Jeff Probst a constant for `Survivor' as it nears 44th game
NEW YORK >> There was a time Jeff Probst could not imagine doing what he will on Wednesday, being on hand as host for the start of a 44th season of “Survivor.”
That's not simply because of the transitory nature of television, where a 44th season of anything is a rarity, even a program that created a sensation when it first aired on CBS in the summer of 2000.
In those early days, there was a restlessness about Probst. He'd studied screenwriting, acted and wrote and directed a well-received indie film in 2001. He tried a shortlived talk show. He admits “I had a chip on my shoulder about being called a `host.'”
Yet as series creator Mark Burnett began stepping away, Probst added “producer” to his title and has since ascended to the level of “showrunner” — industry lingo that means he's in charge of everything.
At age 61, he's all in, an evangelist for “Survivor.”
“I have never been so excited to be part of the show,” he told The Associated Press in a recent interview. “I hope it's apparent. I hope it's clear that I'm really into `Survivor.'”
It remains a marvelouslydesigned game, one that tests survival skills in a forbidding — if lovely — environment along with the social and scheming skills to remain standing at the end to collect the $1 million prize. Even if one cast is a drag, “one of the show's greatest strengths is that every season hits a reset button,” said Dalton Ross, executive editor at large at Entertainment Weekly and a veteran chronicler of the show.
So it can, um, survive a scandal like a player being kicked off in 2019 after being accused of inappropriately touching young women or tweaks that don't work, like the “fire tokens” that were introduced and abandoned after one season.
Other new ideas, like a hidden immunity idol or the “David vs Goliath” season that Probst really loved, freshen the show as it adheres to a basic structure.
Producers were also ordered by CBS to increase diversity, which Probst said has added to the show's richness. The 18 castaways for the new season include five Black contestants, three Latinos and an Asian American.
“People that don't watch `Survivor,' I think they may mistake it for some sort of survivalist's show or they label it with this idea that it's just a reality show,” Probst said. “When, really, `Survivor' is one of the biggest adventures you can ever go on.”