When Will Killing Fields Air Again
Andy, will The Killing Fields and/or The Vet Life be back with new seasons? The Killing Fields left the states hanging on the concluding episode of the last season with a call indicating new evidence on a instance and The Vet Life is just fun/entertaining Television receiver for animal lovers. Thanks. —N.East.
Discovery's The Killing Fields aired its last episode one year ago, on Feb. 22, 2018. It was the concluding episode of season 3.
The evidence premiered in 2016, and attempted something ambitious: following an investigation in real time, just doing and so in an artfully produced serial. Information technology promised to examine "desolate and sprawling areas" where "dozens of deaths remain mysteries, baffling anyone daring enough to investigate."
Alas, it didn't quite work. When I reviewed the series, I found information technology to be well-crafted but as well repetitive and lacking momentum. The prove suggested something was going to happen, but nothing much did.
For season iii, information technology moved to Wight County, Virginia, to examine the 2004 murder of Carrie Vocalizer, and ended with what appeared to be a lead.
Despite the cliffhanger, Killing Fields is done. A Discovery spokesperson told me that "Killing Fields isn't returning."
Equally to that lead, WKTR reported in Feb. 2018 that Lieutenant Thomas Potter "says investigators have received new 'very promising' information in Singer'due south instance, just information technology will take more fourth dimension to see exactly where that leads."
Since so, there haven't been any publicized leads in her example.
However, Carrie'southward female parent, Patty Lord, talked to the Flagler Higher Gargoyle last April near her daughter, and said that she doesn't like how the media doesn't "really requite a whole story of Carrie. All they are going to focus on is what happened to her."
Although there won't be new episodes, y'all can read my interview with its producers well-nigh how The Killing Fields was produced.
When The Vet Life will return
There's better news for Animal Planet's The Vet Life. An Animal Planet spokesperson told me, "The Vet Life will exist returning later this year."
The show follows a veterinary practise in Houston, Texas, that'south led by Dr. Diarra Bluish, Dr. Aubrey Ross, and Dr. Michael Lavigne.
Concluding Apr, Fauna Planet included the show in a printing release with its "programming highlights," proverb that The Vet Life "averaged 935,000 viewers" in Q1 of 2018.
Until it returns, all three seasons are bachelor on Amazon and on Animal Planet's web site.
Three questions nigh Survivor Tribal Councils
How is the society of voting decided in Tribal Council? Also, once voting begins are the survivors allowed to talk amidst themselves? In one case idols are played do they stop filming and rearrange the votes in the urn to all-time consequence? —Bob
Let's start with the last question beginning. We know that, when Jeff Probst goes to tally the votes, he puts them in the most dramatic order possible.
The votes are arranged based on what happened in the voting booth (the producers watch a feed and so they know how each person voted). The producers as well have knowledge of idols that might be played, since they'll ask players most that in pre-Tribal Council interviews. Of form, they tin't be sure, since players can determine in the moment whether or not to play an idol or reward.
But Jeff doesn't re-tally or re-accommodate votes in the event of an idol play. Instead, he adjusts on the wing, and may pull out votes in a dissimilar club. Read this story for a more than in-depth caption.
As to the first question, voting lodge is pretty uncomplicated, with Probst calling players in the order that they're seated. But information technology's edited out of gild for dramatic effect.
Information technology's of import to know that the players have assigned seats at Tribal Council. Before Tribal, they're put in an lodge determined by the producers. (They're besides outfitted with wireless mics, which they also wear during challenges.)
Players with conflicts are often seated next to each other. Those who are the focus of that episode tend to be in the center.
Thinking nigh that made me wonder: Are the people most likely to be voted out commonly seated in the middle? Look at the first Survivor: Edge of Extinction Tribal Council:
Based on the events of that Tribal, it seems like Reem knew she was about to be voted out. Simply I wonder: How often is the person who's voted out sitting in the middle of the group, instead of on the edges? (If someone has free fourth dimension, I'd honey to see a tally!) And if you're on Survivor and the producers fabricated you lot sit down in the heart, would you lot worry you were about to exist blindsided? Hmm.
So, that's the seating order. From my time on location for several episode-one Tribal Councils, I recall them just voting in order of their seats, maybe left to right. That won't be how it's shown on TV.
Instead, the social club we run into people vote on Television is arranged in post-production for maximum drama. For example, someone who casts the tie-breaking vote might be shown final, even though they didn't vote last in real life.
If Probst and the production did the same thing they exercise to the players as they exercise to the votes—arranged them in the nearly dramatic order possible—the other players could pick upwards on those clues and figure out what's happening with the vote. And so the voting order on location doesn't really affair.
Finally, Survivor alum can correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't recall whatever rule that prohibited talking during voting. I recall nosotros've even seen people whispering to each other during or just after voting, though my feeble memory isn't recalling a specific case of that right now.
The times when Survivor contestants are not immune to talk or communicate with each other are the times when in that location are not cameras present to capture what may happen—and the production doesn't want to miss a key moment or decision, or a spark that creates a time to come conflict.
Survivors will be instructed non to talk, say, on gunkhole rides to Tribal Council or when they're getting medical checks earlier and afterwards a claiming.
At Tribal Quango, Jeff Probst might call for a end-down when cameras need to change batteries or recording media, because, once again, they don't want a person to say something critical when cameras aren't recording. But the cameras are rolling during voting, so if someone wanted to say something, they could.
Accept a question nearly reality Idiot box? Send information technology to me!
Source: https://www.realityblurred.com/realitytv/2019/02/ask-andy-survivor-tribal-council-rules-killing-fields-vet-life/
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