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Players share what happens after 'Survivor,' from getting voted off the island to returning home

Business Insider spoke to several former "Survivor" players about their experiences being voted off the show.
  • Former "Survivor" players told Business Insider what happens after they're voted off the show.
  • Some competitors relax at Ponderosa, while others keep their heads in the game.
  • "Survivor" players often have to adjust both physically and mentally after they return home.

Fans have watched most "Survivor" players have their torches snuffed by host Jeff Probst after they've been voted off the show.

However, viewers don't get much of a peek into what happens after they walk away. So, Business Insider asked several former "Survivor" players about it as part of a series in 2021.

Here's what they said happens after they're sent packing and go home.

After they're voted off, players are immediately interviewed and checked out by a doctor.

"Survivor: Island of the Idols" player Karishma Patel said that as soon as host Jeff Probst snuffed her torch, someone with a camera came "out of the bushes" to film her exit interview.

"I was smiling my way out," Patel told BI. "I was like, 'You know what? My mental health is more important, and it was getting too toxic. Let me go take a shower.'"

Patel said she was also weighed and given a brief physical exam before boarding the boat to Ponderosa.

Jury members can eat, drink, and play at Ponderosa.
Reynold Toepfer, Andrea Boehlke, Brenda Lowe, Edward "Eddie" Fox and Malcolm Freberg.

If "Survivor" players last long enough in the game, they get to stay at a camp-like resort called Ponderosa to await the final tribal council as jury members.

"On Ponderosa, you're just free," Patel said. "It's complete freedom."

Jurors remain disconnected from the outside world, but at the resort, they can enjoy buffet-style food and plenty of drinks. Three-time competitor Andrea Boehlke told BI it's like "a big party every single day."

"Survivor: David vs. Goliath" player Davie Rickenbacker also said that Ponderosa has "a lot of activities," like massages and paddleboarding.

However, some competitors are still in "game mode" at Ponderosa.
Dean Kowalski, Karishma Patel, Tom Laidlaw, and Chelsea Walker at Tribal Council.

Some players use their time at Ponderosa to influence the competition. Rickenbacker told BI that he was still in "game mode" after he was voted off, so he advocated for his last ally on the island and eventual season winner, Nick Wilson.

"I was still playing the game for him," Rickenbacker said. "I was going up to Goliaths, you know, trying to balance for him so that they would get his vote at the end."

He said he even chose to room with a player from the rival tribe, Dan Rengering, to "to sway him to get Nick's vote."

And even though Patel said she didn't think about "what vote went where," she was still "a little bit vocal with the other members of the jury" about her concerns with some players in the game.

However, other players said it's hard to care about the game once you're voted out. Four-time competitor (and one-time champion) Tyson Apostol said if players could "forgo your jury vote to go home," he'd choose that option "every time."

Boehlke agreed that you care less about the outcome of the game "the longer you are in Ponderosa."

"You want to hear the drama and what's going on, but you're so bitter about not winning," Boehlke told BI.

Players often have to deal with the consequences of overeating, muscle loss, and infections.
Ciera Eastin and Malcolm Freberg on "Survivor: Game Changers."

Former players said that after living on a remote island with little food for weeks, their bodies sometimes had a difficult time adjusting to post-"Survivor" life.

Several players told BI that it's common to eat yourself sick at Ponderosa. Apostol said he had to take medicine for his digestive tract because he did "horrible things to it."

Many players also lose a significant amount of weight on the island, but Freberg — who said he once dropped 25 pounds in a single season — said his biggest bodily change was lost muscle mass.

"I don't work out like I was when I was a teenager or anything like that, but I can't build the muscle mass back," Freberg said. "I always had skinny legs and now they're just twigs, and I don't think that's ever going to come back."

Other ailments can require extra medical attention. Boehlke said she had to go to the hospital after a urinary tract infection she got on "Survivor: Game Changers" that spread to her kidneys.

"I was in the hospital for a week with a very severe kidney infection," Boehlke told BI. "It was also affecting my other organs, so my heart was in a weakened state."

Patel also said she went to the hospital after a UTI turned into a painful bladder infection. Multiple players told BI that CBS covered their medical costs after the show.

Business Insider has published a more in-depth look at UTIs and other health risks on "Survivor," and CBS did not respond to our request for comment.

Many competitors also have to adjust mentally.

For most players, returning home after "Survivor" is not only a physical adjustment but also a mental one.

"I put it all on the line, and I cried probably more than I ever cried," "Survivor: Island of the Idols" player Elaine Stott told BI, adding that she "struggled" when she came home.

Boehlke agreed that "Survivor" is an "intense experience" and that "you have to take the lows and the highs."

Rickenbacker said that competing on a reality show that is known for changing alliances and backstabbing is a "mind fuck" that leads to "a lot of sleepless nights." He also credited CBS for providing players with therapy after they return home.

"They do have a psychiatrist for us to talk to within that first year whenever we want to talk to them," Rickenbacker said. "And the therapist that they had for us, she's just amazing."

Fans often take to the internet to voice backlash or praise.
Andrea Boehlke on "Survivor: Game Changers."

Viewers follow along with the heavily condensed action at home as the show airs, and Boehlke said "it's easy to hate on people because of the edit."

"I was a pretty noncontroversial character and I got death threats," Boehlke told BI. "I can't imagine what the villains on 'Survivor' face."

Boehlke said a lot of players are "good people" in "extreme conditions" and that the attacks on your character, looks, and personality "can weigh on you."

But not all players experience that backlash. Rickenbacker said he was going to film a Jimmy Kimmel-inspired "Mean Tweets" video, but was pleasantly surprised to find a lack of hate messages online.

"I had everything prepared, and I'm like, 'Hey, where are the hate tweets?'" Rickenbacker said. "I'm searching for my name, 'Davie,' 'hate,' 'Survivor,' and nothing came up!'"

Stott told BI that kids tell her she's their "hero" and send her things in the mail that she hangs on her refrigerator — which "means way more than money."

Many "Survivor" players walk away from the show with lasting friendships.

Several players said that they formed lifelong bonds with some of their "Survivor" castmates.

Rickenbacker said he, Wilson, Gabby Pascuzzi, and Christian Hubicki "chat all the time" and that it's important to have friends from the show "who went through that same experience."

Stott told BI that she talks to nearly everyone from her season and that she invited "almost the entire cast" to her wedding.

Patel, who experienced some "maliciousness" from her castmates on the island, said that she gave everyone "the benefit of the doubt" and "got to know them outside of the game."

"I very fortunately was able to forge friendships with people that seemed almost impossible during the game because there was a realization — 'Hey, you know what, I wasn't myself out there,'" Patel said. "As soon as you acknowledge that ... then you can push it aside."

This story was originally published on December 3, 2021, and most recently updated on March 25, 2026.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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