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Ethan Zohn
Ethan Zohn
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Ethan Zohn (born November 12, 1973) is an American motivational speaker, former professional soccer player, and reality television series contestant who won Survivor: Africa, the third season of the reality TV series Survivor. He went on to compete in Survivor: All-Stars and Survivor: Winners at War, placing 11th and 18th, respectively.

Key Information

After winning Survivor: Africa, Zohn co-founded Grassroot Soccer, an adolescent health organization that uses soccer to engage young people around navigating their most pressing health challenges, including HIV/AIDS and mental health.[1] In 2010, he ranked 14th in USL Second Division's Top 15 of the Decade list as one of the most influential players of the United Soccer League Second Division in the previous decade.[2]

Soccer

[edit]

Zohn was a soccer goalkeeper at Lexington High School and Vassar College, and played professionally for the Hawaii Tsunami and Cape Cod Crusaders of the United Soccer Leagues and in Zimbabwe for Highlanders F.C.[3]

Shortly after winning Survivor Africa, Zohn was hired by ESPN to serve as a sideline reporter for the US National Team's matches in the 2002 FIFA World Cup.[4] In 2005, he began co-hosting the Metro Soccer Report (later renamed MSG Soccer Report) on the MSG Network, a weekly show dedicated to New York Red Bulls (formerly MetroStars) of Major League Soccer. The following year, Zohn began hosting FC Fox on the Fox Soccer Channel.[5]

Grassroot Soccer

[edit]

Inspired by his experience witnessing the devastating effects of HIV while playing professional football in Zimbabwe, Zohn donated some of his winnings from Survivor Africa to co-found Grassroot Soccer, an organization whose mission is to "leverage the power of soccer to equip young people with the life-saving information, services, and mentorship they need to live healthier lives".[6]

Since its founding, Grassroot Soccer has established itself as a game-changer in adolescent health by incorporating soccer and fun into interactive and dynamic activities that equip young people with the tools to tackle the most critical and interrelated health challenges facing them including mental health, HIV/AIDS, gender-based violence, and issues around sexual and reproductive health such as teen pregnancy. Grassroot Soccer programs have reached more than 25 million young people in more than 60 countries, building their assets (health knowledge and the confidence to use it), improving their access to high-quality health services, and increasing their adherence to crucial treatments and healthy behaviors.[7]

For his combined humanitarian efforts to spread HIV education throughout Africa via soccer teams for youth and young adults, Zohn received the Courage of Conscience Award from The Peace Abbey in Sherborn, Massachusetts.[8]

Survivor

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Africa

[edit]

As part of the Boran tribe, Zohn did not become an immediate target in the game; he was seen as a strong player who could potentially help to win many tribal immunities. When his tribe lost two back-to-back immunity challenges, Zohn joined the majority to vote off Diane Ogden and Jessie Camacho in episodes one and two. Over the next few days, Zohn would form a long-term alliance with Lex Van den Berghe and Tom Buchanan from his Boran tribe.

However, a twist in episode five saw both of Zohn's alliance members and Kelly Goldsmith switch from Boran to the Samburu tribe, leaving Ethan alone with fellow Boran members Kim Johnson and Clarence Black. Two of the new Boran members from the Samburu tribe, Teresa Cooper and Frank Garrison, had an old misunderstanding with another former Samburu member, Silas Gaither. So, by consensus, after Zohn's tribe lost the immunity challenge Gaither was voted out. Both of Zohn's alliance members Buchanan and Van den Berghe remained safe on the Samburu tribe, carrying all three into the merge.

Zohn's alliance soon began to control the game, with other members Johnson and Goldsmith. They immediately targeted Black due to his physical strength, among other events that had occurred earlier in the game, and he was voted out. But Van den Berghe had received another vote at tribal council, a vote he believed had come from Goldsmith, but which actually came from Cooper. This led Van den Berghe on a witch-hunt against Goldsmith which almost led to the demise of Zohn's alliance when Goldsmith possessed the power with the other four ex-Samburu members, Cooper, Garrison, Kim Powers and Brandon Quinton. But at the last minute, Quinton switched his vote, saving Van den Berghe, and voting out Goldsmith. But this move came back to haunt Quinton when Zohn's alliance saw him as untrustworthy and voted Zohn out at the next tribal council.

Zohn, Van den Berghe, Buchanan, and Johnson regained control of the game, outing previous Samburu members Garrison, Powers and Cooper in the next three tribal councils, carrying them into the final four. At the next immunity challenge, Johnson, the next target to be voted out, won immunity, leading to the alliance having to resort to voting one of their own out, despite the fact that the challenge contained some controversy. At any rate, Zohn joined Van den Berghe and Johnson in voting out Buchanan, carrying them into the Final Three.

At the final three immunity challenge, older tribe member Johnson outlasted the two young, fit men to win immunity in an endurance challenge. With Johnson holding the power to choose who she would sit next to in the Final Two, she chose Zohn.

In the end, Zohn beat out Johnson in a 5–2 vote to become the Sole Survivor, gaining the votes of Goldsmith, Garrison, Cooper, Buchanan, and Van den Berghe.[9]

All-Stars

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Zohn was invited to participate in Survivor: All-Stars, which he gladly accepted. Originally part of the Saboga tribe, Zohn was immediately targeted as a previous winner, along with Survivor: The Australian Outback winner Tina Wesson. When Saboga lost immunity, the rest of the tribe decided to vote out Wesson first, needing Zohn's strength to win future challenges. When Saboga lost immunity once again, Zohn was spared once more over physical liability Rudy Boesch, who had hurt his ankle previously.

In Episode 5, Zohn and the rest of the Saboga tribe were disbanded after losing a challenge. Zohn and Jerri Manthey joined the Mogo Mogo tribe, while Jenna Lewis and Rupert Boneham joined Chapera. Later in that episode, Zohn joined the rest of his new tribe to vote out Survivor: Borneo winner Richard Hatch.

In Episode 7, Zohn was on the outs when the alliance of Manthey, Lex Van den Berghe, and Shii Ann Huang left him out in their decision to vote out Colby Donaldson. Zohn was shocked at the decision, feeling betrayed by old Survivor: Africa alliance member Van den Berghe.

In Episode 8, Mogo Mogo lost immunity once again, and Zohn, the last former winner, was the sixth person voted out in 11th place, and the eighth person eliminated overall, by a vote of 4–1. He was the most successful of the four previous winners who competed on All-Stars, lasting longer than Wesson, Hatch, and Jenna Morasca, who quit the game on day 9 to be with her ailing mother.[10]

Winners at War

[edit]

Zohn returned as a contestant on the fortieth season of Survivor, Survivor: Winners at War, where he was a member of the Sele tribe. Along with All-Stars castmate Amber Mariano, Zohn broke Kelly Wiglesworth's record for the longest gap between seasons. He was placed on the Sele tribe, joining an alliance of "Old-School" players formed by Rob Mariano and Parvati Shallow. Zohn was targeted by Jeremy Collins and Michele Fitzgerald shortly after as a ploy to weaken Mariano and Shallow, and he was the fourth person voted out. Zohn remained at the Edge of Extinction for the remaining duration of the season, during which he openly spoke out about his health issues and his drive to never give up. Zohn was defeated by Tyson Apostol and Natalie Anderson respectively at the two Edge return challenges and became a permanent member of the jury on day 35. He later voted for Anderson to win the season, although she finished second to Tony Vlachos.

In 2022, the Jewish Journal named Zohn one of "The Top 10 Jewish Reality TV Stars of All Time."[11]

Other media appearances

[edit]

Zohn was a contestant on a February 28, 2005, episode of Fear Factor, where he competed against other reality TV competition winners, including his then-girlfriend Jenna Morasca, who was the winner of Survivor: The Amazon. Zohn finished second, losing to former Bachelorette winner Ryan Sutter.[12] Later that year, he appeared on Kill Reality, which followed various reality television personalities as they filmed a horror movie called The Scorned.[13]

In October 2006, Zohn appeared on an episode of the VH1 series Celebrity Paranormal Project.[14] He and his team investigated alleged paranormal activity at the Warson Asylum for the Criminally Insane.

In 2008, Zohn hosted Earth Tripping, a six-episode TV series, in which he demonstrated how to be "an earth-friendly traveler", and shows viewers "how to employ new, natural and environmentally conscious methods when they travel".[15] During the series Zohn visited New York City, Mexico City, Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Santiago, Chile, and Buenos Aires, Argentina.[16]

In 2011, Zohn and his longtime girlfriend and fellow Survivor winner Jenna Morasca participated in the 19th season of The Amazing Race.[17] They were one of the two teams eliminated in the double-elimination leg and finished 10th for the season after two legs.

Zohn appeared in the 11th episode of the Discovery Channel show PitchMen, in which he presented the EZ Crunch Bowl, a cereal bowl he designed to in which the cereal is kept in the shallow end and the milk in the deeper end in order to keep the cereal "crunchy" and not soggy. The bowl was picked by the show's co-stars, Billy Mays and Anthony Sullivan, for manufacturing and marketing by Telebrands. The EZ Crunch Bowl was sent to Telebrands product engineers for improvement before being made available to the public.[18]

Zohn has co-hosted Outside Today on the cable TV network Outside Television.[19]

In 2024, Zohn appeared as a guest on the Dropout series Dirty Laundry with fellow Survivor contestants Natalie Bolton, Cirie Fields, and Parvati Shallow.[20]

Personal life

[edit]

Zohn is Jewish.[9] His father died from cancer when he was 14 years old.[21]

On April 30, 2002, Zohn called into the Howard Stern Show and shared he was working as a motivational speaker, often in Jewish venues where he shared how Judaism helped him achieve success. He also revealed he had gone on five dates with Jennifer Love Hewitt after meeting her back stage at the Live With Regis and Kelly show, and the two were regularly in touch by telephone (at the time).[22]

Zohn began dating fellow Survivor champion Jenna Morasca after her victory on Survivor: The Amazon in 2003. They both lived in Manhattan.[19][23] In an interview on Rob Has a Podcast, it was revealed that Zohn and Morasca were considered to return in Survivor: South Pacific, after applying for The Amazing Race. The couple declined the offer, saying they were not interested in competing against each other.[24] In February 2013, Zohn and Morasca confirmed that they had amicably ended their relationship.[25] On July 21, 2015, Zohn announced his engagement to New York City interior designer Lisa Heywood.[26] They were married on July 16, 2016, in North Bennington, Vermont, in a Jewish ceremony.[27] Zohn and his wife advocate a paleo diet that is high in meat and vegetables.[28]

On April 30, 2009, Zohn was diagnosed with a rare type of cancer called CD20-positive Hodgkin's lymphoma. He started chemotherapy in May 2009.[29] On September 14, 2009, Zohn disclosed that after three months of intensive chemotherapy, his cancer returned. He underwent a new treatment, including a stem-cell transplant, to battle the rare form of Hodgkin's disease.[30] Zohn received a "clean CT scan" in late April 2010 and remained in remission for nearly 20 months.[31] In September 2011, Zohn confirmed that the cancer had returned in his chest.[32] In early March 2013, Zohn announced via The Jeff Probst Show that he was cancer-free due to two rounds of stem cell transplants that he received from his brother.[33]

As of May 2021, Zohn lives in Hillsboro, New Hampshire.[34]

Filmography

[edit]

Television

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2001–02 Survivor: Africa Contestant Winner
2004 Survivor: All-Stars Contestant Eliminated; 11th place
2005 Fear Factor Contestant Eliminated; 2nd place
2005 Kill Reality Himself
2006 Celebrity Paranormal Project Himself Episode: "Pearl"
2009 PitchMen Himself Episode: "Crunch Time"
2011 The Amazing Race 19 Contestant Eliminated; 10th place (with Jenna Morasca)
2020 Survivor: Winners at War Contestant Eliminated; 18th place
2024 Dirty Laundry Contestant Episode: "Who Was Part of a Ritual to Ward Off Evil Spirits?"

Film

[edit]
Year Title Role Notes
2005 The Scorned Murry

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ethan Zohn is an American former professional soccer player, winner of the competition Survivor: Africa, two-time , and co-founder of Grassroot Soccer, a that employs soccer-based programs to educate youth on prevention and other health issues in and globally. Zohn competed on Survivor: Africa, the third season of the series, which aired from October 2001 to January 2002, ultimately winning the $1 million grand prize through strategic alliances and endurance challenges in Kenya's Shaba National Reserve. He parlayed these winnings into launching Grassroot Soccer in 2004 with co-founder Tommy Clark, an initiative inspired by his experiences playing soccer in and aimed at leveraging the sport's popularity to deliver life skills training and health education to at-risk adolescents, ultimately reaching over 25 million youth across 65 countries. His professional soccer background included stints as a goalkeeper for in and the Cape Cod Crusaders in the United States Premier Development League, following his collegiate career at . In 2009, Zohn was diagnosed with CD20-positive , undergoing , radiation, and two transplants after a ; he achieved full remission by 2012 and has since advocated for cancer awareness as a and author. Grassroot Soccer's model, which integrates peer-led sessions on topics like sexual health and resilience, earned recognition including listings on the U.S. Soccer Foundation's most impactful people and Beyond Sport awards, reflecting Zohn's shift from athletic competition to humanitarian impact amid personal health adversities.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Ethan Zohn was born on November 12, 1973, in , to Ashkenazi Jewish parents Aaron and Rochelle Zohn. He grew up in Lexington alongside two brothers, Lenard and Lee, in a household where played a central role in daily life and cultural identity. The family attended Temple Emunah, instilling values of community and perseverance that Zohn later credited for his personal development. Zohn's early environment emphasized self-reliance, shaped by supportive yet demanding parental expectations focused on personal effort rather than unearned advantages. At age six, he began playing soccer locally, developing an early interest in the sport through youth leagues in the area suburbs. This period was marked by stability until 1987, when his father died of cancer at Zohn's age of 14, an event that tested family resilience amid . Such experiences fostered an independent mindset, prioritizing athletic discipline and individual achievement in his formative years.

Academic and Athletic Beginnings

Ethan Zohn attended in , where he pursued studies in and graduated in 1996 with a degree. Balancing rigorous academics with athletics, Zohn maintained a focus on scientific coursework while prioritizing soccer, which required consistent discipline to meet Division III eligibility standards without athletic scholarships typical of higher divisions. As for the Vassar Brewers men's soccer team from 1992 to 1996, Zohn earned recognition for his technical proficiency and reliability under pressure, amassing 340 career saves—third all-time in program history—and a .823 , metrics that underscored his merit-based advancement through development and team-oriented play rather than preferential treatment. His performance in competition highlighted causal factors like persistent training and tactical awareness, enabling him to contribute to team defenses amid limited resources compared to Division I programs. Post-graduation, Zohn leveraged his collegiate record to enter semi-professional ranks independently, signing with the of the USISL Premier Development League in 1996, a move driven by self-initiated tryouts and demonstrated ability without agent-backed contracts or elite youth pipelines. This progression exemplified discipline-fueled persistence, as he relocated across states to compete, later joining the Cape Cod Crusaders, building experience through on-field results in competitive adult leagues.

Soccer Career

Collegiate and Early Professional Play

Zohn served as for the men's soccer team from 1992 to 1995. Over his career, he set program records with 35 wins and 23 shutouts, while accumulating 340 saves (third all-time) and posting a 1.10 . His save percentage stood at .823, reflecting consistent performance across seasons that included 114 saves and a 0.58 as a in 1992, 99 saves and 7 shutouts in 1993, and 13 wins with 10 shutouts in 1994. Following his graduation from Vassar in 1996, Zohn transitioned to professional , competing in lower-division leagues such as the USISL. He played for the Hawaii Tsunami in Oahu and later the Cape Cod Crusaders in , serving as during a period when was emerging but opportunities remained limited in developmental circuits. Detailed performance metrics from these stints are sparse, though records indicate at least one appearance for the Crusaders in 1998, during which he recorded no goals or assists as a . These engagements marked his initial foray into paid professional play, emphasizing endurance and shot-stopping fundamentals honed at the collegiate level.

International Experience in Zimbabwe

Zohn joined , a prominent club based in , as a in the for the 2000/2001 season, during which the team secured the league championship. This period marked his immersion in a competitive environment characterized by resource constraints, including lengthy road trips in overcrowded vans to away matches across the country. In , Zohn encountered stark socio-economic conditions prevalent in at the turn of the millennium, including widespread poverty and the devastating effects of the epidemic, which afflicted an estimated 24.6% of adults aged 15-49 by 2001 according to UNAIDS data. He directly observed the disease's toll on the local population and soccer community, such as the absence and eventual death of teammates due to AIDS-related illnesses, highlighting the raw human and structural challenges without mitigation from international aid at the time. Following the season, Zohn returned to the around mid-2001, as opportunities in Zimbabwe's domestic league—marked by modest player compensation and limited global market integration—constrained long-term professional advancement for foreign athletes. This move underscored the realities of career mobility in soccer, where economic disparities between leagues often dictate player trajectories.

Philanthropy and Social Impact

Founding Grassroot Soccer

Ethan Zohn co-founded Grassroot Soccer in 2002 alongside Dr. Tommy Clark, Kirk Friedrich, and Methembe Ndlovu, allocating a portion of his $1 million winnings from Survivor: Africa to launch the dedicated to education. The organization's core model leverages soccer drills and peer-led sessions to deliver , particularly on prevention, through structured curricula that integrate physical activities with discussions on risk behaviors, , and access to services. This approach, exemplified by the SKILLZ Core program, consists of eight 45-minute sessions modeling transmission dynamics and practicing behavioral skills via soccer metaphors, such as "defending the goal" for use. Programs launched initially in , training local professional soccer players as coaches to implement the first soccer-based health curriculum, before extending to for pilot resiliency-building initiatives targeting youth in . Subsequent rollout reached additional African countries, adapting the model to local contexts while maintaining soccer as the engagement tool. Grassroot Soccer partners with medical professionals and health institutions to refine curricula, ensuring content aligns with evidence-based practices like those from prevention research, including collaborations for single-sex interventions and integration of topics such as testing and .

Program Effectiveness and Global Reach

Grassroot Soccer's SKILLZ curriculum, which employs soccer drills as metaphors for health decision-making—such as "" past risky behaviors—has demonstrated measurable outcomes in independent evaluations focused on in . A Laureus for Good Foundation evaluation of the SKILLZ Guyz program, targeting and for adolescent boys, reported statistically significant improvements in participants' knowledge of prevention, condom use intentions, and gender equity attitudes, based on pre- and post-intervention surveys of over 1,000 youth in and conducted between 2020 and 2023. Similarly, two independent assessments of the SKILLZ Girl adaptation for females found enhanced , self-confidence, and rates of violence disclosure among participants, with sustained effects observed six months post-program in cohorts from and evaluated in 2019–2022. These results link program elements, like peer-led sessions, to behavioral shifts, though long-term causal impacts on rates remain understudied due to challenges in randomized controlled trials at scale. Mental health interventions integrated into Grassroot Soccer's framework have yielded targeted empirical gains, particularly for vulnerable populations. An independent mixed-methods evaluation of the program, which adapts soccer-based activities for support, concluded that it fostered essential skills such as emotional regulation and coping strategies among adolescent participants in and , drawing from qualitative interviews and quantitative scales applied to 500+ youth in 2022–2023. In a specialized cohort of youth living with , completion of coach-led group sessions resulted in a 96% reduction in clinically significant depression symptoms, as measured by standardized tools like the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 in a 2022 impact study across multiple sites. These findings underscore the program's efficacy in high-burden contexts, where soccer's familiarity facilitates and retention rates exceeding 90% in evaluated sessions, enabling scalable delivery through trained coaches rather than specialized clinicians. The organization's global footprint has expanded from its 2002 founding in to operations in over 60 countries, primarily in but extending through digital and partnership models to regions including and , with cumulative reach surpassing 25 million youth by 2023. Annual engagements peaked at nearly 2 million young people in , incorporating phone-based Digital SKILLZ tools that boosted sexual health knowledge by over 30% in self-reported metrics from 1 million+ users across low-resource settings. Collaborations with since 2010 have amplified delivery via national soccer federations, integrating SKILLZ into federation-led clinics in countries like and , thereby leveraging existing infrastructure for broader dissemination without proportional cost increases. This federation-aligned approach has supported replication in diverse locales, from township programs in to urban adaptations in U.S. partner sites, where pilot implementations have mirrored core outcomes in knowledge gains among at-risk youth.

Criticisms and Challenges in Impact Measurement

Assessing the long-term impact of Grassroot Soccer's programs presents significant methodological hurdles, particularly in sub-Saharan African contexts where participant mobility, inadequate record-keeping , and logistical barriers often lead to high attrition rates in follow-up studies. A of sport-based HIV prevention interventions, including those akin to Grassroot Soccer's SKILLZ , identified encouraging evidence for short-term enhancements in knowledge and behavioral intentions but emphasized the reliance on predominantly low-quality studies, underscoring the need for more robust evaluations of sustained outcomes beyond initial program exposure. Sustainability of behavioral changes remains debated, as short-term randomized trials demonstrate gains in testing uptake and reduction—such as a recent of the SKILLZ Girl program showing increased access to services among adolescent girls—but longer-term data is sparse, with some analogous soccer-integrated interventions failing to yield enduring reductions in sexual behaviors or substance use after six months. These limitations highlight risks, where initial engagement through soccer may not translate to community-wide, self-perpetuating practices without ongoing external support. Critiques also extend to funding structures, with Grassroot Soccer's dependence on Western —evident in partnerships with entities like & Melinda Gates Foundation—mirroring broader concerns in about fostering dependency rather than building endogenous capacities for program continuity. While not unique to the organization, this model raises questions about , as abrupt funding shifts could disrupt operations in resource-constrained settings. Additionally, some observers question the relative efficacy of soccer as a primary vector for versus direct biomedical interventions like widespread antiretroviral distribution, arguing that indirect approaches may underperform in high-prevalence epidemics despite their appeal for youth engagement, though comparative trials remain inconclusive. Ethan Zohn has addressed such measurement and adaptability issues by advocating for iterative program refinements based on local feedback and mixed-method evaluations to enhance resilience against contextual volatilities.

Survivor Appearances

Survivor: Africa (2001)

Ethan Zohn, a professional soccer with experience in and the , was selected for Survivor: Africa due to his demonstrated physical endurance and competitive skills honed through athletics, which positioned him to thrive in the season's grueling challenges in Kenya's Shaba National Reserve. Assigned to the tribe, Zohn rapidly established a core alliance with Lex van den Berghe and Tom Buchanan, initiated by Lex's approach on day 2, emphasizing mutual loyalty and strategic voting to control early eliminations. This trio dominated Boran's internal dynamics, prioritizing challenge performance to maintain tribe strength while targeting perceived threats. A tribe swap on day 13 separated Zohn from van den Berghe and Buchanan, who joined Samburu, leaving him isolated on a reformed with Kim Johnson and new members Teresa "T-Bird" Cooper and Frank . Zohn adapted by forging a temporary pact with Cooper and to eliminate Silas Ecott, intentionally underperforming in an immunity challenge to facilitate this vote against a physical rival. Post-merge into Moto Maji on day 20, he reconnected with his original allies, won back-to-back individual immunities to shield the group, and strategically yielded a subsequent challenge to avoid drawing target attention as a dominant . His gameplay balanced social maneuvering—via side alliances like with Johnson—with physical contributions, culminating in a final immunity victory that secured his spot at Final Tribal Council. On January 10, 2002, Zohn defeated Johnson in a 5-2 vote, earning support from van den Berghe, Buchanan, Cooper, Garrison, and for his understated yet effective navigation of betrayals and swaps. This outcome reflected pragmatic realism: alliances formed opportunistically for survival, bolstered by soccer-forged stamina in tests, rather than overt power plays. Zohn's $1 million prize directly seeded his , channeling winnings into health initiatives tied to his African experiences.

Survivor: All-Stars (2003)

Zohn entered Survivor: All-Stars as the sole winner from Africa, placing him under immediate scrutiny as a perceived threat due to his prior victory and physical prowess in challenges. Allocated to the Saboga tribe initially, he was transferred to Mogo Mogo following a tribe swap, where he aligned with fellow Africa contestant Lex van den Berghe based on prior rapport, attempting to leverage social bonds from the previous season. However, this reliance on interpersonal trust proved a strategic miscalculation, as van den Berghe prioritized eliminating strong competitors to advance his own game, viewing Zohn's likability and jury appeal as endgame liabilities. On Day 21, Mogo Mogo lost an immunity challenge, prompting van den Berghe to orchestrate Zohn's elimination in a 4-1 vote, marking the sixth overall elimination and Zohn's exit in 13th place. Zohn's , characterized by charm and alliance-building, faltered against the heightened of an all-returnees field, where past winners like him faced preemptive targeting irrespective of immediate performance; he later reflected that competitors avoided deeper strategy discussions with him, anticipating his strong final vote potential. This over-trust in van den Berghe—without sufficient contingency plans or threat mitigation, such as proactive idol searches or cross-tribe networking—highlighted a key error in adapting Africa's looser dynamics to All-Stars' cutthroat environment, where betrayals eroded early-formed pacts. Though earning no prize money, Zohn's participation sustained his visibility as a Survivor alum, paving the way for subsequent media opportunities without altering the season's outcome, won by Amber Brkich Mariano. His exit underscored the causal risks of winner status in returnee seasons, where empirical patterns of early boots for champions necessitated more aggressive self-preservation tactics than interpersonal reliance alone.

Survivor: Winners at War (2020)

Zohn returned for Survivor: Winners at War, the 40th season featuring 20 prior winners divided into "old school" and "new school" players, which aired from February 12 to May 13, 2020. Aligned initially with fellow early-era winners and on the Sele tribe, Zohn aimed to leverage social bonds from his 2001 gameplay but faced challenges adapting to the accelerated strategic environment dominated by hidden immunity idols, advantage hunts, and pre-game relationships among newer contestants. His early exit came via blindside vote on Day 9, marking him as the fourth elimination and highlighting vulnerabilities in cross-era alliances against a unified "new school" bloc targeting perceived old-school threats. Zohn attributed part of the difficulty to the game's shift toward rapid betrayals and , contrasting it with the trust-based, survival-prioritizing format of , where "we had no idols, no clues, no ways to get back into the game... Now it’s like ‘boom, boom, blindsides, backstabs, idol clues.’" Exiled to Edge of Extinction, Zohn endured a punishing endurance challenge requiring 20 ascents of a steep hill to collect logs for fire tokens, collapsing around the 10th or 12th due to and physical exhaustion at age 46, prompting medical evaluation with fluids and electrolytes before he completed it with assistance from fellow Edge inhabitants. This ordeal underscored adaptation strains from his cancer recovery and the season's hyper-competitive twists, including fire-making tiebreakers he viewed as emblematic of a format prioritizing youth-fueled agility and drama over raw merit and . Zohn did not re-enter the main game via Edge's buyback challenge, finishing without a second victory, and later critiqued the evolution toward "new schoolers with pre-existing relationships" and twist-heavy mechanics like fire tokens that dilute pure survival elements in favor of spectacle and speed, disadvantaging returnees reliant on foundational skills.

Health Struggles

Cancer Diagnosis and Initial Treatment

On April 30, 2009, Ethan Zohn was diagnosed with stage 2 CD20-positive Hodgkin lymphoma, a rare subtype characterized by the presence of CD20 antigen on malignant Reed-Sternberg cells, following months of symptoms including unexplained itching and night sweats. The diagnosis occurred at age 35, with the cancer primarily affecting lymph nodes in the chest and neck, prompting immediate medical intervention due to the disease's potential for rapid progression if untreated. Zohn began intensive in May 2009, adhering to a regimen designed to target rapidly dividing cells while minimizing damage to healthy tissue, though side effects such as fatigue and were anticipated based on standard protocols for . After three months of treatment, scans indicated disease progression rather than full response, necessitating continuation and potential adjustment of the chemotherapy to achieve tumor reduction. He publicly disclosed the and treatment plan in mid-May 2009, framing the process as a disciplined effort comparable to athletic training, without emphasizing personal hardship. The initial treatment course extended through late 2009 and into 2010, culminating in remission confirmed by clean CT scans in April 2010, validating the efficacy of sustained chemotherapeutic in eradicating detectable cancer cells at that stage. This outcome aligned with reported cure rates for early-stage exceeding 80% under aggressive multi-agent , though long-term monitoring remained essential due to risks.

Recurrence, Transplant, and Recovery

In September 2011, Zohn learned of his cancer's recurrence in the chest following nearly 20 months of remission after initial treatments. He began a targeted using the drug SGN-35 (), which selectively attacked cancerous cells while sparing healthy ones, completing multiple cycles to prepare for further intervention. To address the relapse, Zohn underwent an allogeneic transplant in late 2012, using donor cells from his brother to rebuild his after high-dose . This procedure, distinct from the autologous transplant used in his initial treatment, demonstrated empirical efficacy in achieving durable remission for relapsed Hodgkin's cases when combined with prior targeted therapies, as evidenced by Zohn's subsequent outcomes. By mid-2012, scans confirmed full remission, with Zohn maintaining cancer-free status thereafter under routine medical surveillance. Zohn's pre-existing athletic discipline, rooted in his professional soccer career, played a key role in his physical and mental resilience during recovery; he specifically trained—through exercise, , and mindset preparation—to optimize his condition entering the transplant, enabling faster rebound from treatment side effects like fatigue and without reliance on external support structures. This approach underscored how baseline fitness can causally enhance tolerance to aggressive therapies, aligning with clinical observations of improved outcomes in physically prepared patients undergoing .

Long-Term Advocacy and Personal Insights

Following his recovery from , declared cancer-free in 2013, Ethan Zohn has served as a National Ambassador for the Lymphoma Research Foundation (LRF), a role he assumed in 2021 to inspire patients and disseminate resources on , treatment, and support. In this capacity, Zohn draws on his dual experiences with the disease—initial in 2009 and recurrence in 2011—to advocate for early detection and informed self-management, emphasizing empirical symptom tracking over rote compliance with protocols. He has similarly represented organizations like Gabrielle's Angel Foundation and , focusing advocacy on practical tools for navigating post-treatment vigilance rather than indefinite patienthood. Zohn has publicly credited non-intoxicating (CBD), a compound derived from , with alleviating post-treatment anxiety, describing it as transformative for restoring mental clarity without psychoactive effects. During and after and stem cell transplant, he incorporated edibles and tinctures to manage , , sleep disruption, and "scanxiety"—anticipatory stress before —reporting preference for these over pharmaceuticals due to fewer side effects and better alignment with daily functionality. As an ambassador for wellness brands like Momenta and EO Care, he promotes evidence-based use for symptom palliation, citing personal data from sustained remission alongside reduced reliance on conventional anxiolytics. In motivational talks and interviews, Zohn critiques elements of survivorship culture that foster passivity, advocating instead for proactive regimens grounded in physical resilience and social accountability—lessons adapted from his Survivor tenure and applied to health maintenance. He underscores building community networks for mutual accountability, as isolation exacerbates risks, and prioritizes holistic integration of exercise, nutrition, and alternative therapies to sustain long-term vitality over perpetual medical oversight. This approach, he argues, stems from causal links observed in his own trajectory: rigorous self-monitoring and adaptive interventions correlating with enduring remission, independent of inspirational platitudes.

Media and Public Engagements

Television Hosting and Guest Roles

Zohn co-hosted Metro Soccer Report (renamed MSG Soccer Report) on the Madison Square Garden Network beginning in 2005, focusing on coverage including the , alongside former goalkeeper . He also hosted F.C. Fox on Fox Soccer Channel and worked as a sideline reporter for KCAL9 during soccer broadcasts. Beyond soccer programming, Zohn competed as a contestant on the 2003 adventure racing series Eco-Challenge: Fiji Islands, partnering with fellow reality television participant Jenna Lewis on Team Mad River. He appeared in a celebrity special episode of Fear Factor aired on February 28, 2005, facing challenges alongside other reality competition alumni. Zohn featured on the 2005 VH1 series Kill Reality, which chronicled reality stars collaborating on the horror film The Scorned while living communally; he subsequently characterized the house-sharing aspect as "miserable, torture–the worst experience." In media commentary tied to his television background, Zohn defended Survivor competitor in July 2025 against claims of , arguing such criticisms overlooked strategic gameplay and unfairly targeted women in competitive formats.

Film and Other Appearances

Zohn portrayed Murry Ellis in the 2005 horror television film , a low-budget production stemming from the reality series Kill Reality in which Survivor contestants collaborated on its filming. He later appeared in the 2009 horror anthology Drive-in Horrorshow, contributing to the segment "The Watcher" within a post-apocalyptic framework. These roles represent his primary acting credits outside of , reflecting a modest extension of his public persona into scripted media without pursuing a sustained career. Zohn featured in the 2003 documentary A Closer Walk, which examines the global crisis and includes interviews with figures such as the , , and , aligning with his advocacy through Grassroot Soccer. In ancillary media, Zohn has participated in podcasts reflecting on his Survivor tenure and resilience, including a May 2025 episode of Tea with Rich where he discussed his victory, cancer recovery, and Grassroot Soccer initiatives. Such appearances underscore his role as a commentator on personal and competitive legacies rather than performative content.

Motivational Speaking Career

Ethan Zohn has built a career as a paid motivational speaker, delivering keynotes that emphasize resilience through individual action and adaptation in the face of adversity, drawing directly from his competitive experiences in professional soccer and the high-stakes environment of Survivor. His presentations, such as "A Survivor’s Guide to Life," highlight character development and strategic decision-making under pressure, positioning personal grit and self-reliance as core drivers of success rather than external dependencies. Zohn's talks often integrate lessons from soccer's demand for relentless competition and quick tactical shifts, paralleling the resource-scarce adaptation required to outmaneuver opponents on Survivor, to underscore and in dynamic settings. He addresses corporate audiences on topics like "Surviving the Amazing Race of Corporate America," focusing on building resilient teams through competitive edge and innovation, while engaging youth groups at universities such as Yale and Harvard with interactive sessions on personal achievement and overcoming challenges. These engagements, including team-building exercises modeled on Survivor challenges, target professional organizations like and high school athletes, promoting self-made progress via disciplined effort. The impact of Zohn's speaking career is evidenced by his fee structure, with engagements commanding between $10,000 and $35,000 depending on location and format, indicating strong market demand for his firsthand narratives on entrepreneurial initiative and competitive adaptation. His global reach extends to sports bodies like and U.S. Soccer Foundation events, where he applies soccer-derived principles of performance under scrutiny to broader motivational frameworks. This focus on actionable, competition-honed strategies distinguishes his work, prioritizing measurable personal and organizational outcomes over collective narratives.

Personal Life

Relationships and Marriage

Following his decade-long relationship with fellow Survivor winner , which ended in 2013, Ethan Zohn entered a stable partnership with interior designer Lisa Heywood. The couple met at a Clinton Global Initiative charity event and dated for two years before becoming engaged in July 2015. Zohn and Heywood married on July 16, 2016, in a traditional Jewish held at the Park-McCullough Historic Inn in North , underneath a , attended by 160 guests. Zohn's Jewish heritage, which gained public attention during Survivor: Africa when contestant Tom Buchanan made an anti-Semitic remark about Zohn's reluctance to eat ("He's a Jew! He won't eat the ham!"), influenced elements of their union, reflecting shared values of resilience and cultural identity without reported conflicts in their partnership. The couple has no children and maintains a supportive dynamic centered on mutual encouragement, as evidenced by their joint philanthropic efforts shortly after , such as raising $45,000 for families during a 2017 humanitarian . In July 2025, Zohn marked their ninth on , expressing excitement for future decades together and underscoring enduring family pride rooted in shared principles.

Interests and Lifestyle Choices

Zohn sustains a disciplined fitness regimen rooted in his athletic background, prioritizing running and physical exercise as core elements of daily life to maintain resilience after cancer. He participates in endurance events such as the in 2022, leveraging plant-based recovery methods like CBD and THC tinctures post-race to mitigate inflammation and support empirical health outcomes over pharmaceutical alternatives. In managing post-treatment anxiety, Zohn incorporates CBD, a non-intoxicating derivative, which he credits with restoring mental clarity and alleviating "scanxiety" during follow-ups; he has described its effects as transformative, enabling focused living without psychoactive impairment. This approach aligns with his preference for targeted, evidence-based wellness over excess, as evidenced by his vegetarian diet and avoidance of over-reliance on conventional medications amid treatment side effects. Zohn resides in , near his native region, where he pursues recreational interests including , , and cooking, fostering a balanced, low-key lifestyle detached from professional soccer demands.

Awards and Honors

Philanthropic Recognitions

Zohn received the Community Spirit Award in 2004 from the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care for establishing Grassroot Soccer, a nonprofit using soccer coaching to deliver education and life-skills training to youth in . His leadership in Grassroot Soccer earned inclusion on the U.S. Soccer Foundation's list of most impactful individuals, recognizing the organization's data-driven programs that have scaled peer-led health interventions across multiple countries. Zohn was selected for Richtopia's Top 200 Philanthropists list, highlighting sustained private funding and programmatic expansion in via soccer-based outreach. In 2011, the Foundation presented him with its Courage Award, acknowledging his role in mobilizing resources for youth health through Grassroot Soccer's community partnerships and measurable outreach metrics.

Survivor and Advocacy Milestones

Zohn won the third season of the CBS reality series Survivor: Africa in 2001, outlasting 15 contestants over 39 days to secure the $1 million grand prize in a 5-2 vote. This victory established him as a pioneering figure in competitive , demonstrating strategic alliance-building and endurance under resource scarcity. He later returned for Survivor: All-Stars in 2004 and Survivor: Winners at War in 2020, though eliminated earlier in those seasons, and was inducted into the Comcast Survivor Hall of Fame for his contributions to the franchise. These experiences provided Zohn with a public platform that he has described as instrumental for channeling attention toward health advocacy rather than transient fame. Diagnosed with CD20-positive non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2009, Zohn underwent chemotherapy, radiation, and a stem cell transplant, achieving remission before a 2013 recurrence necessitated another transplant and treatment cycle, from which he also recovered. In September 2021, he was appointed an official ambassador for the Lymphoma Research Foundation, a role focused on motivating patients through personal testimony and promoting access to diagnostic and support resources amid over 100 lymphoma subtypes. He holds global ambassadorships with the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, Gabrielle's Angel Foundation for Cancer Research, and Stand Up to Cancer, leveraging Survivor visibility to advocate for blood cancer research and patient empowerment. These positions underscore his shift from reality competition success to sustained influence in oncology awareness, prioritizing evidence-based survivorship over entertainment spectacle. For his in initiatives, Zohn received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Sciences from Dominican College. In the 2020s, his advocacy extended to education via soccer-based programs, though he has critiqued reality TV's potential for superficiality by emphasizing fame's utility only when directed toward causal interventions like early detection and .

References

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