Jeff Varner

Television

Birthday April 16, 1966

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Greensboro, North Carolina

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#40986 Most Popular

1966

Jeffrey Keith Varner (born April 16, 1966) is a former American real estate agent and television personality, a news anchor and reporter, a former entertainment reporter, and a contestant on three seasons of the CBS reality television series, Survivor: The Australian Outback, Survivor: Cambodia, and Survivor: Game Changers.

Varner is most known for infamously publicly outing fellow Survivor: Game Changers contestant Zeke Smith as transgender.

Jeff Varner was raised on a tobacco farm in Greensboro, North Carolina.

An extensive genealogical search discovered that Varner and Edward R. Murrow are related by marriage on Murrow's mother's side of the tree.

He played right defense for a team in the local youth ice hockey league, and earned his black belt in Tae Kwon Do at the age of 15.

He attended Southern Guilford High School, where he was active in student government and theatre arts and editor of the school's yearbook; he later went on to earn a journalism degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

2001

Varner was a contestant on Survivor: The Australian Outback, 2001.

He was a member of the Kucha tribe, and made it to the merge, but not the core group of nine, as there was a tie between him and Colby Donaldson.

At the time, in the event of a tie, previous tribal council votes would be used.

Because Keith Famie and Tina Wesson knew this, and Tina had no votes against her before while Keith had several of them (mostly from Jerri Manthey and her allies), Keith's request to Tina when they had both lasted for hours in the Immunity challenge and were the last two players standing (phrased as "I need this") led to Tina ending her run so that Keith was safe, and giving Kucha no one to vote for who had more votes than Varner: Jeff had two but knew only of one, while Colby had zero.

It was revealed on the Survivor: Australia DVD, in the special commentary section, that it was Kimmi Kappenberg that inadvertently gave away the vote he had against him during the Episode Two Reward Challenge.

This is also mentioned by Varner in the episode in which he was voted off, early in the episode while the Kucha tribe is talking in their shelter at night.

During the show, Varner's luxury item was a coloring book and a set of crayons.

The castaways colored in the books and signed their autographs in it, and after the show, he sold the pictures on eBay to raise money for charities.

2011

After their tribe lost again on Day 11, Varner was eliminated in a unanimous vote, placing 17th in the overall competition.

2015

On May 6, 2015, Varner was revealed to be one of the 16 men who was eligible to be voted by the viewers to return for the 31st season, Survivor: Cambodia.

On May 20, the results revealed that both Varner and Kappenberg from The Australian Outback were voted to return.

It was revealed that Varner had been part of a pre-game alliance prior to the start of filming, with three other players: Terry Deitz and Shane Powers of Survivor: Panama, and Kelly Wiglesworth of Survivor: Borneo.

Although Powers did not make it into the season, Deitz and Wiglesworth did, and the two of them ended up with Varner on the same Ta Keo tribe.

Early in the game, Varner was seen as a crucial player in the season: He and Peih-Gee Law from Survivor: China were the swing votes who ultimately decided the elimination of Vytas Baskauskas on Day Three, and Varner himself organized the elimination of Shirin Oskooi on Day Six.

However, after a tribal swap and expansion turned the two tribes into three, Varner and Law ended up on the brand new Angkor tribe, along with fellow former Ta Keo members Yung "Woo" Hwang and Abi-Maria Gomes, and two new members from the former Bayon tribe, Latasha "Tasha" Fox and Andrew Savage.

Although Varner initially planned to simply stay with his former Ta Keo allies, Fox suddenly realized this was his plan after they lost the immunity challenge and called Varner "a rat" in front of the other tribes.

As a result, Varner began to panic and decided to turn on one of his own allies, ultimately voting with the majority to send Law home on Day Nine.

2017

On February 8, 2017, it was revealed that Varner was one of 20 contestants who would be competing on Survivor: Game Changers, the show's 34th season.

He was initially placed on the Mana tribe.

At the first Tribal Council, he joined the majority in voting out Ciera Eastin.

At Mana's second Tribal Council, he joined the majority in voting out Survivor: Cagayan winner Tony Vlachos.

Varner, along with Sandra Diaz-Twine, Malcolm Freberg, Aubry Bracco, and Michaela Bradshaw were then switched to Nuku.

They joined original Nuku member James "J. T." Thomas, Jr., winner of Survivor: Tocantins.

At the fifth Tribal Council, Varner joined Diaz-Twine and Bradshaw in blindsiding Thomas.

Varner and Diaz-Twine remained on Nuku after the second tribe switch, but were excluded from the alliance of new members Ozzy Lusth, Andrea Boehlke, Tai Trang, Sarah Lacina and Zeke Smith.

At Tribal Council, both Varner and Diaz-Twine voted for Trang, but the rest voted against Diaz-Twine, thus sending her out of the game for the first time in her Survivor career.

She was replaced on Nuku by the recently-exiled Debbie Wanner.

Before the final pre-merge Tribal Council, Varner tried to convince Lacina, Wanner, and Boehlke to vote out Lusth, by saying that Smith was deceiving the tribe about his relationship with Lusth.

At Tribal Council, Varner asked Smith, "Why haven't you told anyone you're transgender?"

Varner said he thought that Smith had been open about his identity with everyone back home, but was trying to conceal it to his tribemates in the game.

However, this backfired as it became evident that Smith had never revealed his being transgender publicly.

All of the other tribemates disregarded their alliances for the evening to admonish Varner and support Smith.

Many were in tears as the Tribal Council played out, and even Jeff Probst came to Smith's defense.

In the end, Probst asked the rest of the tribe if they are set on voting out Varner, and they said yes, thus sending him out of the game without the usual written-vote style of elimination.