Survivor: Worlds Apart is the 30th season of the American CBS competitive reality television series Survivor, which premiered on February 25, 2015, with the season finale on May 20, 2015. It was the fourth Survivor season filmed in San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua, and on the same location as Survivor: Nicaragua, Survivor: Redemption Island, and Survivor: San Juan del Sur,[1] tying it with the Philippines and Samoa for the most number of Survivor seasons filmed in one country, although all three would be surpassed by Fiji after Survivor: Ghost Island (season 36). It features three tribes of six new players divided by social class: white collar, blue collar, and no collar. This season introduced the concept of an extra vote, in which one player can vote twice at a single Tribal Council, which was offered during the season's Survivor Auction.[2] This season also saw the return of the firemaking tiebreaker challenge in the final four, last used in Survivor: Gabon.
Survivor: Worlds Apart | |
---|---|
Season 30 | |
Presented by | Jeff Probst |
No. of days | 39 |
No. of castaways | 18 |
Winner | Mike Holloway |
Runners-up | Carolyn Rivera Will Sims II |
Location | San Juan del Sur, Nicaragua[1] |
No. of episodes | 14 |
Release | |
Original network | CBS |
Original release | February 25 May 20, 2015 | –
Additional information | |
Filming dates | August 4 September 11, 2014 | –
Season chronology | |
The two-hour season finale and one-hour reunion special aired on May 20, 2015, where Mike Holloway was named the winner over Carolyn Rivera and Will Sims II in a 6–1–1 vote.
Contestants
editThe cast is composed of 18 new players, initially split into three tribes containing six members each: Escameca ("Blue Collar"), Masaya ("White Collar"), and Nagarote ("No Collar"). Escameca is named after Playa Escameca, while Masaya and Nagarote both named after the populated places in Nicaragua.[3] The cast includes former football placekicker Tyler Fredrickson. Additionally, So Kim was originally cast on Survivor: San Juan del Sur with her sister Doo, but they dropped out after Doo had a medical emergency the day before the game began.[4]
Contestant | Age | From | Tribe | Finish | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Original | Switched | Merged | Placement | Day | |||
So Kim | 31 | Long Beach, California |
Masaya | 1st voted out | Day 3 | ||
Vince Sly | 32 | Santa Monica, California |
Nagarote | 2nd voted out | Day 6 | ||
Nina Poersch | 51 | Palmdale, California |
3rd voted out | Day 8 | |||
Lindsey Cascaddan | 24 | College Park, Florida |
Escameca | 4th voted out | Day 11 | ||
Max Dawson | 37 | Topanga, California |
Masaya | Nagarote | 5th voted out | Day 14 | |
Joaquin Souberbielle | 28 | Valley Stream, New York |
Escameca | 6th voted out | Day 16 | ||
Kelly Remington | 44 | Grand Island, New York |
Escameca | Nagarote | Merica | 7th voted out | Day 19 |
Hali Ford | 25 | San Francisco, California |
Nagarote | 8th voted out 1st jury member |
Day 22 | ||
Joe Anglim | 25 | Scottsdale, Arizona |
Escameca | 9th voted out 2nd jury member |
Day 24 | ||
Jenn Brown | 22 | Long Beach, California |
Nagarote | 10th voted out 3rd jury member |
Day 27 | ||
Shirin Oskooi | 31 | San Francisco, California |
Masaya | 11th voted out 4th jury member |
Day 29 | ||
Tyler Fredrickson | 33 | Los Angeles, California |
Escameca | 12th voted out 5th jury member |
Day 32 | ||
Dan Foley | 47 | Gorham, Maine |
Escameca | 13th voted out 6th jury member |
Day 35 | ||
Sierra Dawn Thomas | 27 | Roy, Utah |
14th voted out 7th jury member |
Day 37 | |||
Rodney Lavoie, Jr. | 25 | Boston, Massachusetts |
Eliminated 8th jury member |
Day 38 | |||
Will Sims II | 41 | Sherman Oaks, California |
Nagarote | Nagarote | Co-runners-up | Day 39 | |
Carolyn Rivera | 52 | Tampa, Florida |
Masaya | ||||
Mike Holloway | 38 | North Richland Hills, Texas |
Escameca | Escameca | Sole Survivor |
Future appearances
editMike Holloway, Carolyn Rivera, Shirin Oskooi, Joe Anglim, and Max Dawson were included on the public poll to choose the cast of the subsequent season, Survivor: Cambodia. Due to Holloway winning Worlds Apart, he was ineligible from participating in Cambodia despite placing in the top 10 of his ballot; Anglim and Oskooi were ultimately chosen to compete.[5] Hali Ford and Sierra Dawn Thomas returned for Survivor: Game Changers.[6] Anglim returned again in Survivor: Edge of Extinction.[7]
Outside of Survivor, Anglim competed on the premiere of Candy Crush.[8] Thomas competed with two-time Survivor contestant Abi-Maria Gomes on a Survivor vs Big Brother episode of Fear Factor.[9]
Season summary
editThe eighteen new castaways were divided into three tribes of six based on social class: Escameca (Blue Collar), Masaya (White Collar), and Nagarote (No Collar). Despite frequent arguments between the Blue Collars, they only went to Tribal Council once, as did the White Collars. Though the No Collars lost two members, a core alliance of Hali, Jenn, and Joe formed, with Will as their fourth. With 14 players remaining, the players were redistributed into two tribes of seven; on Escameca, Blue Collar Rodney and White Collar Joaquin aligned, but Rodney's former Blue Collar allies, led by Mike, blindsided Joaquin to break up the pair and retain Rodney's loyalty.
When the tribes merged, two alliances vied for dominance: the No Collar core alliance, now with White Collar Shirin, went against the Blue Collars. Though Rodney remained with the Blue Collars, he constructed his own alliance with the swing votes—Will, and White Collars Tyler and Carolyn—to eventually take down the other Blue Collars to avenge Joaquin; the augmented Blue Collar alliance systematically eliminated the others, unaware of Rodney's alliance. Mike overheard Rodney’s inner alliance plotting his blindside and outed their plans, but instead found himself ousted from the others and made the primary target. However, Mike won five of the last six immunity challenges and played a hidden immunity idol on the only time he was vulnerable, bringing himself to the end of the game alongside Will and Carolyn. Ultimately, for making it to the end despite being a massive target, Mike was awarded with six of the eight jury votes, and the title of Sole Survivor.
Episode | Challenge winner(s) | Eliminated | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Original air date | Reward | Immunity | Tribe | Player |
1 | "It's Survivor Warfare" | February 25, 2015 | Nagarote | Masaya | So | |
Escameca | ||||||
2 | "It Will Be My Revenge" | March 4, 2015 | Masaya | Nagarote | Vince | |
Escameca | ||||||
3 | "Crazy is as Crazy Does" | March 11, 2015 | Escameca | Nagarote | Nina | |
Masaya | ||||||
4 | "Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner" | March 18, 2015 | Nagarote | Nagarote | Escameca | Lindsey |
Masaya | Masaya | |||||
5 | "We're Finally Playing Some Survivor" | Escameca | Escameca | Nagarote | Max | |
6 | "Odd Woman Out" | March 25, 2015 | Nagarote | Nagarote | Escameca | Joaquin |
7 | "The Line Will Be Drawn Tonight" | April 1, 2015 | None[a] | Joe | Merica | Kelly |
8 | "Keep It Real" | April 8, 2015 | Joe [Carolyn, Shirin, Tyler, Will] |
Joe | Hali | |
9 | "Livin' On the Edge" | April 15, 2015 | Dan, Mike, Shirin, Sierra, Tyler |
Tyler | Joe | |
10 | "Bring the Popcorn" | April 22, 2015 | Survivor Auction |
Mike | Jenn | |
11 | "Survivor Russian Roulette" | April 29, 2015 | Carolyn, Dan, Tyler, Will |
Carolyn | Shirin | |
Mike | ||||||
12 | "Holding on for Dear Life" | May 6, 2015 | Carolyn, Mike, Sierra |
Carolyn | Tyler | |
13 | "My Word Is My Bond" | May 13, 2015 | Carolyn, Mike, Will |
Mike | Dan | |
14 | "It's A Fickle, Fickle Game" | May 20, 2015 | Mike | Mike | Sierra | |
None | Mike | Rodney | ||||
15 | "Reunion" |
- ^ There was no reward challenge due to the merge.
Episodes
editNo. overall | No. in season | Title | CBS recap | Rating/share (18-49) | Original air date | U.S. viewers (millions) | Weekly rank | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
441 | 1 | "It's Survivor Warfare" | Recap | 2.4/7[10] | February 25, 2015 | 10.04[10] | 12[11] | |
As the game began, Jeff Probst asked each tribe to pick a representative, who would then choose another tribe-mate with whom to make a big decision; Joaquin and So stepped up for the White Collar tribe, Dan and Mike for the Blue Collar tribe, and Will and Jenn for the No Collar tribe. At camp, the pairs were given a choice between a big bag of beans or a smaller bag of beans and a clue to the hidden immunity idol. Only Joaquin and So decided to take the clue, subsequently lying to their tribe about their decision, raising suspicion. Dan and Mike told their Blue Collar tribe the truth about their decision, though Sierra was skeptical. At the No Collar camp, Vince bonded with Jenn over their mutual outlook on life but bickered with Joe over how to build the shelter. The following day, the Blue Collar tribe also argued about the shelter, with Dan complaining over his tribemates' choices; Rodney and the women agreed that Dan would be an easy target to eliminate first, but Dan found an ally in Mike. At the No Collar camp, Joe earned his tribe mates' admiration, particularly Jenn's, by making fire without flint. Vince took Jenn aside to make sure that she was still loyal to him, causing Jenn to doubt whether Vince was a viable alliance partner. At the White Collar camp, Carolyn suspected So was looking for the hidden immunity idol, but successfully found it herself, citing knowledge of past seasons' hiding spots as her guide.
White Collar and No Collar were neck-and-neck until Shirin from the White Collar tribe struggled on the 50-piece puzzle; the other two tribes found success with the 10-piece puzzle and won immunity. While Shirin seemed to be an easy target for the White Collar tribe's first vote, So decided to target Carolyn for not stepping up to either the ladder releasing or puzzle solving tasks during the challenge; to save herself, Carolyn told Tyler about her idol. So and Joaquin believed that they were in an alliance with Max and Tyler, but Max's true loyalty was with Shirin and Carolyn, who attempted to get Tyler to join them in voting off So. At Tribal Council, Shirin called Joaquin and So out for their lie regarding the clue to the hidden immunity idol, while So admitted that Carolyn was her target, which prompted a heated debate between the two. Tyler ultimately decided to join Carolyn, Max, and Shirin, as So became the first player voted out. | ||||||||
442 | 2 | "It Will Be My Revenge" | Recap | 2.3/7[12] | March 4, 2015 | 9.77[12] | 13[13] | |
At the Blue Collar camp, Dan lost his underwear in the water after getting hit by a wave; his attempts to make light of the situation led Lindsey to further believe he was creating a character out of himself. On the White Collar tribe, Max and Shirin took off their underwear around camp, making Tyler uncomfortable. On the No Collar tribe, Hali and Jenn's attempts to get to know Nina were complicated by Nina's deafness, and tensions increased when Hali and Jenn decided to go skinny dipping without asking her, leading to a public outburst from Nina out of frustration. While the Blue Collar tribe played makeshift basketball around camp, Mike insisted that the tribe continue to work, annoying Rodney in the process. At the No Collar camp, Vince voiced his frustrations about Joe to Nina, and Vince's attempt to talk to Joe about his behavior around camp only served to further their enmity. With an alliance formed between younger tribe members Hali, Jenn, and Joe, Vince, Nina, and Will considered sticking together.
After No Collar's Will struggled in the water, the other two tribes pulled ahead to win immunity. Back at camp, Vince told Nina that he was worried about Will's health due to his weight and asthma, but was considering blindsiding Joe, as voting Will would keep the tribe strong but put the younger alliance in power. The younger alliance tried to recruit Will to split the vote against Nina and Vince—out of fear for a hidden immunity idol—to ultimately eliminate Nina on the re-vote; Will was hesitant to vote against Nina, his closest ally. Will told Nina and Vince about the vote-splitting, and they decided to target Jenn due to her perceived untrustworthiness and Joe's challenge prowess. However, Nina later told Will that Vince was concerned for Will's health, and had considered voting him out. At Tribal Council, Will decided to stick with the young alliance while going against their vote-splitting plan, voting for Vince and sending him out of the game rather than the alliance's planned target, Nina. | ||||||||
443 | 3 | "Crazy is as Crazy Does" | Recap | 2.2/8[14] | March 11, 2015 | 9.25[14] | 20[15] | |
After Will's rogue vote sent Vince home, Joe questioned Will's loyalty while a teary Nina told the tribe that she knew she was next to go. Joe tried to make Nina feel comfortable, but she admitted that she was not as free-spirited as the rest of her tribe. At the White Collar camp, Shirin annoyed her tribe-mates with her tales of seeing howler monkeys having sex in the trees. The next day, the White Collar tribe sans Carolyn looked for the hidden immunity idol, but were unsuccessful as Carolyn had already found it. Shirin proposed a truce, but Joaquin didn't trust her and continued searching with Tyler; though Tyler knew that Carolyn had the idol and Joaquin was on the outs, he continued searching anyway to keep Joaquin's trust as he considered betraying Shirin for her behavior. At the Blue Collar camp, Dan's attempts to be funny upset Rodney after Dan jokingly insulted his mother. Later, Mike voiced his frustrations with his tribe-mates' work ethic, provoking arguments between him and Rodney, Sierra, and Lindsey, the last of whom insulted Mike's religious views.
The No Collar tribe fell behind quickly, which prompted Joe to send Nina back from the water tower to the barrel; the strategy proved ineffective, and they lost their second consecutive challenge. Back at camp, Joe apologized to Nina for implementing the faulty strategy and assuming she would slow the tribe down. Will and Nina both campaigned to vote the other out. Though the original plan was to eliminate Nina, Hali and Jenn considered voting Will out instead after he had proven himself unpredictable by voting Vince out. At Tribal Council, Nina claimed that her tribe perceived that she was weak because of her deafness, though the tribe argued that wasn't the case. When Will discussed his poor challenge performance, Nina took the opportunity to openly campaign against him. She then discussed her previous white collar background and how she felt she had been placed on the wrong tribe. After a pep talk from Hali, Nina affirmed that she would try and fit in with her tribe mates, although she would never get the chance as she was voted out after receiving votes from Jenn, Will, and Joe. | ||||||||
444 | 4 | "Winner Winner, Chicken Dinner" | Recap | 2.3/7[16] | March 18, 2015 | 9.62[16] | 9[17] | |
After voting out Nina, the No Collar tribe affirmed their loyalty to each other, though Will felt he would be the next to go if they lost again. At the Blue Collar camp, Rodney noted his respect for Mike despite their previous disagreements.
During the challenge, the Blue Collar tribe's platform dropped on Kelly's forehead; after a brief medical examination she was cleared to continue in the challenge. The No Collar tribe finished in first place while the White Collar tribe took second. The victorious No Collar tribe celebrated Will's birthday by eating one of their chickens from the reward. Jenn, a vegetarian, felt uncomfortable with the killing and roasting; she went searching for the hidden immunity idol, which she found, while the tribe feasted. At the Blue Collar camp, Kelly received six stitches from her injury at the challenge, but her bravery throughout the ordeal earned Mike's respect, and the two affirmed their alliance. Rodney's remarks that women should hold themselves to a higher standard than men caused a heated argument between him and Lindsey. At the White Collar camp, Shirin continued to alienate her tribe-mates with her behavior, which caused Carolyn to consider betraying Shirin and her closest ally, Max.
All three tribes were neck-and-neck throughout the challenge, but the No Collar and White Collar tribes narrowly won, sending Blue Collar to their first Tribal Council. Lindsey and Sierra campaigned against Rodney for his misogynistic behavior, while Rodney retaliated by targeting Lindsey. At Tribal Council, Dan, Mike, and Kelly decided to align with Rodney, splitting their votes between Lindsey and Sierra in case of a hidden immunity idol; the vote was initially tied, with two votes each on Lindsey, Rodney, and Sierra, but Lindsey was eliminated after a unanimous revote. | ||||||||
445 | 5 | "We're Finally Playing Some Survivor" | Recap | 2.3/7[16] | March 18, 2015 | 9.62[16] | 9[17] | |
After receiving two votes and losing her closest ally, an upset Sierra felt isolated from her tribe; Dan's attempts at justifying voting for her only upset her further. At the reward challenge, the three tribes were redistributed into two tribes of seven: Blue Collar tribe members Dan, Mike, Rodney, and Sierra were joined by Joaquin and Tyler from White Collar, and Joe from No Collar to form the new Escameca tribe, while No Collar tribe members Hali, Jenn, and Will were joined by Carolyn, Max, and Shirin from White Collar, and Kelly from Blue Collar to become the new Nagarote tribe.
The new Escameca tribe quickly won the challenge, five points to Nagarote's two. At the Nagarote camp, the former No Collar and White Collar tribe-mates, three people apiece, vied for Kelly's vote; the No Collar alliance took a more laid-back approach, while former White Collar Shirin acted quickly. Later, Shirin's behavior got on her new tribe-mates' nerves. Max was stung on both feet by a stingray; after putting his wart-covered feet in the tribe's cooking pot on Jenn's advice, he was perceived as selfish. At Escameca, Dan, Mike, and Rodney realized that Sierra had all the reason to abandon them for their new tribe-mates, and attempted to bring her back into their fold. Sierra indeed vocalized her desire to align with Joaquin, Joe, and Tyler, though Joaquin and Rodney began to bond. Later, Dan attempted to apologize to Sierra for his previous behavior, but again only further alienated her after ignoring Mike's advice on how to approach her.
Tyler and Joaquin quickly gave Escameca an early lead, which they maintained to handily win the challenge. Back at camp, Shirin and Max targeted Will for his weakness in challenges, telling Carolyn and Kelly their plans. Though Kelly agreed, Carolyn decided to betray her former White Collar tribe-mates, joining the No Collar alliance instead. Kelly, realizing that Carolyn was no longer with Shirin and Max, also abandoned them. At Tribal Council, the new alliance of five put their votes on Max, sending him out of the game. | ||||||||
446 | 6 | "Odd Woman Out" | Recap | 2.3/8[18] | March 25, 2015 | 9.64[18] | 10[19] | |
The morning after Max's blindside, Shirin, his closest ally, attempted to figure out why Carolyn betrayed them; Carolyn claimed that it was because the two excluded her from strategic conversations. After Hali admitted that it was because the two were annoying, Shirin vowed to reintegrate with her tribe. At Escameca, Rodney and Joaquin aligned based on their common lifestyles.
Though Escameca was first to the top of their tower, Nagarote came from behind to narrowly win the challenge. On the reward, Shirin bonded with her tribe-mates. The next day, at Escameca, Joaquin tried to align with Sierra; though Sierra was prepared to align with Joaquin and Tyler, she was perturbed by Joaquin's friendship with Rodney. Rodney later plotted with Mike to throw the immunity challenge to get rid of Joe for being a physical and social threat at the merge, which Mike considered in order to protect his closest ally, Kelly, on the other tribe.
After the tribes were tied with two points apiece, Mike blatantly threw the final match to Kelly to give Nagarote the win. Back at camp, Rodney continued to target Joe; though Joaquin and Tyler agreed to the plan, Mike and Dan decided to betray him and align with Joe instead to break up Rodney and Joaquin's partnership. Sierra found herself as the swing vote, but ultimately decided to side with Dan, Joe, and Mike to eliminate Joaquin. | ||||||||
447 | 7 | "The Line Will Be Drawn Tonight" | Recap | 2.2/8[21] | April 1, 2015 | 9.59[21] | 7[22] | |
Left out of the plans to vote out Joaquin, Rodney felt betrayed by his Blue Collar allies. Mike informed Rodney that they eliminated Joaquin to protect Rodney from being duped, though Rodney claimed that he was trying to reel Joaquin in, not vice versa, and berated Mike for not trusting him. The next morning, the two tribes were merged, and enjoyed a commemorative feast. At the feast, Shirin asked about Joaquin's blindside and was informed that he and Rodney had grown too close. Realizing that pairs were being targeted, Carolyn planned to downplay her partnership with Tyler going forward. At the merged camp, Mike and Kelly celebrated their reunion as Kelly realigned with her former Blue Collar tribe-mates. Joe rejoined former No Collar allies Hali and Jenn, and the three brought Shirin into their fold. With Kelly noticeably realigning with her former tribe, the alliance of four attempted to align with Tyler and Carolyn instead. Will, the fourth former No Collar, was courted by Rodney, who proposed a final four deal with him, Kelly, and Carolyn. Rodney conspired for the four to initially vote with the Blue Collars but later betray Dan, Mike, and Sierra to avenge Joaquin. Amidst all the scrambling, Tyler and Carolyn found themselves the swing votes between the Blue Collar and No Collar alliances; Rodney and Mike plotted to target Joe first, though a vexed Rodney told Mike that they wouldn't be in this mess had Mike not spared Joe at the previous Tribal Council.
After an hour, Joe outlasted Jenn and Carolyn to win the first individual immunity of the game, foiling the Blue Collars' plan. The Blue Collar alliance shifted their target to Jenn instead to split up her and Hali, though they told Will that Hali was the target to see if he was trustworthy; the alliance of Joe, Hali, Jenn and Shirin targeted Kelly. Tyler and Carolyn entertained offers from both alliances, while a nervous Jenn revealed her idol to Hali, considering playing it. At Tribal Council, Will, Carolyn, and Tyler all voted with the Blue Collar alliance—Will for Hali and the rest for Jenn—but Jenn played her hidden immunity idol, negating the seven votes against her and eliminating Kelly instead. | ||||||||
448 | 8 | "Keep It Real" | Recap | 2.5/8[23] | April 8, 2015 | 9.84[23] | 12[24] | |
After Jenn's successful idol play sent Kelly out of the game, Rodney blamed Mike for changing the target from Hali to Jenn, and tried to convince Will, Tyler, and Carolyn to turn on Mike once the minority alliance—Hali, Jenn, Joe, and Shirin—was out of the game. Rodney later blatantly disrespected the minority alliance, and bickered with Shirin over food portioning.
Joe, Mike, and Hali advanced to the final round, where Joe won his second individual challenge in a row. Given the choice to take four other castaways with him on the reward, Joe chose to take Carolyn, Tyler, Will, and Shirin to earn their trust and bolster his minority alliance. Joe found a clue to a hidden immunity idol in a bottle Carolyn was drinking from; he managed to trick her into giving him the bottle and took the clue, but Tyler spotted him. The next morning, Joe shared the clue with Tyler, but Mike saw them sneak off and spied on them; Tyler told Mike about the clue to keep the Blue Collars' trust. Though Joe couldn't find the idol, Mike decided to frame him by claiming that he saw Joe find it, which sidelined Joe from continuing his search; Mike continued looking, and eventually found the idol.
Though Dan twice believed that he had completed the sliding puzzle, he was wrong both times; Joe won the challenge, continuing his winning streak. Shirin and Sierra told Hali and Jenn about Dan's condescending comments, and Sierra considered leaving her Blue Collar alliance for a girls alliance; Shirin lobbied Tyler to take Dan out and weaken the dominating Blue Collars as she thought it was their only opportunity to do so. At Tribal Council, Dan stated that "flippers never win," but Shirin claimed that his comment was just a fear tactic to discourage voting against him. However, neither Tyler nor Sierra flipped, and the Blue Collar alliance—Will, Tyler, and Carolyn included—targeted Hali, and she became the first member of the jury. | ||||||||
449 | 9 | "Livin' On the Edge" | Recap | 2.2/8[25] | April 15, 2015 | 9.35[25] | 12[26] | |
After losing her closest ally in Hali, a despondent Jenn was ready to get voted out. Shirin then told the others that she would vote for Mike to win the game, in the hopes that it would turn him into a target. Later, she lobbied with Mike and Sierra to vote out Carolyn, who was perceived to have Rodney, Tyler, and Will on her side.
The teams were neck-and-neck at the grappling portion, but the team of Dan, Mike, Shirin, Sierra, and Tyler pulled ahead to win reward. Back at camp, the losing team ate one of the chickens, which again alienated vegetarian Jenn, although the mood was lifted by Rodney's impressions of Mike and Dan; Joe sensed, via his impressions, that Rodney wasn't fully onboard with his alliance, and considered plotting with him to overthrow Mike. Jenn told Joe that she would give him immunity if she won the challenge since she was ready to leave.
Tyler outlasted Jenn and Mike to win immunity. Shirin, predicting the majority alliance of seven would split their votes against Joe and Jenn, created a plan wherein she and Joe would vote for Jenn, which would send a willing Jenn out of the game instead of Joe, the majority alliance's intended target. Mike told Shirin to vote against Joe; Shirin was conflicted between voting against Jenn and ruining the majority alliance's plans, or voting against Joe to take out the proven challenge threat and earn the majority alliance's trust. Joe created a fake immunity idol with stashed materials; Mike found him and claimed that he would switch his vote to Jenn if Joe gave him his idol. Joe gave Mike his idol, but Mike stuck with his alliance at Tribal Council, playing the fake idol on Will and voting against Joe; Shirin also voted against Joe, and he became the second member of the jury. | ||||||||
450 | 10 | "Bring the Popcorn" | Recap | 2.4/8[29] | April 22, 2015 | 10.19[29] | 10[30] | |
Rodney told his alliance of Carolyn, Tyler, and Will that it was time to target Mike; unbeknownst to them, Mike overheard the conversation.
Dan's advantage was that he had earned an extra vote at any Tribal Council of his choice up until the final five.[28] Upon returning at camp, Will found a clue that led him to a hidden box filled with rations, including electrolytes, and chose to share them with the rest of the tribe. Mike, having angered others by initially backing out on buying his letter from home to win the advantage, told his close allies that he had only done so because he had overheard Rodney planning his betrayal, which led to an argument between him and Rodney, and upsetting his allies Dan and Sierra; Mike later joined the minority alliance of Jenn and Shirin. Jenn, Mike, and Shirin suspected that Will hadn't given the tribe his full supply of rations, and suggested he was stashing food. Tyler informed Will, who subsequently lashed out at Shirin, verbally attacking her on a personal level.
Before the challenge began, Will asked Jeff if he could get his letter from home in exchange for sitting out of the challenge. Jeff agreed provided every other castaway approved; all did except for Shirin. Mike won the challenge, thwarting Rodney's plan. Suspecting that Sierra would remain loyal to Rodney's alliance, Jenn, Mike, and Shirin lobbied Dan to join them and vote out Carolyn, while Rodney's alliance—Sierra included—decided to split the vote between Jenn and Shirin. Dan found himself the swing vote, though the majority alliance questioned his loyalty, while Carolyn considered playing her idol due to Dan's hesitance. At Tribal Council, Shirin and Will reignited their argument, during which Shirin tearfully recounted her past as a victim of domestic abuse. Carolyn held on to her idol as the votes were split between Shirin and Jenn, with Mike and Shirin also voting for Jenn to send her out of the game. | ||||||||
451 | 11 | "Survivor Russian Roulette" | Recap | 2.2/8[31] | April 29, 2015 | 9.25[31] | 11[32] | |
Dan and Sierra discussed Mike's claims that they were at the bottom of the majority alliance; Dan later attempted to comfort Shirin about Will's comments at the previous Tribal Council.
After the team of Mike, Sierra, Shirin and Rodney accidentally placed a plank on the ground, they decided to each roll on a barrel to make up time, but they were unable to do so and Carolyn, Dan, Tyler, and Will won the challenge. Back at camp, Sierra campaigned to Rodney to get rid of Tyler for being a threat and to take Shirin to the end because no one would vote for her to win, though Rodney did not believe that Tyler was a threat nor did he trust Shirin. On the reward trip, Carolyn, Tyler, and Will did their best to make sure Dan stayed loyal to them.
Carolyn and Mike outlasted Shirin and Rodney to win immunity, again thwarting the majority alliance's plans. Though the majority alliance targeted Shirin, she lobbied Dan and Sierra to take out Tyler. Tyler searched through Dan's bag and discovered his extra vote advantage, and later informed Carolyn. Mike attempted to realign with Dan, his former closest ally, but was unsuccessful, and Mike considered playing his idol on Shirin. At Tribal Council, Shirin told everyone that getting rid of her would be a bad idea and that they should get rid of Tyler. Right before the vote, Mike unveiled his hidden immunity idol and claimed that he would give it to Shirin, and that she was going to vote for Tyler and he was going to vote for another member of the dominant alliance, and told the other members of the alliance to vote for Tyler to ensure their safety. Ultimately, Mike did not play the idol for Shirin, but the dominant alliance called his bluff and Shirin was voted out, though Tyler and Will voted against Dan. | ||||||||
452 | 12 | "Holding on for Dear Life" | Recap | 2.1/8[33] | May 6, 2015 | 9.22[33] | 9[34] | |
The dominant alliance—everyone except for Mike—regrouped to discuss the previous Tribal Council. Although Tyler and Will had voted against Dan, they explained to Dan their reasoning, which he accepted. The next day was Rodney's birthday, and he hoped that he would finally get to go on a reward trip to celebrate; Will told Rodney that he would give up his potential spot on the trip to make it happen.
Will was not chosen to participate in the challenge. Rodney forgot to bring the balls with him on the obstacle course, losing a lot of time for him, Dan, and Tyler, but they later caught up on the ball-launching portion. However, Mike was able to come from behind to win reward for him, Carolyn, and Sierra. No one decided to give up their reward to Rodney, which provoked his ire. After enjoying the reward trip, Carolyn considered aligning with Mike. Back at camp, an upset Rodney plotted that he would pretend that he wanted to quit the game in hopes that Mike would not play his idol and would be blindsided, though no one else believed it would work. When Carolyn, Mike, and Sierra returned, Rodney began his charade, which Mike saw right through. Tyler, knowing that Mike would likely vote against him, asked Carolyn to play her idol on him.
Carolyn outlasted Mike and Tyler to win immunity. Carolyn proposed to Dan, Rodney, and Sierra that they split their votes between Mike and Tyler, but Carolyn also plotted with Tyler and Will to blindside Dan due to the extra vote advantage he won at the Survivor Auction. Mike told Carolyn that he was voting for Tyler, and she found herself torn between betraying her long-time ally Tyler or getting rid of Dan and his advantage. At Tribal Council, Mike again claimed he would play his idol, which he ultimately did, voiding the four votes against him; Carolyn and Sierra joined Mike in voting against Tyler, and he was sent to the jury. | ||||||||
453 | 13 | "My Word Is My Bond" | Recap | 2.3/8[35] | May 13, 2015 | 9.61[35] | 7[36] | |
Having used his hidden immunity idol, Mike knew that he would be voted out unless he won immunity or found a new ally. Though Dan, formerly Mike's closest ally, felt confident with his new alliance, Carolyn considered working with Mike to blindside Dan to ensure the target stayed off of her, telling Mike about Dan's extra vote advantage.
Both teams were stuck on the word puzzle for over half an hour until Carolyn was able to decipher host Jeff Probst's clues to win the challenge for her, Mike, and Will. Carolyn openly considered giving up her reward to Rodney, who had yet to go on a reward trip, but ultimately decided against it. On the reward trip, Mike proposed a final three deal with Carolyn and Will, which Carolyn entertained, though Will was more hesitant. Mike told them that he did not want to lose to Rodney due to his attitude and outbursts, and they agreed. Back at camp, an irate Rodney targeted Carolyn for not giving up her reward to him. After returning from the reward, Mike tried to convince Sierra that Dan wouldn't take her to the end of the game.
Mike was the first to the table maze and, despite Sierra nearly catching up, ultimately maintained his lead to win immunity for the third time. The majority alliance (sans Carolyn) settled on voting for Carolyn as a threat, while lying to Mike and saying that Dan was the target due to his advantage; Mike then used this to try to tell Dan that he was the target, but Dan didn't believe him. Mike then tried to work with Carolyn and Sierra, telling them that Rodney and Will were siding with Dan, and Carolyn considered playing her hidden immunity idol. At Tribal Council, Dan decided to use his extra vote advantage, but Carolyn countered by playing her hidden immunity idol. The five votes against Carolyn were voided, and Dan was sent to the jury with Mike and Carolyn's votes. | ||||||||
454 | 14 | "It's A Fickle, Fickle Game" | Recap | 2.3/7[37] | May 20, 2015 | 9.74[37] | 5[38] | |
Despite the fact that her allies Rodney, Sierra, and Will voted against her but Mike did not, Carolyn decided to regroup with her old alliance and continued targeting Mike. Before the reward challenge, the castaways were reunited with their loved ones: Carolyn's husband Joel, Mike's mother Deborah, Rodney's father Rodney Sr., Sierra's father Danny, and Will's wife Monifa.
Mike won the challenge, and enjoyed the afternoon with his mother.
The morning of the challenge, Mike had 30 minutes to practice navigating the maze blindfolded with Deborah there to guide him, but they struggled. At the challenge, Carolyn, Rodney, Sierra and Will helped each other, but Mike's advantage paid off and he won the challenge. Mike made a final three deal with Carolyn and Sierra, and another with Rodney and Will; at Tribal Council, Sierra mentioned that she was a threat, and ultimately Carolyn joined the men to vote her out.
Mike maintained his early lead to win his fifth and final immunity challenge. Rodney and Will stuck together and decided to vote Carolyn out, but Mike told Carolyn that he was going to force a tie with her against Rodney, and encouraged her to practice making fire to win the tiebreaker challenge. At Tribal Council, Mike forced the tie between Carolyn and Rodney; after an hour, Carolyn won the fire-making tiebreaker challenge to join Mike and Will in the finals, and Rodney became the final member of the jury. After enjoying a feast for making it to the end of the game, the final three faced the jury for their final Tribal Council. Joe told the finalists what they needed to do for the jury to earn his vote, while Hali asked Carolyn how her role as a mother disadvantaged her in the game; Carolyn explained that she fought hard despite being much older than most of the other castaways. Rodney asked Will how he was true to himself, and Will explained that he used his social game and giving nature to compensate for his lack of Survivor knowledge; he then asked Carolyn to explain the moves she made on her own, and she said it was blindsiding Tyler and Dan. Tyler asked Mike what he brought to the game socially, and Mike admitted that his social game wasn't as strong as he would've liked to be; Tyler asked Carolyn to redeem herself for backstabbing him after 30 days of being closest allies, and Carolyn stated that she had to or else he would've won, but that it was the most difficult decision she made. Sierra asked Will which of the other finalists' traits he wanted; he said Mike's work ethic and Carolyn's analytical skills. Jenn called the jury out for being bitter against Mike's manic, back-against-the-wall gameplay, and pled for them to vote for him to win. Dan chastised Mike for not caring about the people sent to the jury, and Mike told Dan that he regretted losing his trust after his actions at the Survivor Auction, and apologized to him; Dan accepted the apology. Shirin castigated Will for comments he made about her family, and praised Mike for defending her, though she stated that, as a superfan of the game, she was going to vote based on their games; Shirin likened each of their games to an animal: Mike's to a howler monkey, Carolyn's to a stingray, and Will's to a dead fish. | ||||||||
455 | 15 | "Reunion" | TBA | 1.8/6[37] | May 20, 2015 | 7.21[37] | 14[38] | |
Months after the final Tribal Council, at the live reunion, it was revealed that Mike won the game with Hali, Joe, Jenn, Shirin, Tyler, and Dan's votes, while Carolyn and Will tied for second with one vote each; Carolyn with Sierra's, and Will with Rodney's. The cast for Survivor: Cambodia was also revealed, as chosen by public vote. Of the five Worlds Apart candidates, Joe and Shirin were chosen to be among the 20 competitors to play in the following season; Mike was ineligible due to his victory, and Carolyn and Max were not selected. At the end of the reunion, Joe, Shirin and the other 18 chosen castaways were immediately put on a bus to begin their trip to Cambodia. |
Voting history
editOriginal tribes | Switched tribes | Merged tribe | |||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Episode | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | |||||||
Day | 3 | 6 | 8 | 11 | 14 | 16 | 19 | 22 | 24 | 27 | 29 | 32 | 35 | 37 | 38 | ||||||
Tribe | Masaya | Nagarote | Nagarote | Escameca | Nagarote | Escameca | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | Merica | ||||||
Eliminated | So | Vince | Nina | Tie[a] | Lindsey | Max | Joaquin | Kelly | Hali | Joe | Jenn | Shirin | Tyler | Dan | Sierra | Tie[b] | Rodney | ||||
Votes | 4–2 | 3–2–1 | 3–2 | 2–2–2 | 3–0–0 | 5–2 | 4–3 | 4–1–0[c] | 7–4 | 5–4–1 | 5–3–1 | 4–2–2 | 3–0[d] | 2–0[e] | 4–1 | 2–2 | Challenge[f] | ||||
Voter | Vote | ||||||||||||||||||||
Mike | Lindsey | Lindsey | Joaquin | Hali | Joe | Jenn | Tyler | Tyler | Dan | Sierra | Rodney | ||||||||||
Carolyn | So | Max | Hali | Jenn | Jenn | Shirin | Tyler | Dan | Sierra | Rodney | Won[f] | ||||||||||
Will | Vince | Nina | Max | Hali | Hali | Jenn | Jenn | Dan | Sierra | Carolyn | |||||||||||
Rodney | Sierra | None[g] | Joe | Hali | Joe | Shirin | Shirin | Sierra | Carolyn | Lost[f] | |||||||||||
Sierra | Rodney | None[g] | Joaquin | Hali | Joe | Shirin | Shirin | Tyler | Rodney | ||||||||||||
Dan | Lindsey | Lindsey | Joaquin | Hali | Joe | Shirin | Shirin | ||||||||||||||
Tyler | So | Joe | Hali | Jenn | Jenn | Dan | |||||||||||||||
Shirin | So | Will | Kelly | Dan | Joe | Jenn | Tyler | ||||||||||||||
Jenn | Vince | Nina | Max | Kelly | Dan | Dan | Carolyn | ||||||||||||||
Joe | Nina | Nina | Joaquin | Kelly | Dan | Jenn | |||||||||||||||
Hali | Vince | Will | Max | Kelly | Dan | ||||||||||||||||
Kelly | Sierra | Lindsey | Max | ||||||||||||||||||
Joaquin | Carolyn | Joe | |||||||||||||||||||
Max | So | Will | |||||||||||||||||||
Lindsey | Rodney | None[g] | |||||||||||||||||||
Nina | Jenn | Will | |||||||||||||||||||
Vince | Jenn | ||||||||||||||||||||
So | Carolyn |
Jury vote | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Episode | 15 | |||
Day | 39 | |||
Finalist | Mike | Carolyn | Will | |
Votes | 6–1–1 | |||
Juror | Vote | |||
Rodney | ||||
Sierra | ||||
Dan | ||||
Tyler | ||||
Shirin | ||||
Jenn | ||||
Joe | ||||
Hali |
- ^ The first Tribal Council vote resulted in a tie. Per the rules, a second vote was held where the castaways involved in the tie would not vote and the remaining castaways could only vote for those who tied.
- ^ The last Tribal Council vote resulted in a tie. As there were only four castaways remaining, the two tied castaways competed in a fire making challenge to resolve the tie.
- ^ Jenn played a hidden immunity idol, therefore seven votes against her were not counted.
- ^ Mike played a hidden immunity idol, therefore four votes against him were not counted.
- ^ Carolyn played a hidden immunity idol, therefore five votes against her were not counted.
- ^ a b c Rodney lost to Carolyn in the fire making tiebreaker challenge.
- ^ a b c Lindsey, Sierra, and Rodney were not eligible to vote in the second round of voting.
- ^ Dan played an extra vote advantage, allowing him to cast two ballots during a single vote.
Reception
editDespite Jeff Probst hyping up the season as one of the best and suggesting that the winner would become "one of the favorite winners of all time,"[39] reception for Worlds Apart was mostly negative. Critics lambasted the negativity and unlikability of the cast, as well as the predictability of the season.[40]
In a poll conducted by Dalton Ross of Entertainment Weekly, Worlds Apart was ranked as the 5th worst season out of the first 35 seasons of Survivor.[41] Ross himself ranked it 29th out of the 40 aired seasons, stating that there were "not enough people to root for" and criticized Dan Foley's and Will Sims's actions during the season.[42] Worlds Apart was also ranked as the 4th worst season by fan site "The Purple Rock Podcast" in 2020, stating that the cast "quickly disappoints," and that the winner "becomes obvious fairly early on."[43] In 2015, a poll by Rob Has a Podcast and Rob Cesternino ranked Worlds Apart 20th out of 30.[44] This was updated in 2021 during Cesternino's podcast, Survivor All-Time Top 40 Rankings, ranking 35th.[45] In 2020, Inside Survivor ranked this season 36th out of 40 saying that the season had potential during the pre-merge but took a "disturbing turn" after the Survivor Auction.[46]
References
edit- ^ a b Andy Dehnart (May 7, 2014). "Survivor back to Nicaragua for seasons 29, 30". Reality Blurred. Retrieved February 19, 2015.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (April 20, 2015). "'Survivor' exclusive: Jeff Probst reveals the big new twist". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 20, 2015.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (January 21, 2015). "The full cast for 'Survivor: Worlds Apart' revealed (with intel from Jeff Probst)". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 21, 2015.
- ^ Holmes, Gordon (February 12, 2015). "'Survivor' White Collar So – 'The First Person I Noticed Was Max Dawson'". Xfinity. Retrieved February 12, 2015.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (May 20, 2015). "'Survivor: Cambodia—Second Chance' cast revealed". EW.com. Retrieved June 12, 2024.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (February 8, 2017). "Survivor: Game Changers full cast list and twist revealed". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
- ^ Ross, Dalton (February 6, 2019). "Survivor's Jeff Probst explains the decision to mix old and new players again". Entertainment Weekly. Meredith Corporation. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
- ^ "Big Brother And Survivor Alums Tackle A New Challenge On Candy Crush". CBS. July 10, 2017. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
- ^ George, Daniel (August 1, 2018). "How did Survivor vs. Big Brother teams fare on Celebrity Fear Factor?". FanSided. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (February 26, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Empire', 'American Idol', 'Survivor' & 'Arrow' Adjusted Up; 'The 100', 'black-ish' & 'Nashville' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on February 27, 2015. Retrieved February 26, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (March 3, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Empire' Tops With Adults 18-49, 'NCIS' Wins With Total Viewers for the Week Ending March 1, 2015". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 6, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ a b Bibel, Sara (March 5, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Empire' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 8, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (March 10, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Empire' Tops With Adults 18-49, 'The Big Bang Theory' Wins With Total Viewers for the Week Ending March 8, 2015". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 13, 2015. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (March 12, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Empire' & 'American Idol' Adjusted Up; 'CSI: Cyber' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 15, 2015. Retrieved March 12, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (March 17, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Empire' Tops With Adults 18-49, 'The Big Bang Theory' Wins With Total Viewers for the Week Ending March 15, 2015". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 20, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Bibel, Sara (March 19, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Arrow' & 'Survivor' Adjusted Up; 'Supernatural' Adjusted Down & Final 'Empire' Numbers". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 22, 2015. Retrieved March 19, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (March 24, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Empire' Tops Adults 18-49 & Total Viewers for the Week Ending March 22, 2015". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 26, 2015. Retrieved March 24, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (March 26, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Survivor', 'The Middle', 'The Goldbergs', 'Modern Family' & 'Criminal Minds' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on March 29, 2015. Retrieved March 26, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (March 31, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Voice' Tops Adults 18-49. 'NCIS' Wins With Total Viewers for the Week Ending March 29, 2015". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
- ^ "YouTube". www.youtube.com.
- ^ a b Bibel, Sara (April 2, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'American Idol', 'Survivor', 'The Middle', 'The Goldbergs', & 'Modern Family' Adjusted Up; 'The Mysteries of Laura' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 3, 2015. Retrieved April 2, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (April 7, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Big Bang Theory' Tops Adults 18-49 & 'NCIS' Wins With Total Viewers for the Week Ending April 5, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 9, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (April 9, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Survivor', 'The Voice', 'The Middle', 'Criminal Minds', 'CSI:Cyber' and 'The Goldbergs' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 12, 2015. Retrieved April 9, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (April 14, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: NCAA Basketball Championship Tops Adults 18-49 & Total Viewers for the Week Ending April 12, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 18, 2015. Retrieved April 14, 2015.
- ^ a b Bibel, Sara (April 16, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'The Middle', 'The Goldbergs' & 'Criminal Minds' Adjusted Up; 'Arrow' & 'Supernatural' Adjusted Down". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 17, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (April 21, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Big Bang Theory' Tops Adults 18-49; 'ACM Awards' Leads Total Viewers for the Week Ending April 19, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 25, 2015. Retrieved April 21, 2015.
- ^ "Survivor 2015: Exit Interview with the Latest Player Voted Off Worlds Apart". April 23, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
- ^ "Survivor - I Have An Advantage". YouTube. April 22, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (April 23, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Modern Family', 'Arrow', 'Criminal Minds' & 'Survivor' Adjusted Up". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (April 28, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Bruce Jenner: The Interview' Tops Adults 18-49 & Total Viewers for the Week Ending April 26, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on April 30, 2015. Retrieved April 29, 2015.
- ^ a b Bibel, Sara (April 30, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Arrow', 'Survivor', 'Criminal Minds' & 'Law & Order: SVU' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 2, 2015. Retrieved April 30, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (May 5, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Big Bang Theory' Tops Adults 18-49 While 'NCIS' Leads Total Viewers for the Week Ending May 3, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 7, 2015. Retrieved May 5, 2015.
- ^ a b Kondolojy, Amanda (May 7, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Arrow', 'Nashville', & 'The Goldbergs' Adjusted Up; 'American Idol', 'Criminal Minds' 'Supernatural' & 'Blacki-ish' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 8, 2015. Retrieved May 7, 2015.
- ^ Bibel, Sara (May 12, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Big Bang Theory' Tops Adults 18-49 & Total Viewers for the Week Ending May 10, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 14, 2015. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
- ^ a b "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Law & Order: SVU', 'Survivor, 'The Middle' & 'American Idol' Adjusted Up; 'Supernatural', 'black-ish' & 'Nashville' Adjusted Down". Archived from the original on May 16, 2015.
- ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (May 19, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'Billboard Music Awards' Tops Adults 18-49 & 'NCIS' Tops Total Viewers for the Week Ending May 17, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 21, 2015. Retrieved May 19, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Kondolojy, Amanda (May 21, 2015). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Survivor', 'Survivor: Reunion' & 'Modern Family' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 22, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2015.
- ^ a b Bibel, Sara (May 27, 2015). "TV Ratings Broadcast Top 25: 'The Voice' Tops Adults 18-49 & 'Dancing With The Stars' Tops Total Viewers for the Week Ending May 24, 2015". TV By the Numbers. Archived from the original on May 28, 2015. Retrieved May 30, 2015.
- ^ Wigler, Josh (February 23, 2015). "Jeff Probst Digs Deep into Survivor Worlds Apart, the 30th Season of the Hit Reality Series". Parade: Entertainment, Recipes, Health, Life, Holidays. Parade. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
- ^ Reid, Joe (May 6, 2015). "This is the least likeable cast in Survivor history". slate.com. Slate. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
- ^ Ross, Dalton. "Fans Rank Every Single 'Survivor' Season". EW.com.
- ^ Ross, Dalton. "Ranking every season of 'Survivor'". EW.com.
- ^ "Survivor season rankings (with spoiler-free summaries)". The Purple Rock Survivor Podcast. May 22, 2020. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
- ^ "Survivor Top 30 All-Time Season Rankings Results". Rob Has a Podcast. September 21, 2015. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
- ^ "Survivor All-Time Top 40 Rankings | #35: Worlds Apart". Rob Has a Podcast. February 10, 2021. Retrieved February 10, 2021.
- ^ Holmes, Martin (October 2, 2020). "Best Season Rankings – No. 36 – Worlds Apart". Inside Survivor. Retrieved March 11, 2021.