OMG! Boston Rob Mariano Just Dropped a Bombshell on Cirie Fields and Ozzy Lusth Over Survivor 50 — You’ll Be Shocked!

OMG! Boston Rob Mariano Just Dropped a Bombshell on Cirie Fields and Ozzy Lusth Over Survivor 50 — You’ll Be Shocked!

Boston Rob Mariano attends the Survivor 50 Live Finale at the Paramount Studios lot in Los Angeles, California on May 20, 2026. – Photo: Robert Voets/CBS ©2026 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Survivor 50 might be over, but its discourse is still going on two weeks after the finale. On May 20, 2026, we saw Aubry Bracco win the milestone season after beating Jonathan Young and Joe Hunter in an 8-3-0 vote, respectively.

While fans and former players have weighed in on the season’s results, particularly on whether Bracco or Young should’ve won, no one has been more vocal about his disagreement with how everything ended than Young himself. After the season wrapped, Young aired all his grievances in his exit press, expressing disappointment in his loss (fair enough), but also claiming he lost because the jury was bitter and influenced against him by Cirie Fields (sounds like the bitter one is somebody else).

“Friendly Fire” – Boston Rob Mariano on the Twelfth episode of SURVIVOR: WINNERS AT WAR, airing Wednesday, April 29h (8:00-9:01 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network. Photo: Screen Grab/CBS Entertainment ©2020 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved | Robert Voets/CB© Robert Voets/CB

Then, Young’s mentor, Boston Rob Mariano, also weighed in on the situation. We all know, of course, who Mariano is: five-time Survivor player, winner of Survivor: Redemption Island, and half of the Romber phenomenon alongside Amber Mariano (née Brkich).

Mariano told TV Insider in an interview that, while he understood Young’s disappointment (after all, Young lost two million dollars and a brand-new car), he also told Young that he had butchered his press. Mariano said, “I told him that that was the wrong move… I don’t think belittling Aubry’s game to make your game better is a good move.” Regarding Bracco’s win, Mariano stated, “I  always have said, the person that wins is the one that deserves to win.“

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May | Robert Voets/CB© Robert Voets/CB

It seemed the matter had been settled, then, until Mariano gave another interview where he changed his tune, particularly about why Bracco won. In an interview with Mike Bloom for Parade, Mariano first kept defending Young’s emotional outburst post-season due to Young being a sensitive guy who knew he hadn’t made the best decisions (Young hasn’t gone on the record about this, though). Mariano also revealed he kept encouraging Young by telling him another chance at the game could still come. (I vote a solid no on this).

However, despite Mariano having expressed that Bracco deserved to win, he now challenged the jury’s reasons for backing Bracco as opposed to Young, particularly regarding two jurors: Cirie Fields and Ozzy Lusth.

“I Deserve All of This” – After losing two alliance members, castaways spend the next day picking up the pieces of their broken alliance. The castaways face off against a surprise challenger during this week’s individual immunity competition. Then, upon their return to camp, the journey participant must read aloud an important announcement regarding their recent adventure, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, April 22 (8:00-9:30 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live | Robert Vets/CBS© Robert Vets/CBS

Mario stated to Bloom, “I thought [Bracco] played a great game…She played a different game. Survivor‘s changed over the years. And I think that’s something that hasn’t really been noted. I give Aubry credit, because I’ve always said whoever wins is the person that wins.”

Mariano then added, ”The jury doesn’t have rules that they have to follow. They can vote however they want, though a lot of times it’s emotional versus strategic or logical in people’s mind. But I think she did what she needed to do to win, and I don’t think we should take that away from her.”

Having said that, Mariano then challenged, ”I do think it’s interesting that people like Cirie and Ozzy talked about, ‘Aubry played the middle.’ Years ago, that would be considered being called a coattail rider. She rode someone’s coattails, and that was looked down upon, and now it’s being revered.”

“We’re in the Majors” – Boston Rob Mariano on the Seventh episode of SURVIVOR: WINNERS AT WAR, airing Wednesday, March 25 (8:00-9:01 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network. Photo: Robert Voets/CBS Entertainment ©2020 CBS Broadcasting, Inc. All Rights Reserved | Robert Voets/CB© Robert Voets/CB

He added, ”So, I wonder, is that something they actually revere, or is that the excuse they’re giving to be able to justify their vote? To say she played the middle really well, because they didn’t want to vote for Jonathan, or they didn’t want to vote for Joe, so they wanted to vote for Aubry. ‘What’s the excuse we can use for Aubry?’”

Mariano reiterated that he didn’t want to take anything away from Bracco, while, contradictorily, he kept doubling down on the claim that not everyone saw the big picture. Mariano finished by saying, ”As a jury member, you can say whatever you want. But I think in their mind sometimes they feel that justifying it makes it logical.”

“Reverse the Curse” – Back from tribal, tensions rise following the exit of a particularly historic player. The final five immunity challenge ends in a showdown and features one of the closest finishes the show has ever seen. Jeff reveals the outcomes of the remaining in-game fan votes and how they impact the final stage of the competition. Then, one castaway will be crowned Sole Survivor and awarded the $2 million prize, during the three-hour live season finale, on SURVIVOR 50, Wednesday, May | Robert Voets/CB© Robert Voets/CB

Mariano clearly has a soft spot for Young after he spent four years teaching Young about Survivor, which slightly worked since Young placed second. As Mariano first stated, the jury has the right to vote however they want, with any parameters they wish to adhere to, and they also can change their minds if a finalist manages to persuade them. While Bracco’s gameplay might not have been the flashiest of games, it was deserving enough of the Sole Survivor title in the eyes of eight jurors, as opposed to the other three who sided with their pre-game alliance member.

Mariano was right, too, in pointing out that Survivor has changed and that what was considered lacking before isn’t anymore. Where I disagree with Mariano is that there’s a difference between fluctuating between alliances (what Bracco did) and merely coasting to the end (what Hunter did, for instance). Young took credit for moves he didn’t initiate and failed to manage the jury, which is why he lost. Regardless of Fields and Lusth’s ultimate reasoning for voting for Bracco, they had a better social relationship with her as opposed to Young, so why wouldn’t they vote for her instead?

Mariano failed to win Survivor: All-Stars due to poor jury management and took this lesson to heart in subsequent seasons. Perhaps he should emphasize how he did that for Young in case the latter ever returns to the game (please no), as the “blame anyone but yourself move”  has already gotten old.

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