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Gabby Pascuzzi during "Jackets and Eggs," Survivor David vs. Goliath's fifth episode. (Photo by Robert Voets/CBS Entertainment)
by Andy Dehnart 4 Dec. 2018 | 9:01 am
Another Survivor David vs. Goliath player has been interviewed while still on the show, a break from tradition that gives us a lot of wonderful insight into this season—a season that is definitely one of the best in recent years, and continually solidifying its place as one of the all-time great seasons.
The Hollywood Reporter’s Josh Wigler interviewed Gabby Pascuzzi, and she gives behind-the-scenes details about the endurance immunity challenge, Angelina’s rice negotiation, the Carl blindside, her crying, and more.
Her responses are thoughtful and detailed, and—like Nick’s insight about the strategy behind two blindsides—is a real treat to read for someone still in the game.
(For the record, the season was filmed last spring, but players typically aren’t interviewed by the media until after their final episode of the season airs. So “still in the game” doesn’t mean that Gabby is being interviewed while still living on a Fijian island, it means while she’s “still in the game that’s airing on television.”)

Gabby Pascuzzi and Christian Hubicki on Survivor David vs. Goliath episode 10 (Image by CBS Entertainment)
On Twitter, Gabby’s background image is a photo of her crying in one of this season’s episodes, and her bio says that she is the “Crying girl in glasses on Survivor 37.”
That’s a reference to the fact that her tears have received a lot of air time, though in her interview with Josh Wigler, Gabby amusingly points out “I did not cry in episodes three, five, eight, nine or eleven.”
First, for those conspiracy theorists who like to make up stories about what they’re seeing on TV, Gabby says that she is not pretending to cry:
“As flattered as I am by all the fans who think that I have such magnificent acting chops, I assure you that I did high school theater and am not a great actor, and also, I believe being able to cry that convincingly on demand would actually make me a psychopath.
Instead, I want to propose another way to frame my tears: they can be both genuine and strategic. I knew going into the game that I am a person who cries easily — when I’m sad, angry or even happy. I even joked about it in my preseason self-comparison to Dawn, and in my interview with you for First One Out. I think in Survivor, you have to figure out how to work with your own natural personality quirks. So if I know I’m going to cry because I can’t control my body’s natural reaction, what can I do? I can use it as a way to connect with people. Vulnerability is a powerful bonding mechanism.”
She goes on to give several examples about how “pathos is a powerful rhetorical device” and helped her in specific interactions with other players.
But she also acknowledges that “Sometimes, the tears don’t serve a real purpose and I just have to remind the fans that I’m human.”
When Elizabeth was voted out, Gabby said that her “tears weren’t fake, or me trying to cover up the Strike Force. It was a real human moment wanting to defend someone that I cared about. You can love or hate me for it, but I think people in my real life appreciate that I am an empathetic friend who will always stand up for them.”
Earlier this season, Gabby wrote on Twitter,
“Hot take. You can be emotional & vulnerable in private, and also calm & competent when you have to perform a task. Keep that in mind when you call women overly emotional and assume that their personal life and disposition means they can’t do their work in a professional setting.”
In her THR interview, Gabby further addressed those who think crying shows weakness:
“Lastly, I want to ask the people who are so incensed by my crying why it bothers them so much. If you’ve been told in your life that it’s weak to cry, I have compassion for you and hope you can find a healthy way to express your emotions that works for you. Emotions are powerful and wonderful and make us human. I hope that people who have walls up can someday find the strength to be vulnerable, as I think you’ll find it brings love, joy and deep relationships into your life.”
With that, Gabby just won this season of Survivor, whether or not she actually wins this season of Survivor.

Angelina Keeley during her Survivor David vs. Goliath episode 10 negotiation, which was ridiculed even by CBS. (Image by CBS Entertainment)
There was a lot more to the story of Angelina’s negotiation with Jeff Probst for more rice, and Gabby confirmed parts of Angelina’s version, including that the tribe discussed it and that Angelina led the charge:
“She had brought it up many times prior at camp and called tribe meetings to decide how we would negotiate. A lot of us recognized that we did need more rice, but no one really wanted to take the lead and expend the brainpower to itemize our entire camp and rice supply.”
Gabby said that Christian and Angelina spent time about an hour at camp working out the math for how long their remaining rice would last.
In addition, Gabby said that Angelina’s immunity sacrifice was appreciated, but also transparent in revealing Angelina’s place in the game:
“When she volunteered to give up immunity, we were all very grateful. For me? It made me laugh a little. She was supposed to be the decoy name, remember? So why would she sit out if she was in danger?”

Carl Boudreaux in a low moment after losing the first reward challenge on Survivor David vs. Goliath episode 10. (Image by CBS)
Gabby led the way in booting Carl, blindsiding one of her own original tribemates, but that process took two episodes for several reasons.
It started with the blindside of John—a plan that excluded Gabby, as she told Josh Wigler:
“After that blindside, I acted cool, but inside I felt like I was getting left behind in the game. […] My alliance had my back, which I appreciated, but that whole John vote was a wake-up call for me.
We did bond when we all shared our… okay, their advantages, which was one of my favorite moments of the whole game. But my not having an advantage just made me even more cognizant of the fact that out of the five of us, the jury would respect my game the least.”
Gabby said that her priorities did not include a David alliance to the end: “for my personal end game, David strong did not make sense,” she said. “I felt I was at the bottom of the Davids, so going to the final five with them just means I come in fifth place, or am a final three goat.”
Carl wanted to keep the original David tribe together, which contributed to making him a target.
Also, Gabby said that, while she and Carl were close friends, “strategically, we didn’t click. I would want to talk through the possible scenarios, like a rock draw at the final ten, or looking forward to the next vote, and he would say I was overthinking things. He is very straightforward and I’m very cerebral, so we didn’t vibe like that.”
While Gabby is getting more attention for her emotional expression, she says that Carl was just as emotional, but in a less-obvious way:
“I love Carl, but Carl is an emotional player. One of my favorite phrases is, ‘When you point your finger, there are three fingers pointing back at you.’ So I believe when Carl calls me emotional, it’s because he is emotional. The difference between me and Carl is that my emotions are outward, whereas he bottles his up and lets them out in private. So he saw me as weak because I couldn’t hold it in, and I saw him as hard to work with because he was stubborn.”
Gabby did click with Christian, of course, and they both agreed that Carl had to go, which was an example of “how in sync our brains were,” Gabby said.
There were two reasons why the Carl vote didn’t happen in the first of the two back-to-back episodes, when Alec was voted out instead:
Gabby says that “Everyone had their own reasons why voting for Carl was good for their game, and it all came together at the perfect time.”

Alec Merlino during the Survivor David vs. Goliath episode 10 immunity challenge, suffering the effects of five hours of endurance and/or listening to Christian. (Image by CBS)
There was much more to the endurance challenge than we saw on TV—of course there was, since it lasted 5.5 hours, and an episode of Survivor is 43 minutes long.
Gabby said that the challenge “was weirdly a bonding experience for all of us, probably because we were forced to hang out for six hours and couldn’t talk about strategy,” and that time included “several games of 20 questions.”
It also included Christian talking nonstop, which was included in a comedically edited sequence that showed hours passing as Christian kept going.
It turns out that Christian actually started talking—to try to annoy Alec—long before Gabby dropped out of the competition. But he stopped, because she asked:
“At one point, he started telling a story about a robot and it got… anatomical. I was still in the challenge, so I said to him, ‘Christian, I love you man, but I need you to shut up.'”
That sounds like a wonderful moment, but what I really wish CBS would put online is the cast’s conversation with Jeff Probst, which ranged from how Probst works out to Survivor itself. Gabby said:
“Christian is a Survivor superfan, so he would pester Jeff about previous seasons, his favorite players, challenges he wanted brought back, or whatever. Eventually the whole sit-out bench engaged in the Jeff interrogation too, asking him questions ranging from whether they’ll bring the Survivor auction back, to what Jeff’s workout routine was. Jeff was such a good sport and it speaks volumes for what a great host he is — as much as we were suffering in the sun, so was he, on his feet for almost six hours!”
Read the full interview with Gabby here, and also read Nick’s interview about his strategy.
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Cardi B took to Instagram to confirm the release date of her upcoming collection with popular clothing brand Fashion Nova on Monday (Oct. 29). The line of clothing will be available through Fashion Nova on Nov. 15.
Along with the announcement, Cardi also shared an image of herself in a white gown from the collection. In the image caption, the "Bodak Yellow" rapper let her fans know that her line will be made "for all sizes."
Cardi B has a well-documented relationship with Fashion Nova and has promoted the retailer in the past on Instagram before she became one of rap's biggest breakout stars. In the time since then, the rapper shouted out her love of the brand in her video for "Bartier Cardi" and devoted a lyric to the fashion retailer in a line from Invasion of Privacy's "She Bad."
Check out the first image from the collection below.
Source: https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/hip-hop/8482100/cardi-b-announces-release-date-fashion-nova-collection
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Four episodes of Broad City‘s fifth and final season have already aired on Comedy Central. Episode five debuts tonight. With only five episodes left after that, this means that Abbi (Abbi Jacobson) and Ilana (Ilana Glazer) are halfway through their last bout of New York-bound adventures. Abbi has turned 30 and is now making her way through the art world. Ilana started a business and is learning more about herself.
So what’s next?
We’ll obviously have to wait and see, but for now Jacobson, Glazer and the team at Comedy Central decided to celebrate the show’s dedicated fanbase. After all, years before the show first premiered in 2014, the YouTube web series on which it was based was already amassing a huge following. Folks were stanning for Abbi and Ilana long before Amy Poehler and cable television got involved.
“It’s my friends!” a superfan named Alicia declares when asked why she likes Broad City so much. Fellow fan Laura explains that she and her college friend still watch the show together when it airs. Since they no longer live in the same city, however, they FaceTime each other just as Abbi and Ilana do in the show. Little do Alicia, Laura and the rest of the fans interviewed know that Jacobson and Glazer are standing nearby, waiting to surprise them. Watch the whole delightful thing in the video embedded above.
New episodes of ‘Broad City’ season five air Thursdays at 10 p.m. ET on Comedy Central.

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CBS’ FBI right now has the best Week 2 retention of any freshman drama, having dipped just a tenth in the demo (or 8 percent) from its premiere.
Leading out of a steady NCIS (11.9 mil/1.4), FBI this Tuesday copped 9.4 million total viewers (down 7 percent but outdrawing time slot rival This Is Us) and a 1.2 demo rating. Closing the Eye’s night, New Orleans (7.8 mil/1.0) was steady in the demo.
Tuesday’s other Week 2 drama, NBC’s New Amsterdam (7.5 mil/1.6), was down 11 percent from its debut. (Monday noobs Manifest and Magnum respectively slipped 18 and 33 percent.) Opening the Peacock’s night, The Voice (9.2 mil/18) slipped 18 percent week-to-week, while This Is Us (8.8 mil/2.4) slipped 16 and 20 percent to its second smallest audience ever and its third-lowest rating.
RELATED Read Recaps for This Is Us, The Voice and DWTS
Elsewhere….
FOX | The Gifted (2.3 mil/0.7) slipped 22 percent in the demo, while Lethal Weapon (3.2 mil/0.8) was steady.
ABC | DWTS (6.1 mil/0.8) was down a tenth week-to-week.
THE CW | The Outpost (590K/0.1) dipped with its finale. Next week, Barry and the Pierces swing back into action!
Want scoop on any of the above shows? Email [email protected] and your question may be answered via Matt’s Inside Line.
The Flash Video: Will Barry and Iris
Get Along With Their Grown Daughter?

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Musician Jennifer Nettles is the lead vocalist of Sugarland—you know, the wildly popular country music duo that has collaborated with the likes of Taylor Swift and Bon Jovi. But despite her impressive CV, Nettles says her path to success didn’t come easy.
Nettles got her start performing in church and looking to other singers for inspiration. She spent nearly a decade touring the country with "little independent bands," hoping for her big break. It wasn’t until she joined Sugarland—alongside Kristian Bush—that she was able to break into the mainstream country music scene. Even then, though, the duo didn't become a household name overnight.
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“We put together this whole big showcase…it was probably a 2,000 seater,” Nettles remembered, "and we invited all these label heads down and nobody came." They were, of course, incredibly disappointed, but they didn't let the failure slow them down.
Instead, they regrouped and decided to plan another showcase, in Nashville this time. They bussed in a charter bus full of fans—and it totally worked. By the end of the night, they had a record deal.
Sometimes the parts of us that feel the most wounded end up being our being our biggest strengths.
Now, looking back, Nettles feels that her success is that much sweeter since she worked so hard for it. "If you know your purpose, it definitely helps you on your path," Nettles explains. "Sometimes the parts of us that feel like they are the most wounded or the weakest end up being our biggest strengths."
Check out Sugarland's album Bigger, in stores now.

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Full disclosure: What you’re about to witness would be highly disturbing, if not for the joy it brought American Horror Story‘s Sarah Paulson.
President Donald Trump’s alleged mistress, adult film star Stormy Daniels, appeared on Tuesday’s Jimmy Kimmel Live, where she recreated the supposed Forbes magazine spanking incident using a copy of her new autobiography, Full Disclosure. Paulson, who served as Kimmel’s first guest, stuck around for Daniels’ sit-down, and was clearly delighted by what she got to witness in person. “Please God, let him be watching this right now,” Kimmel said.
Daniels, who kept quiet during her first appearance on Kimmel following the 2018 State of the Union address, said she now had “no bleeps to give.” When Kimmel asked what it was like when she and the former Apprentice host “made love,” she fired back. “Gross! What is wrong with you?” she asked. “I laid there and prayed for death.”
Later, Kimmel asked Daniels about Trump’s alleged “Toad from Mario Kart“-shaped you-know-what, asking her to choose which most resembled the president among a display of orange mushrooms. (Yes, really!)
Press PLAY on the video above to watch Daniels’ segment in full (if only to watch Paulson react to every outrageous moment), then hit the comments with your reactions!
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Choose a different path, trolls. Black Mirror: Bandersnatch star Will Poulter has taken a step back from Twitter due to unkind comments made about his appearance on the social media platform.
Poulter, who plays video game developer Colin Ritman on Netflix's choose-your-own-adventure special, tweeted Wednesday that "In light of my recent experiences I am choosing to take a step back, of sorts, from Twitter."
He thanked people for watching and commenting on the "material," but implied that criticisms of him personally were getting to him. "As we all know there is balance to be struck in our engagements with social media. There are positives to enjoy and inevitable negatives that are best avoided," he wrote. "It's a balance I have struggled with for a while now and in the interest of my mental health I feel the time has come to change my relationship with social media."
Instead of using the platform for "personal expression," he'll be using it to promote organizations he is involved with, like the Anti-Bullying Programme.
Every Easter Egg in Black Mirror: Bandersnatch
The actor's relationship with social media has evolved over the years. In 2014, he got into a Twitter fight with a critic who wrote a negative review of the movie The Maze Runner, in which he starred.
Fans shared their support for Poulter, including Star Wars star John Boyega -- an actor with a lot of experience dealing with online harassment -- who replied "Best thing you can do mate" with a thumbs-up emoji to Poulter's step-back announcement.
Black Mirror: Bandersnatch is now streaming on Netflix.
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Did Will manage to get back in good graces with his friends and family?
On Chicago Med Season 4 Episode 11, he made his return to the hospital in the aftermath of his recent undercover activities.
Meanwhile, Ethan and April decided they had to set some ground rules because their personal relationship was starting to interfere with their working situation.
Also, Dr. Charles and Dr. Manning had to collaborate on a patient suffering from Alzheimers, but each had differing opinions about the best course of action.
Use the video above to watch Chicago Med online right here via TV Fanatic.
Catch up on all your favorite shows and reviews and join in the conversations with other fanatics who love TV as much as you.
Paul Dailly is the Associate Editor for TV Fanatic. Follow him on Twitter.
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Bravo is about to gift us with a chilling depiction of a true crime story so juicy it feels like it has to be fiction. The best part is that it's all based on a true story, as reported on by The Los Angeles Times contributor Christopher Goffard.
Dirty John, which premieres Sunday, Nov. 25 at 10/9c, tells the story of Debra Newell (Connie Britton), a successful business woman who fell in love with a con-man named John Meehan (Eric Bana). While some of the details of the case will no doubt be heightened for the sake of TV drama, TV Guide is here to take you through the true story it's based on. Be warned though, there are likely some serious spoilers for the show below...
Debra and John met and were married within two months. After four divorces, Debra Newell tried out an online dating service for singles over 50, which is where she first connected with John Meehan. Though he was a bit odd and her daughters were not sure about him, they started dating seriously and after just five weeks were looking for a place to live together. Despite more confrontations with Debra's daughters (including an incident where he said kids should be "smacked" for going through his things), Debra did not end her relationship with John because of how well he treated her. In a spur of the moment decision, she married him in a courthouse while on a business trip to Vegas -- they'd known each other two months.
Discover your new favorite show: Watch This Now!
Her kids were rightly suspicious of John. Debra's daughter Jacqueline decided to put a tracker on Debra's Tesla (which John regularly used) to watch his movements. After a woman broke into their apartment, John installed security cameras inside and out, on which Debra saw him crawl back into bed after she left for work rather than heading out to the anesthesiology job he claimed to have. When the kids hired a private investigator to look into John's past, they talked to a past girlfriend who said he'd disappeared on her and that he'd once resided in the Orange County prison.
Debra didn't let any of these red flags bother her until John received a letter from an inmate at the Orange Count prison saying hello. He blew up at her for opening his mail, and she became determined to figure out exactly who he was.

This wasn't the first time he'd done this. Looking through papers he kept lying around the house, she discovered that he had been an anesthetist nurse, but he became hooked on painkillers and lost his career as a result. He also hadn't been serving overseas for Doctors Without Borders like he'd told her, since court records proved he'd been swindling and terrorizing women he'd met on dating sites. While awaiting trial for one such case in Orange County, a fellow inmate reported that John was offering $10,000 each for the murders of two Laguna Beach detectives, plus five other potential witnesses against him, including several ex-girlfriends and his ex-wife. Meehan pleaded guilty in February 2014 to stalking and being a felon in possession of a firearm.
He'd met Debra online two days after being released from prison.
The Dirty John Trailer Will Give You Chills
John became violent when Debra left him. When Debra eventually left him, he became the same violent harasser she'd read about and demanded money as spousal support. He stole her car and set it on fire. He sent her awful messages. He stalked her daughters.
Terra, her youngest daughter and an obsessive viewer of The Walking Dead, was living alone in Newport Beach at the time. He attacked her with a knife in the parking lot, knocking her to the ground and slicing her arm, but she managed to wrestle the knife away from him. She stabbed him 13 times, including in the eye -- the same way she'd seen characters on The Walking Dead kill zombies. Though he'd stopped breathing by the time paramedics arrived, they revived him and took him to the hospital. He died four days later.
The Los Angeles Times conducted multiple interviews with Debra Newell and her family to tell her story, which was eventually adapted into a massively successful podcast called Dirty John. Now, you'll be able to compare the reported story and podcast to the TV adaptation starring Connie Britton and Eric Bana.
Dirty John premieres Sunday, Nov. 25 at 10/9c on Bravo.
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