Monday, November 26, 2012

Survivor: Philippines...Unlikable Dead Weight

Pete was a casualty of his own arrogance and his allegiance's mistreatment of its fringe members, who predictably grew sick and tired of being bullied and created a majority against the Evil Three, which is now down to its last member.
Abi owes RC, and her clue to the location of the hidden immunity idol that she later found, to her continued presence in the game. She sucks at challenges, so her only hope now that her idol has been played is that the Survivors aligned against her change their current stance regarding the kind of game they want to play.
Denise announced at Tribal Council that the prevailing strategy is to not allow the dead weight (those that contribute and/or accomplish nothing) and the unlikable (those who behave without consideration for the feelings of others) to make it to the end. No one disputed this, or even looked like they were in disagreement.
After calling Abi out on her shameless sucking up to the jury, Jeff attempted to help her shift some of the blame for her behavior to the cultural differences between her and her tribe mates. She was nasty to anyone that did not say and do exactly as she demanded, she bragged incessantly about the reward that her team won without any help from her, and she behaved like a princess after the reward, refusing to help with the work at camp because she wanted to enjoy whatever time she had left. Selfishness and entitlement are not behaviors that result from cultural confusion. They are character flaws that put Abi squarely into the dead weight and unlikable categories that Denise spoke of.

Jonathan was right. Abi will not win this time. No matter how long she lasts.

Note: Once again...Thank you to the artistic geniuses over at survivorsucks.yuku.com for the excellent gif of Denise.

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Survivor: Philippines...The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly Part Two

Lisa is way too nice to play a cutthroat game like Survivor. Her decisions, which I originally attributed to strategy, are actually driven by an excessive need for approval, and kept the Evil Three in power long past the time that they should have been packed off to the Ponderosa. She was not in a mutually beneficial alliance; she was a plus one being used for her vote, which she was willing to trade for acceptance that she never got. She deserved better, but she really should have known better. Good people often make the worst Survivors.
Michael and his many injuries were a liability to the Tandang gang from the moment he was foisted on them. He is a returning player who has done next to nothing with his second chance except perpetuate the Evil Three alliance. The only good thing I can think of to say about him is that he was the vote that sent Artis to the jury. Too little. Way too late.
Carter looks very lost without his counterpart Butthead. Hopefully, he'll survive until the friends and family Reward Challenge so we can see the reunion.
Abi is not a Survivor. She is a certifiably crazy mean girl who employs emotional blackmail as a means to getting what she wants. Perceived slights result in threats, which often escalate to emotional bullying. She sat out most of the early challenges and wasn't picked to play the last one, which suggests that she hasn't gotten as far as she has by contributing anything and isn't well liked. If she makes it to the final Tribal Council, it will be due to the strategy of those wise enough to know that someone as loathsome as she is will not garner any votes.
I wonder if the nut house will issue her a weekend pass for the finale, or if her presence there will be courtesy of Skype.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Survivor: Philippines...The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly Part One

Malcolm boldly challenged the opposing alliance and risked his Survivor life by running a bluff that kept his idol in the game and the Tandang alliance off balance. He also wisely showed Lisa the grace and mercy that she desperately needed after betraying him. Very good. And my new favorite.
Denise orchestrated the termination of the Evil Three's most valuable, yet least protected, player, Artis. She is a triple threat; smart, strong, and likable. Definitely good. And I wouldn't mind seeing her make it to the end with her ally, Malcolm.
Jonathan blew the vote that could have saved his ally, Jeff Kent. Very, very bad. It was his strategy during the Reward Challenge that gave his team a clear advantage, which led to their victory and a new alliance for him. Very good. He then began a one man crusade to manipulate Lisa into switching alliances by playing on her need to be viewed in a positive light. Morally ambiguous, but strategically necessary and good. He successfully lured Michael away from the Tandang alliance, giving his new alliance the numbers they needed to take Artis out of the game. Also very good. It galls me that I keep finding myself rooting for him when I loathe his presence in the game on principle.
Pete blew the blindside of Malcolm, which proved to be detrimental to his Evil Three alliance. Definitely bad. He is also a troublemaker with no motivation other than a compulsion to disrupt the order of the universe, like the retired jackass in my neighborhood that drives ten miles under the speed limit every weekday morning, making everybody stuck behind him late for work. Bad and ugly. He can get kicked off the island next.
Artis arrogantly believed that bullies are untouchable. Very bad. He mistakenly thought that treating people badly is not only acceptable, but the best way to keep them loyal. Very ugly. He got what he deserved.

Note:  Part Two will be posted on Wednesday.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Survivor: Philippines...Diarrhea of the Mouth

     The inability to keep one's trap shut is an affliction that manifests itself in early childhood--talking while the teacher is talking, tattling the misdeeds of others to persons in authority--but is often outgrown sometime during adolescence, the exception being some teenage girls who possess an overabundance of information courtesy of the social media, which makes overcoming the urge to blab everything they know a near impossibility. Adults still struggling with this malady should not be told anything more salacious than what you consumed for breakfast (unless alcohol was involved), and they should most certainly never, ever be told something as vital to survival as whether you're holding an immunity idol if you were to be unfortunate enough to find yourself stuck on an island with them.
     While not the biggest blabbermouth in the Philippines, Lisa did blab the biggest secret (twice), and set in motion a chain of ridiculousness that ultimately cost Jeff Kent his Survivor life, may he rest in reality game show peace. The repercussions of this questionable strategy will not be pretty because, when she betrayed a fringe member of her Tandang alliance, she incurred the wrath of the Evil Three's token nutjob, Abi, who took the news of Lisa's transgression in much the same way that a snake would after being poked with a sharp stick.
     Abi, however, should be the last one to point an accusatory finger at anyone, being a less than stellar secret keeper herself. If memory serves, she leaked info about RC's clue to the location of a hidden immunity idol to Pete once upon a not very long ago time. More recently, she ran off at the mouth about her alliance hierarchy to Carter in front of Michael, and then whipped out her immunity idol with very little provocation from Jeff (Probst) and no discernible reason at Tribal Council. Apparently, crazy exacerbates dysfunctional thought processes which triggers motormouth disorder.
     Nothing brings a blindside to a screaming halt like a foolish bigmouth who doesn't recognize a golden opportunity when it gets delivered to him wrapped in a charming Texas accent. Pete deserves the imminent implosion of his Evil Three plus one (Lisa) alliance.
     In Malcolm's defense, he did not have a wealth of options at his disposal. Displaying his immunity idol and outing Lisa for making it common knowledge that he had it at Tribal Council may have bought him some time and put the hurt to Lisa's Tandang alliance.
     As for Jeff, the vets that he had plotted against from the beginning (purposely?) blew the vote that would have kept him in the game, leaving poor, perpetually confused (stoned?) Carter with no one to tell him what to do, and me needing a new favorite player.
     Let us observe a moment of silence...

Note: Thank you survivorsucks.yuku.com for the excellent gifs of Pete and Malcolm.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Survivor: Philippines...Family Feud

     Wednesday night's episode of Survivor was the reality game show version of an object lesson in the hazards of merging one dysfunctional family with another...alliances shift, the crazy declare war, and the dumbest tribe name in the history of the game is suggested, voted into existence, and painted on a flag for all to mock.
     The first item on Michael's agenda post merge is to negotiate an alliance, any alliance, that will eliminate three of his Tandang family members, Abi, Pete, and Artis because, in the humble opinion of Catastrophe Walking, they are "too rude to run this game." This from the man that traded a feast to the enemy for a potful of uncooked rice.
     Jeff plotted on Day 1 to rid us all of hasbeen Jonathan, but then saw the necessity of making a temporary deal with the hasbeen when said hasbeen copped to having the hidden immunity idol. With the merge providing potential comrades to join him in his campaign against the hasbeen, Jeff lost no time recruiting Abi, Pete, Artis, and Malcolm in exchange for aligning with them against RC, and then had no problem making a deal with Michael (the other hasbeen) to go after most of his new alliance (Abi, Pete, and Artis) in exchange for Michael's aid in getting rid of Jonathan, whom Michael had already agreed to help in the game since hasbeens with targets on their backs need to stick together. Jeff is targeting hasbeens and pitting them against each other, and that's all the reason I need to keep him my favorite.
     Lisa continued in the role of dysfunctional family caretaker after the merge, but was not opposed to taking a friendly swim with Jonathan, who knew her secret and left the encounter thinking that he had finally managed to bond with someone. And then "the church lady", as Malcolm affectionately refers to her, cut Jonathan's throat at Tribal Council, casting her vote to kick him off the island. Lisa is physically and mentally tough in challenges and seems to make decisions based on strategy rather than emotion, which is why I hope she outlasts the Survivor pretenders she is forced to share space with.
     While we're on the subject of pretenders...Watching Jeff try (in vain) to explain the voting strategy to Carter before Tribal Council gave me a headache. The prevailing theories are that Carter's IQ falls into the Borderline Low range on the IQ scale, or he's got a stash of medicinal marijuana somewhere on that island. My money's on stoned.
     Carter's polar opposite is Malcolm, whose presence of mind prompted him to join the Mean Kids alliance (Abi, Pete, and Artis) because that's where the power was. He's holding a hidden immunity idol and he made sweet-talking Lisa into keeping it a secret look easy. He's capable in any kind of challenge, but has managed to be perceived as less of a threat than he really is. He also has a loyal ally in former fellow Matsing, Denise. For a guy from a decimated tribe, Malcolm is situated pretty well. If he can safely navigate Abi's cycles of crazy, then I predict he will be arguing his case at the final Tribal Council.
     Denise survived the chaos that was life at the Matsing camp, managed to avoid becoming a target at the Kalabaw camp, and is keeping a low profile at the Dangrayne camp. She won the first individual immunity necklace and has the distinction of attending (and surviving) every Tribal Council since the season began. She is loyal and she can keep a secret. She is everything an actual Survivor should be, and, hopefully, will outlast the pretenders she's stuck with.
     Which brings us to Tribal Council, where that perpetual shit-stirrer Jeff (Probst) brings up the subject of betrayals, which prompts a confrontation between Abi and RC regarding RC's alleged betrayal of Abi's trust. RC truthfully denies Abi's allegations, which are ludicrous, being projections of Abi's own wrongdoings and figments of the maze of crazy in Abi's head.
     In the end, RC's innocence was not a factor because the game had become a popularity contest that was rigged by her enemies, and Jonathan played his idol to save himself.
     Another pretender down, four pretenders and two hasbeens to go.