Mike White with host Jeff Probst at his final 'Survivor 50' tribal council. Logo text Mike White did not leave Survivor 50 quietly. The White Lotus creator came back determined to play a bolder game, and he did — only to get burned in this week’s fourth episode when his push to save Angelina Keely backfired and Christian Hubicki cut him loose in one of the season’s first major blindsides.
In his exit interview with The Hollywood Reporter below, White opens up about the ally who shocked him, why he does not entirely buy that his Gabby comments were the real reason Christian turned on him and why, despite the early exit, he has no regrets about swinging bigger the second time around. He also shares how his experience informed the next season of The White Lotus: “I’m grateful that they let me come back. It was a great reset for me.”
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So did Ozzy get the White Lotus cameo Christian said he was angling for? Yeah, I feel like that was kind of unfair in a way because I feel like Ozzy and I had a real friendship that actually even predated Christian’s. So the idea that Ozzy just wanted to keep me around because he wanted a White Lotus cameo, I don’t think that was accurate.
Do you think when he made that comment he was joking around, or was he just looking for an excuse to plant a vote on you?
I would’ve never thought this, but yeah, looking back, I sort of feel like — and this is speculative — but there’s a part of me that thinks Christian felt like I shouldn’t have been asked back. I don’t know. I think he was almost irritated I was there again. So I think that and the fact that The White Lotus and the cameos, and there’s a lot of press before where people asked about it… it just became this whole thing out there that I couldn’t control. Both Emily and Christian are purists about the game and saw that as some kind of unfair advantage that I had. And maybe that was true with some players, but obviously it wasn’t true with other players like them. So it was a mixed bag for me the way I looked at it. It was, in some ways, maybe helpful with somebody, but I don’t think anybody goes out to Survivor to throw their game for a cameo in White Lotus.
You looked genuinely stunned when your name came up. Were you fully blindsided, and did you immediately understand how the vote had come together, or only later realized Christian had flipped it on you?
I had no idea. I knew Angelina wasn’t involved but I didn’t know what was going on. I was definitely blindsided because Christian and I had talked for so long about playing together and I wasn’t pregaming. I only knew Christian and Angelina and Ozzy [before season 50]. We’d only been on the same beach for two days. So I don’t know, I just really thought we were friends. I’m sure he would say we were friends and this was good for his game, but there’s a part of you where you still are the kid on the playground and you’re like, “Don’t you want to play with me?” The fact that he didn’t want to play with me and wanted to take me out so early, I guess I just didn’t think he was going to do that.
You chose not to bring Ozzy in on the Emily plan because he seemed pretty locked in on Angelina. Did that feel like a calculated risk at the time or did you feel confident you could swing the vote in your favor?
I was just trying whatever I could to keep Angelia in the game. I didn’t know if I could. I thought maybe they were going to vote for Angelina. I obviously wanted Ozzy to vote Emily, but he’d just come on the same tribe with Emily and I could see they had a connection. So I floated it and it didn’t fly with him. And I just thought, “okay, well, Christian says he’s in, Angelina’s in,” and now we have Stephenie. If we’re strong, it shouldn’t be that complicated.
Operation Save Angelina technically worked, just not how you planned. Was there any thought of just going with the easy vote and saying, “Okay, I really can’t move the needle and I’ll just vote Angelina.” Was there any way you would’ve voted for her?
There was no way I was going to vote for her.
Did you have any sense in the moment when you were mentioning Gabby to Christian that the strategy was more, as he would later describe it, a “knife to the heart?” Did you know it would bother him so much?
In my personal opinion, I don’t think that’s what happened. I was saying a million different things about Emily. That just came up because she had made a speech the night before at Tribal Council about how she doesn’t have sympathy for people who play the game because you sign up for a game that’s a game of deception and people’s feelings get hurt and that’s part of it. So the next day I was like, “This chick is gnarly. She’s hardcore.” She’s basically telegraphing that she is cutthroat. I was just saying that to Christian. I’m like, “This girl is cutthroat. When push comes to shove, she’s not going to be loyal to you.”
And then Gabby, of course, comes up. I think it might’ve been out of Christian’s mouth. In my personal opinion, he did some good acting because I was blindsided. But the acting of him crying on camera about Gabby, I don’t know. Go back and watch the tape. I’m not sure that was for legit.
So you don’t feel that Gabby was the real motivation?
I guess his motivation was that I manipulated him by bringing up Gabby and that I’m too good at manipulating, so then he has to vote me out. Honestly, I think there were one hundred other things that made him want to vote me out. I don’t know about bringing up Gabby. That might’ve been an editing thing.
Ozzy Lusth, Emily Flippen and Mike White. In your mind, what was the bigger factor in your exit: Christian deciding to turn on you, or the rest of the tribe not recognizing Emily as the threat you knew she was?
I think it was a combination of Christian and me playing it badly. I believed in the bonds, the bond I had with Ozzy and with Christian. That I was going to be able to be more upfront and make the move, as opposed to hanging back and waiting for the counter move. It was a bit too bold, I guess. So that was on me.
Let’s talk about the immunity challenge and reward. What was your reaction when you realized that Zac Brown was part of it? Did it feel like a surprise or another crazy Survivor 50 moment? Honestly, I was so hungry I was probably just stroking out. All I could think about was food. Can we possibly get the food? And it was so clear that we weren’t going to win that challenge. That was such a physical challenge. It was the hardest challenge I’ve ever been through on Survivor. And I was like, “We are screwed.” I was like, “Zac Brown, whatever, whatever.” I was just like, “We’re not going to eat. They’re going to take away our flint. This is going to be another five days without eating food.” I was bumming.
Right before the challenge, Jeff Probst explains that one tribe gets reward and immunity, one gets immunity and one goes to Tribal — and you ask why he’s looking at you. Since you two are friends, was that Jeff messing with you, or was that perfect accidental timing?
I think he knew. Those other teams were stacked. That was one that was just a muscle challenge, and Christian and I are not big guys. Ozzy did everything he could to push that boat but we were outmanned. So just looking at it was like, this is obviously ours to lose here.
Looking back now, how much did your own Survivor experience deepen your understanding of the kinds of power games and human behavior you’ve explored on The White Lotus?
Since the beginning, I’ve always loved Survivor for that reason. I love what it reveals about people. It’s like a king’s court of intrigue and showing people under stress in these high stakes situations and how they act. When reality shows are done well and you’re really feeling like it’s getting some insight into the human mind and motivations, it’s really valuable as a storyteller.
You filmed Survivor 50 before going into the new season of The White Lotus. Did anything from this experience follow you creatively into that process? Since I was eliminated early, I did have three weeks of downtime where everybody thought I was busy and nobody was calling me. So I don’t know if it actually seeped into the inspiration of White Lotus, but it definitely helped me come up with a game plan. So for that, beyond all the other reasons, I’m grateful that they let me come back. That’s definitely a huge one. It was a great reset for me.
This was a shorter run than a lot of fans probably expected from you. What do you feel like viewers didn’t get to see about the game you were hoping to play this time? I played a more conservative game the first time because I really wanted to have the entire Survivor experience, so I kind of played not to lose. This time I wanted to play a little bit more of a bolder game. I feel like I did everything on the bucket list of Survivor, so I felt like I could swing from the hip a little bit more. Maybe that’s why I went out… but I think I would’ve kept playing that kind of game, so maybe that would’ve taken me out early anyway.
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