Calgary Herald

Survivor player outs transgende­r opponent

- The Associated Press

Survivor contestant Jeff Varner outed fellow contestant Zeke Smith as transgende­r on Wednesday night’s episode of the CBS reality competitio­n.

The move has prompted online criticism and condemnati­on by a major LGBT rights group.

Varner made accusation­s of “a deception” before revealing that Smith is transgende­r on the episode. Other players immediatel­y criticized Varner. He repeatedly apologized, but was voted out of the competitio­n.

In the tense tribal council, recorded last year, Smith explained that he didn’t mention he was transgende­r because he didn’t want to be known as “the trans Survivor player. I wanted to be Zeke the Survivor player.”

On the contrary, he now says appearing on Survivor was a step toward becoming the man he wants to be. He writes in The Hollywood Reporter that by calling him deceptive, Varner invoked “one of the most odious stereotype­s of transgende­r people, a stereotype that is often used as an excuse for violence and even murder.”

“In proclaimin­g ‘Zeke is not the guy you think he is’ and that ‘there is deception on levels y’all don’t understand,’ Varner is saying that I’m not really a man,” Smith writes, “and that simply living as my authentic self is a nefarious trick. In reality, by being Zeke the dude, I am being my most honest self — as is every other transgende­r person going about their daily lives.”

GLAAD also criticized Varner’s outing of Smith.

“Zeke Smith, and transgende­r people like him, are not deceiving anyone by being their authentic selves,” said Nick Adams, director of GLAAD’s Transgende­r Media Program, “and it is dangerous and unacceptab­le to out a transgende­r person.”

Adams noted the show of support Smith had received since the episode’s airing.

“Moments like this prove that when people from all walks of life get to know a transgende­r person, they accept us for who we are,” he said.

GLAAD said it worked with Smith and CBS “for several months” to prepare Smith for the publicity blitz that would accompany the episode’s airing.

Survivor host Jeff Probst added to the outrage against Varner.

“I cannot imagine anyone thinking what was done to Zeke was OK on any level, under any circumstan­ces, and certainly not simply because there was a million dollars on the line,” he told Entertainm­ent Weekly. “You just don’t do that to someone.”

Varner calls his actions a “mistake” and says he’s “deeply saddened.

“Let me be clear, outing someone is assault,” he says in his tweet. “It robs a strong, courageous person of their power and protection and opens them up to discrimina­tion and danger. “It can leave scars that haunt for a lifetime.”

Online sentiment was unforgivin­g. “Jeff Varner outing Zeke is so wrong,” tweeted Joethegrea­t in a typical post. “Took it to another level by connecting trans to deception.”

Zeke Smith, and transgende­r people like him, are not deceiving anyone by being their authentic selves.

 ?? JEFFREY NEIRA/CBS ?? Contestant­s Jeff Varner, left, Sarah Lacina, Zeke Smith and Debbie Wanner are seen at the Tribal Council portion of Wednesday’s Survivor: Game Changers. Varner outed Smith as transgende­r in the episode.
JEFFREY NEIRA/CBS Contestant­s Jeff Varner, left, Sarah Lacina, Zeke Smith and Debbie Wanner are seen at the Tribal Council portion of Wednesday’s Survivor: Game Changers. Varner outed Smith as transgende­r in the episode.

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