‘Survivor’ fans torch Jeff Probst over Zac Brown-heavy season 50

Jeff Probst, the host and executive producer of “Survivor,” has taken to defending the show’s 50th season, known as “Survivor 50.”

The 50th season featured 24 legendary former players all returning to compete in Fiji and also contained a slew of new, unpredictable elements and celebrity collaborations.

Some of this hasn’t set well with the show’s longtime fans. Fans were especially annoyed by Probst inviting country singer Zac Brown, a personal friend, to participate in the season as a celebrity collaborator.

Not only did Brown appear in a number of confessionals, but he reportedly received more airtime than the show’s actual contestants.

“Brown’s appearance has been a hot topic among ‘Survivor’ fans on social media,” Variety magazine rightly notes (*Language warning):

Speaking with Variety, Probst defended the season.

“We experiment with all kinds of new ideas, and we tried to usher in the most unpredictability we’ve ever had,” he said. “Whether or not you like the season is subjective, but it’s not that something didn’t work. We’ve made bad choices in the past. I just don’t think we did in 50.”

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Probst then took an ax to the show’s critics.

“It’s fascinating to me that a couple of people, most of them either former players or people who will never play, criticize the show, and it gets momentum,” he told Variety. “I tell anyone who wants to listen: If that’s your goal, to somehow impact our point of view, it will fail. We trust what we’re doing.”

“If you think we’re going to re-edit because you thought there was too much Zac Brown, you’ve not been reading interviews with me. I couldn’t be more serious. I love ‘Survivor.’ I love joy. I love fans. I’ve also got a backbone. It’s gonna take more than that to knock me over,” he added.

“Survivor” started in 2000. According to Variety, after the first decade of the show, Probst started having second thoughts about the show’s original format, style, and focus.

“I didn’t like the stories we were telling, and I was losing my joy of the format, therefore my joy of the job, therefore my joy of life,” he explained. “I didn’t want vitriol, and who can be the meanest, most spiteful person.”

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Probst is now facing a new onslaught of backlash for defending “Survivor” from its rabid critics, all of whom appear to be self-styled “progressives,” surprise, surprise:

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