Survivor’s Jeff Probst Explains Why Season 45 Changed The Challenge Sit-Out Rules

Film

CBS’ hit reality competition show Survivor changed the TV world forever when it premiered back in May of 2000, and it’s still wildly popular over two decades later. The new season has only recently begun (see how to stream Survivor 45 here), and there will no doubt be plenty of shocking twists and variations on the game. And host/showrunner Jeff Probst recently explained why Season 45 changed the challenge sit-out rules.

Throughout its years on the air, Survivor has seen countless tribes face off in both reward and immunity challenges. But since someone is voted off every season, the numbers in each tribe can vary. In order to make sure no one has an advantage in the challenges, there’s a sit-out bench to keep numbers even. But in Season 45 the same person isn’t able to sit out two episodes in a row. Probst explained to EW how the old rules worked, saying:

In the early seasons of Survivor, there were always two challenges: a reward challenge and an immunity challenge. The sit-out rule was designed to force a critical decision, because if you sat out of the reward challenge, you were forced to compete in the immunity challenge. So it came down to strategy. If you really wanted to win [a] reward, you might sit out your weakest player, but if you did, that weak player would then have to run in the immunity challenge. And Tribal Council was always the reset, which meant it was a clean slate with the next challenge.

Originally Posted Here

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