

JOSH BRO SMART PLAYER HOW TO
“ how to make our beautiful planet survive. “It’s a million bucks, so everyone has dollar signs on the mind, but I’m thinking more along the lines of what can I do with the money, and how can I start something that’s a bright light on our Earth, and influences others to do the same,” he says.
JOSH BRO SMART PLAYER FOR FREE
I would want to start an afterschool program for free for those kinds of kids, and get them to learn a healthier and happier lifestyle than what they were introduced to unfairly.” More than anything, Devon has his eyes on the million-dollar prize, and he’s already dreaming up how he plans to use it - supporting “the ones who have been there for me,” for one, and for another: “I was thinking I would start an afterschool program for underprivileged kids who don’t have the easiest lives, who don’t have parents there for them to provide them with the healthiest food or teach them the healthiest lifestyle. 'Survivor' Season 35: Jeff Probst Previews the Hustlers Tribe I’ll do my best to hide that I’m looking for an idol, but if I have an option of looking for the idol knowingly or not looking for an idol at all to make my tribe members happy, I’ll look for the idol.” It’s just playing the game and being smart and getting yourself an advantage. “If people think, ‘Oh, he’s sketchy because he’s looking for an idol,’ that’s not sketchy. “I think it’s stupid to not look for idols,” he says. In that regard, Devon says he’s more than willing to get his hands dirty, whether that means rifling through people’s bags or shamelessly scouting out the beach for hidden immunity idols. And once we start getting people off, I’ll bust out the big guns.” “Maybe to start, I’ll play dumb, just to get the target off my back. “But I don’t want to be seen as someone who didn’t play the game,” he continues. “I consider myself an intellectual - but I’m not going to say a single word like ‘intellectual’ while I’m on the island, you know? I’m going to be like, ‘Whoa, sup dude? How do we do this?’ I’m going to try to play that card, and hopefully they’ll pick off the smarter people who are trying to run things, and then there are a lot of buff dudes and hopefully they’ll see them as a bigger physical threat, and I’ll thread right in through the middle.” I want them to think all I do is surf, even though I have a college degree,” he explains. “My plan is, I already have the dumb-sounding surfer voice, so I’m going to play myself up that way. What he does know is what he’s willing to do in order to make his way forward, beginning with wielding his surfer bro persona as a weapon. The traditional rules have not gone completely out the window, but things have changed. We’ve reached a point in Survivor where anything is possible. Having watched the show with his family since its earliest days, Devon says he’s more than aware of just how complicated the game has become over the past few seasons: “I have no idea what to expect at this point. Listen to the podcast below to hear from Devon and the rest of the Hustlers in the fourth episode of our preseason series, “First One Out.” But everything that I’m going to get to experience by participating in this game, it blows my mind.

Even just shitting in the ocean is such a fucking crazy thing to them, and that’s my norm! And the challenges? I get a huge adrenaline rush, just watching the challenges.

The majority of these people aren’t meant for that. “I love seeing these people whom you would never imagine in this situation, left to survive on their own and live off the land.

“I watched the very first season with my mom. “But I am a numbers guy I’ve always been good at math,” he insists, and perhaps that’s part of where his lifelong love for Survivor comes from. Prior to Survivor, Devon was a student at Sonoma State University, where he studied finance - not the most natural fit, based on optics alone. I make enough to get by to pay for food and pay for my rent and whatever fun plans I have, whether it’s going on a surf trip or going some place new.” I’m not too focused on cash in my life right now, the bills. He works as a surf instructor, a job he doesn’t take too seriously: “I mostly do it just because it’s fun. Devon grew up in a beach town, where “surfing is the regs,” as is snowboarding through the nearby mountains.
