If “Survivor” fans finally get their wish of a long-rumored all-winners edition for Season 40 (due out in 2020), then the following five Male champs must be a part of the action, say our readers who voted in our recent poll. “Boston” Rob Mariano (Season 22) earned 15% of the vote, Yul Kwon (Season 13) also received 15%, Richard Hatch (Season 1) nabbed 12%, John Cochran (Season 26) scored 11% and Tony Vlachos (Season 28) netted 7%. Do you agree or disagree with your fellow “Survivor” fans? Be sure to sound off down in the comments section.
Rob has competed in no less than four seasons — “Marquesas,” “All Stars,” “Heroes vs. Villains” and “Redemption Island” — and will also be a part of the upcoming “Island of the Idols” as a mentor along with Sandra Diaz-Twine, who is one of the five Female winners who fans want to return. After years of coming up empty-handed, Rob finally took home the $1 million check on...
Rob has competed in no less than four seasons — “Marquesas,” “All Stars,” “Heroes vs. Villains” and “Redemption Island” — and will also be a part of the upcoming “Island of the Idols” as a mentor along with Sandra Diaz-Twine, who is one of the five Female winners who fans want to return. After years of coming up empty-handed, Rob finally took home the $1 million check on...
- 6/3/2019
- by Marcus James Dixon
- Gold Derby
When does ‘Survivor: David vs. Goliath’ start? Season 37 to debut with supersized 90-minute premiere
“Survivor” fans, mark your calendars for Wednesday, September 26. That’s the day that the landmark 37th season is set to debut on CBS with a supersized 90-minute premiere. This season’s twist is “David vs. Goliath,” which pits the underdog versus the favorite in a biblical showdown for the ages. While the 20 contestants are all new to “Survivor,” two of them are celebrities who you may recognize: filmmaker Mike White and pro wrestler John Hennigan. Watch the two-minute Season 37 preview trailer above.
See‘Survivor: David vs. Goliath’ trailer: Season 37 teases biblical battle of ‘the underdog versus the favorite’ [Watch]
“David vs. Goliath” filmed between March 29 and May 6 in Mamanuca Islands, Fiji, the sixth such season to take place in that country. This time around the castaways have to deal with Fiji’s rainy season, which no doubt makes things more challenging for the players.
“It’s a hard season,” host Jeff Probst...
See‘Survivor: David vs. Goliath’ trailer: Season 37 teases biblical battle of ‘the underdog versus the favorite’ [Watch]
“David vs. Goliath” filmed between March 29 and May 6 in Mamanuca Islands, Fiji, the sixth such season to take place in that country. This time around the castaways have to deal with Fiji’s rainy season, which no doubt makes things more challenging for the players.
“It’s a hard season,” host Jeff Probst...
- 7/10/2018
- by Marcus James Dixon
- Gold Derby
Stephen Fishbach was the runner-up on Survivor: Tocantins and a member of the jury on Survivor Cambodia: Second Chance. He has been blogging about Survivor strategy for People since 2009. Follow him on Twitter @stephenfishbach.
Erik Reichenbach is a comic artist, illustrator, and former Survivor Fan Favorite. See more of his artwork and commissions on Tumblr.com and follow him on Twitter!
“You have to make moves at some point or another in order for your game to be respected. You sit at the end, you have to have something to say.” —Michele Fitzgerald, winner, Survivor: Kaoh Rong
In the battle of the generations,...
Erik Reichenbach is a comic artist, illustrator, and former Survivor Fan Favorite. See more of his artwork and commissions on Tumblr.com and follow him on Twitter!
“You have to make moves at some point or another in order for your game to be respected. You sit at the end, you have to have something to say.” —Michele Fitzgerald, winner, Survivor: Kaoh Rong
In the battle of the generations,...
- 12/15/2016
- by Lanford Beard
- PEOPLE.com
They're young. They're energetic. And they have all the answers.
Ten Millennials have been selected to compete on Survivor, and they'll be competing against 10 contestants from Generation X.
As he splits up the tribes, host Jeff Probst Jeff Probst defines Millennials as being born between 1984 and 1997. The Generation X contestants are born between 1963 and 1982. (Apparently, if you're born in 1983, you're out of luck.)
People spoke with all 20 contestants before they competed on the show. The 10 millennials were enthusiastic, confident and ready to play the game.
Will Wahl, 18, Long Valley, New JerseyThe youngest contestant to ever play the game, Wahl is just 18 years old.
Ten Millennials have been selected to compete on Survivor, and they'll be competing against 10 contestants from Generation X.
As he splits up the tribes, host Jeff Probst Jeff Probst defines Millennials as being born between 1984 and 1997. The Generation X contestants are born between 1963 and 1982. (Apparently, if you're born in 1983, you're out of luck.)
People spoke with all 20 contestants before they competed on the show. The 10 millennials were enthusiastic, confident and ready to play the game.
Will Wahl, 18, Long Valley, New JerseyThe youngest contestant to ever play the game, Wahl is just 18 years old.
- 9/21/2016
- by Steve Helling, @stevehelling
- People.com - TV Watch
"True Detective" Season 2 just got hate-watched into the ground. The 1.5-hour finale aired last night, and Twitter was ready with knives. Maybe expectations were too high after Season 1, but from the first episode, fans were confused, disappointed, confused, depressed, still confused, and bored. When the series ended, there was still mass confusion and disappointment.
To be fair, there are some TD2 defenders out there -- fans who claim to have liked the plot, characters, tone and finale resolution, with some arguing that the haters were just too dumb to follow along or forgot that Season 1 was also pretentious and incomprehensible. But some of defenders just seem to want to pride themselves on swimming against the stream, while some of the critics just seem to want to pride themselves on coming up with clever insults.
Either way, the result was an onslaught of (sometimes hilarious) opinions during the finale's airing. #TrueDetectiveSeason...
To be fair, there are some TD2 defenders out there -- fans who claim to have liked the plot, characters, tone and finale resolution, with some arguing that the haters were just too dumb to follow along or forgot that Season 1 was also pretentious and incomprehensible. But some of defenders just seem to want to pride themselves on swimming against the stream, while some of the critics just seem to want to pride themselves on coming up with clever insults.
Either way, the result was an onslaught of (sometimes hilarious) opinions during the finale's airing. #TrueDetectiveSeason...
- 8/10/2015
- by Gina Carbone
- Moviefone
As Pandora’s Ipo sends Wall Street spinning, the hefty infusion of cash will position the company to deliver a better experience to its estimated 34 million active users (and counting -- the company estimates a new user is added every second).
For Pandora, innovation must come quickly: With cloud-based music services on offer from Google and Amazon and Apple’s iCloud to be released soon, Pandora’s personalized radio service faces certain competition from virtual music libraries that allow consumers to create their own, customized playlists -- without the ads that make up nearly 90 percent of Pandora’s revenue.
Tech insiders agree that Pandora must address is its limited catalog. Jim Lucchese, the CEO of EchoNest, a music intelligence company that powers smart music applications, estimates that the company -- now 11 years old -- has 800,000 to one million songs in its catalog. It's a fair number but a relatively small...
For Pandora, innovation must come quickly: With cloud-based music services on offer from Google and Amazon and Apple’s iCloud to be released soon, Pandora’s personalized radio service faces certain competition from virtual music libraries that allow consumers to create their own, customized playlists -- without the ads that make up nearly 90 percent of Pandora’s revenue.
Tech insiders agree that Pandora must address is its limited catalog. Jim Lucchese, the CEO of EchoNest, a music intelligence company that powers smart music applications, estimates that the company -- now 11 years old -- has 800,000 to one million songs in its catalog. It's a fair number but a relatively small...
- 6/15/2011
- by Alex Wagner
- Huffington Post
The music industry has been rocked by one tech innovation after another. But as Lauren Coleman reports, Google's entry could change everything, for artists and listeners alike.
For years, Google has rampaged through the tech business, radically transforming (and usually improving) virtually everything it touches, from book digitization to street maps. Now, it has honed in on the music world.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Google Flips Off Wall Street
A few days ago, the upcoming version of the music application for Android-Google's software for smartphones-was reported to have been accidentally leaked to a tech news blog called Tech From 10. The blog promptly made the app available for download, and though it couldn't quite get the service to work at that time, its exposure was nonetheless a bombshell in the tech world.
That's because the leaked app provided the most stark indication yet that Google is hard at work on a "cloud" service,...
For years, Google has rampaged through the tech business, radically transforming (and usually improving) virtually everything it touches, from book digitization to street maps. Now, it has honed in on the music world.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Google Flips Off Wall Street
A few days ago, the upcoming version of the music application for Android-Google's software for smartphones-was reported to have been accidentally leaked to a tech news blog called Tech From 10. The blog promptly made the app available for download, and though it couldn't quite get the service to work at that time, its exposure was nonetheless a bombshell in the tech world.
That's because the leaked app provided the most stark indication yet that Google is hard at work on a "cloud" service,...
- 4/10/2011
- by Lauren DeLisa Coleman
- The Daily Beast
Students say Columbia University has long been a haven for casual drug sales. Then an anonymous complaint brought New York City police to campus, resulting in a major bust.
Like Captain Renault reacting to gambling at Rick's Café, Columbia University officialdom was shocked, shocked by Tuesday morning's police raid on three fraternities accused of dealing illegal drugs to the privileged student body.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Drug Dealers to the Stars
Columbia authorities offered a chagrined open letter a few hours after the New York Police Department announced one of the biggest campus drug busts in memory-the arrest of five students and three alleged off-campus dealers in an undercover sting popularly dubbed "Operation Ivy League."
"The alleged behavior of the students involved in this incident goes against not only state and federal law, but also University policy and the principles we have set-and strive together to maintain-for our community,...
Like Captain Renault reacting to gambling at Rick's Café, Columbia University officialdom was shocked, shocked by Tuesday morning's police raid on three fraternities accused of dealing illegal drugs to the privileged student body.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Drug Dealers to the Stars
Columbia authorities offered a chagrined open letter a few hours after the New York Police Department announced one of the biggest campus drug busts in memory-the arrest of five students and three alleged off-campus dealers in an undercover sting popularly dubbed "Operation Ivy League."
"The alleged behavior of the students involved in this incident goes against not only state and federal law, but also University policy and the principles we have set-and strive together to maintain-for our community,...
- 12/8/2010
- by Joshua Robinson & Lloyd Grove
- The Daily Beast
Chris Wedge has been interested in making a movie about Lives of the Monster Dogs for over a decade. Back in 1998, when Kirsten Bakis' book first came out, Wedge read it and thought that it would make for an interesting movie. Now that he's minted in the eyes of Hollywood, he's picked up the screen rights and is developing Monster Dogs under his WedgeWorks production company.
Wedge has already selected a screenwriter named Adam Klein to adapt the book. Bakis' novel uses the foundation of mad science as its premise: imagine that a group of crazy Prussian scientists engineered intelligent dogs and raised them in the seclusion of the Canadian wilderness. After years of isolation, the civilized dogs eventually escape their confinement and arrive in civilization, to the wonder and amazement of the world. Dressed in formal wear, standing erect and using voice boxes to communicate, the dogs are befriended...
Wedge has already selected a screenwriter named Adam Klein to adapt the book. Bakis' novel uses the foundation of mad science as its premise: imagine that a group of crazy Prussian scientists engineered intelligent dogs and raised them in the seclusion of the Canadian wilderness. After years of isolation, the civilized dogs eventually escape their confinement and arrive in civilization, to the wonder and amazement of the world. Dressed in formal wear, standing erect and using voice boxes to communicate, the dogs are befriended...
- 8/23/2010
- by Patrick Sauriol
- Corona's Coming Attractions
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