filming for seasons 41 and 42 indefinitely postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, EW is reaching back into the reality show s past. We sent a Survivor Quarantine Questionnaire to a batch of former players to fill out with their thoughts about their time on the show as well as updates on what they ve been up to since. Each weekday, EW will post the answers from a different player.
Yes,
Survivor is real. No, the contestants are not whisked away to a hotel at night. Yes, they are out there suffering 24 hours a day. And no, other than sunscreen, feminine hygiene products, and, somewhat infamously, condoms, the players are not secretly given the creature comforts of home. Yet even though the show has been on for 40 seasons over 20 years, many viewers still don t believe the poor souls on the show are actually suffering out there suffering even more than what we see on TV, it turns out.
Construction is starting this month for the Southern-themed brunch spot, which has four locations in Ohio but none yet in the Cleveland area. Plus, Insurance.com finds Ohioans pay well below average on their auto insurance rates, Politico looks at what it will take for Democrats to win Sen. Rob Portman's seat, and a Marcus Thomas-produced Super Bowl ad wins high marks from a firm that analyzes search engagement.
After 33 years as an attorney and a four-year stint on the Mandeville City Council that put him in the middle of a contentious land use debate, John Keller is no stranger to legal confrontation.
Itâs experience that should serve him well when he assumes the 22nd Judicial District Courtâs Division D judgeship in January. He will serve a six-year term on the court that has jurisdiction over St. Tammany and Washington parishes.
Keller was elected without opposition in the Nov. 3 election to fill the seat on the bench previously occupied by Judge Peter Garcia, who died in May. Garcia had held the post since 1996, having been re-elected without opposition three times.