Survivor: A Race Among Races

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Probst Reveals Contestants And Controversial Tribe Change

(CBS) In

just a couple of weeks, the new season of "Survivor" takes 20 castaways

to the Cook Islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.

They will be split into four tribes, but how they will do that is

guaranteed to be a talking point. For the 13th installment of the

series, producers have yet another controversial way to begin the game:

20 people, four tribes — each divided by race.

Jeff Probst is back as host of "Survivor: Cook islands" and spoke with The Early Show co-anchor Harry Smith about the controversial new season, which premieres Sept. 14 at 8pm ET on CBS.

Smith asked Probst whether the new way of dividing the "Survivor" contestants was a good idea for a reality show.

"Well, that's probably one of the reasons it will be interesting

and controversial, maybe, as you say. I know, from where I sit, I found

it to be one of the freshest ideas we've had going back to the

beginning of this show in season one," said Probst.

Smith asked him if this new twist was taking the reality show too far.

"I think at first glance, when you just hear the idea, it could

sound like a stunt. Especially with the way reality has gone, it

wouldn't be unusual. But that's not what we're doing here. The idea for

this actually came from the criticism that 'Survivor' was not

ethnically diverse enough," he said. "Because, for whatever reason,

we've always had a low number of minority applicants apply to the show.

So we set out and said, 'Let's turn this criticism into creative for

the show. I think it fits in perfectly with what 'Survivor' does — it

is a social experiment. And this is adding another layer to that

experiment, which is taking the show to a completely different level."

How did the new players react when they were told they would be divided by race?

"The reaction was mixed. (Contestant) Yuhl wasn't sure. Yuhl was

concerned we were going to turn this into something that would show

stereotypes and reinforce them," Probst said. "On the other hand, you

have people like Rebecca, who said, 'I don't really care how you divide

it because I know that I need a certain amount of people to be on my

side to help me get through this.' Ultimately, to win this game, you're

voting people out that are then on the jury that have to come back and

vote for you. So, the person who wins is actually going to do the best

job of merging with all different ethnicities."

Smith asked Probst if he thought the tribal divides would divide the viewing audience as well.

"I think it's very likely," he said. "In fact, our original idea

was simply to have the most ethnically diverse group of people on TV.

It wasn't until we got to casting and started noticing this theme of

ethnic pride that you're alluding to. So, yes, I think it's very

natural to assume that certain groups are going to have audience

members rooting for them simply because they share ethnicity. At the

end of the day, I think it will come down to what it always comes down

to: who do I like?"

Probst announced the new crop of castaways and the tribes that they will be divided into:

African-American Tribe:



[*]Make-up artist, Rebecca Borman, 34, from Laurelton, N.Y.



[*]Jazz musician and recording artist Sekou Bunch, 45, of Los Angeles

Nursing student
Stephannie Favor, 35, of Columbia, S.C.



[*]Retail salesman Nathan Gonzalez, 26, of Los Angeles



[*]Sundra Oakley, 31, an actress from Los Angeles



Asian-American Tribe:





[*]Nail salon manager Anh-Tuan "Cao Boi" Bui (pronounced Cowboy), 42, from Christianburg, Va.



[*]Attorney Becky Lee, 28, of Washington, D.C.



[*]Management consultant Yul Kwon, 31, of San Mateo, Calif.



[*]Real estate agent Jenny Guzon-Bae, 36, of Lake Forest, Ill.



[*]Fashion Director Brad Virata, 29, of Los Angeles



Hispanic Tribe:





[*]Heavy metal guitarist Billy Garcia, 36, of New York



[*]Professional volleyball player J.P. Calderon, 30, of Marina Del Rey, Calif.



[*]Police officer Cristina Coria, 35, of Los Angeles



[*]Waiter Oscar "Ozzy" Lusth, 25, of Venice, Calif.



[*]Technology risk consultant Cecilia Mansilla, 29, of Oakland, Calif.





White Tribe:





[*]Copier salesman Adam Gentry, 28, of San Diego, Calif.



[*]Writer-producer Jonathan Penner, 44, of Los Angeles



[*]Boxer-waitress Parvati Shallow, 23, of Los Angeles



[*]Performer-roller girl Jessica Smith, 27, of Chico, Calif.



[*]Pre-med student Candice Woodcock, 23, of Fayetteville, N.C.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/08/23/earlyshow/series/survivor/main1926528.shtml

i deffinatly want to hear thoughts on this.. when i first heard someone say this at work i thought it was just a lame joke. Then i saw it in the paper.. and i couldnt believe it.

LETS HEAR THOUGHTS !!!

 
I've been waiting for this thread for some time, haha. I still cant believe what they are proposing. But hey, you know it's gonna be a good watch. ahah
 
I think in a way it is definetly racism cause once the winner annonced i think that there will be much conflict with the other races...saying how one another set each other up to make it seem like they were all equeal to the end... not sure if that made sense...i just think that it will cause a great amount of conflict
 
id put money on the asians, those asians are knifty and all of them know all 150 pokemon
 
I don't think it will cause that much conflict. If I recall last season correctly they split the people up by sex then by age, right off the bat. So you had 4 groups, old men, old women, young men, young women. But the thing is, they dissolved those tribes within 3 days or so. So I doubt they will keep the tribes split by races for very long.
 
them negros r gonna own, they know how to live off the land and if anyone tries to beat them in a immunity challenge they will prob cap a bitch. and someone is deff gona get rapped im sure of it
 
ya and asains can survive for days without food cause their used to eating like one grain of rice a day. plus they're all kung foo masters
 
WTF the mexican team is stacked!! Heavy metal guitarist, pro volleyball player, and a cop! But they'll probably loose anyways, they're so damn lazy..... JK JK JK JK JK lol.
 
its not that fair cause the whites cant use the blacks as slaves or the chinese to do their math. and deffinetly no tacos.
 
chinese shelter is going to be multi level with electricity

latinos won't build a shelter because where and when they sleep doesn't matter.

i hope the producers of the show let some chickens loose in the black tribe area.

it will be like when that white dude killed that wild pig all on his own.
 
I definitely think something "good" will come out of it, or they'll try and teach the participants/viewers and "important" lesson.
 
Retail salesman Nathan Gonzalez, 26, of Los Angeles

Are you sure he isn't supposed to be on the hispanic team?
 




Asian-American Tribe:



[*]

[*]Nail salon manager Anh-Tuan "Cao Boi" Bui (pronounced Cowboy), 42, from Christianburg, Va.

[*]



[*]Attorney Becky Lee, 28, of Washington, D.C.



[*]



[*]Management consultant Yul Kwon, 31, of San Mateo, Calif.

[*]Real estate agent Jenny Guzon-Bae, 36, of Lake Forest, Ill.

[*]Fashion Director Brad Virata, 29, of Los Angeles

the chick in bold graduated from my highschool
 
yeah but it was another AZN dude and they graduated like in 98.

im only a sophmore now, my sister knows them tho
 
asians are going to win, 2 members of the latin tribe dont look remotly latin and could fit with the caucasians easily, cao boi is a badass, and that bitch who let the chickens out needs to die
 
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