June 2023. Jeff Probst and the intrepid team behind Survivor has just wrapped filming Season 46. But, like the best players, they're already looking ahead, specifically to one big milestone: Survivor 50. What followed were countless hours of seemingly endless configurations of returning players, tribe divisions, twists, etc. Ultimately, however, they chose to leave many decisions "in the hands of the fans," as devoted viewers got to vote on everything from tribe colors to whether there would be Final Four firemaking.Now, we stand on the precipice of Survivor 50 finally arriving, with a supersized three-hour premiere on CBS. So when Parade got the chance to talk with the host and executive producer at SCAD TVFest, where he was being honored with the Legend of Television Award, we had to ask what surprised him the most about what unfolded on those beaches across 26 days, considering the lengthy journey it took to get there.
?Don’t miss our weekly Survivor newsletter! Sign up to get Mike Bloom’s exclusive interviews with the players and the latest news about the show right to your inbox.?"You know, what surprised me the most, I guess, is that it worked," he replies. "I mean, because we bit off a lot. The first time I wrote down an idea for Survivor 50 was June of 2023. That's how long this has been percolating to try to figure it out and pick the right people and figure out the challenges and what twists do we get to do thanks to the fans. But it worked." "Picking the right people" is, arguably, the most essential element to any season of Survivor, let alone arguably its biggest season to date. This historic group of 24 players ranges from multi-season legends to long-awaited returns, spanning the show's first season to its most recent. But, of course, the dedicated fanbase had things to say about the two dozen people that were chosen. Some highlighted the fact that half the cast came from the show's "new era." Others took umbrage with the fact that nobody who debuted between Seasons 18 and 32 is on the cast. But Probst explains how the casting process for Season 50 was less about putting people from all eras of the show and more about channeling what they represent."What we kept coming back to is we want to celebrate all of it," the Emmy winner recalls. "Even though Russell Hantz isn't going to be on this season, he's a part of it. So we want the flavor that a Russell Hantz season had. And even though we aren't going to have Winners at War players on, we want some winners on that. Some people will be happy. Some won't be happy. We're very happy. Everybody came and delivered."
Related: Jeff Probst Reveals How Much ‘Survivor 50’s Celebrity Cameos Will Change the Game (Exclusive)"The players showed up," he continues. "They showed up. Fans will be happy to know that the players we picked came to play. That's what's desired from somebody. Don't just come out and be. You come out and play the game. And they do out of the gate. Game is on all the way to the end. And when it was over, a bunch of us looked at this whiteboard in my office, and we went, 'Oh, my God, we did everything.' We hope the fans like it. But from our standpoint as a production, we did it."The scariest part of this entire process for Probst and company, of course, lies with the theme. In the past, fan votes have determined things like who received a postseason fan-favorite prize, and in one particular instance, even an entire cast. But this was the first time production elements would be decided by viewers. And part of the process of settling on "In the Hands of the Fans" would be letting go of what they want the season to be."The biggest fear for me was, 'Okay, what are you going to do if they want to give them rice and give them their tribe supplies, and they don't want any idols, no twists, no advantages, no switch?'" Probst says about the various votes that occurred across the first half of 2025. "So Matt [Van Wagenen] and I and the producers just sat around going, 'Okay, here's how we do it.' It would actually be interesting to see Jenna [Lewis-Dougherty] from Season 1, who played that game, she didn't have any of this stuff. Versus somebody like Kyle [Fraser] or Savannah [Louie], who just finished that season. And what would win out? Would strategy and social relationships dominate?"Despite how much was out of their hands, the team had to plan for every contingency. And Probst reveals that, behind the scenes, they mapped out decision trees of all the various possibilities based on the results of the vote. Think of it as a "Choose-Your-Own-Adventure," just with a million dollars on the line.
Related: ‘Survivor’s Mount Rushmore: The Legends Who Built a 50-Season Legacy (Exclusive)"We felt fine no matter what," he says of working through all the options. "Even the one tree says they don't want anything in the game, and they want to give the players food, and they want to give them rice, all the things you wouldn't want as a game designer. We're like, 'Great. We'll finally give fans what they want. You want to go back to Season 1? Great.' It didn't matter to us because of who we picked."That's perhaps the most interesting part of all of this. With every Survivor season, there are infinite possibilities of what could happen at any given time. Those infinite possibilities are squared (even if that's mathematically impossible) thanks to all the different ways this season could be structured. But it seems like Probst and crew were surprisingly stress-free about what Survivor 50 could look like, trusting in the cast they assembled."You'll see it in the episodes. They showed up. They would have played with everything on the board. They would have played with nothing on the board. They just wanted to play. So for us, yeah, there were contingency plans. But the stakes weren't as high as you think, because we were okay either way. I knew what I wanted. I wanted everything. I mean, I wanted them to say, 'Go for broke and don't give them anything.' But that's why we turned it over to the fans. I've been getting what I want for a long time. Now you get what you want."Before these 24 contestants arrived in Fiji, Survivor 50 was "in the hands of the fans." But, for the next few months, it's in the hands of the players. And it sounds like, according to Probst, we're in good hands.
Related: Meet the Full Cast of 'Survivor 50': Photos, Bios and What to Know
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