"Survivor" Stars Sierra & Joe Reflect on Unlikely Love Story
Warning: This article contains major spoilers for the season 47 finale of Survivor.
A new sole survivor has claimed the $1 million prize.
During the final episode of Survivor’s season 47 two-part finale on Dec. 18, the long-running reality competition series crowned its newest champion.
Entering into the season’s final episode, Rachel LaMont, Sam Phalen, Sue Smey and Teeny Chirichillo were the Beka tribe’s last remaining members vying for the title, but it was ultimately Rachel, a graphic designer from Michigan, who pulled out the win.
“I feel like I'm having an out of body experience,” she said after her win. “It’s just so surreal,” before later adding, “I’m a little bit in shock, if I’m completely honest.”
During the finale, Rachel pulled ahead early by winning the final immunity challenge, giving her the most power she had all season at the most crucial point in the game. Because of that advantage, she sent Teeny and Sam into the show's final physical challenge: fire making.
In the end, though, the fire-making challenge didn’t sway the jury, as Rachel received all but one vote.
While the finale’s latter episode was definitely full of excitement, the two-parter’s first half on Dec. 11, which saw frontrunners Andy Rueda and Genevieve Mushaluk eliminated in shocking blindsides, laid the stones on the pathway to victory.
Andy—who canonically had one of the worst Survivor starts in the show’s 24-year run by having a breakdown after the competition’s first immunity challenge and throwing his tribemates under the bus—had slowly and slyly worked the game back into his favor over the course of his 23-day journey.
However, he ultimately came up short after he bragged about his gameplay résumé to Rachel (who he presumed was going home) in an attempt to win her jury vote, not realizing she had a hidden immunity idol.
“The only thing better than attending your own funeral,” she said as she pulled out her idol, sending Andy home, “is knowing you’ll wake up alive the next morning.”
CBS
But Andy’s exit wasn’t the only notable torch-snuffing from season 47, which saw celebrity podcaster and former White House speechwriter Jon Lovett amongst its cast. Though Jon had a knapsack full of his signature quick wit and self-deprecation during his two-episode run, he was the first to go home.
“I was really excited about the experience,” he told Entertainment Weekly in September. “I thought a lot about different pieces of it: What I would do here? What I would do there?”
CBS
“What I feel now is less like, ‘Oh, I blew the experience,’ or, ‘I let myself down in the experience,’” Jon continued, “but that I didn't really fully get the experience. And that disappointment is the part that's important to me.”
But when it comes to the public’s reaction to his gameplay, he added, “I've just been genuinely pleasantly surprised. I expected people to be a little bit harsher.”
Keep reading to look at behind-the-scenes Survivor secrets from over the years.
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