About Heather

I'm a Writer, Artist, and proud snarky person.

Now a days I'm living it up here in Skiatook, Oklahoma. No matter where I go my love for comedy, Reality TV, and many other things will forever litter this little blog of mine.

E-mail me at HeatherNS17@Ymail.com and follow me on Twitter at Heather_Short17.

Thanks for your support!

~Heather Smith.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Winning Without Numbers- The Rise of the Underdogs



          One of the biggest unwritten rules of Survivor is to have the numbers in an alliance, if a player is on the wrong side of numbers, they are usually on the outside of the tribe, and picked off without remorse or regret.  Usually, winners of the season were a part of the bigger alliance.  They had the numbers that got them the win.  All they had to do was micromanage their alliance in order to be seen as the leader, in order to take credit for their alliance’s success and gain jury votes from the departed outsiders or other members that had to go due to liability issues.  It’s an all too common strategy seen but what most viewers don't realize is that usually there is other people outside of the main alliance.  Maybe it was an immunity win, or a social move, or both, but suddenly that person is a huge threat to win it all.  Suddenly, an a contestant with no real alliance left is in the finals and the jury looks to them more favorably because that was their old alliance that was picked off, all on the jury.  People generality praise the gameplay of the dominant leaders of the alliance that ruled the game, winners like Richard, Brian, Tom, Parvati, and Kim, and not look at the winners that spent a long time on the bottom rung, like Vecepia, Sandra, Danni, Fabio, Denise, and Natalie plus a few others. 

          The first winner that won while entering a merge down in numbers is Vecepia who won the fourth season Survivor: Marquesas.  While she was on the Rotu tribe which had the numbers, she was on that tribe as a result of a tribe swap, and the only people that was on the old Maraamu tribe with her were known trouble makers Rob and Sean, two people that would get voted out before her in almost every situation.  At the merge, the old Rotu tribe had seven people still in the game out of the eight people originally on the tribe, Gabe being the only one not to make the merge.  However, infighting with Kathy and the Rotu four caused a major power shift and John, the leader of said alliance was out the door as soon as they managed to pick off Rob.  With only Sean and a good bond with Kathy, Neleh, and Paschal, the shattered remains of the Rotu Four left right with John.  Vecepia then wins Immunity at the final four right before Kathy stuck with the old Rotu lines and helping to vote off Sean, and the tiebreaker sent Paschal home.  Vecepia then ensured her place in the finals by getting Neleh to make a deal with her that ended up backstabbing her original ally Kathy, and winning the game due to Neleh’s horrid jury performance.  Even though she came from a tribe that only won one Immunity challenge, she has yet to really get the respect that she deserves.
 
Why doesn't she get the respect?  A lot of people today call her an “invisible” winner, even though she wasn’t that invisible at all, especially in comparison to later seasons, and later winners.  I have a theory that they editors just didn't know what to do with her.  They made her a character, but not to the extent of Kathy or Sean, or even Neleh and John.  She was someone that faded to the background, but I've noticed over all of the seasons for the most part, the winners do have a period of hiding.  It’s a myth that every winner is up and front every episode.  Now we do have the exceptions, Boston Rob is the best example, but take Brian Heidik for example, he wasn't big in the beginning of the season.  Vecepia was there, dropping the all important “winner’s quotes” that people like me look for on rewatches.  It would be that quote that should get used whenever people talk about that winner.  It puts them in a relatable light.  Vecepia gets the backlash that she did even though if you look at the numbers, she should have been voted out 7th or 8th.  Back then, the basic rules of Survivor is to "Pagong", to pick off.  Yet she defied the law, opening the door for another possibility.

Another winner three seasons later took up that strategy that Vecepia had.  Vecepia started the “anyone but me” outlook to Survivor, yet this winner is the most associated with that term.  It’s Sandra.  Many people call her the queen of Survivor, as she is the shows first and only two-time winner.  She competed on both the seventh season of Pearl Islands and the twentieth season of Heroes Vs Villains and has won both seasons.  However before she became known as the queen of Survivor, a lot of viewers, including Jeff Probst himself, didn't really give her the praise that she probably deserved back then even though she did come out alive as the only person not to get voted out from her season and the fact that she never even received a vote against her in Pearl Islands.  After Rupert’s blindside she had to stay on her toes and watch her back as the one of the biggest villains in Survivor history, Jonny Fairplay, was looming over her.  She became this free vote and pretty much sunk Fairplay’s game by getting Darrah and Lill to vote for Burton.  While Survivor tends to celebrate the challenge dominators, Sandra has never won a single individual challenge.  Statistically the greatest Survivor player ever and she has a track record of zero individual challenge wins.  However, Sandra laid low on both seasons.  She took Vecepia's game, stirring up drama and making moves that benefited her and her only, and made it her own.  She was louder that Vecepia but the frameworks of their wins are the same.

Even though Sandra got the respect now, she still has those people that call the luck card.  They discredit her win due to the luck she had with pre-merge challenge wins, alliance infighting, and other people winning challenges that took her to the end, however Survivor is mostly luck.  The game of Survivor is never truly in ones hands the entire time.  Silas in Africa thought he had it, and then the first tribe swap happened.  All it takes is a twist, a challenge loss or win, a medical evacuation, anything that happens in the game can either help or hinder anyone.  Every winner was lucky.  They had the right tribe dynamics, the right twists that helped them out, anything that happens in the game can change it.  Sandra is lucky to win twice.  However she managed to make her own luck when blindsiding Burton and putting herself in that position that Lill took her over Fairplay.  She made the moves, it’s not all luck. 

To wrap up this part, I want to remind people reading this that this is not an “under the radar” game play essay, this is a down in numbers game play essay, meaning that I'm not going to cover the lower visibility winners unless they had a huge disadvantage at the merge.  The next part I'm going to cover two winners that had very similar situations, but are both edited differently and took different paths to the million dollars.  They both cracked alliances that let them walk into FTC and win it all. 

Yes.  The Next Chapter is about Chris and Danni.




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