survivor recap Survivor Cook Island Cast
 Survivor Cook Island
Survivor Cook Island Contestant

Survivor
Cook Island Cast:

The Survivor Cook Island Tribes are divided by Race

 

Candice Woodcock Survivor Cook Islands Voted Off

 

 

Candice Woodcock is a member of the Asian-American Tribe.

Survivor Cook Islands Candice Woodcock

Candice Woodcock is a 23-year-old pre-med student from Fayetteville, NC

 

 


Candice Woodcock Was Voted Off: 11-30-06

 

Candice Woodcock Won Immunity Idol: TBA

 

Candice Woodcock Won Food Challenge: TBA

 

 

 

 

Caucasian Tribe

Survivor Cook Islands Caucasian Tribe

 

When the new season begins Sept. 14 on CBS, the 20 contestants -- this time stranded on islands in the South Pacific -- will team up by race or ethnicity. There are four teams: black, white, Asian and Hispanic, and they will be pitted against one another. One contestant will win $1 million.

Criticism has come from all angles -- from television writers to bloggers to a New York City councilman. They called the setup a cynical ploy by a network anxious for buzz, viewers and advertising dollars.

"We're trying to work to make this country -- a country of immigrants -- blend in together," Julie Garza, program director of La Ley 96.9 FM, a Triangle Spanish-language radio station, said Thursday. "Then we go and do these kinds of shows."

The ratings for the last edition of "Survivor" were down from previous seasons, with about 17 million people watching. The show once routinely drew 20 million. But in comments to reporters this week, executive producer Mark Burnett said the idea is an effort to respond to criticism that past "Survivor" casts were not diverse enough.

The Triangle entry to the cast is Candice Woodcock, originally from Fayetteville and a 2005 graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill. She is 23, studied at UNC on a prestigious Morehead scholarship and lived in a hut and taught school in Kenya. She also has traveled to Chile and Peru.

Woodcock's "Survivor" adventure has already taken place, though she and the other contestants are not allowed to talk about it until the episodes air.

The show probably will be a hit, said Lee D. Baker, an associate professor of cultural anthropology at Duke University. He is teaching a class this semester called "The Anthropology of Race."

Baker predicted that the show will play up racial stereotypes. Blacks will be athletic. Whites will be thrifty and hardworking. The Asians will outsmart everyone.

"They're going to push those stereotypes and sell commercials in between," Baker said. "I don't think this moves us forward."

The CBS network's official statement said that the "unscripted entertainment series" had frequently tried to provoke.

"The producers have regularly introduced new creative elements and casting structures that reflect some social issues in our culture. The ethnic format Mark Burnett and his team proposed and implemented for the beginning of this edition is an extension of that process.

"CBS fully recognizes the controversial nature of this format, but has full confidence in the producers and their ability to produce the program in a responsible manner."

Each season of "Survivor" generally begins by placing contestants on teams. Past installments have pitted the old vs. the young and men vs. women.

At some point in the season, the different teams -- or "tribes," as "Survivor" calls them -- will probably merge.

Woodcock, a graduate student at Georgetown University, has been a fan of the show for years, said her father, Michael Woodcock.

Her father, a Fayetteville ophthalmologist, was surprised at the way the teams were divided. Be he doesn't expect it to affect his daughter's game. "I don't think it's anything that would bother her mentally in any way."

Woodcock has experience with less-than-ideal living arrangements and should excel at the game, said former boyfriend Sebastian Gibbs, who met her while volunteering with Students for Students International, a student-run nonprofit at UNC.

As for the idea of dividing contestants by race? "Perhaps in principle it would be something that would bother her," Gibbs said. "But in practice, she knows it's a game, and she'll be worried about winning the game and not which race is doing what."

 

 

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