsByDoingAbsolutelyNothing: It's possible for a contestant to win the game by not doing much other than riding other players coattails; letting their allies take the backlash for making unpopular moves. However, while this "doing nothing" accusation is often leveled at "under-the-radar" winners by fans, it's ''usually'' not true -- players who get to the end do have to work to make sure they ''are'' liked and that votes go in their favor, and juries aren't inclined to reward actual "do-nothing" or coattail-rider players.
313* WhatYouAreInTheDark: A few contestants have claimed over the years that the game reveals everybody's ''true'' personality, which is many times far different than the one they adopt back home.
314* WhoWillBellTheCat: Comes up in several seasons, and is a major reason for the trend of conservative play: even if everyone wants a guy in a position of power voted out, nobody wants to be targeted for trying. Especially if said person has an immunity idol that can lead to a vote going against the people attempting the coup.
315* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Once an alliance has eliminated their competition, the perceived strongest member(s) is/are the one(s) who get voted out by their tribemates because they see them as a threat. This is also why traitors from opposing factions [[RewardedAsATraitorDeserves last only a spot longer than whoever they ratted out]].
316[[/folder]]
317
318[[folder:Season-Specific Tropes A-M]]
319* AccentuateTheNegative: Quite common among the contestants, especially when people are forced to vote out one of their own and needed to accentuate someone's negatives to get them out.
320** Stephanie Lagrossa, for example. Did you know that she actually made the ''Final Two'' when she played the game a second time in ''Guatemala''? And that she was actually in a ''majority'' alliance? The way everyone mentioned/carried on about how she was on Ulong in ''Palau'' during ''Heroes vs. Villains'', you'd be surprised to find out ''that'' detail.
321** Poor Dreamz - even if he ''clearly'' was sorry for having broken a promise and regretted it (even months later at the reunion), everyone '' VICIOUSLY'' chewed him out for it.
322* AccidentalMisnaming: In the first Tribal Council of ''Redemption Island'', Phillip consistently calls Francesca "Fransesqua", resulting in her indignantly correcting him. The third time, he said, "My mouth is dry, I've been getting treatment for it." During the vote, he writes her name down as "Francesqua", showing that he didn't really know Francesca's name. Either that, or he was trying to irritate her on purpose.
323** In ''Borneo'', B.B mistakenly refers to Greg as "Craig", and doesn't even know Jenna's name, referring to her as the "lady in the pink swimsuit."
324** Brian in ''Thailand'' has one of the weirdest ones. He is a control freak and needs Shii Ann to switch to their team to get the majority so he does everything to bring her over except learn her name. He calls her "Soo-Yi" and "Sin-Jo" instead.
325** In ''Micronesia'', Ozzy mistakenly refers to Joel as "Troy" during the tribe swap.
326** In ''One World'', Tarzan referred to Jonas as "Jason" and Christina as "Katrina". He explained he has nominal aphasia, meaning he needs to work at getting names right.
327* TheAce: Colby Donaldson during ''Australian Outback'', "Boston" Rob Mariano from ''All-Stars'', ''Heroes vs. Villains'' and ''Redemption Island'', Tom Westman during ''Palau'', Yul Kwon during ''Cook Islands'', Bob Crowley during ''Gabon'', J.T. Thomas during ''Tocantins'' Kim Spradlin from ''One World'' and Malcolm Freberg from ''Philippines'' and ''Caramoan'' all fit this trope to a T. Also Terry Deitz from ''Panama''; he gets double points for being an AcePilot.
328* ActionGirl: Several, but the earliest and most accomplished AG is Kelly Wigglesworth from ''Borneo''.
329* AfricaIsACountry: Or so the third season, 'Survivor: Africa', might lead you to believe.[[note]]Survivor: Africa was filmed in Kenya, which is at least mentioned a few times during the season.[[/note]]
330* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: Shii-Ann Huang and Eliza Orlins are notable examples because they managed to be ostracized by their tribes in multiple seasons (''Thailand'' and ''All-Stars'' for the former, ''Vanuatu'' and ''Micronesia'' for the latter). Both responded each time by finding a way to spite the rest of their tribe, to varying degrees of success (see DiabolusExMachina for a Shii-Ann attempt that didn't go so well, and TakingYouWithMe for a more successful incarnation from Eliza).
331* AllThereInTheManual: Looking at shooting schedules, ''Heroes Vs Villains'' filmed just before ''Samoa'' aired. This means that none of the other ''H vs V'' players had the chance to see Russell in action before the season, which became important.
332** The tie-breakers for the first 5-6 seasons definitely fall under here as well, since most of the contestants seemed so unsure of how they would proceed that they avoided forcing one like the plague. Also counts for the one season where contestants believed the tie-breaker would be pulling stones, and was instead the fire-building challenge.
333** Actually, much of the strategy in ''Australian Outback'' and ''Africa'' was based on the survivors knowing that a tiebreaker involved who had the most previous votes. Tina from the ''Australian Outback'' managed to give her tribe, Ogakor, a majority during the merge when she tricked Kimmi from Kucha into revealing who had the most votes from Kucha.
334* AlwaysSecondBest: Despite being able to reach the finals in back-to-back seasons, both Amanda Kimmell and Russell Hantz failed to win both times due to (respectively) [[PoorCommunicationKills a poor final tribal council performance]] and [[EntitledBastard wrong ways of rubbing people]].
335* AndThereWasMuchRejoicing: Can easily happen given how someone is ejected every episode. Not only for the audience but sometimes the contestants act this way, too. Jerri leaving ''Australia'' was a relief to the other players (one even whistled "Ding Dong, The Witch Is Dead"), and just about ''everybody'' (including many viewers) was glad to see Russell finally get voted out in ''Redemption Island''.
336* AnimalBattleAura: "Coach" Wade's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIzXotG6Tmshis Zen trip to Exile Island]], either sincere for WarriorPoet or deadpan snark for MilesGloriosus.
337* AntiClimax: There have been a couple of seasons that were considered "blowouts" at the end because of the Final Two or Three and the winner being pretty obvious. Probst has pointed out that there were fan complaints of "blowout" seasons ''before'' they started doing a Final Three.
338** ''Panama'', wherein the players that viewers wanted to win were the last two evicted and left with Daniele and Aras.
339** ''Fiji'', wherein the fan favourite was the last person evicted and the Final Three faced a ''very'' bitter jury. The winner was liked, at least.
340** ''Redemption Island'', wherein the only characters that were considered interesting were on the losing side of a Pagonging and voted out early, and Rob had such a grip on his tribe to the point where everyone trusted him and believed whatever he said so that his win was almost written in the stars.
341* ArrowsOnFire: One ''Africa'' challenge involved shooting these at a bulls-eye. HilarityEnsues when Brandon tried to shoot and [[http://funny115.com/v1/25.htm botched it completely]].
342* ArtisticLicense: The way they divided Millennials and Gen X (placing 1984 as the first Millennial birth year) conflicts with many definitions of Gen Y/Millennial, which is often cited as starting in 1976. Although until about ten years ago, Gen X was said to begin in 1961, it has now been moved ahead to 1965. Alternately, some use 20 year generations, which would make Baby Boomers 1945-1965, Gen X 1966-1986, and Millennials 1987-2007. This would have likely worked better with what they were going for. However, it's likely the real reason they picked such a weird, random year is that [[RealLifeWritesThePlot it was the only way to divide the 20 contestants they picked evenly]].
343* ArtisticLicenseStatistics: Invoked - Probst regularly says that, when the numbers of players dwindle, the players have a one-in-''x'' shot at winning a million. Except that it's actually not determined by luck of the draw - [[JustifiedTrope He actually says this to help motivate players to make it further]].
344* TheAtoner: After starting ''Guatemala'' on a sour note, (see SmugSnake, below), Jamie [[HeelFaceTurn suddenly got better]]. He traded the nice food Reward he earned in episode 9 for the lowest-quality food item available; he explained that he realized how much of an asshole he'd been. As the contestants sit to eat, Jeff reminds everyone of the sacrifice:
345--> '''Jeff''': Bring out the next meal: burger and a beer. [...] This is where you would have been in the line, Jamie.
346--> '''Jamie''': Nothing tastes better than my self-respect.
347--> '''Jeff''': Well put.
348* AttackAttackRetreatRetreat: Said by Tony and LJ in the swap episode of ''Cagayan''.
349* AudienceParticipation:
350** The America's Tribal Council after the ''All-Stars'' season.
351** The Sprint Player of the Season awards.
352** ''Second Chances'' featured a poll determining who would be the castaways that season (10 for each gender).
353* AwesomeButImpractical: Trying to play a ''VERY'' strong physical game in the early parts of the game. Unfortunately, this winds up depleting your body (and possibly causes your body to consume muscle if you're male and don't have as much fat) and either causes you to slow down, get sick and either lead to you being VotedOffTheIsland or even worse, a NonGameplayElimination. And unless you can carry yourself with immunity wins; you'll be seen as a threat around the merge.
354* AwesomenessByAnalysis:
355** Yau-Man from ''Fiji'' and Bob Crowley from ''Gabon'', who effectively used maths and physics in challenges; Stephen from ''Tocantins'' also used math in at least one challenge to win. Christian from ''David vs. Goliath'' successfully created an algorithm to search the island more efficiently for idols.
356** Praise should be given to all of the ''Survivor'' contestants who actually knew how to survive out there, despite little-to-no prior experience or survival skills. To name the more obvious examples: Richard, Rudy, Greg and Gretchen from ''Borneo'', Michael from ''Australian Outback'', Hunter from ''Marquesas'', Rupert from ''Pearl Islands'', Ozzy from ''Cook Islands''... and the list goes on.
357* BackFromTheDead:
358** ''Pearl Islands'' allowed eliminated players to return to the game as "The Outcasts". This twist was borrowed by two international editions (the Israeli version's "Dead Man Island" and the second season of the Philippine edition's "Isla Purgatoryo"). Three of the four (''Pearl Islands'' had two Outcasts) aforementioned returning players '''nearly won''' their respective seasons.
359** Redemption Island and the Edge of Extinction are NotQuiteDead variants: when someone's voted out, they're sent to Redemption Island/the Edge. In Redemption, the new arrival challenges the person already there; loser is out for good; while the Edge just collects everyone who wants to stay. At the merge and just before the finals, one player (either Redemption Island's reigning champion or the winner of an Edge of Extinction challenge) [[MyGreatestSecondChance will be able to return to the game]].
360* BadassDecay: InUniverse, James laments [[TheAce Colby's]] disappointing struggling early in ''Heroes Vs Villains''.
361-->"[[ConfessionCam My Superman sucks!]]"
362%%* BaldOfEvil: Russell Hantz, though he desperately tries to hide it (the baldness, not the Evil).
363* BatmanGambit: Many, but the URExample is almost certainly when Richard threw the last competition. He waited deliberately until Jeff came in with a temptation (in this case they were oranges), and stepped right off the platform, waiting for either Rudy or Kelly to win. If Kelly won(which Richard was banking on given that she's younger than Rudy), she takes Richard to the finals on the assumption that the jury would hate Richard for pagonging them all. If Rudy won, he takes Richard to the final two out of loyalty, in which case Richard believed he would lose. In either case, Richard doesn't have to get his hands dirty and potentially lose a jury vote (whether it was Rudy or Kelly who eventually left), and since he is a better public speaker than either, he could very well win against Rudy as well.
364* BeautyBrainsAndBrawn: While our trope is usually used for a three-girl PowerTrio, ''Cagayan'' and ''Kaôh Rōng'' deserve mention for being themed after the dynamic and referencing it by name repeatedly.
365* BeingEvilSucks: Russell Hantz relishes being the bad guy (see "Griefer" below), but his "evil deeds" cost him the jury's votes twice and got his third tribe to throw a challenge to get rid of him. Jury backlash for evil deeds was also the reason Dreamz lost in ''Fiji''.
366%%* BeingGoodSucks: [[HonorBeforeReason Colby]] in ''Australia'', [[StupidGood J.T.]] in ''Heroes vs Villains'', Matt in ''Redemption Island''. %% Zero-context
367* BerserkButton:
368** Jeff Probst has a few:
369*** He visibly turns nasty when someone quits without a good reason. He was sympathetic towards people like Jenna (who was having bad vibes about her mother with cancer[[note]]The producers told her her mother's cancer took a turn for the worse[[/note]]) and Kathy (who was having a mental breakdown); and with Janu (pulling a ThanatosGambit), he seemed more ''surprised''. But as for people like Osten, "Purple" Kelly, and [=NaOnka=]? Not pleased.
370*** Don't ever claim you threw a challenge in front of Jeff.
371*** Jeff also ''especially'' did not like Jonathan Penner or Jonny Fairplay for unspecified reasons; he never called Penner by name and only seemed sympathetic towards him when he was evacuated in ''Micronesia'', and Fairplay [[NoodleIncident supposedly got in a fight with one of Probst's family members]] at the ''Vanuatu'' reunion that put him on Probst's shitlist.
372*** The last episode of ''One World'' showed that Jeff is ''also'' visibly disgusted when a contestant [[ExtremeDoormat doesn't even bother scrambling when they know they're going next]]; his reaction to Christina saying as much is evidence for this.
373** Benjamin "Coach" Wade's BerserkButton is apparently being referred to by his real name. "If anyone calls me Benjamin to my face, I'm gonna go nuts."
374** Lex [[MoralMyopia getting a vote cast against him. Ever.]]
375* BestKnownForTheFanservice: Jenna and Heidi stripping for peanut butter and chocolate during ''Amazon''. So much that they even posed for Magazine/{{Playboy}}. InUniverse, Jenna lampshaded this during ''America's Tribal Council'' saying people will remember her stripping instead of actually winning that season.
376* BewareTheHonestOnes:
377** See the ''Redemption Island'' premiere, where Phillip's honesty led him to blab his alliance's plan at Tribal Council.
378** In ''South Pacific'', Brandon Hantz went through a cycle of feeling "Catholic guilt" over some falsehood, coming clean about it, lather, rinse, repeat; throwing tribal dynamics into chaos every single time.
379* BigBad: Most seasons have at least one contestant that plays this role, either of the [[AntiVillain anti-villainous]] or [[CardCarryingVillain card-carrying]] variety.
380* BigBadDuumvirate:
381** Despite Parvati referring to Russell as her [[TheDragon pet dragon]] in ''Heroes vs. Villains'', this is what they likely were.
382** Burton and Jonny Fairplay were this thirteen seasons earlier, although it [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation could be argued]] that Burton was just TheDragon.
383* BigBrotherMentor:
384** In Episode 6 of ''Thailand'', after a quarrel over a misunderstanding Robb had, Ken takes Robb under his wing and becomes a sort of Big Brother Mentor to him, teaching him how to better relate to his tribe. This calmed down the normally very unpredictable Robb into having an epiphany about himself and suddenly becoming much nicer to his tribemates.
385** Coach basically acted as one to Brandon in ''South Pacific'', helping him keep himself together.
386* TheBigGuy: Many, including Clarence Black, "Big Tom" Buchanan, "Big Ted" Rogers Jr, Rupert Boneham, James Clement, Jaison Robinson.
387* BigScrewedUpFamily: The Hantzes, from what we see of them. Russell is an EntitledBastard and revels in being a JerkAss. His nephew Brandon tried to be better than that in ''South Pacific'', but [[HeroWithAnFInGood frankly sucked at it]] and melted down at every screwup. In ''Caramoan'' he gave up trying and displayed an extreme HairTriggerTemper. And in the ''South Pacific'' family visit, we met Brandon's dad/Russell's brother, who told Brandon to suck it up and get the money (not ''bad'' advice given Brandon's issues, but comes off as "abandon your principles") and tried to bully Coach into helping Brandon. (Plus, another of Russell's brothers, Willie, was on ''Series/BigBrother'' and his behavior actually got him ''disqualified''.)
388* BitingTheHandHumor: Pagong from the first season, ''Borneo'', all voted for host Jeff Probst during their first trip to Tribal Council out of sheer mockery of his seriousness. The mock vote for Jeff wasn't shown, but everyone including executive producer Mark Burnett claimed that it happened and that it infuriated Probst. Greg Buis in particular took this trope up to eleven.
389* BlackAndWhiteInsanity: Brandon Hantz suffered from this big-time in ''South Pacific''.
390* BlatantLies: ''Gabon'' featured "video messages from home" as a teaser for the 11th Reward Challenge; Jeff claimed that the true Reward would simply be pizza and a longer message, and later told the losers that he had nothing for them. While eating (alone), Bob was pleasantly surprised to see his wife step from behind a nearby tree and led her back to meet the tribe. Then, he turned around, [[EpicHail whistled sharply]], and the other players' loved ones crested the hill down to the camp.
391* BlondeBrunetteRedhead: The GirlPosse in ''Amazon'' consisted of Jenna (brunette), Heidi (blonde) and Shawna (redhead).
392* {{Bookends}}:
393** At the beginning of ''Samoa'', Russel burned Jamison's socks by throwing them into the camp's fire. Towards the end of the following season, ''Heroes vs. Villains'', Sandra burns [[IconicItem Russel's hat]] the same way.
394** The first boot of ''San Juan Del Sur'' is Nadiya Anderson. The winner would ultimately end up being her twin sister, Natalie.
395* BoringButPractical:
396** Pagonging. Essentially, if you control a majority and remove all the other alliances and the floaters, you can waltz to a game milestone almost completely unopposed. Editors wouldn't like this strategy as it can make a season quite boring. Thankfully, it's only happened in its entirety in ''Borneo'', ''Thailand'', ''Cook Islands'', ''Redemption Island'', and ''South Pacific''. And YMMV on ''Cook Islands'' since the tribe doing the Pagonging was actually an underdog. Also downplayed in ''South Pacific'', where Redemption Island allowed Ozzy to return and make it to the Final Four.
397** ObfuscatingStupidity or/and TheQuietOne as a strategy. The editors don't like it unless you're doing something amusing like Fabio (look how little screentime Vecepia, Brett, and Natalie got!), but when the other players think you're stupid/easy to beat, then if you play your cards right you'll be dragged along and possibly the last man out of your alliance.
398** Natalie's strategy in ''Winners at War'' throughout the Edge of Extinction: Hoard fire tokens, then use them all on protein and advantages in the final challenge during the last day you can spend them. It's undoubtedly the optimal way to play with the Edge of Extinction and fire tokens in the game, but that doesn't make it particularly exciting to watch.
399* BornUnlucky: Part of the reason the Ulong tribe in ''Palau'' did so poorly was because of factors outside their control. Ashlee and Jeff were voted out because of illness and a twisted ankle respectively.
400* BornWinner:
401** Sandra definitely qualifies, as she has won both seasons she has competed in, with only one vote cast against her in both of them.
402** J.T. made it to the end with [[NoDamageRun no votes cast against him]], and [[FlawlessVictory won all jury votes]].
403** Earl became the first person to have won all jury votes, and only has a single vote cast against him during his season.
404** Cochran, like J.T., had a NoDamageRun and a FlawlessVictory; however, he didn't do this until the second time he played.
405** Jeremy made it to the end with no counted votes against him [[note]]he had three votes against him negated by an idol[[/note]] and earned all 10 jury votes.
406* BrickJoke: In ''Winners at War'', the four people on Edge of Extinction had to do a task in which they had to repeatedly hike up and down the mountain to take twenty logs of fire to their camp. When Tyson joined them, the first thing he said was "Wow, look at all this firewood!"
407* BrutalHonesty: During the Final Tribal Council of ''Africa'', juror Brandon asked Ethan which jury member would be least deserving of being in the Final 2. Ethan bluntly answered "You".
408* BunnyEarsLawyer: Some contestants are good but at the same time...weird.
409* TheBusCameBack: The seasons featuring [[MyGreatestSecondChance returning players]].
410* CallBack / NostalgiaLevel: All-Star seasons tend to bring back challenges from the castaways' original seasons. Whenever such a challenge is played, Probst notes the original season it came from.
411** Also, the first duel in ''Redemption Island'' was appropriately a repeat of the challenge that took place during ''Pearl Islands''[='=] Outcast twist.
412* CaptainObviousReveal: An InUniverse example: In ''Millennials vs. Gen X'', Figgy attempted to tell Ken and Jessica about her showmance with Taylor in which she has been trying to hide from them. However, neither of them were actually surprised over that.
413* CardCarryingVillain: A few players over the years have been smart enough to know that they were going to be edited as the villain and played it up accordingly. Examples include Jonny Fairplay, Russell Hantz, and Corinne Kaplan. An inversion of this is Jerri Manthey, at least in Australia. According to her, she did ''not'' expect to be edited as a villain, since she never did anything particularly villainous (at least to ''Survivor'' standards at the time), especially since she as a person received an extremely negative reception after the whole [[NoodleIncident "Beef Jerky"]] incident.
414** Villany Marches On, though. People originally booed Jerri off the stage. After the likes of Ami, Russell Hantz, Rob, Corinne, Randy, Parvati, and Fairplay...putting ''her'' in the villains tribe may have been incredibly unfitting.
415* TheCassandra:
416** The [[MeaningfulName appropriately-named]] Sandra plays this role in the early stages of the ''Heroes vs. Villains'' merge - first, in her attempts to rat out Russell and Parvati's scam to the Heroes, then in her attempts to persuade Candice to stay with the Heroes. An encore from her days in the ''Pearl Islands'' warning people not to trust Jonny Fairplay.
417** An early example: Joel Klug from ''Borneo'' was voted out on Day 18 for several reasons such as supposed chauvinism, being the richest tribe member other than B.B (and thus not really needing the prize money), being a physical threat during the merge, etc. But one other excuse for eliminating him according to his tribe was that he was "telling people what to do" or something similar for bringing up the idea of alliances. He says on camera to his tribe that it's in Pagong's best interest to vote as a unified whole just in case Tagi was planning to do the same (and they were), and most of his tribe punished him for not being naive and assuming everyone would vote emotionally.
418* CatFight:
419** Danielle and Amanda had one in ''Heroes Vs Villains'' over a hidden immunity idol clue. Coincidentally, lone male Colby already had [[PassThePopcorn a bowl of popcorn]] with him at the time as it was a movie night reward.
420** [=NaOnka=] and Kelly B had one in ''Nicaragua'' yet again over a hidden immunity idol clue, though that was slightly less entertaining because Kelly had an amputated leg. Both women later tried to write it off as not treating Kelly differently for being handicapped, but it rings hollow considering [=NaOnka's=] rants about wanting to tear the prosthetic leg off and throw it in the fire.
421* CerebusRetcon: Bruce Perrault and Katurah Topps's feud in ''45'' appears to mainly be because Katurah finds Bruce annoying and dislikes him trying to micromanage everyone in his alliance. Then comes episode 11, which reveals Katurah was a cult survivor, implying the real reason that she hates Bruce is because his micromanaging reminds her of her time in the cult.
422* TheCharmer: Parvati and Boston Rob have both been described by tribemates as having an intense, magnetic charisma that causes others to seek their attention and hang on their every word. Given that they're also both [[TheSocialExpert highly skilled manipulators]] and [[TheChessmaster clever strategists]], they are both able to easily use this trait to their advantage.
423* TheChessmaster:
424** After first season winner Richard Hatch showed that the game is really about politics, not actual wilderness survival, every contestant has subsequently tried to be this. Most wind up being {{Unwitting Pawn}}s.
425** Cirie was one of the best, being the first player to successfully engineer a three-way split in the votes.
426* ChickMagnet: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SgppVGQPVPs&feature=channel Colby.]] Lampshaded by [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WQ-R7oLfxgg Sandra]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ez0ZWm3JPBU Parvati]].
427* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: Some players can't help but vote off their own alliance members - even through this, people keep on trusting these players.
428** An example of this is Candice Woodcock-Cody, in both ''Cook Islands'' and ''Heroes vs. Villains.''
429** Another prime example is Dreamz in ''Fiji.'' En route to the final three he screws over Michelle, Edgardo, Mookie, Alex, and most notably Yau-Man, all of whom are on the jury. Needless to say, this comes back to haunt him.
430** Vecepia was the first notable backstabber who managed to win the game - she takes part in voting out her tribe's original leader Hunter, one of her only remaining tribemates Boston Rob, and Kathy with whom she had an iron-clad deal going into the finals with.
431* CloudCuckooLander:
432** Coach in ''Tocantins''. The 'Dragon Slayer' is just the tip of the crazy iceberg. To his credit, he seems to have recognized how he came off and scaled things way back in his repeat appearances.
433** Additionally, Cao Boi from ''Cook Islands'' and Matthew from ''Amazon''; the entire cast thought Matthew was insane (Or "cweepy" as Christy Smith would have it.)
434** Greg Buis (in ''Borneo'') was the first CloudCuckooLander of ''Survivor'', beginning with his coconut phone, and ending with his unexpected descent into tears.
435*** Greg's final Jury question "Pick a Number between 1 and 10" ended up being the deciding vote. He just did it to mock the seriousness of everyone else and because he liked to screw with the production crew. The correct number was "whatever Richard picked" so there was no luck involved.
436** Shane, who decided to quit smoking only the day before ''Panama'' began. Later seen with his Blackberry rock.
437** Philip (from ''Redemption Island'') challenges Coach's ''Tocantins'' performance for craziest Survivor ever.
438** Greg "Tarzan" Smith, from ''One World'' is shown to definitely live in his own world. A few examples of this are when he tells Jeff Probst that ''he'' (meaning Jeff) is the one getting played at Tribal Council; and when he is convinced that another contestant is mad at him because he's a plastic surgeon, and she was ''unhappy with her plastic surgeon.''
439* ClusterFBomb: Being a RealityTV show, it can't be helped, but they're usually censored.
440* TheCobblersChildrenHaveNoShoes: Combined with InformedAbility; there's usually at least one contestant whose job and life experiences back home don't seem to translate to ''Survivor'' as well as it should. Some examples include:
441** Kelly Wiglesworth from ''Borneo'', a professional river guide who lost a boating race to Gervase Paterson, a man who couldn't even swim.
442** Keith Famie from ''The Australian Outback'', a chef cooked rice was so badly that the result was inedible. His inability to cook was made all the more blatant when actor Jerri Manthey made tortillas from scratch that the whole tribe ended up loving.
443** Lillian Morris from ''Pearl Islands'' couldn't tie the fisherman's knot and easily lost a fishing hook, despite being a Boy Scout leader.
444** James Miller from ''Palau'', the physically-fit steelworker, got beaten in a fight by Coby Archa, a CampGay hairdresser who just ran at him without thinking.
445*** James claimed he knows a knot from his time in the U.S. Navy that was impossible to see the end of and would only get tighter the more the other tribe tried to untie it. The other tribe untied it just by yanking it hard enough.
446** Jean-Robert Bellande in ''China'', the poker player who was so bad at telling who was trustworthy that he ends up not only sending potential allies and easy fall guys home, but also got himself into crosshairs of threats who would have otherwise ignored him.
447** Crystal Cox from ''Gabon'', an Olympic gold medalist who [[http://funny115.com/v2/28.htm couldn't run, climb, throw, or dunk a basketball...on a five-foot hoop]]. She had admitted to steroid use in the past, which ''could'' have affected her performance, but some would argue that she should have performed better regardless. In an attempt to not be seen as a physical threat, she claimed she was ''actually'' a kindergarten teacher and homemaker, which everyone wound up believing to the point that they were incredulous when they were given proof she actually was in the Olympics. She at least had an imposing frame that helped with her alliance's strategizing.
448** Dan Kay the lawyer could not parse what an immunity idol clue referred to, and squandered his time in Exile Island after thinking "sandy crater across a lake" meant "sandy crater ''in'' a lake". Sugar Kiper, the model and actor, managed to follow the instructions to get on the other side of a lake, and got the idol without breaking a sweat.
449** [=NaOnka=] Mixon from ''Nicaragua'' and Alicia Rosa from ''One World'' are teachers (physical education and special education, respectively), but demonstrated things kids probably shouldn't be learning. Namely, [=NaOnka=] had a bad attitude towards a disabled tribemate (and everyone else, but the disability rivalry stood out) and quit at the expense of her team, while Alicia spent much of her game as a selfish AlphaBitch.
450** Phillip Sheppard from ''Redemption Island'', a "Former Federal Agent?" who couldn't pierce tribal council DoubleSpeak, got upset and proceeded to reveal all of his alliance's secrets. [[FunWithSubtitles Yes, even the captions]] appeared to question his profession. A fan theory is that his actual government job was much less impressive than he tries to make it sound.
451** Emily Flippen from ''45'', an investment analyst, fails a math based challenge to get her vote back.
452* {{Crossover}}: ''Series/BigBrother'' winner Hayden Moss competed in the original ''Blood vs. Water'', while two-time ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' contestants the Anderson twins competed in ''San Juan Del Sur'', the second ''Blood vs. Water'' installment. ''Survivor'' also crossed over into ''The Amazing Race'', as its Season 31 featured teams from previous ''Race'' seasons, ''Survivor'', and ''Big Brother''.
453* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass:
454** Brett from ''Samoa'' simply hid behind the numbers and kept his mouth shut ([[OutOfFocus losing a lot of screen time in the process]]), making the Foa-Foa's think he was nothing more than an easy-boot at the final six. [[FromNobodyToNightmare But then all of a sudden, this quiet person who looks 16 starts to chain-win immunities.]] Then comes the scary part for the Foa-Foa's, since [[TheHero Brett]] is the last remaining Galu left, [[OhCrap with a jury now 100% filled with Galus]]... [[LaserGuidedKarma not to mention he's the only one besides Natalie out of those six who ''had not'' angered anyone like Russell and Mick]]...
455** Jud from ''Nicaragua'' got pegged as a [[DumbBlonde himbo]] (not completely unfairly) and was given the nickname "Fabio", but he used it to his advantage to sneak past people perceived as bigger threats and won, even managing to trick Chase and Sash into telling Jane they were voting her out ''to her face''.
456** Ashley appeared to have been one of the {{Living Prop}}s on Rob's team who was incapable of doing a thing by herself...until she started winning challenges and worried Rob a lot because she didn't anger anybody on the jury and was actually ''not'' incompetent. You can spot Rob's OhCrap face.
457** Before these three, Lillian in ''Pearl Islands''. The entire season she's (again, not unfairly) built up as a woman in over her head. In a rather brilliant move, Fairplay comes into the final three with her and Sandra, neither of which had won any challenges. Sandra goes out easily as predicted... but Fairplay starts to get in trouble. He tries to get Lil to drop... but every single deal is shot down with a big "No", and she continues to wear him down.
458** Sophie is sort of seen as this emotional girl who's being dragged by Coach... and then manages to beat ''Ozzy'' in the most crucial immunity challenge.
459** Christina gets a moment in ''One World'' - she's pretty much abused all game but eventually, the abuse stops a bit as they decide to go after Kat instead. Throughout the game, she doesn't perform well in challenges, yet in the final immunity challenge, she comes in second... a very ''close'' second at that, as both her and Kim were ''leagues'' ahead of Chelsea and Sabrina!
460* CryingWolf: After his famous "dead grandma" ploy in ''Pearl Islands'', Jonny Fairplay had basically established himself as the player who had no limits about what he thought was accepted to get himself farther in the game. So in ''Micronesia'', when he told a sweet story about feeling emotionally detached from the game because he was thinking about his soon-to-be-born daughter, the other players thought he was up to his old tricks and voted him out first. He was telling the truth that time, at least about his baby. He may have been playing up the rest, of course.
461** Fairplay later confirmed in a Reddit AMA that he did give up during the season after having to play while enduring an injury without painkiller medication. He directly asked to be voted out when he couldn't take it anymore, and his tribe obliged.
462* DavidVsGoliath: The theme and title of Season 37; which pits a tribe of "Goliaths" who gained success with improbable advantages, against "Davids" who had to overcome adversity to get where they are in life.
463* DefeatByModesty:
464** Kathy Vavrick-O'Brien lost ''Marquesas''' final challenge because she was trying to cover up. Making matters worse, her alliance partner turned on her at the last second and Kathy got sent out of the game ''and'' the challenge.
465** Courtney Yates in ''China'' lost a challenge because her bra kept slipping and she kept turning around to cover it up.
466** Averted in the ''Heroes Vs Villains'' premiere; Sandra Diaz-Twine tried to sabotage Sugar Kiper by undoing her bra top, but Sugar merely wiggled out of her top and ran topless to the finish. Sugar then flipped the bird to the cameras, giving the audience a rare double blur.
467* DefectorFromDecadence: In the middle of one ''Palau'' challenge, Gregg Carey once promised Katie Gallagher that he wouldn't hasten her loss; since protecting [[SickeninglySweethearts Jenn Lyon]] was always his top priority, he was later forced to go back on his word. Katie happily forgave him when Gregg invited her and Jenn to join him for the overnight cruise. [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness This didn't stop her from agreeing to]] [[UngratefulBastard blindside Gregg at the next vote]], however.
468* {{Determinator}}: Russell Swan worked through a 5-day storm in ''Samoa'' before [[YouCanBarelyStand collapsing]] ''twice'' during a challenge, and was sent home because his heart rate dropped far too low. It was basically because of his failing that the Galu tribe quickly fell apart after the merge.
469* DiabolusExMachina: Some of the game's twists have royally screwed players over:
470** Lex from ''Africa'' got sick in day 38, hours before the ''final'' immunity challenge.
471** '''PASCHAL'''. Because of a tie in the final four between Kathy and Neleh, Jeff Probst took out a bag full of rocks, and whoever drew the purple rock would be eliminated from the game. Paschal drew the purple rock, and was eliminated from the game; with no votes cast for him throughout the entire game, let alone that Tribal Council. This caused a lot of controversy outside the game because of how many people felt Paschal was unfairly screwed over. Although this did work out for him, his leg gave out the very next day so he couldn't participate in the next tribal council.
472** Shii-Ann in ''Thailand'' was on the outs with her tribe, and when the two came together she immediately tried to integrate with the opposition - only for Jeff to spring the twist that they ''hadn't'' merged yet, they were only sharing a camp. Bye-bye, Shii-Ann.
473** Andrew Savage from ''Pearl Islands'', who got voted out mostly because returnee Lillian Morris was still mad at him for getting ''her'' out.
474** Amber Brkich from ''All-Stars'' by all rights should have been the ultimate example of this trope, when during a randomized tribal switch she was most improbably the ''only'' person not to switch tribes. And yet, Boston Rob managed to turn her case into a subversion by duping Lex van den Berghe into saving her with a single sentence. Its small wonder she immediately accepted when Rob later proposed marriage.
475*** Amber had already done the legwork by offering Lex and Kathy Vavrick-O'Brien a final-5 alliance with her, Boston Rob, and Big Tom Buchanan, in which Lex expected to have the upper hand because he had a secret pre-show alliance in place with Big Tom. Rob's muttered line at the challenge just convinced Lex to go ahead with the deal. It would have been a pretty smart move for Lex, except the part where he forgot Rob was there to win, not to help his friends win.
476** Angie Jakusz and Willard Smith felt rather safe in the early half of ''Palau''; Angie managed to get in the good graces of her tribe after a single immunity challenge, while Willard coasted on his tribe's unprecedented winning streak. Then a twist requires both tribes to head to tribal council, with the later bonus of the "winning" tribe giving individual immunity to any member of the losing tribe. Naturally, Willard's tribe Koror wins and sends him home; while Angie's tribe Ulong loses and is forced to vote her out after a scramble when Koror deliberately gives individual immunity to an obvious target. Worth noting is that both Angie and Willard got picked last in a "schoolyard pick"-style team choice; which had eliminated Jonathan Libby and Wanda Shirk, who never got sent to a tribe at all.
477** Michelle Yi from ''Fiji'' gets voted out after a twist where the reward and the immunity challenges are combined into a single event, and the losing team has to go immediately to tribal council with no opportunity for discussion or strategizing. Michelle is on a team consisting of hostile and indifferent players after a shuffle who lose, and she is subsequently voted out.
478** In ''Cook Islands'', Jenny Guzon-Bae was hit with a bad twist: her tribe ended up losing the challenge, and after voting out Rebecca Borman, they were told that they immediately had to vote off another tribemate. Jenny ended up getting the surprise boot. Naturally, as she walked away from the tribal council set, she raised a big middle finger. Whether it was to her tribe or the production or both is still uncertain.
479** Aaron Reisberger from ''China'' has to be one of the best examples of this: at the final twelve, both tribes were told that they were allowed to kidnap whichever two members of the opposing tribe they perceived as the strongest, automatically putting those players into a minority. Aaron, the leader of the Fei Long tribe who was in a solid alliance, got sent over to Zhan Hu and was voted off the same episode just to spite the Fei Longs.
480** While this wasn't a new twist, Jacqui Berg from ''Gabon'' was screwed out because she got switched to another tribe and was a clear target by the long-suffering Fangs. Fellow Kota Marcus Lehman was screwed in a second tribe swap, but he knew he had been considered a threat by that point anyway.
481*** Also has happened to Silas Gaither and Lindsey Richter in ''Africa'', who were especially ruined by twist actually being new in their day.
482** Brenda Lowe won the family visit challenge in ''Caramoan'', which is already fairly unenviable due to having to pick a tribemate or two to go along with and risk alienating everyone else. After she chose Dawn to share the prize, Probst hit her with the SadisticChoice of keep the reward for her and Dawn Meehan or have both of them give it up to let everyone ''else'' see their loved ones, thereby forcing her to either ''actively'' deny the others their families or turn her kind gesture to Dawn into a case of YankTheDogsChain. And to add insult to injury, the reward took place just offshore from the camp, within view of anyone not participating thereby stoking their jealousy. For a "reward", there was really no way for Brenda to come out unscathed.
483* DiggingYourselfDeeper:
484** Dreamz Herd from ''Fiji'' and Neleh Dennis from ''Marquesas'' are notable examples. And Lex van den Berghe, every time he tried to justify why [[{{Hypocrite}} he can get away with playing ruthlessly, but others need to be punished for it]].
485** Happened ''twice'' in a row at the beginning of ''Nicaragua''. As a [[SelfFulfillingProphecy result of panicking over her vulnerability]] before and during Tribal Council, [[TalkativeLoon Wendy [=DeSmidt=]-Kohlhoff]] fell victim to this in episode 1, and was first to be evicted. Ironically, [[ConfessionCam she had admitted]] (before the vote) that her chattiness was often irritating; she didn't say much early on, but it was enough to give an impression of being odd. In episode 2, [[JerkJock alpha male Shannon Elkins went on a rant that included homophobic comments]], likely turning what would have been a tie into his own ouster.
486* DisproportionateRetribution:
487** [=NaOnka=] Mixon in ''Nicaragua'' made a batch of tortillas but got stuck with the smallest one, so she swiped and hid all the tortilla-making supplies and some fruit. The only reason she brought any of it back was because she got caught.
488** Boston Rob chose to vote out Matt Elrod early in ''Redemption Island'' because he ''shook hands with the other tribe'' after they won a challenge.
489* TheDitz: Jud "Fabio" Birza from Nicaragua is a rare male example, who didn't know that crabs pinched. [[DitzyGenius Although his strategy confessionals aren't quite so ditzy...]]; [[ObfuscatingStupidity he did win after all]].
490* DitzyGenius: Dr. Sean Kenniff. Fans regularly make fun of his "Alphabet Strategy", but it actually made sense: most of the names that started toward the beginning of the alphabet were from the Pagong tribe. Why he failed was because of his neurotic demeanor, and reluctance to play as cutthroat as he had to. It didn't help matters that he thought of himself as a kind of Jerry Seinfeld entertainer kinda guy, noting in his audition tape that Seinfeld, Joey Buttafuoco and all of the Baldwin brothers are from his hometown (Massapequa, New York for the record). Also, his Superpole 2000 was hilariously ineffective and caught exactly 0 fish. Gervase Paterson called him the "dumbest smart guy" that he's ever met. Also, Sean's dad ended up being largely the same when he showed up for the first-ever "loved one" visit, with Sue calling the elder Kenniff a goof.
491* DoubleMeaningTitle:
492** Many of the episode titles in the earlier seasons are [[ShoutOut Shout-Outs]] to various pieces of literature, film, music, or events that happened earlier in the season. They are also allusions to what is going to happen in ''that'' night's episode. For example, Thailand's premiere episode is called "The Importance Of Being Eldest", a reference to Creator/OscarWilde as well as to the opening twist (and is also a clue to how the season itself plays out).
493** "Redemption Island", while being an obvious reference to the twist introduced in that season, is also a subtle reference to the fact that two of the most notorious Survivors who had never won a season, Boston Rob and Russell Hantz, were trying to "redeem" themselves by finally winning it all.
494* DysfunctionJunction:
495** Episode 2 of ''Nicaragua'' is an hour full of crazy; with Holly Hoffman's weird revenge scheme, [=NaOnka=] Mixon's unprovoked bile, and Shannon Elkins's out-of-nowhere ranting.
496** The Casaya Tribe from ''Panama'', in between Shane randomly going off at people, Courtney randomly going off at people, and Shane and Courtney going off at each other, the tribe really was one of the most dysfunctional tribes to ever be slumped together.
497** Between Alicia and Christina's shouting matches, Tarzan's {{Cloudcuckoolander}} antics, and pretty much ''anything'' Colton said or did, the first half of ''One World'' made for one of the most dysfunctional seasons in the show's run.
498** ''Caramoan'' put Brandon and Phillip on the same tribe, which proved to be, shall we say, volatile.
499* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
500** Some people consider ''Borneo'' to be so different in tone and mood compared to the rest of the rest of the series that it's this. Note that this season had pretty similar actual rules and official gameplay to many seasons, but had been filmed more like a genuine test of survival, not politics with some survival in the background.
501** The hidden immunity idol had to take a few seasons to have its rules refined. The first time it appeared in ''Guatemala'', it worked just like regular Immunity, preventing the user from even being on the "ballot" in the first place. In ''Panama'' and ''Cook Islands'', it was allowed to be played after the votes were read, when the user ''knows'' that they'd be voted out otherwise. The rules would then change once more to require it be played before the reading, forcing the user to take a risk on whether it would be needed or not.
502* EmbarrassingPassword: In Season 41, a set of "Beware Advantages" force their holders to say a code phrase in public in order to get an advantage. The phrases were made to be completely ridiculous and improbable to be thought up by anyone unaware: "I truly believe that butterflies are just dead relatives saying 'hi'.", "I'm as confused as a goat on [=AstroTurf=].", and "I didn't realize this until now...broccoli is just a bunch of small trees.".
503* EntitledBastard: ''Russell Hantz''. In ''Samoa'', he tried to buy the title off the winner. In ''Heroes vs Villains'', he claimed that the rules were flawed. In ''Redemption Island'', he even said that he should have sued every player on his team for losing just to get rid of him. Even after his nephew Brandon played in ''South Pacific'', he referred to his own game as "greatness" and said Brandon was screwing it up.
504* EpicFail:
505** ''Palau'''s Ulong tribe. Infamous in that they lost ''every single immunity challenge'', and all but three reward challenges. The only reason anyone from the other tribe was voted out was that one episode featured a contestant getting voted out from both tribes as part of a twist. By the end only one member, Stephenie [=LaGrossa=], remained. As a result no official merge happened, Ulong was considered "conquered", and Stephenie was got set over to the other tribe for the individual immunity portion. She didn't last too long after that, and Ulong officially became the shortest-lived tribe in ''Survivor'' history.
506** Seasons later, the Matsing tribe from ''Philippines'' became Ulong's successor and three-tribe season equivalent; never winning a single challenge in the four episodes it lasted. Malcolm Freberg and Denise Stapley were consequently absorbed into opposing tribes, ironically going far to become major threats in their own rights.
507** And ''Cagayan''[='s=] Luzon (Brains) tribe almost became the next Matsing/Ulong within three episodes. They lost ''both'' immunity challenges during the premiere. They had to rely on one person to carry the entire team afteward and lost almost every challenge, only winning one double immunity/reward challenge. Right after their only victory, Luzon lost against the Aparri (Brawn) tribe who were TRYING TO LOSE ON PURPOSE. It says a lot when a tribe tries to throw a challenge, and another tribe still loses anyway. To the Luzons's credit, their surviving three members all made it to the merge, and all placed higher than any Solana (Beauty) member.
508* EroticEating: Jerri Manthey toyed the idea with chocolate to Amber Brkich during ''Australian Outback''. HilarityEnsues when Colby Donaldson, aware of the DoubleEntendre, reacted uncomfortably but privately:
509-->'''[[MemeticMolester Jerri]]''': I just wanna pour hot chocolate on some hot dude's bod.
510-->'''[[MrFanservice Colby]]''': [[TheAce I may be a lot of things]], but I ain't no Hershey bar! (chuckles)
511* EvenEvilHasStandards: Natalie Bolton sums up the ''Micronesia'' [[AmazonBrigade women's]] intentions in ep. 11:
512--> "...as evil as women can be, and diabolical and cutthroat and go-for-the-jugular as women are, and just suck blood, we do want Erik to have a good birthday on day 30. Today's his birthday; he's 22... so he's not going home today."
513* EventTitle: The series title itself invokes people surviving. For specific seasons, the ones named after twists or/and gimmicks such as ''One World'' (tribes sharing a camp) and the ones under VersusTitle below.
514* EverythingTryingToKillYou: All of the locations are designed to wear the hell out of the contestants, but Australia and ''especially'' Africa qualify for this trope. The two tribes had to be barricaded inside a little rickety boma to keep from various predators who might eat or gore them and other animals who may stampede over them by accident. Arguably also SerialEscalation, as these were the second and third seasons, when ''Survivor'' hadn't quite become a social game yet.
515* EvilIsCool: InUniverse, Some contestants believe this (as it ''is'' a game of deception), and swear to lie, cheat, and steal their way to the million. Most of them realize that they ''are'' on a television show, and deliberately do this to play up to the cameras.
516** The Villain tribe from ''Heroes vs Villains''. Their dramatic entrance alone was all kinds of cool, the descent of their chopper literally [[AHandfulForAnEye blowing sand right at the Hero tribe's faces]].
517* ExactWords: In the ''Tocantins'' premiere, the players are about to begin an hours-long hike to the campsites, when the host suckers them good:
518--> '''Jeff Probst''': "We're going to have our first vote, and one person from each tribe is not gonna make this journey..."
519--> ''[vote is held, unhappy words of farewell to the selected players, angry laments from them]''
520--> '''Jeff Probst''': "Let's be clear: I said you will not take part in this adventure. 'This adventure' is a four-hour trek to camp. *Sandy Burgin screams happily and others laugh upon realizing what Jeff meant*'' [...] while these guys are [[BlessedWithSuck trekking for four hours, carrying all of the camp supplies]], you're gonna fly to camp in a helicopter".
521** Before that, there was the time in ''Thailand'' where Jeff Probst told the tribes they were together now, but later took great joy in informing them "''Merge''? I never said you ''merged''.".
522* FailedASpotCheck: When Michaela Bradshaw does not get picked to be on a team-based reward challenge in ''Game Changers'', she spends most of the challenge on a platform where a hidden advantage item can be found nearby. Not once does she even bother to check the area for it, allowing Sarah Lacina to find it and take it after the challenge ended.
523* TheFarmerAndTheViper: Mick Trimming uses this general idea in ''Samoa'' ep. 13 to explain his [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness concern that Russell Hantz will soon turn on him]], despite an earlier alliance.
524%%* FemmeFatale: Parvati Shallow, Jenna Morasca, [=Danielle DiLorenzo=] and Jerri Manthey, among others. %% Zero-context
525* FiveSecondForeshadowing: In ''41'', when Danny [=McCray=] mentions the possibility of Erika Casupanan pulling out an idol, Naseer Muttalif snickers a little. During the next challenge, Naseer gets a confessional and it turns out ''he'' found the idol.
526* FlawlessVictory:
527** Earl Cole from ''Fiji'', J.T. Thomas from ''Tocantins'', John Cochran from ''Caramoan'', and Jeremy Collins from ''Cambodia''. Each got 100% of the votes-to-win in their respective final tribal councils.
528** Winners with a NoDamageRun but uneven finale votes may also count, namely: Tina Wesson (''The Australian Outback''), Ethan Zohn (''Africa''), Brian Heidik (''Thailand''), Sandra Diaz-Twine (''Pearl Islands''), Tom Westman (''Palau''), andd Natalie Anderson (''San Juan Del Sur''). Plus, everyone with a FlawlessVictory except Earl Cole, who only got one vote anyway.
529* FoilerFootage: The first season shot multiple combinations of contestants at tribal council, creating a phony boot order.
530* FormerTeenRebel: He's barely even out of his teens, but Brandon Hantz describes himself as one in ''South Pacific''. He, shall we say, [[BlackAndWhiteInsanity hasn't quite gotten]] [[SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny the hang]] [[BewareTheHonestOnes of it yet]], though.
531* FourIsDeath:
532** ''Marquesas'' (season 4) fourth placer Paschal English was eliminated in a ''very'' controversial manner due to the purple rock.
533** Amanda Kimmell became the fourth member of the jury in ''Heroes vs Villains''. The catch? This was the first time she was VotedOffTheIsland in her ''Survivor'' career, having been in the final tribal councils of her 2 previous seasons. Even worse: if you total the jury votes she got in her first two tries, the pattern is obvious: she only got a single vote from ''China'', and three from ''Micronesia''. After her boot, she had spent a total of 108 days in her three tries. The numbers are ''definitely'' against her that season.
534** Cirie Fields was always connected with this number. She placed fourth in ''Panama'' (her original season), was part of a dominant FourGirlEnsemble in ''Micronesia'' and was the fourth person eliminated in ''Heroes vs Villains''. Also look at the numbers in between her three seasons (12, 16, 20). Her playing in Season 34 saw her eliminated at 6th place, but she was eliminated by default after the addition of 4 advantages during her final tribal council.
535** Defied by "Boston Rob" Mariano. He was originally from the fourth season (''Marquesas''), but he finally won the game in his fourth attempt.
536** Rupert Bonham became the first boot of the original ''Blood vs. Water'', his fourth attempt at the game.
537* FourTemperamentEnsemble: Obvious in many final four lineups or four-person alliances like:
538** The Tagi alliance in ''Borneo'': Richard is choleric, Kelly is sanguine, Rudy is melancholic, and Sue is phlegmatic. Bonus points for being ''the'' first alliance and being the final four.
539** The final four in ''Thailand'': Helen is choleric, Jan is supine, Clay is phlegmatic, and Brian is sanguine.
540** The final four in ''Pearl Islands'': Sandra is phlegmatic, Lil is melancholic, Jon is choleric, and Darrah is sanguine.
541** The final four Chapera alliance in ''All-Stars'': Amber is supine, Boston Rob is choleric, Jenna is melancholic and Rupert is sanguine.
542** Koror's final four in ''Palau'': Tom is choleric, Katie is phlegmatic, Ian is sanguine, and Jenn was melancholic.
543** The Aitu 4 from ''Cook Islands'': Yul is choleric, Ozzy is phlegmatic, Becky is supine, and Sundra is sanguine.
544** The Black Widow brigade in ''Micronesia'': Parvati is sanguine, Amanda is phlegmatic, Cirie is choleric, and Natalie is melancholic. Note that they were the final four, too.
545** ''Gabon'' final four: Bob is melancholic, Susie is choleric, Sugar is sanguine, and Matty is phlegmatic.
546** ''Samoa'''s final four: Natalie being supine, Russell being choleric, Mick being phlegmatic, and Brett being melancholic. Jaison was phlegmatic when he was part of the Foa Foa alliance with the first three mentioned.
547** ''Heroes vs Villains'' final four; Sandra is phlegmatic, Parvati is sanguine, Russell is choleric, and Jerri is melancholic.
548** The four winners who returned in ''All-Stars'' (Ethan is sanguine, Richard is choleric, Jenna is melancholic, and [[TeamMom Tina]] is supine) and ''Heroes vs Villains'' (Sandra is phlegmatic, Parvati is sanguine, J.T is supine, and Tom is choleric).
549** ''Redemption Island'' final four: Natalie is supine, Ashley is melancholic, Rob is sanguine, and Phillip is choleric.
550** ''South Pacific'' final four: Ozzy is phlegmatic, Albert is choleric, Coach is sanguine, and Sophie is melancholic.
551** The four ''Fans'' that reached the merge in ''Caramoan'': Sherri is melancholic, Eddie is phlegmatic, Reynold is sanguine, and Michael is choleric.
552* FreudianSlip:
553** Brian Heidik in ''Thailand'' was gloating in the penultimate episode about why he wouldn't lose and starts to count down on his fingers the ways he's manipulated everyone in Chuay Gahn into doing his bidding. By the time he's gotten to Clay Jordan, Brian inadvertently was FlippingTheBird to the camera; but it seemed like he meant he was doing it to Clay, who was the other finalist.
554** Chris Daugherty in ''Vanuatu'' was assuring Eliza Orlins that he would stay solid in his deal with her but accidentally said that they were fine up until the final three (which was the absolute farthest he planned on taking her) as opposed to final two (which Eliza believed was the deal, and the general finale count at the time). Eliza's reaction was a rare example of not realizing Chris blurting his plans out loud and just correcting him words.
555** The botched challenge taunt from Angie Jakusz in ''Palau'', while in the middle of ''the'' Ulonging: "We're not going back to immuni- to Tribal Council!"
556** Sash Lenahan in ''Nicaragua'' said "if there's a time when I lose trust in [my tribe] -- or, I'm sorry, if there's a time when they lose trust in me". And he said this during a tribal council, too, so Probst made sure it didn't escape anyone's notice.
557** During the reunion show of ''Redemption Island'', Jeff Probst asked Russell Hantz a question, accidentally calling him Phillip Sheppard, which he immediately lampshaded.
558* FromNobodyToNightmare: Sometimes during seasons featuring returning players, a returning player who did relatively poorly the first time around ends up taking such a [[TookALevelInBadass level in badass]] that their reputation skyrockets overnight.
559** Boston Rob during ''Marquesas'' was at best a SmugSnake EnsembleDarkHorse with a smart alec mouth, but during ''All Stars'', he ends up leading Chapera to becoming the overwhelmingly more dominant tribe compared to Mogo Mogo and Saboga, to the point where Mogo Mogo becomes pagonged, and the Saboga members who were absorbed into Chapera became his loyal followers. He made it to the finale, and was one vote away from winning despite how many bridges he had burned. By the time ''Heroes vs Villains'' rolled around, Rob was considered a ''Survivor'' legend. He then used that reputation to exploit his tribe members during ''Redemption Island'', the season in which he did win.
560** Parvati Shallow during ''Cook Islands'' was seen as merely a flirty girl who was on a losing tribe, which itself was overshadowed by [[TheSmartGuy Yul Kwon]] and [[TheAce Ozzy Lusth]]. But during her first return to ''Micronesia'', she managed to use her unassuming reputation to great effect, and built an [[AmazonBrigade all-female alliance]] which took her to the finale and eventually a victory. Her reputation grew even more during ''Heroes vs Villains'' when she herself managed to overshadow the self-described "best player ever" [[EntitledBastard Russell Hantz]] in strategy, making several ingenious moves and also overcoming the bias other players had against her. She didn't win this season, but she did come in second, and many believe that she was more deserving overall than either Sandra Diaz-Twine (who also had already won) or Russell Hantz (who was considered a goat).
561** Cochran went from being the little superfan that everyone picked on in ''South Pacific'' to the man running the show in ''Caramoan''.
562** Kelley Wentworth went from being a forgettable pre-merge boot in ''San Juan Del Sur'' to being a huge threat in ''Cambodia''. She was the first person to find an idol in a challenge, used that idol to negate the most votes ever with nine, and found another idol in the camp at the risk of being caught. She was impressive in challenges and had she won the final immunity, she would have won the whole thing.
563* FunWithSubtitles: On rare occasions, onscreen labels are used for subtle snarking.
564** In ''Redemption Island'', the occupation of Phillip was presented as "Former Federal Agent?", though that may be justified if production couldn't get confirmation of classified work he did. Also in that season, the "participate or eat" challenge not only has the usual "Elapsed Time" caption for endurance challenges, but also "Elapsed Burgers" for those sitting out.
565** In ''Pearl Islands'' the Morgan tribe was trailing in the very first challenge when Osten's boxers started falling down (again), and some of the other men stripped off their own shorts in solidarity. So now everyone's bare rears are exposed (and blurred out) - and what had been a "Morgan trailing" caption became "[[{{Pun}} Morgan behind]]".
566* TheFundamentalist: Elisabeth Filarski-Hasselbeck on ''Outback'', who would go on to become a conservative commentator on ''Series/TheView''. Examples abound in other seasons as well.
567* GambitRoulette: The game of choice of Cirie Fields. Her pet hobbies include: organizing 3-2-1 vote splits and orchestrating scenarios to convince people to give away immunity at tribal council and then immediately voting them out. These are plans that would fail by just one person moving out of line, which they never do because Cirie has everyone convinced she's loyal primarily to ''them''. This finally backfires on her in ''Heroes vs. Villains'', when J.T. Thomas displays what happens when someone ''does'' stray away from her master plan and got rival Tom Westman to whip out his idol.
568* GameBreaker: InUniverse. The hidden immunity idol in ''Panama'' and ''Cook Islands''. In ''Panama'' it kept outsider Terry Deitz from being easily defeated by a majority alliance, and ''Cook Islands'''s Yul Kwon used it strategically to sway Jonathan Penner, but it otherwise made both invincible at the latter half of the game. You can see why [[ObviousRulePatch they added a rule stating you can only use it until the final six, and why it had to be used BEFORE votes are counted]].
569* GameBreakingInjury: For some, see For the others, see NonGamePlayElimination; but more often these lead to a SuicideByCop; especially if the injury happens other than right after a tribe wins immunity. The injured player will often ask the others to vote them out to prevent more than one person being sent home, and thus helping their friends's chances of winning.
570** James Clement became a victim of this twice now. The first led to his NonGamePlayElimination in ''Micronesia'', the second had him {{Mercy Kill}}ed by his tribemates in ''Heroes vs Villains''.
571** Dehydration in ''Africa'' led to Diane Ogden and Jessie Camacho being the first two voted out, despite both being well-liked.
572** ''Palau'', wherein Jeff Wilson twisted (and possibly broke) his ankle because he stepped on a coconut in the middle of the night and was unable to perform well in challenges, despite carrying all of them before.
573** ''Guatemala''. Jim Lynch tore his bicep and asked to be voted out. Months later he was still in a cast.
574** Among other injuries, Chet Welch in ''Micronesia'' had a piece of coral stuck in his foot, which was why he basically asked his tribemates to send him home.
575** Jerry Sims in ''Tocatins'' suddenly got sick and had to ask his tribe to vote him out, which derailed his tribe's plans to send home Erinn Lobdell.
576** Fourth elimination in ''Samoa'' Ben Browning said that despite being sent home for his abrasion, he was likely to have been voted out sooner or later anyway, because he had torn a ligament in his leg.
577* GarageBand:
578** After playing ''VideoGame/RockBand'' together in the Ponderosa, ''Heroes vs. Villains'' jury members Coach Wade, Courtney Yates, and J.T. Thomas started a band called [[XtremeKoolLetterz The Dragonz]], named after Coach's self-given title. They wrote a few songs, wore custom T-shirts to Tribal Council, and even made a [[http://www.cbs.com/primetime/survivor/video/?pid=21Iu17vMS4nLeU57OKlbjveqJtvFKPiK&vs=Ponderosa&play=true music video]].
579** Lex van den Berghe from ''Africa'' and ''All-Stars'' was part of a band called "Lucky Dog" at one point, which he mentioned during Africa's reunion show. Currently, he's in another one called "The Maids of Honor."
580* {{Gayngster}}: Richard Hatch thanks to his {{Magnificent Bastard}}ness.
581* TheGenerationGap: It's occasionally present when older and younger tribemates don't see eye-to-eye. Some seasons deliberately invoke it by separating the starting tribes this way, such as ''Panama'' (which separated them by gender, too), ''Nicaragua'', and especially ''Millennials vs. Gen X''. ''Thailand'''s starting tribes were picked by the two oldest contestants, but were effectively split like this when Sook Jai head and oldest contestant Jake Billingsley purposely chose younger contestants in an attempt to overwhelm Jan Gentry's Chuay Gahns.
582* GeniusDitz: Fabio Birza played this card in ''Nicaragua''. It worked and got him the million.
583* GetOut: Jeff Probst tends to say something like this when someone quits the game.
584** When [=NaOnka=] Mixon and "Purple" Kelly Shinn quit ''Nicaragua'', both times he said "You wanna go? Go.".
585** He was equally unsympathetic to the show's first quitter, Osten Taylor, fourteen seasons earlier in ''Pearl Islands''. Instead of being told "the tribe has spoken", Probst just said "Go home.".
586** He elevated it to a full scale TheReasonYouSuckSpeech when Colton Cumbie quit in ''Blood Vs. Water''.
587* GirlPosse: Several alliances:
588** Jenna Morasca, Heidi Strobel, and Shawna Mitchell from ''The Amazon''. Emphasis on girl, given the younger age of most of the cast.
589** The Yasur Alliance from ''Vanuatu''. Notable for being run by seemingly-misandrist Ami Cusack, giving them an AmazonBrigade vibe.
590** The Black Widow Brigade from the latter half of ''Micronesia''.
591** Andrea Boehlke, Natalie Tenerelli, and Ashley Underwood from ''Redemption Island''. Only Ashley was all that great at challenges, but each made it far into the game.
592** The Salani Five from ''One World'', arguably the most successful female alliance in Survivor history.
593** The Witches Coven from ''Cambodia'', consisting of Kelley Wentworth, Ciera Eastin, and Abi-Maria Gomes.
594** The Dara Women alliance from ''Kaôh Rōng''.
595* GivingSomeoneThePointerFinger: [[SassyBlackWoman Alicia's]] claim to fame in ''Australia'':
596--> '''Kimmi Kappenberg:''' Don't wave your finger in my face!
597--> '''Alicia Calaway:''' I will ''always'' wave my finger in your face!
598* GlassCannon: Boston Rob. He is an extremely formidable player when things are going his way but he is easily dispatched if put on the defensive. This is because his core strategy is being intimidating enough to make everyone believe their target of his alliance, even if they're in it. See ''All-Stars'' and ''Redemption Island'' for the former, ''Marquesas'', ''Heroes vs Villains'' and ''Winners at War'' for the latter.
599* TheGlomp: Sarah Dawson gives an epic one to Jeff Probst at the ''Philippines'' reunion show.
600* GoodIsDumb: Most of the cast of ''Samoa'', with the major exceptions of Natalie White, Brett Clouser, and Russell Hantz (all of which are not dumb, and Russell is also '''not''' good). Also the Heroes tribe in ''Heroes Vs Villains'', considering they went along with J.T.'s plan to give Russell Hantz an idol.
601* GoodIsNotDumb: Natalie White and Brett Clouse in ''Samoa''; the former used Russell's scheming against him for her own benefit, and the latter managed to outstay the [[TotalPartyKill Pagonging]] of his tribe. Also "Fabio" Birza in ''Nicaragua'', who had a "lovable goof" personality but was reasonably game-savvy and combined the two to get the win.
602* GracefulLoser: There are such contestants; even Colby Donaldson didn't seem to mind about Tina Wesson winning. Some people have actually been alright with being voted out by someone they consider a WorthyOpponent.
603** Lillian Morris from ''Pearl Island'' picked Sandra Diaz-Twine to go to the final jury over Jonny Fairplay, knowing she would have likely lost to either, and instead wanted to make sure Fairplay ''didn't'' win.
604* GrayAndGrayMorality: Often, the final jury is forced to pick the lesser evil among the last two/three. Especially obvious in:
605** Right from the start in ''Borneo'': Sean Kenniff bluntly told the finalists that he and whole jury thought neither finalist was truly deserving. Sue Hawk's infamous jury speech calling Richard Hatch and Kelly Wiglesworth a snake and a rat, respectively, is the best example of the fact.
606** ''Marquesas'': where [[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder Vecepia Towery]] won mostly because no one really wanted to admit they were beaten by [[TagalongKid Neleh Dennis]].
607** ''Thailand'': Both Brian Heidik and Clay Jordan weren't very well-liked and were called out for betraying their former alliance members, amongst genuine accusations of bigotry. Five of the seven votes were explicitly cast as votes against the other finalist, rather than a genuine desire to see one of the two win.
608** ''All-Stars'': where it was between Boston Rob, who had backstabbed everyone on the jury up to that point, and Amber Brkich, who had the luck of being in an unbreakable alliance with him that let her ride his coattails. Lex van den Berghe, Alicia Calaway and "Big" Tom Buchanan's votes for Amber were not as much votes for her as they were votes against Rob.
609** ''Samoa'', where the jury was mad at Russell Hantz for being a manipulative jackass who bullied them and treated them like dirt (in a way that put Boston Rob's ''All-Stars'' game to shame), and Mick Trimming for being, as Shambo put it, "feckless". They voted Natalie White, the woman with one of the best social games at that point in the series, even though they considered her a coattail rider.
610* GreaterNeedThanMine: Parvati Shallow cleverly giving up her idols in ''Heroes vs. Villains'' to not just one but ''two'' other contestants, Sandra Diaz-Twine and Jerri Manthey, simultaneously, which ensured [[LaserGuidedKarma J.T. was immediately sent home]], and that the Villains would take control. As Parvati had reason to worry that night, it was a bold move.
611* {{Griefer}}: It's not too common a strategy, given that the point of the game is to get jury votes, but sometimes people do try it:
612** Randy Bailey from ''Gabon'' was the first notable user of this strategy, both pre-merge and post-merge, and gave it two silly names: first name was "Operation Let Everyone Else Crash And Burn", where he'd make his tribe as miserable as possible to capitalize on any mistakes they made; the second name was "Operation Strongarm", where he'd make everyone loathe him, pile their votes onto him, then idol whoever he and his alliance wanted, which would have actually worked had Bob Crowley not given him a fake immunity idol.
613** Russell Hantz in ''Samoa'', who in the premiere secretly emptied everyone's canteens and burned a guy's socks, claiming that it was manipulating his teammates to his advantage. He also tried to stir things up later by making it possible for the tribe's chickens to escape their coop, but they did not flee on that occasion.
614---> "I plan on weeding out the weak right off the bat; I plan on making it as miserable as possible for everybody. [...] I think if I can control how they feel, I can control how they think."
615** [[IronicEcho Sandra, in turn, burned Russell's hat]] at the end of ''Heroes Vs Villains'', something he admitted that he was fazed by, but by then Russell's own behavior had made him an AssholeVictim.
616** Sandra also tried to sabotage her tribe towards the end of ''Pearl Islands'' when she thought she was going to be voted out. She changed her mind when a plan to save her came into play.
617* GroupHug: After Stacey Powell was voted off in ''South Pacific'', Coach suggested the tribe give her one of these. They agreed; but it was swiftly rejected by Stacey, who understandably wasn't in the mood for a group hug from the people who just voted away from win a million dollars.
618* HappilyMarried:
619** Boston Rob Mariano and Amber Brkich(who was [[BabiesEverAfter in the audience with their cute baby]] in the ''Heroes Vs Villains'' ReunionShow); many other players are happily wedded to non-contestants, of course. Some of these spouses show up for the "visit from home" reward challenges.
620** Rob and Amber aren't the only former contestants who are married. Erik Hafemann and Jaime Dugan from ''China'', and Alex Bell from ''The Amazon'' and Kim Powers from ''Africa'' are married to each other as well.
621** ''Blood vs. Water'' included married couples among their loved-one pairs: Rupert and Laura Boneham, Brad and Monica Culpepper, and John and Candice Cody-Woodcock.
622* HappyDance: Richard Hatch did one when he won individual immunity in ''Borneo''.
623* HardWorkHardlyWorks: Colby Donaldson from ''Australia'', Matthew von Ertfelda in ''The Amazon'', ''Ozzy Lusth from ''Cook Islands'' and Parvati Shallow from ''Heroes vs Villains'' dominated the challenges in their respective seasons (especially the first three), but it still not enough for them to win jury votes. To be fair to the HvH jury, Parvati ''had'' already won.
624* HistoryRepeats:
625** ''Kaôh Rōng'' has a few similarities to ''Cagayan'':
626*** One of the three tribes is quite dysfunctional and gets reduced to three members swap, broken up by them winning one immunity. In fact, the one immunity they won was actually in the same cycle for the one immunity that the brains won in Cagayan).
627*** There's a NonGameplayElimination pre-merge. Albeit, under far different circumstances.
628*** Merge at eleven people, the swapped tribes are 6-5. Going by the original tribes, it's a 4-4-3 split.
629** James Clement and Erik Reichenbach had a similar arc during their first two seasons:
630** James spent most his time in ''China'' as a strong competitor who knew he would be sent home when the merge thinned out any rivalling alliances. He did what he could to get advantages ahead of time, but ultimately was sent home in a stupid fashion; not using either of the two idols he had, when there were [[EpicFail only three places before the final immunity challenge]]. He did come back as a "favorite" for the first "Fans vs. Favorites season, ''Micronesia'', but only made it to the same place as last time before an injury got him medevac'ed, which got worse in ''Heroes vs. Villains''.
631*** Erik debuted as a "fan" ''Micronesia''. He was a solid competitor and likeable guy, despite being a starstruck fanboy who was always on the outside of alliances. He made it past many of the more dangerous favorites, including the returning James Clement, before embarrassing himself by giving up his individual immunity to an alliance that outnumbered him 4 to 1. Years later, he got to appear on the second "Fans vs. Favorites" season, ''Caramoan'' as a favorite. He played a much better game, was in a pre-merge tribe with a solid winning streak and was careful with his trust into the merge. But sadly, he wound up getting evacuated at the same place he was voted out back in ''Micronesia'.
632* HonestyIsTheBestPolicy: Sandra Diaz-Twine from ''Pearl Islands'' and Randy Bailey from ''Gabon'' used this strategy to advantage: when you're mean but completely honest with your tribemates, they all know exactly where you stand and know you'll never lie to them. Unfortunately, this didn't work out so well for Phillip Sheppard in ''Redemption Island'', who actually unveiled his alliance at the first Tribal Council and it forced him to jump alliances.
633* HonorBeforeReason: Subverted. A lot of contestants ''talk'' a big game about how they want to play with honor, but then they vote either according to reason or against whoever annoys them. Coach Wade is one of the biggest examples of this, talking about integrity and warrior's honor incessantly but then not putting it too far ahead of reason.
634** However, a more conventional example of this trope is the finales for ''The Australian Outback'' and ''Pearl Islands'', where Colby Donaldson and Lillian Morris took someone to the finals that they knew had a large chance of winning the jury rather than the person they chose to eliminate. Subsequently, Tina Wesson and Sandra Diaz-Twine won their first seasons.
635** Many of the players in the earliest seasons simply refused to make alliances because they either thought: (a) the game element is boring to them (Greg Buis from ''Borneo''), (b) alliances go against their morals (Most of the Pagong tribe from ''Borneo'', most contestants from ''The Australian Outback''), or (c) they are trying to play the game in a way that avoids alliance making (Sean Kenniff and Gervase Paterson from ''Borneo'', Gabriel Cade from ''Marquesas''). Most of these attitudes have died out by today, but sometimes a player or two will bring them to a later season.
636** Brandon Hantz was one of the biggest followers of this in ''South Pacific'', often seeming to abandon reason entirely in his attempts to live righteously. It probably wasn't any help to him that sharing a tribe with Coach encouraged this mindset. He arguably kept the mindset in ''Caramoan'', he just had a radically different definition of "honor" then.
637* HopeSpot: Happens frequently in most seasons. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that most people don't want to know who's going home, lest they play an idol, or form a counter-alliance.
638* HotterAndSexier: ''The Amazon''. The previous season, ''Thailand'', had a cast that skewed older and more conservative and it failed to connect with audiences. ''Amazon'' not only had a much younger and prettier cast, including the series' first swimsuit model, it also divided the tribes by gender. This not only led to scenes like the youngest women bathing each other, it also generated a lot of sexual tension becuase both tribes fixated on sex as much as they did food. It also helps that in ''Thailand'' the younger players were voted out early, while in ''Amazon'' the younger players made it the deepest into the game.
639* {{Hypocrite}}: in-game, people often criticize others for lying, making deals, or backstabbing them...when they themselves would do the same to get in their shoes.
640** ''San Juan del Sur'' is a big example: they yell at Julie [=McGee=] for taking trail mix in despite ''praising her'' for thinking to take some trail mix back from the merge feast.
641* IconicOutfit: Notable examples are Rupert's tie-dye shirts, Boston Rob's Red Sox cap, Russell's hat, among others. It could be said that Richard's memetic outfit is his [[NakedPeopleAreFunny birthday suit]].
642* IBrokeANail: Parvati Shallow split a nail with a machete in ''Cook Islands''.
643* ICouldaBeenAContender:
644** Any contestant that was removed for injuries, especially ones that pretty much had everything in place to make it to the end: Jonathan Penner in ''Fans vs. Favourites'', Michael Skupin in ''Australian Outback'', and Russell Swan in ''Samoa''. These three were later brought back in ''Philippines'' for exactly this reason.
645** Even some people who were voted out early: Gabriel Cade in ''Marquesas'', Dolly Neely from ''Vanuatu'', Tracy Hughes-Wolfe and Yau-Man Chan (who was playing a second time) in ''Micronesia'', and Marisa Calihan and Betsy Bolan from ''Samoa''.
646*** Jolanda Jones from ''Palau'' won the first individual immunity challenge in which she got to pick her tribe, but was voted out first for being bossy. The other members of her tribe [[TheChewToy Ulong]] said she really could have helped them because, "She was in the Olympics, man!". Also Wanda Shirk and Jonathan Libby from that season, who were voted out before even being put on a tribe.
647* IdiotBall: Sometimes, players will make boneheaded moves or plans with little or no reasoning behind them for extended periods of time:
648** Lex van den Berghe giving up a 6-4 lead for his tribe and almost getting voted out during the merge in a close vote due to his rampant paranoia. The ''only'' reason he was saved was that Brandon Quinton was carrying an even bigger idiot ball than him.
649** "Big" Tom Buchanan in ''All-Stars'' just barely touched the idiot ball when he called himself the swing vote between the Rob-Amber alliance and the Rupert-Jenna alliance. Normally not a bad thing to say to the ConfessionCam, but instead, he [[TooDumbToLive did it right to Boston Rob's face. At the final five.]] That was all an already-wary Rob needed to turn the vote against Tom and send him packing.
650** The Coconut Chop in ''Marquesas'''s merge portion, where the Rotu Four worked together and ended up showing up their intended boot order, causing the other five to rally together and vote them all out.
651** In ''Palau'', Tom Westman tells Ian Rosenberger that if one of them wins the reward they need to NOT pick the other to go with them so they can divide the girls and prevent them from forming a majority alliance. No problem, Ian promised to take Katie Gallagher anyway. Ian wins and takes...Tom? Poor Tom had to fake excitement despite being pissed at Ian.
652** James Clement getting voted out of ''China'' with '''two''' idols. It gets brought up a lot. but what is often forgitten is that he could only use them for the next three tribal councils and was no slouch [[MusclesAreMeaningful at individual immunity challenges]].
653** Dan Kay the lawyer reads a clue to the hidden immunity idol at Exile Island in ''Gabon'' that says "across the lake there is a sandy crater" and that the idol is in it. His genius analysis is "maybe it's in ''the lake''". He then checks a bush. Dan the attorney cannot figure out this clue, but Sugar Kiper the pin-up model finds it easily.
654** Sash Lenahan grabbed it twice in ''Nicaragua'': first when he chose to vote out [[HandicappedBadass Kelly Bruno]] even though Marty Piombo was clearly the bigger threat; and then again at the end, when he was duped by Fabio Birza into blindsiding Jane Bright, and then proceeded to tell her ''right to her face'' that she was the next to go. To be fair course, Chase Rice had it too that second time.
655** In ''Philippines'', Carter Williams asks Jonathan Penner who they should vote for at tribal council... "Katie Hanson or [[ImStandingRightHere Penner]]?". [[SarcasmMode It's a shock that the blindside of Penner didn't work out]].
656* ITakeOffenseToThatLastOne: At one point in ''Panama,'' Shane Powers told Courtney Marit that if she backstabs him "he will drive to her shitty apartment in LA and kill her", coming off deadly serious the entire time. What does Courtney object to first and foremost in that scenario? [[MoodWhiplash The assertion that her apartment is shitty]].
657* IWasBeatenByAGirl: In the first episode of ''South Pacific'', Cochran mentions that he's afraid that he might be voted out before the girls. With him being a fan who's studied the game, this may not have been intended to be sexist; he may just be referring to the fact that women tend to get targetted first.
658** John Rocker in ''San Juan Del Sur'' can't stand that he lost a challenge to his girlfriend Julie [=McGee=] for this reason
659* IndyPloy: The gameplay style of Vecepia Towery and Sandra Diaz-Twine, winners of both their initial seasons. They simply play the game "one day at a time," making it easier for them to adapt to the other strategies of players around them.
660* InformedAbility: Stephenie [=LaGrossa=] is regularly touted as one of the physically strongest and most useful women ever to play ''Survivor'', but she has only ever won one challenge on her own. And on all three of her ''Survivor'' stints, she was part of the (initially) lesser tribe, first with Ulong on ''Palau'', following through one season later with Yaxhá on ''Guatemala'', and finally with the ''Heroes'' tribe in ''Heroes vs. Villains''.
661** Crystal Cox in ''Gabon''. A former Olympic relay racer that fails at every single challenge, and even loses a footrace to 60-year-old Gillian Larson, ''who got voted out for being physically weak''. This was made apparent so early on, that the other contestants could not believe her back story and only feared her as a strategic threat.
662** Thanks to being OutOfFocus in ''Samoa'', Kelly Sharbaugh. Apparently, Kelly was such a huge threat to Foa Foa that they needed to take her out second (after Erik Cardona), but thanks to a blatantly severe lack of screentime, it's impossible to tell why. However, the reason why she was edited poorly was ''because'' of the way she was taken out of the game; they didn't want the audience to be too disappointed with her elimination so they made her as much of a non-entity as they could.
663** Russell Hantz. The producers and Jeff Probst tout him as a dangerous player. Meanwhile, he makes flashy moves that anger all the contestants, bosses people around and generally rubs them the wrong way, while all the while ignoring his alliance members who do a ten-times better job at making relationships with people. The only reason he gets as far as he does is that a savvier player brings him along as a goat.
664* InformedFlaw: Happens a fair bit. Without fail, it is always either ManipulativeEditing or [[AllTheOtherReindeer many contestants]]] [[UnreliableNarrator being untrustworthy]] themselves.
665** Nick Brown was portrayed as a "LazyBum" in ''Australia''; but when everybody saw the finished edit, practically the whole cast got on the editors's cases about how actually was helpful around camp.
666** Anthony Robinson in ''Fiji'' was apparently dislikeable and shifty. Yet almost all the time during the fights between him and Rocky Reid, it's not that hard to see ''Rocky'' as the aggressor.
667** Chet Welch in ''Micronesia'' was mostly shown as loser who sucked at challenges and would not handle the wild that only got by as a pawn. After the show was finished, a few contestants came to his defense about how he was helpful around camp and was a considerably nicer person than most of the cast. Even Chet himself didn't deny he was far from a physical threat, though.
668** In ''South Pacific'', the Upolus regularly consider Edna Ma for elimination because she's "sneaky", "devious", and a physical liability, yet the audience is shown nothing of her deviousness and sneakiness, and every challenge the Upolus won she took part in.
669** Christina Cha in ''One World'' is said to be lazy, yet she's regularly shown working around the camp. She's also apparently annoying but is ''nothing'' compared to "Tarzan" Smith, Alicia Rosa, or Colton Cumbie, each of them being on her tribe by the shuffle.
670* InterfaceSpoiler: The voting for ''Cambodia''[='s=] cast was determined by online vote, and showed Carolyn and Mike from the then-airing ''Worlds Apart'' on the ballot, but not several other people who were still in the game at the time. This resulted in many viewers speculating that the winner was ''not'' them, as the theme of ''Cambodia'' was a second chance. [[AvertedTrope Probst revealed that if Mike or Carolyn won they would ergo be ineligible]]. At the same time, this ''also'' resulted in many viewers thinking that those two ''did'' win just by looking at the candidates, expecting that if one of them won they would be ineligible. However, this arguably also wound up making Carolyn screwed, as some viewers pointed out on blogs that voting for Mike or Carolyn would be a "Waste", as the edit did not paint an obvious picture to either of them being the winner. Subverted when Probst revealed at the ''Cambodia'' cast announcement that Mike apparently ''did'' receive enough votes to get on the cast if he hadn't won while Carolyn missed the cut.
671* IntergenerationalFriendship: Most of the {{Cool Old Guy}}s / [[CoolOldLady Ladies]] and {{Youngsters}} can chill out and have fun with one another.
672** Rudy Boesch to anyone he played the game with during both ''Borneo'' and ''All-Stars''.
673** Elisabeth Filarski-Hasselbeck and Rodger Bingham in ''The Australian Outback'', with a very touching but purely platonic relationship that lasted their entire game. The majority alliance saved them for fourth and fifth because of how kind (and albeit non-threatening) they were.
674** Neleh Dennis and Paschal English from ''Marquesas'' is another prominent example, and maybe one of the most unbreakable mini-alliances in ''Survivor'' history.
675** Butch Lockley and Matthew von Ertfelda were both social outcasts with their tribe during the merge in ''The Amazon'', and bonded because of this. It helped they were both avid fishers and saw themselves as a voting bloc.
676** Tom Westman was known for his friendship with a lot of younger players in ''Palau''.
677** ''Gabon'' had Bob Crowley and "Sugar" Kiper, as well as Susie Smith and Matty Whitmore.
678** Chase Rice and Jane Bright, as well as Marty Piombo and Jud "Fabio" Birza; both from ''Nicaragua''.
679** Aubry Bracco and Joe Del Campo in ''Kaôh Rōng'', who had over a 40 year age difference between them and were tight alliance partners for the majority of the season.
680* InvincibleHero[=/=]InvincibleVillain: When one alliance [[TotalPartyKill pagongs]] another, all the suspense drains out of Tribal Council unless the larger alliance falls to infighting. If someone controls the game - such as Boston Rob in ''Redemption Island'' or Kim Spradlin in ''One World'' - then they become boring to watch, and if someone keeps losing control of the game, then it becomes more interesting...even though they're probably grinding their teeth.
681* IronicEchoCut: Sometimes the editors have too much fun mocking unlucky or idiotic contestants:
682** ''South Pacific''
683--->'''Cochran:''' ''[Referring to the upcoming duel]'' I have a chance, right?
684--->'''Ozzy Lusth:''' Of course you have a chance. Everyone has a chance. ''[Cut to the ConfessionCam]'' He doesn't have a chance...
685** Russell Swan in ''Philippines'' is shown interviewing to the camera about trying to find the hidden immunity idol to save himself, even going as far to say that more than likely the camera will show him searching right around where the idol was hidden and missing it. We cut back to island time, as Malcolm Freberg searches right around where the idol is hidden, and even a glint is added to rub in the irony.
686* {{Irony}}: In ''Philippines'', the winner of the season comes from Matsing, one of the worst tribes in the history of the series.
687* ISurrenderSuckers: Some of those who find hidden immunity idols ''want'' to encourage others to try to vote against them. They may talk of being ready to leave, irritate tribemates, or otherwise draw drama and disfavor. Having allies reinforce these perceptions can help. [[BatmanGambit If the finders can attract enough soon-to-be-worthless votes in this way, the Idol holder's partner(s) can complete the minority that ends up controlling the vote]]. Amanda Kimmel did this brilliantly in ''Micronesia'' and didn't even have to lie to keep her plan with Parvati a secret. She didn't find the idol in exile...[[ExactWords because it was hidden at camp]].
688* IslandHelpMessage: Some of the challenges have involved building these, fitting the general "castaway" theme.
689* ItSeemedLikeAGoodIdeaAtTheTime:
690** ''Heroes Vs. Villains:'' Parvati Shallow and Danielle [=DiLorenzo=] decided it would be just peachy to keep an immunity idol hidden from Russell. You really ''don't'' want to infuriate your alliance partner, particularly if your alliance is firmly in the driver's seat.
691** Lex van den Berghe in ''All-Stars'' decided that it would be a great idea to vote off loyal tribemate Jerri Manthey and keep Amber Brkich around to fulfill a deal Boston Rob offered him. Then the merge hits, and Lex realizes that Rob has a rather nasty case of ChronicBackstabbingDisorder.
692* JadeColoredGlasses: A lot of contestants become this on returnee seasons, but possibly the worst case was [[NiceGuy Ethan Zohn]] on ''All-Stars''. He went from the lovable ''Africa'' winner to taking on this, after he had to constantly play defense thanks to the "winners must go" attitude.
693* JadedWashout: Eternally-miserable Randy Bailey from ''Gabon'' and arguably blunt army man Frank Garrison from ''Africa''.
694* JustEatGilligan: There are ''numerous'' seasons where the audience is saying "Come on! VOTE OUT THIS GUY!" at the TV.
695** ''Vanuatu'': Vote out Chris Daugherty! He ''will'' take advantage of your infighting, worry about the alliance later!
696** ''Samoa'' and ''Heroes Vs Villains'': You ''know'' Russell is trouble! Dump him! Thankfully, the ''Redemption Island'' cast took notes, but...
697*** ''Redemption Island'': Vote out ''Boston Rob'', he's playing all of you!
698** ''South Pacific'': Vote out Coach, he's doing the same thing Rob did! [[AllAccordingToPlan Oh wait a second...]]
699** ''One World'': Vote out Kim Spradlin! She's the most dominant player in the season and knows you don't know!
700* KansasCityShuffle: Believe it or not, all three parts of this are played perfectly during the ''Cagayan'' merge vote:
701** 1) Knowing that it's going to come down to five people on the new Solana vs. six people on the new Aparri, Tony and LJ (the two most typical merge targets) both consider playing their hidden immunity idols and attempt to cancel out the votes from Aparri, so that whoever they choose will go home. However...
702** 2) ...the Aparri Alliance correctly predicts that these two might have idols to shuffle between them, and TakeAThirdOption by voting for Jefra, who nobody would think to pass an idol along to save, meaning that Tony and LJ both get no votes and waste their idols. ''Yet''...
703** 3) ...the Solana Alliance has caught wind of this and already let non-target/turncoat Kass decide who goes home. Meaning that while Jefra still receives the Aparri votes, the Solana Alliance plus Kass successfully manages to vote off Sarah, who ''nobody'' thought was in danger of going home.
704* KickTheDog: There are a ''lot'' of {{Jerk Ass}}es on this show, but if you really want viewers to hate you, either tell fake sob stories for sympathy and brag about it in confessional (like Johnny Fairplay and Russell Hantz) or make racist comments, sexist ([[HeManWomanHater misogynist]], or otherwise bigoted (such as [=NaOnka=] Mixon's rants against Kelly Bruno for being an amputee). Other unforgivable sins include but aren't limited to: betraying someone directly after they went out of their way to save you or your ally (Boston Rob to Lex van den Berghe), hiding food from people not in your alliance (Ami Cusack to all the men in ''Vanuatu''), and not giving up your reward for supplies even after you announced your intention to quit ([=NaOnka=] again), or targeting out a non-threat that everyone likes just to spite them (John Carroll causing Gabriel Cade's elimination).
705** Dreamz Herd forever doomed himself into being The Worst Guy Ever in his season. Yau-Man Chan, an BadassAdorable grandpa and fan favorite, had won an SUV in a reward challenge. Seeing no possible use for it because he already had a decent car, he gave it to Dreamz in exchange for a promise: if he won that night's immunity challenge, Dreamz would give the immunity to him. Dreamz won immunity... and kept it. Yau-Man got voted out right then. To Dreamz's credit, Yau-Man had done the ploy to exploit Dreamz, and said he was surprized he got edited favorably during it.
706** In the penultimate episode of ''Caramoan'', Brenda Lowe was put into an impossible situation (see DiabolusExMachina above) and tried her hardest to make things up to Dawn Meehan, even easing up during the challenge so Dawn could take immunity. And Dawn ''still'' helped vote her out that night.
707** In the first challenge of ''Heroes vs Villains'', [[EstablishingCharacterMoment the Villains]] go on a dog-kicking spree, with Courtney yelling "Break her shoulder!" to her team, Parvati Shallow dislocating Stephenie [=LaGrossa=]'s shoulder, Russell Hantz[[UnnecessaryRoughness brutally twisting Tom Westman's leg,]] and Sandra Diaz-Twine deliberately unhooking Sugar Kiper's top.
708* KidHero: Spencer Duhm from ''Tocantins'', Natalie Tenerelli from ''Redemption Island'' and Brandon Hantz from ''South Pacific'' were all 19 years old at the time of filming. Will Wahl from ''Millenials vs Gen X'' took this even further, being 18 at the time of filming, and the first ever castaway to play the game while ''still in high school''.
709* TheKlutz: Boo Bernis in ''Fiji'' was infamous for stumbling a lot during his season. Less funny when he tore his ACL, and otherwise being a threat to comp out and win the season.
710* KnightInSourArmor: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93KNzeLx9Yw&feature=channel Colby Donaldson]] during ''Heroes vs Villains''. Frank Garrison during ''Africa'' could be seen as this.
711* LaserGuidedKarma: The bane of every outright deceitful and manipulative player once they reach the final tribal council and are at the whims of people they forced out have the power. But sometimes, this comes a bit earlier:
712** The Rotu Four in ''Marquesas'' made their alliance and intended boot order so blatantly obvious during a challenge that the other players rallied and sent them all home one after the other.
713** In ''Pearl Islands'', Jonny Fairplay got soundly beaten in the final immunity challenge by the one he'd been using as his biggest punching bag all season, Lillian Morris, who promptly voted him out.
714** Ami Cusack's Yasur Alliance in ''Vanuatu'' decided to target [[TagalongKid Eliza Orlins]] instead of obvious target [[LastOfHisKind Chris Daugherty]]. Eliza immediately defected to Chris and two other women get rid of Ami and shatter her alliance.
715** Julie hiding Philip's shorts in ''Redemption Island'' [[JerkAss just for a laugh]]. Philip assumes it's Steve, but Julie eventually admits it was her, confident he wouldn't find them. Inevitably, she's voted out at Tribal. Oh, and [[EpicFail he finds his shorts the very next day]].
716** The Four Horsemen in ''Fiji'' thought they had the game in the bag and wanted to punish Cassandra Franklin for sending Mookie to exile island. Then flighty near-outsider Dreamz Herd and a blindside by the other players caused the swift downfall of that alliance. Edgardo Rivera, Mookie Lee, and Alex Angarita were voted out by both Cassandra and Dreamz, also one after the other.
717** In ''Heroes Vs Villains'', J.T. Thomas's boneheaded plan to give Russell Hantz an immunity idol backfired and got him voted out only one episode later. And earlier, Tyson Apostol screwing up his alliance's plan got him voted out ''immediately''.
718* LazyBum: There's always one or two people a season who refuse to help out around camp:
719** Aras Baskaukas almost lost ''Panama'' because some of the jury thought he was one.
720** Gervase Paterson from ''Borneo'' is the URExample, and escaped elimination by being TheCharmer.
721** Subverted when after Nick Brown was edited as being lazy during one episode of ''Australian Outback'', almost the whole cast came to his defense that he was not, in fact, lazy.
722* LivingLieDetector: The biggest asset of Sandra Diaz-Twine; who's scoffed through lies by designated villains Jonny Fairplay, Burton Roberts, and Russell Hantz that weren't sussed out by the other contestants until after the season aired. Her capacity to play along with these lies before using them against her opponents often leads to a game of XanatosSpeedChess. She won ''twice'', and one of those was in the particularly twisted ''Heroes vs. Villains'' season, packed with series' veterans.
723* TheLoad: Many players, with most being early boots. Chet Welch in ''Micronesia'' stands out as somebody who stuck around despite being an obviously weak player. During an obstacle course challenge where he was tied to Joel Anderson, Joel got so frustrated he just dragged Chet around, not caring that he was seriously injuring him. The tribe lost, but Joel was sent home that day. Why? Chet was a reliable vote for anyone who could keep him the game, while Joel (among others Chet outlasted) was a strategist and challenge threat that would be hard to deal with at the merge.
724** Dan Lembo in ''Nicaragua''; Natalie Tenerelli, Ashley Underwood, and Andrea Boehlke in ''Redemption Island''. All challenge liabilities and mediocre at dealing the wilderness, all people who made it ''far'' in the game. Ashley is a bit of a subversion though, as she proceeds to get dangerous in challenges late in the season.
725* LongSpeechTeaTime: A couple of people's rambling has been met with eye-rolling. First Phillip Sheppard in ''Redemption Island'' (the editors even made a fake TimePassesMontage during one of his speeches) and then Semhar Tadesse with her poetry in ''South Pacific''.
726* LoopholeAbuse: There are some things that players have gotten away with:
727** Looking at other peoples' boards during certain puzzle challenges.
728** Bribing other contestants.
729** During ''Cook Islands'', a couple of people accidentally ''wandered into the other tribe's camp''.
730** Luxury items. Colby used his Texas flag as a tarp in ''Australia''. Peter from ''Marquesas'' had brought cologne, intending to use it as an accelerant for fire-making. Evidently, someone had once smuggled in a granola bar to the game, and another time, someone broke binoculars and used them to start a fire. There have been {{Obvious Rule Patch}}es put in afterward.
731** Using a pair of eyeglasses to start a fire.
732** Giving ''the other tribe'' your immunity idol so you can vote one of your own out! (In ''One World'')
733** Stealing the other tribe's supplies during a "Get the supplies as fast as you can"-part. (Also ''One World'')
734** Taking the other tribe's fire using a stick. (''One World'' again)
735** You can't agree to split the million-dollar prize, but you ''can'' marry the winner. (''All-Stars'') [[RuleOfRomantic Not that CBS minded.]]
736* LoveAtFirstSight:
737** In ''Cook Islands'', Billy Garcia misinterpreted Candice Woodcock's "we love you" like this. She said it to cheer him up since he knew his tribe intended to vote him out.
738** Boston Rob to Amber Brkich. As the guy said: "[[EstablishingCharacterMoment Because she's beautiful, and any idiot can see that!]]".
739* LoveTriangle:
740** [[ChickMagnet Colby Donaldson]], Jerri Manthey, and [[TheDulcineaEffect Danielle [=DiLorenzo=]]] according to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yLYpeN3ZT4&feature=annel Russell Hantz]].
741* LuckySeven:
742** After winning ''Pearl Islands'', Sandra Diaz-Twine became the first two-time winner by winning ''Heroes vs Villains'' seven years later.
743** J.T. won ''Tocantins'' with a '''7'''-0 jury vote.
744* ManlyTears: Even the manliest Survivors can break down during the "Letters/Visits from Home" challenges. Notably, there's Shane Powers in ''Panama''. Terry Deitz won that season's "visit from home" reward challenge, and was [[SadisticChoice forced to decide]] which relatives would get some quality time with their respective Survivors. He immediately chose himself and his wife Trish for the overnight resort stay. Of course, Cirie Fields's husband "HB" also would go back to camp with her. Meanwhile, Shane was already misting up when his son Boston walked in for the cameras, but upon Terry inviting them to come along, Shane promptly broke down tears-and-parental-hugs style. He may have been a bit abrasive and uncaring to the other players, but [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure his fathering]] is what gets him to care.
745* MarsAndVenusGenderContrast: Invoked in seasons where tribes are gender-segregated: ''Amazon'', ''Vanuatu'', and ''One World''.
746* MeaningfulName:
747** The Manono tribe in ''One World''. Considering how dysfunctional it became and that it started as the men's tribe, "Man, o no" seems appropriate.
748** The [[ButtMonkey Matsing]] ("monkey") tribe in ''Philippines''. Also, [[PunnyName Dangrayne]]. Penner joked that he tried to get the tribe named "Fucking rain" but [[GoshDangItToHeck the producers wouldn't allow it]].
749** One of the tribes in ''San Juan Del Sur'' (Hunahpu) is named after one of the Hero Twins of the Myth/MayanMythology. The season's SoleSurvivor came from this tribe, and her twin sister was [[AngstySurvivingTwin the season's first boot]].
750* MemoryMatchMiniGame: Occasionally, one of the challenges will have contestants unveil covered items, with the goal of finding matching pairs. In ''Samoa'', tribes could opt to keep whichever items they matched should they win reward, at the cost of having it count towards their score.
751* MontyHallProblem: Referenced during the ''Caramoan'' auction, when Jeff offered Reynold the chance to swap his mystery item for one of two other mystery items. Cochran called the situation by this name and advised him to switch, though technically it wasn't since there was no guarantee there was only one "good" item, and Jeff hadn't eliminated a bad one. (For the record, Reynold stuck with his original item, dodging a rotten coconut but getting only a slice of pizza instead of a whole one.)
752** In ''Season 41'', the Do or Die challenge results in the elimination of any player who does not find the correct option. Interestingly enough, the player in question plays it completely wrong but still wins.
753* MoonLogicPuzzle: The first clue to any hidden immunity idol is typically very cryptic to the point of potentially meaning anything. The ''Redemption Island'' clues have been commented on as particularly useless, amounting to "it's around your camp somewhere".
754* MundaneMadeAwesome: The earlier seasons, especially with the "This Is The Adventure Of A Lifetime" and "Tribal Council Is Scary/ Tribal Council Is Sacred" mantras repeatedly being emphasized every other episode.
755* MyGreatestSecondChance: Any time a player returns for a second season unless they won the first time. Especially emphasized in ''Philippines'', as the returnees didn't get to play out their previous seasons due to [[NonGameplayElimination medical evacuations]], and [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin the eponymous]] ''Second Chances''.
756** Played straight with ''Australian Outback'' and ''Cook Islands'' sixth placers Amber Brkich and Parvati Shallow, three-time loser Rob Mariano, ''South Pacific'' eighth placer John Cochran, two-time loser Tyson Apostol, and ''San Juan Del Sur'' tenth placer Jeremy Collins by respectively winning ''All-Stars'', ''Micronesia'', ''Redemption Island'', ''Caramoan'', ''Blood vs. Water'', and ''Cambodia''.
757[[/folder]]
758
759[[folder:Season-Specific Tropes N-Z]]
760* NakedPeopleAreFunny: Rich Hatch's other major shtick, besides being the show's first ManipulativeBastard.
761* TheNapoleon: Sandra Diaz-Twine, Jonny Fairplay, and Russell Hantz may be small in stature, but they're people you don't wanna mess with. Clay Jordan from ''Thailand'' was a 5'5" ManipulativeBastard who almost beat the [[ShowyInvincibleHero Showy Invincible Player]] of that season.
762* NearVillainVictory: Happens whenever the season's villain makes the finale with a good shot at swaying the jury. The most extreme example of this is Jonny Fairplay, who gets to the ''final three'' of ''Pearl Islands''. His only real opponent Sandra Diaz-Twine is the first to fall out of the last immunity challenge, which means all he has to do is beat or sway his longtime pawn Lill Morris. [[LastMinuteReprieve Suddenly Lill turns on him for all the crap he's put her thru and reveals that she is good enough at squats to win an immunity challenge for the first time in the entire game]], leading to his third-place finish.
763* NewMeat: The two ''Fans vs. Favorites'' seasons as well as ''Blood vs. Water'' featured a tribe of new contestants competing against a tribe of returning/seasoned ones.
764* TheNicknamer: Coach Wade, who himself goes by a nickname. He calls Brendan Synnott "The Dragon", Stephen Fisbach "The Wizard" and the already-nicknamed J.T. "The Warrior". Coach even wrote "The Warrior" when he voted for J.T. to win ''Tocantins''. Also, he even calls ''himself'' "The Dragon Slayer"! There is also Phillip Sheppard, who after creating the Stealth 'R' Us alliance, gives each member a codename ranging from cool to just plain ridiculous.
765* NippleAndDimed:
766** Some fairly strenuous physical competition takes place among women dressed in bikini tops or skimpy shirts. On occasion breasts and nipples have been exposed. As this is American TV, such wardrobe malfunctions are visually bleeped out by blurring or pixelating the screen.
767** It is also noticeable that during a game involving women contestants bobbing for items in a tub full of gloopy brown mud, several bikini tops were dislodged exposing breasts and nipples. But since the women involved were by then slathered from head to waist in a coating of mud, the bared breasts were not visually bleeped out and left in the full "uncensored" camera view.
768* NoDamageRun: So far, thirteen people have done this. Ten of them have made it in the end, and eight [[note]]technically ten, as both Mike Holloway and Jeremy Collins received votes that were negated by hidden idols before their win[[/note]] of them have won the game.
769* NoFourthWall: Generally defied; despite ''Survivor'' being a program with real-life contestants stranded in harsh real-life conditions, many of the earlier seasons try to make it a point of editing out any references to past seasons of ''Survivor'', or even the fact that they are being filmed for TV.
770** The most obvious exception to this rule happens to be from the very first season, ''Borneo''. Not only are there frequent references to the fact that the show they are participating in will soon be seen by millions of TV audience members, but the players also don't even know most of the terminology for the show's set pieces. The Tribal Council is sometimes interchangeably called both the "Island Council" and the "Immunity Council", and BB calls the Immunity Challenge that his tribe is about to attend the "Indemnity" Challenge, although in context calling the challenge an "Indemnity Challenge" would actually make just as much sense. In a later episode, Kelly says that "We're not evil, we just play bad people on TV!"; and in the episode before that, Colleen makes fun of the upcoming trivia-based reward challenge by saying that they already are on a game show.
771** The trope is sometimes played straight in later seasons, as superfans are generally allowed to make references to prior seasons, to establish their character as such.
772* NoodleIncident:
773** Jake Billingsley's adventure stories during Episode 9 of ''Thailand'' apparently involve him fighting off men with alligators and doing something nefarious in the middle of an airport (according to Clay and Ted), but unlike Coach in seasons later, we never got to hear exactly what he said.
774* NothingCanStopUsNow: Russell Hantz in every season he's been in has gloated to the point of absurdity before ultimately losing.
775* ObfuscatingStupidity:
776** Natalie White in ''Samoa'' noticed that strong, aggressive women got booted, so she made herself a hanger-on to Russell. If you're not convinced about the "Obfuscating" part, watch her confessional in episode 4 after the arrangement was made. She won handily, and snagged not one but two goats by bringing the unreliable tribe leader Mick the finals.
777** Vecepia Towery did the same thing (albeit about strategy, not general stupidity) seven years earlier in ''Marquesas'' and also won.
778** Fabio from ''Nicaragua'' also did this, to the point where the audience figured out what he was doing long before the other contestants. It's almost like he realized that it normally works on this show. Then again, that seems to be his real personality for the most part anyway.
779** Phillip Sheppard claimed near the end of ''Redemption Island'' that he purposely became the villain, knowing that it would both take the heat off Boston Rob and convince the man that he was someone to be going up at the end. Not everyone is convinced that his weirdness was all an act, however.
780* ObituaryMontage: In "Heroes vs. Villains", there's a reunion that features a brief GoodTimesMontage for the late Jenn Lyon, with warm and respectful words from Jeff Probst (who met up with her after she left her season).
781* OddFriendship: A staple when a RagtagBunchOfMisfits share a tribe for an extended amount of time.
782** The earliest example was in ''Borneo'': Machiavellian gay nudist Richard Hatch and gruff homophobic Navy SEAL Rudy Boersch.
783** Another prominent one from ''China'': James Clement, the blunt, bulky, and aggressive gravedigger and Todd Herzog, the scrawny, flamboyantly gay manipulator.
784* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome:
785** Tom Westman's famous shark-hunt in ''Palau''.
786** Pagong all voting for Jeff Probst at their first Tribal Council in ''Borneo'', and Greg Buis's rebelliousness against the producers in general.
787* OutlivingOnesOffspring: During ''San Juan Del Sur'', the second ''Blood vs. Water'' season, all the children in the children-parent pair were eliminated before their parents. This is played within the original ''Blood vs. Water'' with the Tina and Katie (mother/daughter) pair. Tina was technically eliminated before Katie, but she kept on winning at Redemption Island, defeating Katie in the process and thus came BackFromTheDead before being eliminated again to be the last jury member. Played [[TearJerker tragically]] straight, however, with her son (and Katie's brother) dying in an accident at the time the season was still airing.
788* OvershadowedByAwesome: Becky Lee during the ''Cook Islands'' finale. She was overlooked because the jury only considered the [[GuileHero strategic and social mastery]] of Yul Kwon and the [[ActionHero physical prowess]] of Ozzy Lusth. It also didn't help that Becky and Sundra Oakley's tie-breaking challenge during Tribal Council (basically building fire that's huge enough to snap a piece of string) took [[EpicFail almost two hours to finish]], making her look even more incompetent. It took so long that the game's producers gave her and Sundra ''matches'' instead of the usual flint and knife, just so they could hurry up and finish. ''And even then'', Becky only won because Sundra ran out of matches.
789* {{Pirate}}: The theme of ''Pearl Islands'', as it takes place in Panama and gives the players opportunities for things like looting and kidnapping. It also incorporates the idea of {{Ghost Pirate}}s, as the idea behind that season's Outcast tribe is the departed coming back to haunt those who remain.
790* ThePlace: Many of the earlier seasons were given this form of subtitle. It has since dropped off due to the series starting to use the same location every year.
791* PlanetOfSteves: ''Samoa'' and ''Heroes vs. Villains'' were together a Planet of Russells. ''Samoa'' had Russell Swan, who was medevacked from the game, and the infamous Russell Hantz, who returned in ''H vs. V''. Ponderosa's chef in ''H vs. V'' was also named Russell (the jury dubbed him "Good Russell"). Finally, the series' composer, who performs at reunion shows, is Russell "Russ" Landau.
792* PoorPredictableRock: Three out of three times now, Russell Hantz's alliance strategy is "find some pretty little bimbo that I can manipulate". It didn't work the first two times, both of the girls were at least as savvy as he was, and it actively backfired when ''they'' manipulated ''him'' and one even won! The third time around, he managed to pick a properly empty-headed pretty girl and an ignorant girl who was almost as bad at the social game as he was. Unfortunately for him, the other members of his tribe knew what he was up to from the start and kicked him out early - the tribe even lampshaded in the first or second episode that he was probably collecting a harem as they spoke. And since the girls actually ''were'' just lackeys this time, they were no help in convincing the others to keep him around.
793* PrisonersDilemma: Season 41 features these as a regular mechanic, as each episode takes a handful of players from different tribes and tells them to each make a decision which will be affected by the other players' choices. For instance, the first two episodes had "Protect Your Vote" (nothing happens, good or bad) versus "Risk Your Vote" (get an extra Tribal Council vote for later use if someone else chose to Protect, but if all players Risk then they lose their votes in their next Council(s) instead).
794* ProphecyTwist:
795** A self-made one at that! At the beginning of ''Samoa'', Russell Hantz tells the audience: "I'm going to show America how easy it is to win Survivor." And indeed he did. By treating the rest of his tribe like crap, destroying their belongings, bullying and threatening everyone, and blithely ignoring the social skills of his would-be goat, Russell did indeed demonstrate how easy it was for '''Natalie White''' to win Survivor. He had to beat sixteen people - she only had to beat two.
796** And then Russell goes and does the same thing in the very next season, ''Heroes vs. Villains''! At the time of filming, ''Samoa'''s results had not been announced and Russell was under the impression that he had won. He played the same game he had the previous season with the same results: he took Sandra Diaz-Twine to the finals expecting that he would easily win the vote against her, only for her to win another million.
797* PublicSecretMessage: Season 41 contains an immunity idol with a twist, in that it's shared among all three tribes and can't be used until all three are found, and each holder must alert the others by saying a code phrase in front of the tribes during a challenge. The secret phrases are: "I truly believe that butterflies are just dead relatives saying hi", "I'm as confused as a goat on [=AstroTurf=]", and "I didn't realize this until now... broccoli is just a bunch of small trees."
798* PyroManiac:
799** Butch Lockley on the ''Amazon'' became one during the latter days of his season when the wilderness started getting to him, with hilarious if tragic results.
800** Happens again in ''Nicaragua'', when a tribe tries to shelter their fire from the elements... with materials that happen to be flammable.
801* RatingsStunt: ''Redemption Island'', setting up a season to give Rob Mariano or Russell Hantz the wins that many claimed they deserved, casting a vast vast majority of people who had never seen the show before or had only seen Boston Rob and Russell's seasons, cutting half of these people from the show, and tailoring the challenges to their respective strenghts. ''South Pacific'' was also the same with Coach and Ozzy but has been received better, mostly because they didn't [[SpotlightStealingSquad forget they actually cast eighteen people and not just four]] this time.
802* RedBaron: Some contestants are given these, namely, Richard Hatch (The King, The Emperor), Jerri Manthey (The Black Widow, The Wicked Witch), Ozzy Lusth (Dolphin Boy), Sandra Diaz-Twine (The Queen, The Empress), Rupert Boneham (The Pirate), Cirie Fields (The Puppet Master), Coach Wade (The Dragon Slayer- which he initialy gave himself), Earl Cole (The Godfather). Coach has since passed the "Dragon Slayer" title onto Sophie Clarke after she beat Ozzy Lusth at the final immunity challenge and went on to then win the million.
803* ReligiousBruiser: Tyson Apostol from ''Tocantins'' is a Mormon. Brett Clouser from ''Samoa'' is a prayer warrior. Matt Elrod spent almost all of ''Redemption Island'' ''on'' Redemption Island, staying there by going on a challenge streak and talking about God in most of his confessionals.
804* RevengeBeforeReason:
805** Arguably in ''Africa'' after the tribal swap when Frank Garrison and T-Bird voted out Silas Gaither.
806** Also from ''Africa'': Lex van den Berghe spends an early part of the merge alienating himself and risking elimination, just to vote out someone he feels wronged him.
807* RhetoricalQuestionBlunder: in ''Nicaragua'', Fabio is upset with Sash after he goes back on his word to take him along on the family reward challenge. When Sash returns, Fabio asks him how it was. When Sash tells him it was great, Fabio responds by telling him that he knew it was great; he was just calling him out with a rhetorical question.
808* RuleOfFunny: There was absolutely no strategy behind Sugar convincing Bob to give Randy a fake immunity idol. Either way, he was going home, but she knew it would be hilarious to have him humiliate himself on the way out. And it was.
809* RunningGag:
810** Eric Hafemann's confessionals always being in a tree.
811** Phillip Sheppard's job listed as "Former Federal Agent?" As of Season 41, it ''still'' appears this way in his profile on the CBS official website, and he last appeared in Season 26.
812** Boo Bernis's increasingly AmusingInjuries (until the end when it [[DudeNotFunny wasn't played for laughs]]).
813*** And everyone falling at the start of ''Fiji''.
814** Michael Skupin in ''Philippines'' finding new and original ways to hurt himself. The editors didn't even feed this, it happened!
815* SanitySlippage: The game has a pretty significant, though thankfully temporary, effect on the players. It's common for players to compulsively hoard food, experience night terrors and suffer from intense and persistent feelings of paranoia, claustrophobia and alienation for weeks after they get home.
816* SceneryPorn: Especially in the seasons from ''Gabon'' onward, which were shot in HD.
817* ScheherezadeGambit: Every now and then a person will be on the chopping block for survival merit or because they've angered a clear alliance, but invoke their charm and personality to keep in the game. The very first example is Gervase Paterson, who managed to prove himself by the end.
818* SdrawkcabName: The merged tribe of ''Gabon'' was named "Nobag", and in ''Caramoan'' it was "Enil Edam" after Malcolm Freberg's mother, Madeline.
819* SecondPlaceIsForLosers:
820** See ''Samoa'', where Russell Hantz was in tears when he didn't get first. And then he offered to buy the title from the winner. And when he lost first place ''again'' in ''Heroes Vs Villains'', he claimed the rules were flawed ''because'' he wasn't winning.
821** Since seasons are usually filmed two back to back before either airs, both Russell Hantz and Amanda Kimmell ended up in a situation where they played two seasons in a row and got to the finals both times without knowing if they won their first season. The result was both of them losing both seasons. This could be why Russell cried at the ''Samoa'' finale, he just found out he likely lost both seasons when he was expecting to get Two Million-Dollar checks.
822* SeinfeldianConversation: Most of the castaways' day-to-day conversations are left on the cutting room floor due to time constraints, but a few of these make it through.
823** ''Panama'' had a lot of these, mainly to establish the sheer craziness of the Casayas. Early on Shane Powers randomly yelled at his tribe to not take a specific rock to sit down on as it was his "thinking seat". In another episode, Bobby Mason and the rest of his Casaya tribe argue about whether the outhouse that they just won should be used as an actual outhouse, or a place to store wood. In a later episode, Shane and Courtney Marit have another one of their big fights, this time over whether or not Courtney lives in a "shitty" apartment. One episode later, Terry Deitz and Aras Baskaukas have an argument over whether or not one's wife is more important to a loved one than one's parents.
824** ''Africa'' had a moment where Frank Garrison's tribemates tried to explain to him what a "brunch" is.
825* SelfDeprecation: In ''Fiji'', they used the "What do you think of your fellow castaways?" challenge again. When Jeff asked who the smelliest person in the tribe was, most people wrote "Dreamz", and Dreamz even wrote ''his own name'' down.
826* SelfProclaimedLiar: Boston Rob was a ''master'' at this.
827* SequelEscalation: The locations for the first three seasons became progressively harder for the contestants to live in. During ''Borneo'', the contestants were merely very uncomfortable. During ''Australian Outback'', Elisabeth almost died of starvation, Barramundi's camp was completely flooded out, and early on there were wildfires near Ogakor's campsite. During ''Africa'', which had the most oppressive heat of any season by far, several contestants contracted various illnesses which took them months or even years to recover from, not to mention the extreme scarcity of water and the very likely chance that one of the players could have been ''eaten'' by one of the wild animals roaming around. Season 4, which was supposed to take place in Jordan (apparently it was supposed to be called ''Survivor: Arabia") would have continued this escalation, but the events of September 11th stopped this dead in its tracks.
828* SexIsEvilAndIAmHorny: Brandon Hantz in the first few episodes of ''South Pacific'', regarding his tribemate Mikayla. And since he said ''she's'' at fault for tempting him, he didn't exactly redeem the Hantz family name.
829* ShipperOnDeck: Some players love pairing fellow contestants for some reason, such as Cirie for Amanda and Ozzy (and jokingly Erik and Ozzy).
830* SmugSnake:
831** "Boston" Rob Mariano and Russell Hantz (in multiple seasons each) are the quintessential examples.
832** Ami Cusack from ''Vanuatu'' became a perfect storm of SmugSnake when Eliza's name was read at tribal council and Ami nodded, faux-sadly, at her. Which made it all the more ridiculously awesome when it turned out Eliza Orlins and the rest actually voted out Leann Slaby, Ami's closest ally.
833** Kenny Hoang probably would've had a very good chance of winning ''Gabon'' had he not turned into this late in the season.
834** Jamie Newton in ''Guatemala'' rapidly earned this label. He [[TheLoad did a lot to help his tribe lose]] two consecutive challenges, but [[TrashTalk he celebrated a little too much]] when they won the next one. When the contestants were [[SadisticChoice forced to choose either enjoying the merge feast or playing for Immunity]], Jamie sat and ate, while calmly mocking a very hungry Bobby Jon, competing just a few yards away. He didn't stay like that forever, though; see TheAtoner, above.
835* SpicyLatina:
836** Sandra Diaz-Twine may not have the sex appeal associated with this trope ([=YMMV=]), but she certainly has the lippy attitude.
837** Brenda Lowe of ''Nicaragua'' also seems to apply to this trope.
838* SpinOffspring:
839** Brandon Hantz from ''South Pacific'' and ''Caramoan'' is the nephew of ''Samoa'', ''Heroes vs. Villains'' and ''Redemption Island'' castaway Russell Hantz.
840** ''Blood vs. Water'' gives us three; Ciera Eastin (daughter of ''Samoa'' castaway Laura Morett), Katie Collins (daughter of ''Australia'' winner and ''All-Stars'' castaway Tina Wesson) and Marissa Peterson (niece of ''Borneo'' castaway Gervase Peterson). Bonus points for actually competing in the game against their respective loved ones.
841* StealthParody: Easily one of the cleverest of these (if not the only one) was when Greg Buis asked both of the finalists on the first season to pick a number between one and ten during the standard Q&A jury session featured on each finale. Presumably whoever answered closest to the correct answer would get Greg's vote, and they did (Richard picked 7 and Kelly chose 3 when the secret number was 9). As some time went by and people began to call Richard an overrated winner since he basically won through luck and all the machinations and intrigue of his season were thus pointless, an old interview with Greg then surfaced claiming that he had planned to vote for Richard the entire time and only did the "pick a number" gimmick to mock the overly serious nature of Tribal Council.
842* StealthPun:
843** Ace Gordon was evicted from ''Gabon'' because Sugar Kiper betrayed him at tribal council. Pixellation makes the vote card appear a bit blurry, but Sugar's vote read "Ace-Hole".
844** A ''Nicaragua'' challenge had the players make their way through barriers: [[Literature/TheThreeLittlePigs first a haystack, then wooden rods and then a brick wall.]]
845* TheStrategist: Richard Hatch from ''Borneo'', Tina Wesson from ''Australian Outback'', Brian Heidik from ''Thailand'', Yul Kwon from ''Cook Islands'' and Todd Herzog from ''China'' won the game for being this.
846* StrawFeminist: While some seasons encourage mild sexism by dividing tribes by gender, ''Vanuatu'''s Ami Cusack took the idea and ran with it. Obsessed with creating an all-female alliance, she went so far as to hoard a food reward from the remaining men, and then mock them with the bones...after they had just returned from working! Appropriately, she got the ''Survivor'' equivalent of a KarmicDeath when she was voted out by the four people she despised most [[DarkHorseVictory and the lone remaining guy survived the sisterhood and won]].
847* SuicideByCop: Some people actually asked to be voted out, be it they're sick, injured, or just can't take it anymore. It's normally a bit better rather than risk a NonGameplayElimination; since a NonGameplayElimination means your tribe can wind up losing ''two'' people if the Tribal Council isn't cancelled.
848** The earliest known example is B.B. Andersen from ''Borneo''.
849** Lisi Linares in ''Fiji'' said she was done with the game and asked to be voted out.
850** Tina Sheer in ''Panama'' asked to be voted out first because she was still mourning her son, who had recently died in a car crash.
851** Jim Lynch from ''Guatemala'' asked to be voted out because he tore his bicep...and was shown as ''still'' having it in a splint months later!
852** Jonny Fairplay also asked everyone to vote him out first in ''Micronesia'', saying he wanted to be with his pregnant fiancee and daughter, which everyone thought was a ploy. His tribemates honored it, but there's still rumors he was suffering the after effects of a fight with Danny Bonaduce or had grown tired of the show.
853** Jeff Wilson from ''Palau'' asked to be voted out after spraining his foot on a coconut and realizing he wouldn't get very far with the injury, as well as to save his love interest, Kim (who ended up going home next).
854** There are also unconfirmed rumours of people asking to be voted out. Allegedly; Chet Welch asked to be voted out because he probably would have been evacuated had they not, because had stepped on a piece of coral. Stephenie [=LaGrossa=] also was apparently still hurting when she dislocated her shoulder and asked to be voted out also. Ashlee Ashby also wasn't shown asking to be voted out, but the fact was confirmed outside the game.
855** GC in ''Gabon'' hated being in the wilderness, despite being generally liked and decent at challenges.
856* SurroundedByIdiots:
857** Sandra Diaz-Twice, in ''Heroes vs. Villains'', after the merge. Before the merge, Tyson Apostol's boneheaded moves destroyed her original alliance, and post-merge the Heroes completely botched every attempt to carry out her plans. In spite of it all, she [[GuileHero managed to]] ''[[GuileHero win twice]]''.
858** James Clement almost invoked this trope word for word on ''Fans vs. Favorites'', saying something to the effect of "I feel like I am back in China with a bunch of idiots!". [[TooDumbToLive Of course, his own actions weren't exactly brilliant]].
859** Joel Klug in ''Borneo'' was the only player on Pagong that realized that forming an alliance would be an excellent strategy, as there were rumors of an alliance on the other tribe and they would surely be picked off one-by-one after the impending merge. His idea was shot down in the name of sportsmanship and this was used as part of the reason for sending him home. His tribe went on to fall apart exactly as he predicted (with the MVP of being kicked out immediately) and "Pagonging" entering the ''Survivor'' lexicon as the name for a systematic post-merge annihilation.
860* TakingYouWithMe:
861** In ''Micronesia'', Eliza Orlins immediately realizes that Jason Siska's "hidden immunity idol" [[FailedASpotCheck is just a poorly carved stick]]. It had been planted on Exile Island by Ozzy, who didn't even take making it seriously. She plays it at Tribal Council anyway, hoping that something "miraculous" would happen. Once Jeff confirms that Jason's been suckered, Eliza promptly blabs that Ozzy must have the real Idol.
862** In an online interview, Ted Rogers Jr. from ''Thailand'' said that Helen Glover approached him in Ponderosa, telling him that finalist Clay Jordan was a racist. This caused Ted to negate any intentions whatsoever of voting for Clay. However, no one else could verify that Clay ever did anything racist or made any racial slurs during the show. Since Helen was vocal about her dislike of Clay during and after the show, earlier on even accusing him of being sexist (again, with no evidence), this might have been her way of taking Clay down with her.
863* TeamTitle: Overlaps with most of VersusTitle below except ''Blood vs. Water'', though the original ''B vs. W'' was [[WhatCouldHaveBeen originally]] planned to be this.
864* ThanatosGambit:
865** Janu Tornell's reason for quitting during ''Palau'', to screw up the original Koror's plans and allow [[EnemyMine Stephenie [=LaGrossa=]]] another chance to survive.
866** Shii-Ann Huang's elimination in ''All-Stars'', highlighting who she thought was the biggest threat on her way out.
867** Randy Bailey in ''Heroes vs. Villains'' used his vote to say "get rid of this guy".
868** Ozzy Lusth voluntarily got voted out in ''South Pacific'' so he could go to Redemption Island, beat Christine Shields-Markoski and eliminate her for good, and come back.
869** Jonathan Penner in ''Philippines'' casts his vote to let the tribe know who is going to win, he even yells her name back at them when he writes it down to make sure they know. She still wins.
870* TheTease:
871** Parvati Shallow ''deliberately'' plays the role in just about any season she's in.
872** Kimmi Kappenberg on ''Australian Outback'' told her teammates that if she was still on the show by her birthday, she would spend the day "in her birthday suit" to celebrate. That was a ways away, and she ended up being voted out before her birthday.
873* ThisIsACompetition: "This is a game" got used so many times during ''All-Stars'' it practically became the season's ArcWords.
874* TooDumbToLive: Various contestants have pulled ''unbelievably'' boneheaded strategies.
875** Drew Christy from ''San Juan del Sur'': After spending the entire first week of the game sleeping and generally drawing ire from his tribemates, he then tried to sell the tribe flint to Jeff Probst (needless to say, this failed), exiled himself from his tribemates for a whole day, spontaneously decided to throw a challenge that was obviously noticeable,openly announced his plans to target the (non-existent) all-female alliance, and acted like a complete jackass the whole time. The result? He angers everyone so much that all of the girls (and Jeremy) band together to vote him out while the rest of the guys scatter their votes towards Keith and Julie. That's right, Drew's horrible gameplay against a non-existent girls alliance ''created'' one to get rid of him.
876* TookALevelInBadass: Some players who started weak become stronger as the game progress, such as Fabio in ''Nicaragua'', who started as a [[DumbBlonde himbo]] and went on an immunity run to win it all. There's also returning players who do far better a second time around, like Parvati Shallow.
877** Lill Morris from ''Pearl Islands'' is considered one of the most memorable examples of this trope. Overall quite mopey and sensitive, she was basically Jonny Fairplay's pawn and punching bag for the season. Then she ends up dominating the final immunity challenge, taunting Fairplay as she pretty much handed him his ass on a silver platter. All while refusing his repeated and desperate attempts at trying to convince her to cut a deal, quickly sending home without a second thought after she wins.
878** Cochran. In ''South Pacific'' he was basically a nerdy whipping boy for both tribes. In ''Caramoan'' he won four individual challenges, including the final immunity challenge, and basically ran the game for the last few episodes.
879* TookALevelInJerkass: Many survivors who return to the competition do so on a sour note for various reasons, such as Jenna Lewis, Boston Rob, and Lex van den Berghe in ''All Stars'', Stephenie [=LaGrossa=] in ''Guatemala'', and James Clement in ''Heroes vs Villains''. Hell, even Jeff Probst has become more aggressive in his questioning and role in the show in later seasons.
880* TookALevelInKindness: But just as many survivors will return even kinder than before, such as Jerri who was hated in ''Australian Outback'' and ''All-Stars'' for her {{Jerkass}} attitude, but became the beloved "sweetheart" in ''Heroes Vs. Villains''. Or Boston Rob who, as mentioned above, was awful in ''All-Stars'', but in ''Heroes Vs. Villains'' and ''Redemption Island'' became the TeamDad JerkWithAHeartOfGold.
881* TransatlanticEquivalent: In 2001, ITV premiered a British version of the show which never quite caught fire, but was revived in 2023 by the BBC.
882* TruthInTelevision: The infamous "peeing scene" in ''Marquesas'' actually is a common remedy. Note that urine doesn't immediately heal a sea urchin wound, it ''cleans'' it so it allows it to heal.
883* UnderdogsNeverLose: The main story of ''Gabon'' is how four of the unlikeliest people could make the final four despite being in the minority and opposing possibly the tightest core alliance in the season: Bob Crowley, an elderly physics teacher who survived Kota's TotalPartyKill by continually winning immunities; Susie Smith, a middle-aged mother and hairstylist who was always the lowest rung on the ladder and eventually survived long enough to get involved in a decent alliance; Sugar Kiper, a waitron/pin-up model who many tried to break the spirit of by sending her to Exile Island a record number of times and eventually ended up controlling the game; and Matty Whitmore, the personal trainer and supposed physical threat who had to carry one of the worst tribes in the show's history, yet came out of the whole mess no worse for the wear.
884* TheUnintelligible: Big Tom Buchanan of ''Africa'' and ''All-Stars''. To quote Jeff Probst:
885--> "When you try real hard, you can almost understand what he's saying."
886** Rupert Boneham could go this way too, as well as Chicken Morris in ''China'', although Chicken only lasted one episode and Rupert was only that way sometimes.
887* TheUnfairSex: The standards for single-gender alliances are not-so-subtly biased. Rocksroy was vilified as a misogynist by the editors and other players for trying to make an all-male alliance when they had a 6-4 lead over the women. All female alliances (e.g., Black Widow Brigade and Witch's Coven) have been treated more sympathetically by the show. Jamal was called a misogynist for suspecting an all-women's alliance when his tribemates talked about making one in that same episode.
888* UnkemptBeauty: Some Survivors can look good in the wild, where they live without shaving or having any cosmetics to cover up, in dirty clothes and rough living conditions. Sometimes they look even better than when they’re dressed up for the reunion. The term "island hot" is frequently used by fans to describe players they consider to be becoming more attractive the longer they stay on the island. Depends on the viewer's opinion, though.
889* UnknownRival:
890** In ''Micronesia'', Jason Siska compared himself to [[TheAce Ozzy Lusth]] and wished to overtake him. He just never brought this up to Ozzy, who wound up leaving the game before hearing about it.
891** Russell Hantz to Boston Rob, at least in the early stages of ''Heroes Vs Villains'' (but certainly no longer unknown in ''Redemption Island''). Early in ''Nicaragua'' ep. 1, two of the La Flor "alpha males" [[DefiedTrope agree to avoid this]], after noting that Russell and Boston Rob could have done even better if they had been partners in ''Heroes vs. Villains''.
892** Jeff Kent in ''Philippines'' was focused on making sure that none of the returning players won over the newbies, with much of his attention directed towards Jonathan Penner, whom he was on the same starting tribe as throughout the tribal portion of the game. Several of his confessions throughout the season revolve around targeting Penner and planning for his demise. Penner, however, had no idea of Kent's obsession with him, as the two formed an alliance early on and Penner's discovery of the immunity idol made blindsiding him very difficult, forcing Kent to play nice and use Penner as a shield in the meantime. It reaches its head in the second tribal after the merge, where Penner inadvertently gets Kent eliminated[[note]]At the final ten, Penner and Kent were part of a tentative alliance of five that were set to vote together against Pete, while the opposing five would vote for Kent, forcing a tie and leading to either someone flipping their vote or a rock draw. Penner tossed a stray vote to Abi-Maria instead, splitting the alliance's support and allowing enough votes to land on Kent to get him out[[/note]], leaving Penner mostly unaware of their feud until the game had wrapped up.
893* UnusualEuphemism: Frank Garrison of ''Africa'' claimed that Linda Spencer was "So solid, she's buried at the bottom the Hoover Dam." Huh?
894* VariablePlayerGoals: Specific to ''Palau'', an individual immunity challenge where each contestant had a different sequence of pictures to figure out.
895* VillainProtagonist:
896** ''Thailand'' winner Brian Heidik is perhaps the TropeCodifier of the show. He never showed any deep care for his alliance members and tribemates and spent the entire game doing things just to advance himself. He just never showed ''why'' he did what he did to those who trusted him.
897** Russell Hantz was arguably positioned as one of these in ''Samoa'', although he came off as more as an AntiHero. He was firmly in this position in ''Heroes vs. Villains'', however.
898* VitriolicBestBuds: Ethan Zohn and Big Tom Buchanan on ''Africa''.
899-->'''Ethan''': "Me and Tom, we have kind of like a brotherly relationship right now. He makes fun of me because I'm Jewish, and I make fun of him because he's fat and he's got a boil on his neck..."
900** Rob Cesternino and Matthew Von Ertfelda in ''Amazon'' sort of had this. Rob and most of the others made fun of Matthew for sharpening the machete all the time and for being socially awkward. Even though most of the cast would have decided to boot Matthew for being an outcast, Rob decides to make fun of Matt even more by turning him and Butch into unwitting pawns of his during the merge (see Funny.{{Survivor}}). However, Rob and Matthew later develop a working relationship and Matt proves to be a more reliable ally despite Rob finding him annoying. By the Rob himself is out, he realizes he accidentally gave Matthew too much power and that Rob had to rely on him in return.
901* WackyMarriageProposal: Six seasons before Rob famously proposed to Amber at the live ''All-Stars'' reunion, ''Australian Outback'''s Keith proposed to his girlfriend via instant message during an internet reward challenge. She said yes. Matty also proposed to his girlfriend during the loved ones visit in ''Gabon''.
902* WeAreStrugglingTogether: The Samburu tribe from ''Africa'', being split right down the middle, spent more time in-fighting than working against Boran. In fact, in several instances where the Samburus could have tried to vote out a Boran member, they just [[RevengeBeforeReason voted each other out instead]].
903* WhamEpisode:
904** A sort of consensus among the older fans of the show is that episode 7 of ''Borneo'' is the single most important episode of the show's history. In a game that had up until then been an outdoor adventure and voting had been based on sociability/ survival merit, the Tagis banded together and [[ShockingElimination forced out Gretchen]], the ''most'' qualified survivalist and somebody who was hardly disliked. This act of putting politics before ability almost completely changed the course of how the game and all the future seasons would play out.
905** Another contender for the title of WhamEpisode would be "Trial By Fire" of ''Australia'', where Michael Skupin became the first castaway to be medically evacuated after he suffered serious burns to his hands. The episode left ''everyone'' (even executive producer Mark Burnett) in shock and it hammered home the point that Survivor wasn't a glorified vacation. Castaways would be removed from the game because their life was in danger, and if it could happen to Michael (who was arguably the most qualified survivalist on the show), then it could happen to ''anyone''.
906** Episode 9 of ''Marquesas'', "Jury's Out." The dominant Rotu Four alliance has just taken out Boston Rob, Sean Rector is all set to go next, followed by Vecepia and Kathy, and the Rotu Four are set to dominate the game, just as every majority alliance has done for the past three seasons. Until this season, when the "coconut chop" challenge revealed the pecking order of the tribe, matching that previous sentence's exact order. Sean immediately catches the Rotu Four's scheming and turns the players against them. Neleh and Paschal finally abandon on the Rotu Four and align with the other outsiders, and start by taking down alliance leader [[SmugSnake John Carroll]].
907* WhamLine: [[WhamLine/{{Survivor}} Has its own page.]]
908* WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway: [[WesternAnimation/CaptainPlanetAndThePlaneteers Ma-Ti and his Power of Heart]] is referenced repeatedly by Jaison in ''Samoa''. However, he ultimately concludes that HeartIsAnAwesomePower, and wished he had it to help cope in the wilderness.
909* WholePlotReference: Given that ''Survivor'' is a [[LighterAndSofter minimally violent]] version of war, frequently [[ShoutOut highlighting]] ''Literature/{{The Art of War|SunTzu}}'' in the ''China'' season was a stroke of genius. Each tribe receives [[BigBookOfWar a list of its main points]] and is [[AllThereInTheManual encouraged by Jeff to review all that wisdom]]. Hidden Immunity Idol notes and some of the tree-mail occasionally cite the book. Certain major events are apparently inspired by passages from the text, such as the tribal swap in episode 5:
910-->"The enemies who have come to spy on us must be sought out, tempted with bribes, led away and comfortably housed. They will become converted and available for our service."
911* WinsByDoingAbsolutelyNothing: Chris Underwood in ''Edge of Extinction'': the "Edge of Extinction" twist clustered more or less the ''entire'' cast into the jury. Chris, voted out third, entered the game at [[EleventhHourSuperpower the final moment]] after spending about 30 days sitting on Exile Island not actually ''playing'' the game.... except for schmoozing with the jurors. Though to be fair, he did do everything possible to make an impression once he finally did come back, eventually giving himself a more impressive resume than the other players.
912* WolverinePublicity:
913** Until Russell Hantz came along, Rupert Boneham was easily the ''Survivor'' poster boy for this trope. He was so overexposed during his original two seasons, in fact, that at one point ''he was handing out the checks to the winners''.
914** Russell Hantz vs Boston Rob in ''Redemption Island''. Subverted in Russell's case when most of his tribe decided to go OffTheRails and eject him ASAP.
915** Within the larger "CBS Reality Show" family, Boston Rob and Amber Brkich got to go on ''Series/TheAmazingRace'' while they were at the height of their popularity. They also got to go on ''their'' All-Stars season.
916** ''South Pacific'' continued to sponge off of Russell's infamy. He didn't come back ''again'', but the cast included his nephew, Brandon Hantz. And Russell got namedropped some more when Brandon came back again in ''Caramoan''. ''Series/BigBrother'' also had Russell's brother and Brandon's father, Willie Hantz.
917* WomanScorned: As [[AmazonBrigade the women]] of ''Micronesia'' are plotting to blindside Jason Siska (who they concede might [[CursedWithAwesome find an actual immunity idol in exile]], for once), Alexis Jones immediately quips "Hell hath no fury".
918* WorthyOpponent: Now and again, one of the jury members will say that one or more of the finalists is this. The reverse is equally true, but it [[UnreliableNarrator can be the finalists buttering up the jury]]. An example would be David Murphy from ''Redemption Island'', who was impressed by Boston Rob's game and lamented being placed on the opposite tribe of him.
919* WouldHitAGirl: Well, they wouldn't ''hit'' one, that's an immediate ejection, but many male contestants have no problem with tackling them to the ground or forcefully hauling them fifty feet to the goal line. Some more notable examples:
920** Colby Donaldson tossed Jerri Manthey into the water in one of the early challenges in ''Heroes Vs Villains''. But note the relationship between ''[[SitcomArchNemesis Colby and Jerri]]''.
921** Bobby "Bobdawg" Mason in ''Panama'' against the much smaller Ruth Marie Milliman. Instead of taking a bag from her, he took ''her'' with the bag to his tribe's mat get the points in a challenge.
922** Played straight when Erik Reichenbach hits Eliza Orlins over the head with a heavy sack in the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WJkp2p-41D4 Beach Bash Challenge]]. He then got Amanda Kimmel in the same challenge with a judo-esque throw.
923[[/folder]]
924
925----
926
927-->''[[EliminationCatchphrase The tribe has spoken.]] [[GameOver It's time for you to go.]]''
928

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