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Vacaville Bise Host Sust Survivor Watch Party – The Vacaville Reporter

Joe Hunter, the native Vacaville, is clearly a fan favorite in the latest season of the long-standing reality show “Survivor”.

Weekly Watch parties in the area of ​​Sacramento, in which he now works as a fire brigade captain, were packed and social media contributions are clear about the candidates for which people are visible. While that humiliates him and even surprised, he said, he knows what to expect when he organizes his next public clock party in Vacaville.

“I have friends and family and people I know that they always have my back,” he says about his hometown. “I fully expect it to be a fun time.”

Hunter will be at Journey Coffee in downtown Vacaville to see the next episode of the show on Wednesday. The doors will be opened at 5:30 p.m. and the show broadcast live on CBS at 7 p.m. He said there would be food and drink, and he promised to chat and answer which questions he can answer as part of the show insurance agreement.

Joe Hunter, Collection Vacaville, competes at the CBS Show Survivor and organizes a watch party for the episode of this week at Journey Coffee on Wednesday. (Courtesy photo)

This season, the show dropped 18 candidates in a remote region of Fiji, where they compete in physical and strategic challenges. The last candidate will go away with one million dollars and Hunter is one of the last 8 participants in the episode of last week.

He hopes that the Vacaville clock will bring the community together and worked for a while to find a place for it. “We implemented ideas and Greg Richie helped,” he said and mentioned his long -time friend and city council. “(Travel) has the place so that people can eat and visit. I have not been there since the conversion, it was still a theater when I was there.”

But he has a clear news when he was asked whether the local watch party is an indication that something that happens with his competition will happen.

“I can't give up too much, but I will say that a watch party is no indication that anyone was chosen,” he said. “I would still have a watch party, and the show encourages us to organize weekly watch parties throughout the season. So don't be annoyed!”

Hunter repeatedly said on the show that he was playing for his children, but before the episodes were broadcast, he also noted that he died for his late sister Joanna, who died in 2011. He and his family contributed to saying goodbye to Joanna's law.

So far, the problem has not appeared during the edited, broadcast consequences of Survivor, but Hunter said: “Good things come” and yes, he often spoke about his sister during the filming. “It was a big topic and I talked about it all the time, but I am not sure which episode it will include,” he said, adding that the adoption of Joanna's law “absolutely the powerful what our family has ever happened to bring Joanna justice.”

When asked whether everything he has learned or surprised him or surprised him since the start of the broadcast of episodes, he said that the most shocking was to hear the recorded conversations with which others did not inaugur.

“What people may not understand is that they themselves see their own conversations they have had only a dimension while they are there and they do not get the full story until the show is broadcast,” he said. “So maybe you have some suspicions, but you don't know until you see it and it is shocking to hear some of what people say about you that you didn't know!”

An intense moment that helps competitor Eva Erickson. (Courtesy photo)
An intense moment that helps competitor Eva Erickson. (Courtesy photo)

One thing that did not shock him was a powerful moment when he helped the competitor Eva Erickson, who has autism, with an episode of overstimulation. He said he was still friends with Eva.

“We talk about it every other day, if not every day,” he said. “It was a powerful moment that we shared and we are friends forever.”

And how have his colleagues in the fire brigade reacted to the show since his return to work?

“Just let me tell me that it can be brutal to be in the fire brigade,” he said with a laugh. “They do not let go and constantly remind me of every misstep in my piece or especially my appearance and send me pictures to remember – and I love it to death!”

So what is more difficult: survivor or fire brigade?

“Well, the fire brigade is more difficult because it can really be life or death, but Survivor is socially and mentally with him”

And the food on the show. So far he has won two meals: tacos and ham and cheese. “Undoubtedly the best tacos were!” he said. But when he came home after the submission, there was a meal from which he secured himself. “I had a western bacon cheeseburger and fries from Carl's Jr. – and a big cola!”

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