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Jeff Probst on Survivor’s race pairings
August 23rd, 2006 under TV Reality. [ Comments: none ]

Ths Slug got an amazing interview with Jeff Probst on Survivor: Cook Islands or as I like to call it Survivor: The Racist Edition.

 

The Slug: How did ya’ll come up with the idea of grouping the tribes by race?

Jeff Probst: Every season, we sit down and ask one question, which is: What are we gonna do this time? We weren’t happy with the ideas we were coming up with. Somebody suggested, well, what are we criticized for? Is there something we can address that’s been a negative and turn it into a positive? And the first thing that came out of everybody’s mouth is we’re criticized for "Survivor" being, basically, a white show. The truth is 80 percent of the people that apply are white. And television, in general, is white. So all these criticisms were valid. We said, "Is it possible to bring more ethnic diversity to this show?" It started this journey we haven’t been through in a long time.

TS: What were the difficulties in casting?

JP: The first problem was we don’t have Asian-Americans, African-Americans and Latinos applying to the show. So our casting director Lynne (Spiegel Spillman) started courting people. We do our casting all over the country. So she had her casting associates going all over the country to find specific groups where we could find Asian-Americans, maybe a cultural center or a certain part of town where more Latinos live. We really just took off all blinders and said we want to find 20 people to play this game and we’re really gonna have to source them out. I’m not sure of the exact number, but about 85 percent of the people on the show were recruited. In other words, these are people that did not apply, maybe not have seen "Survivor" or even cared about "Survivor." We told them nothing about the way we were gonna group them because we didn’t even know that at the time. Our original goal was to have more ethnic diversity on the show.

TS: What was your reaction to this idea?

JP: The idea came up and there was silence in the room because I think everybody knew it was the right choice. But would CBS have the courage to do it? From their point of view, this is a franchise that’s still performing well. It’s worked in the past. Why would you change it? It’s risky. People are very touchy about even saying the word race or even bringing up the notion of different ethnic groups working together or maybe not working so well together. What if they don’t get along? What if it’s a disaster? What if we set back the whole notion of integration? (CBS President Leslie) Moonves said, "Yes, I want you to do it. If you do it, I want you to do it right. Don’t back off of it. Just do it." That’s all we needed to hear.

TS: So what does this do to the game? Is it more or less fair now?

JP: I think what we did is add another layer to the social experiment. It’s always been a show about taking people from different walks of life and forcing them to live together. Now we’re doing the thing that everybody’s afraid to talk about. Can people from different ethnic groups get along? Is one group going to do better than the other? Or are we going to find when you force people to work together that ethnicity fades away? Hunger doesn’t discriminate. And now it becomes a human experience.

TS: Was anybody afraid this might offend viewers?

JP: I think that was the big concern that CBS had. It’s very risky because you’re bringing up a topic that is a hot button. There’s a history of segregation you can’t ignore. It is a part of our history. For that, it’s much safer to say, "No, let’s just stick with things as they are. Let’s don’t be the network to rock the boat. Let’s not have ‘Survivor’ try something new." But the biases from home can’t affect you. This is an equal opportunity game. Twenty people are given the same materials, the same odds of wining a million dollars. We’re gonna start you out in your own ethnic group so you’re not a minority unless you’re a minority in your own ethnic group, which is possible. And then, as you know from watching this game, at some point you’re going to integrate. And the person who wins this game will integrate the best. I believe that’s what will happen.

TS: How did the players react to the division?

JP: Their reaction was varied. I remember Yul (Kwon), who’s on the Asian-American tribe, was concerned that we were going to portray people based on stereotypes. To which we said, "We don’t portray you in any way. We just observe you and put the show on." And that reassured him. There were a few people who thought it was really exciting. I know Nate (Gonzalez) on the African-American team thought it was a great idea. He was jazzed about it. Rebecca (Borman), on the same tribe, thought it had absolutely no bearing. One thing we were cognizant of in casting the show, we weren’t looking to put a white supremacist on with a member of the NAACP. We weren’t looking for extremes to show that people do have racial biases or ethnic biases. That would be a different show.

The Slug

I think this is so wrong, there is no reason to push the envelope for ratings by doing this. What is next year’s edition breakdown by religion? sexuality?

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Marie Osmond joins Celebrity Duets
August 22nd, 2006 under The Osmonds, TV Reality. [ Comments: none ]

Wow, this Duets show could be a real trainwreck! I mean, nothing compares to Idol, but this could be riveting viewing. You’ve got a grab-bag of semi-celebrities of varying vocal ability, a passel of professional partners of varying career viability and, as announced today, one of the most bizarre judging panels imaginable.David Foster, who’d already been announced, we know about. He was tough on the Idol finalists during his guest-coach role, and obviously he’s been cast to handle the Simon-esque role on Duets. (Plus, he’s a non-American — Canadian, to be exact.)Marie Osmond sounds like the perfect Paula — not only does she have one of the all-time nice-gal images, but there’s a prescription incident in her past that could inspire a few hypothetical comparisons.And then Little Richard — I’m confident he can still whoop it up, but are they expecting him to deliver coherent advice too? Are the other judges prepared to put up with all those admonitions to "shut up"? Will anyone else ever get a word in? I guess Mr. Penniman will portray a combination of Randy (the impenetrable jargon aspect) and Paula (the sheer wigginess).All in all, I’m going to have to put this on the TiVo schedule for sure.

Idol Chatter

This is either going to be very very good or very very bad, either way it is going to be hot!

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Survivor the racist ediiton
August 22nd, 2006 under TV Reality. [ Comments: none ]

Rumors circulating on the Internet suggest that the tribes for Survivor Cook Islands will be separated in an entirely different and somewhat controversial way. (Warning: Potential spoilers ahead about the game’s structure, but not about results.)There have been persistent rumors, supported by photographs of challenges, that there will be four tribes at the start of the game. However, those won’t necessarily be dissolved immediately: instead, they’ll be split in brand-new way, “divided up into 4 groups by race, 5 white, 5 black, 5 hispanic, and 5 asian,” according to a rumor sent to both SurvivorFever.net and the True Dork Times.At the end of last season, Jeff Probst said, “we’re hoping to do something that we’ve never done before in a huge way,” and the tribe split may allude to that. Of course, this isn’t really that different from last season, when the show separated tribes by sex and age for Survivor Panama. Splitting them by race may seem to be more controversial, but really is a no less arbitrary distinction than sex or age.With the show debuting Sept. 14, the cast should be revealed on The Early Show sooner than later, and with that, we’ll probably have confirmation about this rumor’s validity.

Reality Blurred 

This is so wrong if this is true

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The celebs for Celebrity Duets
August 15th, 2006 under TV Reality. [ Comments: none ]

Hot on the heels of ABC’s unveiling of the new Dancing with the Stars lineup, Fox has ID’d the wannabe crooners who will partner up with pros and compete on Celebrity Duets, premiering Aug. 29. And they are: Lucy Lawless, Cheech (minus Chong) Marin, WWE champion Chris Jericho, Olympic gymnast Carly Patterson, Fresh Prince’s Alfonso Ribeiro, Queer Eye’s Jai Rodriguez, actor/comedian Hal Sparks, and Back to the Future’s Lea Thompson. Now call me conservative or naïve but as opposed to Monday’s DWTS news, I am predicting zero wardrobe malfunctions here. Just a bleeding ear or two.

TV Guide 

Hey Hal Sparks has a band and Alfonso Ribeiro was in a Broadway Musical, that is so cheating.

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The soap for I Wanna Be a Soap Star 4 is…
August 14th, 2006 under TV Reality, TV Soaps. [ Comments: none ]

I am so glad that my soap Days of our Lives will be the soap of choice for SOAPnet’s I Wanna Be a Soap Star 4.
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