What To Know
The Survivor 50 premiere featured dramatic moments and multiple eliminations.
TV Insider was on set when this episode was filmed. We detail things that got cut from the final edit.
Jeff Probst reacts to the major moments of the first immunity challenge of the season in our interview conducted after the challenge was filmed and before tribal council.
[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Survivor 50 Episode 1, “One Epic Party.”]
Survivor 50 has begun, and the first returning players season in 10 seasons started with some shocking eliminations. Yes, more than one person was sent home in the Survivor 50 premiere. But the three-hour episode on CBS (which is really two hours with ads) had to leave some things on the cutting room floor. TV Insider was on set in Fiji in June 2025 to watch this episode be filmed. We interviewed Jeff Probst in the hours after the first immunity challenge of the season and before the first tribal council. Here, we’re sharing that interview with Probst, which contains his reactions to the challenge’s most dramatic moments, some of which viewers didn’t see onscreen. But first, a quick recap of what you did and didn’t see.
Let’s start with fan voting results. As previously announced, the Survivor live finale is back. Episode 1 revealed that the fans voted to make players earn rice and other survival supplies, and that idols will be in the game with a “dynamic” impact. The “Billie Eilish Boomerang Idol,” which was not on the ballot for fan voting, debuted in the premiere, too. Genevieve Mushaluk found it, and it gave her the power to send her immunity idol to a player on another tribe (she chose Ozzy Lusth, who also got an extra vote at Exile Island). The idol will boomerang back to her eventually.
The real drama was between Ozzy and Benjamin “Coach” Wade, the Survivor: South Pacific rivals, and Jenna Lewis-Dougherty and Cirie Fields, two longtime legends of the game. Ozzy and Coach made amends for their South Pacific finale beef before they competed in a challenge for supplies with Q Burdette, but their truce didn’t last long. Jenna, meanwhile, started campaigning for Cirie’s removal before the first immunity challenge, which shocked her Cila tribe mates.
Cirie botched the first immunity challenge so badly for Cila that it added loads of fuel to Jenna’s fire. On set, we saw Cirie eagerly taking on the monkey’s fist portion of the challenge. The episode showed that it took Cirie a long time to complete it, but in reality, it took so much longer, around 15 minutes. The press contingent stood in shock as Cirie tried the same failing method repeatedly without making any changes to her technique. Her team shouted out suggestions for tweaks, but she didn’t take them. Eventually, Cila stopped communicating altogether.
Cirie’s challenge blunder was interrupted by Kyle Fraser‘s ankle injury. What the episode didn’t show was that Kyle jumped down the ramp to help Colby Donaldson get up it. Kyle hurt his ankle after that while trying to get back up the ramp himself. Over on Kalo, Jonathan Young and Dee Valladares skipped a step earlier in the challenge, prompting Probst to yell at them to go back and start again. Jonathan also competed in the mud challenge barefoot, which became a huge struggle on the slippery guillotine ramp. Jonathan was his tribe’s human ladder, and then Charlie Davis became his, but that wasn’t shown.

Robert Voets / CBS
Jenna came hard for Cirie after the challenge failure, but Cirie had a strong ally in Ozzy and, as her past seasons have shown, she’s a great talker. Cirie and Ozzy both argued that she’s more of an asset down the line than Jenna would be. Their teammates considered voting out Jenna, Cirie, or Ozzy.
Ultimately, and perhaps shockingly, Jenna was the first boot. The Season 1 alum said, “First in, first out,” as she grabbed her torch for Probst to snuff out. Later, Kyle’s ankle injury was determined to be a ruptured Achilles tendon, and he was taken out of the game.
Here’s what Probst had to say about the first immunity challenge of Survivor 50, not long after it was filmed.
Were you surprised that fans chose no rice?
Jeff Probst: Not really. It was close. It was 53-47, or something like that. I meet a lot of people who tell me how we should produce the show, and it’s usually no idols, no advantages, no twists. I say, “OK, tell me your 10 favorite moments,” and 10 of them will have an advantage, an idol, or a twist involved. And then they go, “Well…,” and I go, “I’m just saying a game without any dynamics in it is not going to be nearly as much fun. But you’re in charge. If you want a season with no idols, it will be fun to watch.” The reason I think it’ll be fun to watch, Kelli, is because what stops Rick Devens from saying, “Oh, I just found a note. Not only are there idols, they’re super idols. They’re good after the vote, and I can play it on anyone I want at any time.” How do I know if he’s telling the truth or not?
That mud challenge today. It had so many unexpected moments from every team: Jonathan not bringing his shoes, Jonathan and Dee forgetting the rules, and you having to yell, “Go back,” and “No!”
[Laughs] Jonathan.
Kyle’s injury. Cirie’s struggle. Kyle and Jonathan’s teams communicated really well throughout, whereas Cila was not really talking that much at all.
Really?

Robert Voets / CBS
Yeah. Did you not notice that? You’re so busy during the challenges.
No, yeah. I didn’t pick up on that.
What was your reaction when you saw Cirie struggling that hard to have this moment with the monkey fist and not changing her method even after suggestions?
I had two thoughts with Cirie. Why is she doing something that’s fairly complicated — I mean, that is not easy to do — when they had a role where she could have been the one outside of the cage putting the coconuts in the bin, and it would’ve been a much less painful spot to put somebody who was struggling. Then the other question I had is, Cirie, how long are you going to keep doing the same thing that isn’t working? She kept doing this lasso idea, where she was throwing the rope up very high.
Completely candid: I kind of thought, what better way to start our 50th season than Cirie in this incredible underdog spot? Is she going to be there forever, or will she finally get this thing hooked? And then she hooked it, and it became another moment of, yes, your tribe’s in trouble and you’re going to tribal, and you might be the one that pays the price, but in terms of game and adventure and experience, she got it again. So I like that. I think those are the [best] kind of moments.

Gail Schulman / CBS
A tribe that isn’t communicating with each other in a challenge: What does that bode for them in your mind?
A problem. I agree. You picked up on it, I didn’t, but I know exactly what you’re talking about. On Q’s tribe, he was so instrumental in solving that puzzle. He just kept looking at pieces and saying, “That one right here goes right there.” So they had this great teamwork where one person was looking closely, one person was far back, seeing a bigger picture. And then down on Cila, even during the puzzle, it was Emily and Christian, and nobody was talking.
No one.
That, I did see. There was no help, and there was no enthusiasm. It was like they had almost accepted that they were going to lose. So that’s where tribal council comes into play because when you vote somebody out, often it’s a cleansing and you go back and you go, “OK, we got rid of the problem,” or, “We have a new dynamic. It’s only seven of us now.” And so hopefully for Cila, whatever they do, the vote will be based on chemistry. Because you could easily imagine another challenge where you’ve got everybody in specific roles, and you can find yourself back in the same spot. So is this the time Cirie’s out simply because she’s a physical liability? You heard her plead her case: “I’m good at other stuff.” [Probst’s interview with the cast right after the challenge featured this response from Cirie. It wasn’t shown in the episode.]
She knew what to say in that moment.
Exactly.
I wonder how much the tribe will take group accountability for the fact that they let her take that role. I wonder if she volunteered, if they all decided she’d be there, and how that will fall out.
Exactly. You’re right, that does seem like a big misstep on the group’s part.
Survivor 50, Wednesdays, 8/7c, CBS