The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 2

We never did find out who the two new trainers are in The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 1, but 10 people gained immunity by picking them, while Ana became the first casualty of the voting room.

Alison walks in, and already they know something bad’s about to happen. She tells them that the other 5 teams lost more than these 6 did. Let the vagueness continue. With that, they are given a challenge: if they lose a higher percentage of weight loss, they will all have immunity. Additionally, the group that wins the weigh-in wins $10,000. Not to be left out, the unknown teams also get to participate in that challenge.

Bob sees Marci as someone who’s carrying around a lot of guilt, for letting her daughter get up to over 400 pounds. While Courtney tries to deflect the bullets from her mom, it’s fair to place at least part of the blame on the parents if a 22 year old has abused herself that much.

Arthur, who it would be fair to call a Twinkie away from a heart attack, is having a great workout, managing to run at 5 miles an hour on the treadmill.

Denise was teased by her father growing up, having been called Dumb Deni because her siblings got better grades. She’ll use that as her motivation.

Jillian blames Jay for making his daughter feel guilty and, therefore, unable to lose weight. She needs him to tell her he’s going to do it, with or without her help. I don’t get it. Just do it. Using your father as an excuse isn’t going to help you any.

The ranch contestants receive a gift from their opponents: two dozen donuts. They take them outside and crush them. Cops Dan & Don would like to see a little more originality. Although grabbing the donuts off the ground is tempting to Arthur, he is able to resist, even though the three second rule dictates he is allowed to partake.

Doc H’s first visit of the season is never good. Courtney’s inner age is 40, 18 years older than her chronological age. Want to know when Dan is going to die? March 29, 2020. The murder weapon: cigarettes, sugar, chocolate, and corn chips. This is a crime the brothers may want to consider solving. Arthur has 370 pounds of excess hydrated fat, even after losing 150 pounds. His inner age is 60, compared to his actual age of 34.

The unknowns send another package, which says “Play me.” It’s all about taunting them.

At the challenge, the ranch contestants have to beat the time set by the unknowns. They will have to get everyone from the beach across the canal using rafts to build a bridge. The unknowns completed the challenge in 38:23 a few hours before. The winning team will receive a 3 pound advantage. Alison allows them some time to strategize. Well, the good thing is they have plenty of strategies. The bad thing is they haven’t picked one. Nobody is emerging as a leader, and they can’t communicate with each other. A few people are standing on shore with their hands on their hips, apparently just waiting for the clock to finish ticking. They’re not even going to be able to make this remotely interesting. They don’t all get halfway across before time expires.

With Jillian sick, Bob’s left to deal with the contestants on his own. He thinks 3 pounds is a lot, although it can be overcome.

I was thinking we were gonna see the unknown trainers this week. Just shadowed out people who we can only see from the back and side. Maybe next week then.

Bob doesn’t like Alison’s use of the phrase that the unknowns destroyed them at the challenge. The problem with his objection is that her term is accurate. They fell apart fairly humiliatingly, not so much because they are the underdogs but more because they could not get their act together and work, well, together.

Rulon continued his losses, with 17 pounds lost this week. Moses lost 12 pounds, for a 2 week total of 53. In total, the 10 of them lost 79 pounds. The 3 pound advantage brings them to 82 pounds, for a total percentage of weight loss of 2.46%, a decent number for week 2, but not insurmountable. In order to beat that, the ranch team needs to lose more than 78 pounds, a little more than 7 pounds each. Arthur’s excited, saying that their goal was 140 pounds.

Irene: 232 pounds (-10, 4.13%)

Don: 280 pounds (-8, 2.78%)
Dan: 263 pounds (-5, 1.87%)
Black Total: 543 pounds (-13, 2.34%)

Olivia: 239 pounds (-6, 2.45%)
Hannah: 226 pounds (-6, 2.59%)
Purple Total: 465 pounds (-12, 2.52%)

Jennifer: 250 pounds (-8, 3.10%)
Jay: 364 pound (-10, 2.67%)
Green Total: 614 pounds (-18, 2.85%)

Courtney: 298 pounds (-10, 3.25%)
Marci: 218 pounds (-6, 2.68%)
Aqua Total: 516 pounds (-16, 3.01%)

Arthur: 463 pounds (-13, 2.73%)
Jesse: 278 pounds (-8, 2.80%)
Blue Total: 741 pounds (-21, 2.76%)

With 90 pounds lost, the on campus players have lost 2.81%, easily enough to beat the unknowns. They beat them by 11 pounds, which is the amount they lost by last week. Everybody is immune, and they’ve got $10k to split between themselves.

Stay tuned to dingoRUE for another live recap of The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 3, which airs Tuesday at 8/7c on NBC.

The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 1

As the final season (or so we assume) for Jillian Michaels, The Biggest Loser season 11 promises to be an interesting one.

Opera singer Olivia hopes to no longer be the fat lady singing. Moses, age 46, is worried that his family history is that people pass away around his age. Dan and Don are twin brothers. They are cops who won’t be chasing any fleeing suspects. Rulon was an Olympic gold medalist 10 years ago. At the time, he was close to 300 pounds but pretty solid. Now he’s just round. Courtney has already lost over 100 pounds but is still is just at the start of her journey.

Ken has 9 family members who have had bariatric surgery, which nonetheless has not served as reason enough to lose weight. Sarah lost another pregnancy two months ago due to her weight. Arthur is as big around as he is tall, still over 500 pounds with a BMI of about 75 in spite of 139 pounds of weight loss in the past year and a half. Don’s son refuses to see him, in fear of losing him anyway.

We start off with the first weigh in.

Ken: 377 pounds
Austin: 396 pounds
Brown Total: 773 Pounds

Courtney: 323 pounds
Marci: 238 pounds
Aqua Total (what’d you run out of colors?): 565 pounds

Ana: 255 pounds
Irene: 255 pounds
Orange Total: 510 pounds

Larialmy: 301 pounds
Q: 437 pounds
Red Total: 738 pounds

Sarah: 261 pounds
Deni: 256 pounds
Pink Total: 517 pounds

Arthur: 507 pounds
Jesse: 293 pounds
Blue Total: 800 pounds

Jennifer: 278 pounds
Jay: 400 pounds
Green Total: 678 pounds

Olivia: 261 pounds
Hannah: 248 pounds
Purple Total: 509 pounds

Kaylee: 233 pounds
Moses: 440 pounds
Grey Total: 673 pounds

Dan: 287 pounds
Don: 309 pounds
Black Total: 596 pounds

Justin: 365 pounds
Rulon: 474 pounds
Yellow Total: 839 pounds

They will not be working out tonight. Instead, they will compete in their first challenge. The challenge will determine who their trainers will be. But if they thought they were choosing between Bob and Jillian, they’d be wrong. They will choose either Bob and Jillian or two newbies.

The choice is clear. As experienced as these new trainers may be at training people, they have no clue what it’s like to be on the ranch, whereas Bob and Jillian have been doing this for 10 seasons (9 for Jillian), plus the time they spent in Australia training contestants there. So to make the contestants actually consider the alternative, an offer is put forward. Choose the new trainers, and you are immune for 4 weeks.

Each team has a manual treadmill. As a team, they have to run a 5k. The order in which they finish will determine the order in which they choose their trainers. 6 teams get Bob & Jillian, and the remaining 5 get the new trainers, who they still haven’t seen yet.

Yellow team reaches 1 kilometer. Grey team is behind them, followed by aqua. Yellow retains the lead through 2k, and their size does not appear to be slowing them down. Grey and aqua remain behind them. Yellow is the first to 3k, with grey and aqua still in second and third. Yellow is the first to hit 4 as well. Yellow team ends up winning the challenge in 40 minutes, which will guarantee them at least 1 week of immunity. Grey team places second. Aqua takes third. Green places fourth. Brown team finishes fifth, making them the last team guaranteed to have a choice. Purple team finishes sixth, so they are the last team guaranteed to have the choice of Bob & Jillian. Pink, red, orange, blue, and black round out the standings.

Bob & Jillian: Courtney & Marci, Jennifer & Jay, Olivia & Hannah, Ana & Irene, Arthur & Jesse, Dan & Don
Unknowns + 4 weeks immunity: Justin & Rulon, Kaylee & Moses, Ken & Austin, Sarah & Deni, Larialmy & Q

With 5 of 8 teams choosing the unknowns, that leaves orange, blue, and black teams with Bob & Jillian.

Bob asks the question. Where is everyone? Oh, by the way…

Both Bob and Jillian seem to think passing up immunity was a mistake. There’s a simple reality here. Depending on how/whether they opt to shake things up, 4 of the 12 people there are going home over the next 4 weeks, which could further be a disadvantage for whoever does survive.

Jillian starts off the workout saying she’s not going to yell. That’ll last.

Bob thinks Courtney’s a machine who could go all the way.

Now it’s time to end the mystery, sort of, as we head to the unknown trainers’ camp at Biggest Loser Fitness Resort at Fitness Ridge in Malibu. One of the new trainers has a pre-med and science background, which he considers beneficial because training is a science. The female trainer is a boxer, who won the Golden Gloves twice. As to what their names are, well, that’ll have to wait.

Arthur collapses, complaining about not being able to move his leg yada yada. He’ll get no sympathy from Bob & Jillian. He needs something for his leg? No problem. Here’s a treadmill.

The contestants at camp unknown weighed in first. Rulon & Justin lost 59 pounds. Moses lost 41 pounds, a new one week record. How do those on the ranch stack up?

Courtney: 308 pounds (-15, 4.64%)
Marci: 224 pounds (-14, 5.88%)
Aqua Total: 532 pounds (-29, 5.17%)

Arthur: 476 pounds (-31, 6.11%)
Jesse: 286 pounds (-7, 2.39%)
Blue Total: 762 pounds (-38, 4.75%)

Jennifer: 258 pounds (-20, 7.19%)
Jay: 374 pounds (-26, 6.50%)
Green Total: 632 pounds (-46, 6.78%)

Olivia: 245 pounds (-16, 6.13%)
Hannah: 232 pounds (-16, 6.45%)
Purple Total: 477 pounds (-32, 6.29%)

Ana: 246 pounds (-9, 3.53%)
Irene: 242 pounds (-13, 5.10%)
Orange Total: 488 pounds (-22, 4.31%)

Don: 288 pounds (-21, 6.80%)
Dan: 268 pounds (-19, 6.62%)
Black Total: 556 pounds (-40, 6.71%)

That puts Ana & Irene below the yellow line, and the rest of the teams have 1 hour to decide which of them to send home. Ana wants her daughter to stay, but Irene thinks her mom has greater health needs for being there.

Votes
Courtney & Marci: Ana
Jennifer & Jay: Ana
Olivia & Hannah: Irene
Arthur & Jesse: Ana

With 3 votes, Ana is not The Biggest Loser. From her starting weight of 255 pounds, Ana has dropped to 205 pounds.

Perhaps next week we’ll see the new trainers for more than 2 minutes.

Stay tuned to dingoRUE for another live recap of The Biggest Loser Season 11 Episode 2, which airs Tuesday at 8/7c on NBC.

The Apprentice UK Series 6 Winner

Following the interviews with some very rude people (hopefully these people are just putting on a show and aren’t actually like this in real life), three people were sent packing, bringing us down to the final two. As the last person in Britain to realize that Stuart Baggs the brand (TM) should have been fired weeks ago and that Liz should still be on the show, Lord Sugar finally gave up on Stuart after deciding he was a liar, although I thought the reasoning for getting rid of him was rather arbitrary (surely there were other reasons, as presented throughout the season). Joanna Riley then met the end of the road due to her lack of business experience. I felt they were hard on her. To be fair, she was even harder on herself. Lastly, Jamie Lester, who I had assumed was going to be in the running, was eliminated. Not sure why.

That brings us down to a battle between Chris Bates and Stella English, banker vs. banker’s assistant, neither seemingly a good fit for Sugar’s organizations. Between the two, however, the panel has us to believe they have the most distaste for Stella’s corporate background and lack of personality (not that Chris’ somewhat monotone personality has shined either, although him telling Stuart to F off was awesome).

They will be getting some assistance, in the form of eight returning contestants. Stella calls tails. It’s heads, so Chris picks first.

Chris: Jamie, Liz, Alex, Shibby
Stella: Joanna, Chris F, Melissa, Paloma

Their final task is to create a premium alcoholic drink. They will make the drink, design the bottle, and create an ad campaign. The spirit-based drink is intended for over 25s and must retail for £20, not exactly giving them a great deal of flexibility.

Stella’s team is looking at doing a bourbon drink. Nick is worried about this, having the same initial concern Stella raised: will this drink actually appeal to women? The focus group raises the same point. Their decision to overcome this is to add honey and spice. A lot of spice.

Chris and his team will be going with rum with some fruit flavor, such as pomegranate.

Stella stumbles upon a quite good name, Urboun, a bourbon blend for the urban generation. If only bourbon were spelled bourboun. Maybe it is in the UK for all I know. Check and color both have mysterious u’s added to them.

Running with his concept of threes, with his three flavored drink, Chris has come up with both a name and bottle shape, Prism. Certainly different. Meanwhile, Liz and Shibby are creating the product. In spite of Chris’ directive to not get too aggressive with the color, Liz wants to make it pink, which comes with a warning from the person they’re working with that it’s feminine. Afterward, Chris asks for confirmation that the color is clear. No, it’s not.

Having looked up how to spell bourbon, Stella has changed her brand name to Urbon.

Before they can shoot their commercials, they must first get approval from the stupidly strict industry authorities for advertising alcohol. Stella is warned to keep the drinking moderate, no shots and no large bottles. Chris is warned not to imply that the drink has an impact on a guy’s ability to be successful on a date. He also cannot use lips, eyebrows, eyes, or any other body part in a sexual way, and the clothing must be something that the “older generation” (aka people over age 25) would wear.

Since everything he wanted to do was shot down by the ad people, Chris has decided to shoot an ad featuring three friends, rather than two people dating. The problem now is that he hasn’t left himself much time to work, but they finish the commercial just in time. Not that it’s a very good commercial.

The final step of the task is to launch their brands with a pitch to people in the industry.

Speaking of the pitch, Stella’s struggling to come up with anything, with only about 10% of her presentation ready. Chris, however, already has his pitch ready. Now he just needs to work on his presentation skills, which history has shown us are passable but not impressive. Jamie wants Chris to show a bit of personality, to avoid the monotone criticism of presentations past. It seems to work, although Chris’ tone is what it is, so there’s not much they can do to work around it. In the end, both presentations appear to go off without a hitch.

So then Lord Sugar asks for feedback from those who are sitting at his table. Stella’s drink receives criticism for being pungent and overspiced. For the other team, the drawback is the color, pink. In each case, he can’t understand why people other than the project managers were doing the formulating of the products, one of the key components in the task.

As always, each of the teams support their leader for the job. The only exception is Alex, who suggests hiring both of them.

Returning to the feedback, we start with Chris. His advert was not very good, but the 3 thing was good. The bottle is quite clever, whereas Stella’s looks like vinegar. That said, her brand name is very clever.

With all that said and done, it’s now time for the final decision. The Apprentice UK Series 6 winner is Stella English.

While the US version has been flailing about for quite some time, only still around because of the D-list celebrity twist, The Apprentice UK continues to be one of the top rated shows. It will be returning next season for series 7, with the change being that Sugar will give the winner £250,000 toward a new business venture of their choosing, which they will then own 50/50. Seeing as only one winner remains with the company (last year’s winner), this probably makes more sense.

Survivor: Nicaragua Winner

Aware of what everybody else has realized, Jeff Probst tried to interject some strategy into the group of dumb-dumbs in Survivor: Nicaragua Episode 14, telling them that they could vote to a tie, which apparently nobody realized or considered. By that time, Jane had already torpedoed her chances of survival, in an over the top strategy of going out with a bang. However, she attempted to run with it, saying they should all vote for Holly. Then she voted for Sash, while everybody voted her out. Sadly, Sash is the only person remaining who has anything resembling a strategic mind, but don’t tell him that because he mistakenly believes himself to be the king of Survivor.

Jeff Probst’s recap is about improbable journies. Translation: how did five idiots make it so far? Sash was a dead man walking, but he offered himself up as the swing vote, which made him worth keeping around. Chase has voted out anybody who was stupid enough to align with him. Dan hasn’t done anything, but because he has not done anything, he has no enemies. I would certainly hope that’s not enough reason to vote for him, however. Fabio was a goofball, and still is, perhaps by design, but he has shown himself to be a threat in challenges, both physical and mental. Holly wanted to quit on day 5 but has since managed to warm up to the tribe following her childish display of destroying Dan’s personal property.

Notice they have a fire going already. Jane’s actions may have made her felt better, but they were moot. There’s no way to prevent people with torches from having fire.

Fabio realizes his neck’s on the chopping block. He never would have seen it coming if the three people on the other side weren’t so blatant as to flaunt their alliance.

Sash would like to go to the end with Chase. Or Fabio. Or any other person left on the island. He doesn’t care how he gets there, just as long as he gets there.

The challenge is to answer questions about Nicaragua. If they’re right, the bag will contain puzzle pieces. If they are wrong, the pieces will be black. Once they have answered all three questions and collected all three bags of pieces, they will use the pieces to solve the puzzle. We may as well count Dan out now. Last time, Fabio proved he could do puzzles blindfolded. Everybody gets the first question right. Honduras is north of Nicaragua. Fabio is incorrect on the second question. This gives Chase, Holly, and Sash the lead. Dan’s irrelevant as always. Fabio is correct on the second and third questions, but he’s allowed the leaders to open up a huge gap on him. Fabio’s just about caught up to Sash. Chase, who dropped a puzzle piece early on, still hasn’t noticed it on the ground. Fabio wins immunity. Then Chase realizes he’s missing a piece.

With Fabio having won immunity, the alliance can only remain intact in one way: vote out Dan. Do they really want to take out a guy who will never come in above last place in any challenge and who hasn’t done anything around camp?

Fabio’s plan is to get rid of Holly. He asks Chase if Dan is a bigger threat than Holly. Chase says yes. Realizing that talking to Chase is pointless, Fabio approaches Sash instead, who may be a bit more open to listening. His pitch is that, aside from the fact that Dan’s not a threat, Chase and Holly are too tight and need to be broken up. Holly knows something is up, but she will just keep faith that her alliance will save her.

Chase says that he thinks Brenda called him paranoid before. She agrees. He’s paranoid as hell.

Fabio warns the others. A lot of people on the jury think of Holly as a mother figure. That alone could score her some votes, whether it should or should not.

Votes
Dan
Dan
Chase
Dan

With 3 votes (4 counting Fabio, who realized it was futile), Dan, the least threatening person ever, has been voted out. Dan wishes everybody but Fabio the worst, but he ultimately voted for Chase in an effort to let him know how much he dislikes him, in spite of the fact that Holly is a crook.

Fabio still doesn’t get it. His plan remains the same: target Holly. Because that worked so well last time. I’m not sure that he really has much choice, though.

Holly’s already talking to Chase about what to do if Fabio wins again. Their plan is to take out Sash, which is exactly what Fabio warned him about. They’re afraid that Sash will get a lot of votes, but then again, so will Fabio. In either scenario, they’re worried they have screwed themselves.

Now it’s time for the walk. First, there was Wendy Jo. Yeah, apparently there was somebody named Wendy Jo this season. Shannon’s still bitter about his defeat, saying he didn’t want to babysit these people anyway. Marty was always thinking, but like Sash and Brenda, he got on my nerves by getting way too cocky before he earned it. NaOnka says that she was always smiling, friendly, and strategical, and that she was the smartest player in the game. Welcome to opposite world. Benry’s convinced he could have gone on an immunity run, unless there were some puzzles. Jane says she can go back to North Carolina with her head held high. Well, except for her tantrum on the final day.

For the final time, immunity is back up for grabs. Each person will have a sword. With one hand, they will balance the sword on a shield. With their other hand, they will stack coins on the handle of the sword. Every coin is slightly uneven, making them not so easy to balance. Holly drops a single coin, which is enough to eliminate her first. Chase is the next one out as his stack falls. That brings us down to Sash and Fabio, and whoever fails first is probably going to get voted out. Sash’s coins drop. Fabio wins immunity, which I would argue is a million dollar win.

Now Fabio can just relax and watch the fun.

Holly and Chase immediately go off together, while Sash remains behind to try to weasel his way into Fabio’s good graces, telling him he’s his best friend in the game. I’d vote him out just on the basis of that ridiculous lie, although having a very bad liar with you in the finals is not a bad thing. Fabio tells this to Chase, who says Sash is a snake. Chase and Holly try a different approach, the truth: Fabio was the next to go.

Fabio has now decided that Sash and Chase are both liars, and Holly is the only decent person there, although she may be a threat as a result.

At tribal council, Sash continues to talk circles around himself, still unable to give a straight answer, except to acknowledge that he had an alliance with everybody.

Votes
Sash
Holly
Holly
Holly

That was an interesting turn of events. With 3 votes, Holly has been voted off the island, as the guys ended up sticking to their fake alliance.

Sash feels he’s played the best strategic game. Being the only person with a strategic game does not mean it was the best. Rather, it’s all blown up in his face. His inability to choose a side is not lost on the jury.

Chase’s plan is to tell Fabio he just won the money, in hopes of getting him overconfident.

Brenda feels that Sash was smart for making alliances. If only he didn’t break all of them. She is shocked that Chase so easily accepted her getting voted out. Chase says he tried, but NaOnka and Fabio backed out. With that said, Sash shakes his head. He thinks he could have stepped up more.

Marty would like Chase to give a dumber than a bag of hammers award to somebody other than Marty. Chase’s response: this is a BS question because I can’t pick you. Therefore, he will not answer. Marty thinks Sash has been a solid strategist, and he thinks Fabio has changed the most as a person and a player.

Holly asks Chase his best move he made on his own. In the beginning, he chose to go with the minority he did trust, and voted out Shannon. She asks Fabio whether winning the immunities was too little, too late. That was the only option he had. Whether it’s enough to warrant a vote is another story. Did Sash ever lie to her? Yes, he put her name down, although he told her he would not do that.

Next up is Jane. Here comes the bitterness. Sash is a New York City river rat, who can go crawl back into the black hole he came from. Chase made her time out here the funnest event in her life, even though she’s still pissed at him. What would he do with the money? His promise is that $100,000 will go to help cancer, and he will take care of his mom. Fabio interjects that he wants to take care of his mom and dad as well.

Benry has heard everything from Chase he needs to hear. Congrats to Fabio for his immunity wins. The target here is Sash, who he could see right through. Sash’s response is right on point, but perhaps not the smartest thing to say. If Benry could really see through him, he probably should have mounted a strike against him.

Dan hates everybody (can’t imagine why because, regardless of how they voted, he had no chance), so back to the bitterness we go. He thinks Sash is a liar, a phony, and spineless. Chase is the most paranoid player, who backstabbed everybody. Beauty fades; dumb is forever.

Purple Kelly (so that’s who that blonde sitting in the jury is) gives Sash 60 seconds to explain how he outwitted everybody. Sash thinks he should have been voted out at the merge, but he wasn’t, as a result of all the alliances he created with every single player.

Now we come to NaOnka the nutjob, who threw away a career as a reality star by quitting. Chase was her brother, Fabio was the hippy friend, and Sash was the strategic player. An emotional Fabio tells her that seeing his mom and dreaming what he could do for his family got him to the end. He’s got multiple members of the jury crying with this response.

Alina would rather give the money to a man than the ultimate surfer boy dude, so can Sash prove he deserves to win? Sash’s defense of himself is that Fabio was clueless a lot of the time (he was), while Chase was a bit wishy washy. Fabio says that, unlike Chase, who merely tried to get through the game without pissing anybody off, he actually did it. Nobody on the jury holds ill will toward him. Of course, Chase’s defense is that Fabio didn’t do this strategically. He just did this by not knowing what the hell was going on.

Pointing out that the young vs. old twist failed pretty miserably, Probst makes note of the final three all being from the young tribe.

Votes
Fabio
Chase
Fabio
Chase
Chase
Chase
Fabio
Fabio
Fabio

With 5 votes, the Survivor: Nicaragua winner is Jud Birza (aka Fabio), the youngest winner ever at age 21. In a normal season I would have been irritated with Fabio winning because he really didn’t do much. In this rather lackluster season in which nobody really did much, however, I will say this was the right decision, certainly better than what the 4 idiots who voted for Chase intended. To Chase’s credit, he did make strong bonds with some of the people he ended up screwing over, but I’ll stop short of saying he did anything more. Meanwhile, Sash got no votes. While I would argue this is unfair because he was the most strategic, he made a key error. He set himself up to get to the end… without actually making sure he secured the votes along the way.

Jeff’s surprised that Sash even made it this far. He predicted Sash would be voted out at the first tribal council.

Jimmy Johnson has a story of his efforts at getting on the show. 6 or 7 years ago, he was rejected. So a couple years later, he tried again, and was told they’d love to have him, but he had two blocked arteries. He thanks Survivor for saving his life. So this season he got on as the most famous person ever to be on the show, only to be eliminated very early on, certainly not what the producers planned when they spent so much time hyping him.

As a peace offering for destroying his shoes, Holly gives Dan ostrich boots.

From this point forward, following the actions of quitters NaOnka and purple Kelly, the producers will reserve the right to remove people from the jury if they quit the show for reasons other than medical or other extenuating circumstances (I’m not sure what that’s supposed to mean… hopefully they’re not just trying to cover themselves with that wording to allow people like Jenna Morasca and Sue Hawk to be excused for being quitters).

The winner of the Sprint award and $100,000 richer is Jane, who won by the largest margin and with the most votes ever. I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again. Overrated.

Jeff had hoped to give Shannon a chance to redeem himself. Shannon wants no such chance, saying that Sash walks like a duck, so he called him a duck.

Rob and Amber have now had a second baby, Carina Rose Mariano, born on December 10.

Survivor will be back for season 22 with a new twist. When somebody is voted out, they will be forced to live alone, on Redemption Island. The next person to join them will duel with them. Whoever survives long enough will reenter the game.

The Amazing Race Asia 4 Winner

The elimination of Jess & Lani, who left smiling and with class, in spite of being hated by two of the three remaining teams for no apparent reason, brought us down to the final three teams. Richard & Richard have been at the top of the pack all season. This is theirs to lose, but stranger things have happened on the race. Natasha & Hussein have appeared moderately competent in the last two legs, but they are the luckiest team in the history of the race, having run most of the race in second to last place only to be saved by dumb luck every time, be it producer incompetence giving one team a broken car or an extra long leg with a fake pit stop so that even being quitters with a 4 hour penalty did not harm them. Michelle & Claire really impressed me early on, with their ability to eat 275 chicken balls when everybody else could barely eat 100. I really haven’t seen much out of them since then, however, although they have been very consistent, placing third in most of the legs.

Teams depart in the order in which they arrived.

First: Natasha & Hussein – 1:00PM
Second: Richard & Richard – 1:10PM
Third: Michelle & Claire – 1:13PM

Teams will now fly to Singapore, the home country for Michelle & Claire and also birthplace of Hussein. The Richards make a call from the cab to make travel arrangements, but as close as all the teams are, I don’t think it really matters. The first two teams to arrive get tickets on the first flight out, and the waitlisted Michelle & Claire later do as well, so all three teams depart on the same flight as expected, on their way to the international airport.

Natasha & Hussein have booked a flight directly to Singapore, which gives them half an hour to make their connection. That’s cutting it tight for any international flight, but at least they don’t have to deal with the TSA. The Richards had standby for this same flight but instead opted for the safe bet, which would put them in 4 hours later. Michelle & Claire hope that begging will get them on the first flight. It doesn’t.

First flight (arriving at midnight): Natasha & Hussein
Second flight (arriving at 4AM): Richard & Richard
Third flight (arriving at 10:25AM): Michelle & Claire

Their first destination is Cavenagh Bridge, where they will be greeted by traditional lion dancers. At some point we will hit an hours of operation. That point is not now.

From the bridge, they are going to Red House Seafood Restaurant, where they will have to extract 1kg of chilli crab. At least they don’t have to eat anything. The restaurant opens at 10AM. Based on the Richards taking 2.5 hours to get to the restaurant, we can surmise that Michelle & Claire will now be 3 hours behind the first two teams. They pretty much have no chance. Even if one team takes a 4 hour penalty at some point, that still puts them in second at best. This is why the Richards made the smart move of booking that sure flight 4 hours after the first one because they knew there was no way they were going to miss the flight and end up in dead last, while also realizing that there would be an hours of operation to make up the 4 hours.

I’ve been wondering where Caltex was. Teams will now go to one of four Caltex stations and get in the marked vintage car. If the car is no longer there, it has been taken by another team, so they must try another station. Obviously, this will as a result get more difficult for the trailing teams.

Although they finished the challenge first, the Richards failed to spot the closest taxi, which Natasha & Hussein managed to get as a result. This means that the closest service station car goes to them. Richard & Richard will have to try again. Of course, being in last, Michelle & Claire are probably going to see multiple attempts.

The detour is a choice between stay up and add up. In stay up, teams must ride a simulated wave for a total of 2 minutes. In add up, they will go on a reverse bungee, and while flying through the air, they will have 10 seconds to add up a series of numbers that have been provided to them just before launch.

Stay up: Natasha & Hussein, Michelle & Claire
Add up: Richard & Richard

With Natasha & Hussein racking up less than a second of time at a time, this detour may take them a while. Hussein would rather switch, but Natasha wants to stay put, not wanting to do the bungee. After a bunch of tries, they are finally getting the hang of things, with runs of 9 and 12 seconds, putting them at the halfway mark. Michelle & Claire are continuing to trail, and it doesn’t appear anything will stop that. Claire decides she sucks, so she just lets Michelle go for it because she seems to be getting it.

One of the Richards doesn’t like bungee jumping either, but this can’t be worse than what they went through in New Zealand (the bungee freefall that was actually slower than the far less scary swing on the other side). This task seems a lot easier if they can overcome it. Although the numbers are not overly simple, they do add up to less than 250. They get the first two numbers but forget the final one. Their second try, with different numbers, is correct, although they are shaken up by this rough ride. This was definitely the easier detour for teams with basic math skills who could stomach it.

Now’s their chance to perform some magic. At Saint James Powerstation, they will have 2 minutes to unlock their handcuffs, while performing an illusion taught by top Singapore illusionists. Richard & Richard fail once. Then twice. Natasha & Hussein arrive, so now the teams will rotate turns. Their first attempt is a failure. The Richards make it on their third try.

The road block is a tightrope walk 55 stories above the ground, from tower 1 to tower 2 of the Marina Bay Sands hotel and back.

Road block (in order of arrival): Richard, Hussein, Michelle

Richard really doesn’t seem to have any trouble with this. Earlier in the season, Hussein was unable to do a ropes course that was much lower and much shorter in distance, ultimately quitting and opting for the other detour instead. This time, he’s not even going to try. He’ll take the 4 hour penalty. Really? On the final leg of the race, you’re taking a 4 hour penalty? This is why this team should not be in the finals. His argument is simple: they’re going to finish second anyway, so why bother trying? Natasha begs him to at least try. Hearing this, he decides to at least hear the instructor out, but once he gets on the rope, it’s back to quitting again. As much grief as Natasha gives her father, he’s doing this road block because she wouldn’t. On their way to the road block, Michelle & Claire get very emotional about being so far behind everybody else, but they’re about to find out they are in second place. No possible way either team can catch the Richards, but at least there is now a battle for second. With a chance to overtake the second place position, Michelle’s able to get across without too much trouble.

The final challenge is a multiple choice quiz about the race, with questions such as the name of a church and the name of the rice war, plus race specific questions such as the fifth team to be eliminated.

The finish line is SkyPark Observation Deck at Marina Bay Sands. In one of the most predictable final standings ever, we already know how this is going to turn out, so the producers aren’t even going to try to edit it to fake us out. The Amazing Race 4 winners and $100,000 richer are Richard Hardin and Richard Herrera. After their airline struggles, Michelle & Claire recovered to place second. In third place, having quit a road block for the second time this race, are Natasha & Hussein. Jess & Lani so should have been there instead (or Ethan & Khairie or Su & Dimple).

Hell’s Kitchen Season 8 Winner

Trev and Jillian were eliminated in Hell’s Kitchen Season 8 Episode 14, which brings us down to a final two of Russell and Nona.

They take a helicopter ride to the JW Marriott for the final challenge. Ramsay tells them to jump, so they ask how high, but he’s just kidding. They take the stairs down, rather than using the parachutes he provided. Good thing he broke the news because Nona was practically off the roof already.

Each of them will have one hour to cook their dishes, and then they will be judged by people from LA who apparently know about food.

The first round is soup. Nona makes potato soup with bacon, cheddar, and chives. Russell has cooked cauliflower soup. Obviously, bacon beats cauliflower. Nona gets the point.

Salad is next. Nona has made beet salad. Doesn’t sound very appealing. Russell made burrata and prosciutto salad. Russell gets the point to make it a tie.

Next up is pasta. Nona’s made pan-seared chicken breast over orecchiette, while Russell has gargenelli with sea scallops. Nona takes a 2-1 lead.

Fish is the fourth dish. Russell serves pan-seared arctic char, while Nona has made pan-seared salmon. It’s tied at 2-2.

The tiebreaker is the meat, to be judged by Kerry Simon of LA Market. Nona cooked pan-seared ribeye; Russell cooked grilled veal tender. Russell wins the challenge.

Eight chefs have returned, some more competent than others. As the challenge winner, Russell picks first.

Russell: Jillian, Vinny, Sabrina, Rob
Nona: Gail, Melissa, Trev, Boris

Jillian’s happy to be picked first, the right choice seeing as she should be one of the final two. Vinny is sick to have been picked by Russell. Sabrina’s happy to have not been picked last, which she shouldn’t have been because she just had difficulty with other people being hostile, not her cooking. Trev is looking forward to being able to help knock Russell to the floor.

Nona considers Boris her biggest problem, which will lead her to keep her eye on him and talk down to him as needed. Russell gives Vinny attitude, telling him to go on the other team if he really wants to do so. Go ahead. Do it. This idiot apparently can’t realize he needs you, not the other way around. This is exactly why Russell should not be a finalist. He just can’t work with people, always believing he’s the only one that matters.

Unfortunately, Vinny doesn’t plan to screw over Russell, although his first dish gets rejected. Ramsay tells him if he talked to him like that, he’d be history. Okay. First, he already is history. Second, he doesn’t respect Russell, nor is Russell attempting to earn any respect. Anyway, Vinny’s next scallops are good.

Trev’s salad is overdressed, but his second attempt is also good.

Now they can move to entrees. But first, why is Sabrina stewing beef? Then her first dish is undercooked. That said, Russell switches Sabrina to fish and Vinny to beef. This switch was necessary, or so Russell tells us, although he doesn’t have much confidence in Vinny, who he says completely messed up the scallops (that one time). The switch works.

Boris is on fish. He doesn’t know how long to cook it, though. After being told how long to cook it, he still doesn’t know. Trev warns him that he’ll take over if it happens again. Raw for a third time. So Trev wants to take over, which just leads to an argument. Boris’ fourth attempt is acceptable.

Russell has set a new goal. He doesn’t just want to win. He wants to finish as quickly as possible, whether it’s smart to push his staff that much or not. This is working to get food pushed out rapidly… and then rapidly returned.

Nona’s next dish is a VIP, at least as far as she’s concerned. Melissa delivers raw meat for the meal that’s for Nona’s husband.

Rob runs out of tomato water, so Russell tells Jillian to come over here and cook because Rob can’t. This causes a shoving match between Rob and Russell.

After reviewing the customer comment cards, Ramsay has made his decision. The Hell’s Kitchen Season 8 winner is Nona Sivley. Not a big surprise. Although it could certainly be argued that Russell was the best chef, his inability to get over his own ego caused him to be this season’s biggest ass. Not one to accept defeat gracefully, he blames his team for the loss, warning them he will blackball them from working again.

Survivor: Nicaragua Episode 14

Being seen as a physical threat, Benry was voted out in Survivor: Nicaragua Episode 13.

Sash’s head continues to get bigger by the minute. As obnoxious and inept as he may be, he’s sadly the only person in this game who seems to be playing.

Leading up to the reward challenge, we get a Sprint commercial, with videos from home on a phone. Reward will be sailing and a meal with their loved ones. Their family members will participate in the challenge. The Survivors will run up a plank and jump in the water and retrieve two bags of letter tiles, then their loved ones will use the letters to solve a phrase. Fabio (aka Jud the stud) is leading, followed by Chase. Dan’s being lapped by everybody, even just having to swim. Chase’s mom solves the puzzle first to win reward. They will be bringing Sash and his mother with them. Also, they will be going with Holly and her husband. The others take this news badly. I never will understand this concept of how spending two weeks away from family is this difficult.

Back at camp, it’s trash talking time. Fabio thinks he got played by somebody who he would have picked if given the choice. Jane says he just threw away a million dollars, but her concern is that she’s positioned herself at #4 on the totem pole. Chase keeps being foolish with these choices, failing to realize the concept of strategy, instead just choosing the people he likes.

The three who go on reward promise each other final three, although they feel that Jane is still on their side. They get a clue to the hidden immunity idol, or so it seems.

Immediately upon getting back from reward, Chase gets a hard time from Fabio, who after venting decides that holding a grudge doesn’t work on the island.

For the immunity challenge, they will be blindfolded, work their way over and under the hitching rails, memorize symbols using their hands, grab the symbols, and head back to use their symbols and create a matching shield. It’s not overly relevant who’s the first person back since they could in theory screw up and have to go back or just simply go too slowly. It’s all just about who gets this puzzle solved first. Fabio thinks he has it, but he does not. He tries again, and Fabio wins immunity.

There goes the plan of the alliance of the three, who wanted to get rid of Fabio next. They can either take out Dan, who is the weakest link, or they can drop their numbers down to three and take out Jane, who is a likeable person that they really don’t want to face at the end.

Chase says that Dan is about done, but Fabio tells him it’s such a no brainer that Jane has to go. Not such a no brainer for Chase, who thinks it’s a “big risk” to send Jane home. Big risk because…? I really don’t understand what the risk is. If the choice is her or a guy who won’t get any votes and can’t place higher than last place in a challenge, I don’t get the drama. When asked by Jane, Chase tells her they need to discuss whether they’re getting rid of her or not. May as well just tell her she’s going then because she’s not going to believe anything else after hearing that. Chase tries to toss the blame back on the other two, saying he doesn’t want to do it, but he will if they’re dead set on it. They acknowledge that she’s too big a threat to them. Jane is angry and surprised by people stabbing others in the backs. Apparently, that’s not supposed to happen in Survivor.

Before they head off to tribal council, Jane dumps pots of water over the fire. I’m not sure what the heck that was supposed to achieve.

Aware she’s going and not wanting to give anyone a reason to either keep her around nor vote for her should she somehow survive this vote, Jane views tribal council as an opportunity to take shots at people.

Chase says that either Fabio or Dan is going next, whichever one doesn’t win immunity. Reluctantly, Sash and Holly agree. It seems to me that nobody realizes the concept of a tie, aside from Jeff Probst.

Jane has a suggestion: everybody else vote for Holly. Well, it’s nice to see her finally make an effort here, five minutes before they vote, rather than rolling over and throwing stones at people.

Chase and Sash both play their hidden immunity idols. Seems like a waste since the other three didn’t appear to have a clue how to vote, let alone being able to be unified enough for their votes to count.

Votes
Jane
Jane
Jane
Jane

Unable to make headway with her too little, too late plea, Jane has been voted off the island.

Stay tuned to dingoRUE for another live recap of Survivor: Nicaragua Episode 15, where we will find out who the Survivor: Nicaragua winner is, which airs Sunday at 8/7c on CBS.

The Biggest Loser Season 10 Winner

Frado and Patrick finished above the yellow line in The Biggest Loser Season 10 Episode 12. That leaves America to choose between Ada and Elizabeth to round out the final three.

It goes without saying who America chose. Although she had trouble embracing it, Ada was one of the strongest competitors of the season, whereas Elizabeth was below the yellow line week after week after week and never really seemed to be putting in the same effort as the others. By an overwhelming majority, Ada is the winner of America’s vote.

Now the contestants competing for the at home prize can start weighing in.

Elizabeth: 173 pounds (-71, 29.10%)
Adam: 220 pounds (-182, 45.27%)
Allie: 248 pounds (-74, 22.98%)
Tina: 191 pounds (-72, 27.38%)
Brendan: 245 pounds (-117, 32.32%)
Sophia: 207 pounds (-65, 23.90%)
Lisa: 191 pounds (-97, 33.68%)
Anna: 221 pounds (-109, 33.03%)
Jesse: 203 pounds (-166, 44.99%)
Burgandy: 167 pounds (-64, 27.71%)
Rick: 185 pounds (-165, 47.14%)
Jessica: 190 pounds (-92, 32.62%)
Aaron: 296 pounds (-172, 36.75%)
Mark: 208 pounds (-213, 50.59%)

The Biggest Loser at home winner of $100,000 is Mark. This comes as no surprise seeing as he’s had the lead all season long, having been eliminated the one time he fell below the yellow line.

That brings us down to the finalists battling for the big prize. As the biggest loser on the ranch, Frado picks the order.

Frado: 205 pounds (-162, 44.14%)
Ada: 159 pounds (-99, 38.37%)
Patrick: 219 pounds (-181, 45.25%)

The Biggest Loser Season 10 winner is Patrick House, now $250,000 richer.

Alison tells us we are in for a surprise for next season, which starts January 4th (3 weeks from now). For starters, there will be two new trainers joining the show next week, presumably as part of the departure of Jillian Michaels. This will mark the first time in The Biggest Loser history that Bob and Jillian are not alone. Well, except for the first two times in seasons 3 and 4. Contestants will be given the choice between training with Bob and Jillian on the ranch or training with the two unknown trainers in a secret location. For me, the choice is obvious.