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SURVIVOR: PANAMA
COMING THIS FALL TO CBS!
Can you Outwit, Outplay and Outlast on SURVIVOR? If you think you've got what it takes to be a contestant on SURVIVOR, click here to apply.
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| GUYS GET EVEN: JANET KOTH VOTED OUT |
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Unfortunately, the women of Jaburu were still without proper shelter. Exposed to the elements, they endured the pounding downpour while attempting to maintain their all-important fire. "We thought we had more time than this to prepare for the rain. We forgot that we are in the middle of the Amazon, and torrential rainstorms come by daily," explained Shawna Mitchell, the 23-year-old retail saleswoman from Redwood City, California.
REWARD CHALLENGE: FLIP OUT
After the rain subsided, both tribes met host Jeff Probst at the Reward Challenge, where he explained the rules. Both tribes were given a giant 30-piece puzzle to solve. The pieces of the puzzle were scattered around a playing field studded with obstacles like trees, broken limbs and mud. Each tribe was instructed to choose a "caller," while the other tribe members would be blindfolded and paired up. The "caller" was to guide his or her blindfolded tribemates to their colored planks to collect them. Once all pieces were collected, the blindfolds were to be removed, and the tribe could then solve the puzzle. First tribe to have completed the puzzle would win the reward: fishing bait.
As the Challenge began, JoAnna Ward, the 31-year-old school guidance counselor from Orangeburg, South Carolina, and Butch Lockley, the 50-year-old middle school principal from Olney, Illinois, were selected as each tribe's callers, As the two callers barked out instructions to their blindfolded tribe members, it became clear that JoAnna had a firm grip on the game, because she guided her team with relative ease to each plank. Butch didn't have it so easy as he struggled with even his own tribemates' names.
The women took an early lead and never looked back as they found and retrieved all their planks. Once their blindfolds were off, the women scrambled to assemble their puzzle while the men were still retrieving the last of their planks. Finally, both tribes raced to finish their puzzle, with the women still commanding a lead. Soon, the women's determination paid off as they successfully assembled their puzzle and took their second straight victory over the men of Tambaqui.

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