Turns out reality must come before ‘reality TV’
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- He’s a survivor.
At least the producers of the hit TV program “Survivor†thought so.
Oscar Santoyo, the affable director of the Save Our Youth after-school
program, said he made the final cut in the program’s highly selective
castaway casting process.
“In my last interview, they were asking me if I would be ready to get
inoculations and could eat only rice,†he said. “I was getting both
physically and mentally prepared.â€
In March, producers of the show stranded 16 people on a charmless
Pacific island with only their clothes and one luxury item each.
On the show -- which airs on CBS -- the castaways are subjected to
challenges during their stay. They raced through obstacle courses and
munched on barbecued rat. And each week, the castaways are required to
banish one of their comrades from the island. The last one wins $1
million.
“I could do that, no problem,†Santoyo said. “Except for the water
challenges, that is. I can’t swim. But I told the producers I would learn
how to.â€
Santoyo said he heard about the casting while driving to work in
December. He sent a three-minute videotape audition and got a call a few
weeks later. The casting agents scheduled an interview with him at the
Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Los Angeles.
An anxious Santoyo figured that as a cast member struggling though
challenges and surviving on rice and rats, he could serve as an example
for the children at his after-school program.
“If I could survive on an island without anything, then they could do
anything,†he said. “They can go to college and get jobs.â€
But two days before his interview, Santoyo’s wife told him she was
pregnant. The excitement of knowing he would soon have a son, Nicholas
Alexander, diluted some of his enthusiasm.
“I knew that being a father would be my biggest challenge,†he said.
“I think I won already.â€
Santoyo said he’s been too busy working at the Save Our Youth center
to follow the plight of the castaways. But he said he might audition
again in the future.
The big question, of course, is how would he spend the money?
“I’d definitely give some to the center,†he said. “Then I’d put some
money aside for my son, pay off a lot of bills. Or maybe I’d do the Elvis
thing and buy everyone cars.â€
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