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'Survivor' Diaz-Twine wins 6-1 vote

By SHARON FINK, Times Staff Writer
Published December 15, 2003

Lill Morris followed her heart instead of her head. And it cost her $1-million.

With a guaranteed spot in the final two of Survivor: Pearl Islands, she decided to get rid of Jon Dalton and go against fellow wife and mother Sandra Diaz-Twine. And Diaz-Twine won Sunday night by a 6-1 vote, which ties for the biggest landslide in Survivor history.

When host Jeff Probst asked the voting contestants who would have favored Morris, 51, a Cincinnati Boy Scout leader, if she had gone against Dalton, 29, a Los Angeles art consultant, four people raised their hands, meaning she would have won.

Morris said she had no regrets. She said she thought Diaz-Twine,29, a military office assistant from Fort Lewis, Wash., deserved a chance to win more than Dalton, because she couldn't identify with Dalton's single, pro-wrestling-loving lifestyle.

Diaz-Twine, who went through the game without having a vote cast against her at tribal council, benefited from having her two closest confidantes in the game voting for the winner, and in the end was perceived as a more honest, straightforward player than Morris. Morris had a hard time from the start, because she was sent to the islands wearing her Boy Scout uniform and spent a lot of time debating whether she should be following the Scout code while she played. She was one of two players allowed back into the game midway through after being voted off, which was a factor for jury member Ryan Opray, who voted for Diaz-Twine.

The first of the Pearl Islands final four voted out Sunday was Darrah Johnson, 22, a mortician from Liberty, Miss. None of the final four had immunity from ejection after the final twist involved an immunity challenge in which the then-six voting contestants competed against the final four as individuals. The voters answered more questions about pirate life correctly than the final four, keeping any of the four from having immunity. Johnson was voted out by the other three because she won the previous three immunity challenges and was perceived as a threat for the crucial final challenge.

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