Report: Elizabeth Beisel To Appear On Season 39 of CBS’s Survivor

Olympic swimmer Elizabeth Beisel will be part of the cast for the 39th season of CBS’s hit reality TV series Survivorper a report by a media outlet covering the show.

Season 39 wrapped up filming last month in Fiji’s Mamanuca Islands according to Inside Survivora site that covers the long-running reality TV show and has accurately leaked the casts of all recent seasons. The season should air on CBS next fall.

Currently, Inside Survivor has reported 11 of the 20 cast members, including the 26-year-old Beisel. Beisel competed at the 2008, 2012 and 2016 Olympics for Team USA, winning a silver medal in the 400 IM and a bronze medal in the 200 back in London in 2012. She’s also a world champ (400 IM in 2011) and three-time Pan Pacs champ.

Beisel is a fairly high-profile swimmer: she was a U.S. national teamer at age 13 and competed at the World Championships at 14. She was a staple on Team USA’s international rosters from 2007 to 2017, but stopped competing after the 2017 World Championships. Since then, Beisel has dabbled with color commentary for televised swim meets, and she told SwimSwam in February that “swimming hasn’t really ended for me, but competing has.”

All that is to say that the colorful and bubbly Beisel one of the rare swimmers who is pretty likely to be recognized as a celebrity by the rest of her Survivor cast. Season 39 of the hit series will be titled “Island of the Idols,” and will feature two of the game’s most iconic players (‘Boston Rob’ Mariano and two-time winner Sandra Diaz-Twine) returning as “advisers” for the cast of all-new players.

Swimmers have been well-represented in the show’s casting history. Olympian Katrina Radke appeared on season 35, which aired in 2017. Season 27 winner Tyson Apostol was a Division I swimmer at Brigham Young University, swim coach Holly Hoffman was the fourth-place finisher in season 21, and season 19 cast member Jaison Robinson was a former Stanford water polo player.

In This Story

13
Leave a Reply

Subscribe
Notify of

13 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
NCSwimFan
4 years ago

I’d expect Beisel to do fairly well here. She’s super bubbly and relatable which is a huge key into making social inroads. If she has done some homework on the show and knows what to expect going in I wouldn’t be surprised to see her make a deep run. Which would be nice, as it would raise the average placement of swimming Olympians on the show tremendously (sorry Katrina).

Aquajosh
4 years ago

I really hope she considers a comeback. She’s in great shape, and I’d like to see what she could do now that Troy has his focus on postgrads. Making a fourth US Olympic Team in the 400 IM would be completely badass and unprecedented.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Aquajosh
4 years ago

oh yes …..

PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
4 years ago

RC Saint Amour was a swimmer on the show as well-I believe she swam for Wellesley, and still swims at Masters meets.

Benedict Arnold Schwarzenegger
Reply to  PK Doesn't Like His Long Name
4 years ago

Does swimming necessarily want to claim RC? Those Ponderosa videos were pretty unbecoming

Ol' Longhorn
4 years ago

Ever seen Beisel do backstroke kick LCM with her hands straight up over her chest? Brutal.

ERVINFORTHEWIN
Reply to  Ol' Longhorn
4 years ago

was she not training with Troy back in the day ( Not so long ago LOL ) ?

marklewis
4 years ago

Elizabeth is known for her likeability, so that she keep her in the game for awhile. She’s smart too, if they’ve got challenges with puzzles to solve.

Jeff
4 years ago

You’ve also got to bear in mind Shane Gould won Australian survivor last year.

Muddy Canary
4 years ago

You forgot Holly Hoffman! She was/is a swim coach for Eureka Swim Club, South Dakota! Pretty sure she was top 3 on one series. Her daughters were very talented division 1 swimmers, and Alex ended up being a model, or something.

wanye kest
4 years ago

hey, Jared is it the 38th or 39th season?

About Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson

Jared Anderson swam for nearly twenty years. Then, Jared Anderson stopped swimming and started writing about swimming. He's not sick of swimming yet. Swimming might be sick of him, though. Jared was a YMCA and high school swimmer in northern Minnesota, and spent his college years swimming breaststroke and occasionally pretending …

Read More »