Emily Flippen and Rick Devens Face Mrbeast Fallout in Episode 10
mrbeast is not in the game, but the fallout is real for Emily Flippen and Rick Devens in Survivor 50 episode 10, A Side Dish of Chaos. New sneak peeks show both players trying to steady themselves after voting for Ozzy Lusth in a split vote that failed to land the target they wanted.
Christian Hubicki was sent to the jury last week after a shocking and unfavorable twist, leaving Emily, his closest ally, exposed at camp. The episode 10 footage suggests the two players now have to work from the bottom, with Devens treating the mess as a chance to play loose instead of defensive.
Ozzy hears it from Emily
Emily Flippen told Ozzy Lusth after Tribal Council, “I did throw him under the bus in an attempt to save Christian, and I'm sorry.” She added, “I've never felt so on the outs at camp,” which is the kind of line that tells you exactly how hard the vote had landed on her position in the group.
That matters because the split vote left her tied to a failed push that did not keep Christian in the game. With Christian already on the jury, Emily is now speaking like a player who knows she has lost room to maneuver and has to say more than everyone else to stay relevant.
Devens answers with Rizo
Rick Devens brushed off Ozzy after Tribal Council, telling him, “he doesn't have an idol because he didn't play it.” Devens then described the moment as “his best impression of Rizo Velovic holding onto the idol in Survivor 49,” a line that turns the exchange into a direct read on Ozzy’s position rather than a broad camp complaint.
Devens also said he and Emily were on the bottom and had “nothing to lose.” That is the part that makes the sneak peeks worth watching: once players decide they have no cushion left, they stop protecting old alliances and start using every conversation as a swing vote attempt.
The hammock move returns
Emily and Devens also talked through the chaos in a hammock that had already served as the meeting site for many social moves this season. The show is leaning on that setting again, which keeps the episode focused on where the game actually turns: private talks, not flashy challenges or big Tribal speeches.
Devens went from being voted out 4th to placing 4th overall on Edge of Extinction, and that background explains why his posture here reads as deliberate rather than panicked. For viewers, episode 10 looks like a test of whether Emily can recover from the failed blindside while Devens keeps turning a bad spot into motion, and the players still in control should treat that as a live threat rather than background noise.