Alone (2015–…): Season 1, Episode 7 - The Hunger - full transcript

In the brutally freezing temperatures the hunt for food becomes the paramount focus of the remaining survivalists. While some find gratifying success; others face complete failure and obstacles that beat them down emotionally and push one man to the brink.

[dramatic music]

[wind whispering]

I'm sick.
Too much shellfish.

If my body doesn't do well
with the diet here,

that'll make me pull out.

Ugh.

I don't know if I'm done yet.

(Alan)
Weather is the hardest on you,
psychologically and physically.

It's just relentless.

You would just knock yourself

in the head with a rock
to escape it.



(Sam)
When the weather's like this,
you just get to the point

where you just don't want
to be out here anymore.

[sighs]

(Mitch)
My gear is growing mold.

I've been wet for so long--

That's bad news.

See the mold?
That's not good.

(Lucas)
The wind's probably blowing,

like, 40, 50 miles an hour
through the trees, at least.

(Sam)
The temperature's dropping.

The sky looks evil.

'Tis some visitor entreating
entrance at my chamber door.

(Brant)
This is gonna be a bitch.

(Chris)
We have to film it,
and we're totally alone.



(Dustin)
Nobody knows what it's like here

except for the ten guys
out here doing it.

Time to get shelter.

(Dustin)
There's nobody here but me.

(Lucas)
This is so hard
doing this alone.

(Josh)
I'm scared to death right now.

(man)
I feel like I'm starving.

[wolf howls]

[animal growling]

(man)
Pretty sure I just saw a cougar.

(man)
Oh, [bleep].

(man)
The last man standing
wins $500,000.

I don't want to go home.
I want to win.

(man)
This is the chance
in a lifetime,

but it's not worth dying over.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Sam)
I have kind of a story
about last night.

It's midnight,
and I'm kind of half awake,

and I hear this rustle.

And I look over,

and there's a mouse just, like,
hanging out on my rain jacket.

And it just, like,
ran away into the forest.

And I was thinking,

"Hmm, I've been out here
for a long time.

I am not above eating mice
at the moment."

[laughs]

So I figure,

there's a really good trap
that I know that is really

good for rodents and such.

I think I'm gonna set a few, see
if I can get some mice to eat,

and--it'd be nice
to have some meat.

I didn't know how hard it would
be, just not having enough food.

I've never, ever
been so hungry in my life.

What we're gonna do,

is we're gonna
carve a Paiute deadfall trap.

It's a trap that's used a lot
in the Southwest United States.

It's really highly effective.

Instant kill.

Very humane as well.

I figure I'm probably better
at trapping and hunting

than I am at fishing,
anyhow, so...

might as well put
this line to good use.

Just tie it on here.

Now we make the trigger.

You want to carve
a nice little tiny piece,

almost rectangle-shaped,
a little tab,

and it's got to be real nice
and flat on both ends.

That's what we tie
our string to.

Now we can really see
this trap coming to life.

This rests right here,

stone goes right there,

and the stick pulls around,
trigger goes like so.

Perfect, actually.

Now we've got our trigger stick.

All the pieces...

made just right might
get us some food tonight.

[sticks clacking]

I take life very seriously,
and my family very seriously.

I take Mother Nature
very seriously.

But I don't take
myself very seriously.

Mentally, I'm pretty tough.

As far as my mind-set goes,
I kind of view success

as stumbling
from failure to failure

without a loss in enthusiasm.

I would be so dead right now
if I was an animal.

Bad things can happen to you,

but don't let your mind-set
dwell on that.

Try to stay focused
on the good things.

Try to kind of ration

the good things
that happen to me, and--

Aha.
[laughs]

Got it.
One trap.

Bunch more to go
if I want a decent trapline.

I rarely ever lose enthusiasm
over something.

It takes a lot
of breaking me down for me to--

before I actually break,

and before I actually
admit defeat on things.

I can fail and fail and fail
over again,

and just keep on going
and keep on trying my best.

Ha-ha, this is perfect.

This is a perfect setup.

Very, very sensitive trigger.

Can't even see them on camera.

I've got all these bloody spots
in my hands,

all these little nicks
everywhere.

But hopefully,
it results in food tomorrow.

But we'll keep going, you know,
we'll keep pushing through.

Keep pushing.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Lucas)
Today is all about fishing,

nothing else.

The weather's nice.

I'm gonna go down there
and throw some lines in.

Probably use the floats
that I found yesterday,

and create some, like, trotline.

Found a float.

You just never
know what's gonna wash up.

More things that potentially
could yield food.

There has to be
some fish out there.

What I'm aiming to do
is make a trotline,

which is basically a line

that runs along the surface
with floats,

and then hanging off it,
down into the water,

are lines with more hooks on it.

And so that way
you have six hooks

or more fishing for you while
you're not actually present.

I need to find sustainable ways
to bring in calories,

and so far, I haven't.

If this starts
to pull in food for me,

this'll mean huge rewards.

This'll be a big deal.

Okay.

I do feel
like I have a place here.

That doesn't necessarily mean
that I feel experienced here

or knowledgeable.

I don't know all the secrets
to the land,

and how to obtain food.

So I'm trying to listen.

I think the land will teach you.

I have to learn the secrets
of this area

to make it work for me.

And between each one of these,
I'll put one or two lines.

I've got some snails
that I gathered for bait

and a few other things,

and just let them sit out there
and see what happens.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Sam)
So first things first,

today we're gonna check
the traps just here around camp.

Field mouse traps.

Trap number one, not triggered.

Trap number two, triggered.

Nothing.

But the bait
wasn't taken, so that's good.

Looking around the other traps,

not triggered,

but the bait was taken,

then also not triggered
but the bait was taken.

Hope for better luck tomorrow.

There's no way to explain
how tough this is.

You're just hungry all the time,

all day you're just hungry.

You just want
a little something.

[rocks clatter]

I've spent my entire adult life

living off of pizza
and pizza rolls,

a healthy balance
of those two foods.

Being out here with no food
is really hurting me bad, bad.

[rocks clatter]

Ow.

Golly, that hurts.

Knuckle buster.

Man, this is all really
just so draining.

It wears you out so much.

[rain pattering]

[grunts, rock thuds]

[stick cracks, rain pattering]

[rain pattering]

[boots squelching]

[fabric rustles]

[rubber squeaks]

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Alan)
The local people we talked to,

when we told them
what we were gonna do,

they actually
laughed out loud at us.

They were like,

"Oh, you picked the wrong time
of year," you know?

And we did, in a sense,

because in the forest,
there's not a whole lot for you.

There's no berries,
there's not the animal movements

that you normally have,
all the plants and stuff.

It's not like it's gonna
be in the spring.

So it pushes you
out to the seashore.

That's kind of
where the resources are at.

Oh, let's see.

Man, I got some holes
in this net

that are gonna have to be fixed,
that's for sure.

Nothing.

Not even a single solitary crab.

So the shoreline,
a bit of a strikeout today.

Nothing in the gill net.

So I have a couple of plastic
bottles just found on the beach,

washed up, and I'm gonna
build some fish traps.

So I take the cap off,

take your knife,

and select a space.

Since this bottle has ridges,

I use those to lock the cap
en I turn it back in.

There's one, two, three,
four ridges, so I go two in,

and then put the tip
of my knife there gently,

and then just cut
all the way around that.

Try to keep it straight.

[plastic, metal scraping]

Just like that.

[plastic, metal scraping]

And then,

once you get the top off...

[plastic crinkling]

You just spin it around

and force it
back into the opening.

[plastic crinkling]

Kind of like that.

[plastic crinkling]

Then those ridges
that are in this bottle

will actually help
lock that in, I think.

See?

So now the fish
goes in through the neck,

and gets confused
as how to get back out.

I've heard of people catching
prawns in similar traps.

So I'm not looking for big fish,
obviously.

Basically,
this is a bait catcher.

This is gonna catch me bait.

Tide's coming in,
so I'm gonna go ahead

and put these things out

in this tidal pool area.

Try to lock them down
with rocks and see what happens.

Kind of make an artificial cave,

a place where a
fish would feel safe.

Think I'm gonna do these
other two in this tidal pool.

[rock smacks]

Very slippy.

They got some kind
of green slime growing here

that's like Teflon.

[groans]

I think I'm gonna
do one facing one way

and one facing the other.

Push comes to shove,

whatever gets caught
in these little traps

can also be food.

Yeah.

I think that'll work.

[mud squishing]

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Mitch)
My main issue right now

is a stable food source,

'cause if you can't
find food security,

then you're done.

On my way
to go check my gill net.

I hope I got a fish in it.

That'd be a great start
of a day right there.

I don't know.

Might just be a piece
of seaweed hanging.

I'll check it out.

You know,
I'm not messing around.

I want food.

I want to eat.

It's just all about food.

Food, every day.

If I can't find food,
I have to leave.

I don't want that to happen.

I've got a fish in my net.

It's a good size fish,

but I don't know
if I want to eat this guy.

It might be old.

But it's also been freezing out,
so he might be okay.

We'll check him out.

[sighs]
This thing reeks.

I haven't even cut it open.

Its eyes are kind
of looking weird.

Its skin is just,
like, wearing away.

Look at that.
Yep.

The meat's rotten.

That's a bummer, man.

That's--that's awful.

That's awful,
that sucks because

I missed out
on an incredible meal,

and this fish was killed

and I didn't, you know,
get to harvest it

and honor it properly
and eat it and enjoy it.

I just--
I don't know.

I'm just very troubled today

because of all these things
going on in my mind.

This would be
a different situation

if I had four salmon right now.

I just don't want
to be here anymore.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Lucas)
I dropped a trotline

with about five or six lines
coming off it

that are fishing
for me right now,

so I'm gonna set up my boat

and go cruise around that rocky
point and see what's going on.

Time is of the essence.

The currents
are shifting as we speak,

and if I get caught out in them,
it's dangerous.

Just get them working.

It's all about having
food production out here.

And if I don't work,
then it's not happening.

[plastic scraping]

[water lapping]

Let's go for a ride.

[rubber squeaking]
Oh, yeah.

[water running]
Boy, that's different.

[water running]

I'm making a beeline
towards my--

towards my fishing lines.

[water lapping]

How's it going, buoys?

No hits or nothing.

There's not even snags
or not even a bite.

It's one thing
when you don't get a fish

when you're fishing for fun,

and it's another thing
when you don't get a fish

when you don't have
much for food.

It's kind of--

it's kind of a downer.

And as much as I'd like to say
that, like, I'm always strong

or always optimistic,
the reality is that I'm not.

Putting all those lines
in the water

and not even having,
like, a little bite,

just took my confidence level
and just--

[blows raspberry]

[sighs]

[inhales sharply]

Ugh.

[groans]

[exhales]

[hat thuds]

[groans]

[bird calling]

[sighs]

It's just so hard
doing this alone.

[sighs]

[bird calls]

This would be
so much better with a friend.

[inhales]

[groans]

[bird calls]

[sighs]

And nobody knows
when we're gonna be done.

[leaves rustle]

I don't want to spend [bleep]--

[twig clacks]

Christmas out here.

[twig thuds]

I want to spend it
with the people I care about.

[twig snaps, thuds]

Or even [bleep] Thanksgiving.

[leaves rustle]

Eating seaweed [bleep]
stewed up.

[sobs]

[inhales]

There's just no end in sight.

[inhales]

[exhales]

I just feel so alone.

[cries]

[inhales sharply]

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

[wind rustling]

I think now's the time.

The tide has went out enough
that I can check my fish traps.

I mean, ideally,
you want to set a lot of traps,

but I didn't make that many.

I just made
three different.

And if it doesn't hit,

I'll just make more of them
and change uthe location.

It's just a process.
So this is step one.

Check the fish traps
and see how they did.

Let's see what we have
in the first one.

[rocks clack]

Kind of cloudy water there.

Pour some of that out.

I'd say--

I'd say that's a success.

Into the pot they go,

and there we have it.

So now I'm gonna
take this piece of trash

that just fed me
and put it right back,

so it can feed me again.

And here's another
piece of trash.

Oh, look at that.

Look at that,
ladies and gentlemen.

Yet another success story.

The repurposing of trash

for sustenance.

Into the pot they go.

That is starting to look
like breakfast,

brunch, what have you.

We still have a couple more.

Oh, another success story.

Into the pot they go.

Now that's fish soup,
right there.

One went back to freedom.

That's fine.
That's okay.

Now, that's survival, people.

That's payoff right there.

That's payday.

That's life.

That's life-giving
nutrients right there.

Vitamins and minerals.

Eyes, bones, I'm getting it all.

I'm getting it all.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

We have a saying
where I come from,

"You got to make hay
while the sun shines."

So I'm getting it right now,

and this is the time to act
and make a run for some food.

I need to make
that happen for myself,

'cause I am not done yet.

Hungry for fishies.

[plastic squeaks]

Time is of the essence.

Every day without fish
or protein from the sea

is a day that
I can't stay out here as long.

So I'm paddling
right towards my trotline,

and I want that thing to be full
of juicy, juicy, juicy fish.

[water lapping]

I only see one
buoy system right now...

[water lapping]

Which means...

[water lapping]

The other one...

[water lapping]

Disappeared?

[water lapping]

So something's
happened to my lines,

because there's only one man
standing over here.

[water running]

Oh, there's seaweed on it.

Oh, what a mess.

[water plops]

Whoa.
[laughs gleefully]

I got a fish.

[exclaims]

I got a fish.
[laughs]

Awesome.

I'm gonna get breakfast, buddy.

That was the coolest surprise
in the world.

And I didn't even
catch him by his mouth.

I caught him by his gill.

I'm feeling like those lines
out there are actually

gonna do some good,

and I'm gonna put another one
out tomorrow.

The fact that I got one fish
just made my day.

[sizzling]

I didn't really debone it,
I'm just gonna eat it as is.

Too hungry,
too much work.

[fish sizzles]

Oh man, I've been missing this.

[sizzling]

It's easy
to be grateful for things here,

'cause things are scarce.

But once I go back,

I really hope
I hang on to my gratitude.

Mm, that's good.

I think some part of me

will always remember
this moment.

You can't really forget
stuff like this very easy.

That's perfect.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

[water running]

[water running]

(Mitch)
I can't believe
this is happening.

This is a very big deal.

[water running]
[exhales]

My net is gone.

I don't know
if it was taken by the tide,

or if it was taken by an animal.

I can't believe this happened.

I was worried about
the current taking it yesterday,

that's why I put
those rock piles yesterday.

[exhales sharply]

Oh, my god.

It has floats and weights,
so if the current

plus the high tide was
enough to lift it high enough,

it could have lifted the stakes.

Then it would have just
floated right out.

My net could be
anywhere right now.

[water running]

This is very bad.

That cut me off
from my food source.

I mean, it's that simple.

I'm gonna walk
around a little bit,

pray it got hung up
on rocks or something.

[water running]

It's, like,
my main food source right now,

and I'm really behind
on calories.

Oh, my god.

This is so bad.

A net is massively powerful
in this environment.

Able to catch multiple fish
and crabs

and do it all by itself.

You just set it up
and walk away.

You come back
and there's food.

And that's gone.

It's incredibly crushing.

If I can't produce any fish

I'm done.

¶ ¶

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

[bird calls]

(Alan)
The fish traps were a hit.

[water running]

The little bottles
packed full of stuff.

I've been thinking,
since the fish traps

on a small scale
are so successful,

I think I'm gonna try
to go for a bigger one.

¶ ¶

One thing that I'm really
getting from this

is the psychology of survival.

It's amazing what you can do.

Things that you didn't
think that you could do

or things
that you actually can endure

that in our air-conditioned,
climate-controlled,

swipe-the-card lives,
we really don't have to.

And I think that's
detrimental to a human.

I think we're designed
and capable

to do way more than what we do.

And the only way
to really discover that

is to get out there and do it.

The wilderness is
a good place to start that.

[branches scrape]

A whole lot of work for a fish.

This is probably my seventh trip

of carrying materials
for that fish basket,

and we're nowhere near done.

[branches rustle]

So the next time you order fish

at your local restaurant,

remember this lesson.

[branches snap]

So I'm gonna go ahead
and start on the fish trap.

I think some hoops
are in order, first thing.

See, that bends up pretty nice.

I need to try to envision that.

Okay, here's my hoop.

Got my sticks.

[leaves rustle]

Fish comes in,
there's a cone here,

dropping down
to a small opening.

The fish goes in,

then he's got dead space here,
and he can't get out.

But we'll see.

Who knows what'll
show up in this thing?

This is largely
experimental for me.

I have not done one
just like this type.

[peaceful music]

¶ ¶

So I got my hoop.

I'm gonna run long pieces down,

and they're gonna
join crisscrossed together

like the top of a teepee.

I just made the smaller loop,

and I'm thinking about

maybe putting it
in here somewhere.

All these other pieces
will tie to it.

That will give it some structure
between this hoop and that hoop.

And then tie the ends together,

just interlocked,
just lash them together.

And then for filler, come in
with some smaller branches

and weave over and under
and over and under

with the sides,
that's what I'll do,

just like that,

with sticks and vines,

where it'll actually
contain fish or whatever.

¶ ¶

You know, first couple of weeks
after I got here,

it was all I could do to just,
you know,

just focus on the basics
and constantly reassess.

And now I just,

I feel like I've come to a place
where it's just life, you know.

I'm just doing it.

Just doing what I have to do
to live out here.

[insects chirping]

Definitely turning
more spiritual.

My focus is not
so much on the water

and the shelter and the fire
and the food,

'cause I know
I have those things.

You know, it's becoming
more inward-looking.

[insects chirping]

And it's pretty powerful,

pretty deep, and it's hard
to put into words too.

[branches and leaves rustling]

Whenever my journey ends--

and I don't even know
when that's gonna be.

I've done, you know,

what I came here to do,
as far as--you know,

there's no doubt in my mind
I can survive here.

There'll be a winner, you know,

somebody who stays the longest,

but I don't feel like
I'm competing

against the other guys.

I think we're all competing
against ourself.

Winning is defined differently
for each of us out here.

I think that victory, for me,

would be leaving here
at peace with myself.

And I don't know
what that is yet.

There have been some awakenings

and spiritual things
that have happened.

[wood rattling]

Sometimes you don't always
like what you see.

Sometimes you become aware
that maybe you need to change

some things.

¶ ¶

Like every other
person out there

that's honest with themselves,
I have my regrets.

I've made my mistakes,

[wood clacks]

and some of them
are very painful,

very hard to look at,

very hard to relive.

But when you've come out here
in the wild, you have no choice.

They will come bubbling up
to the surface.

There's no suppressing them.

They will come to the fore,
and you have to meet them.

You have to own them.

¶ ¶

My relationship with my son

is one of my things
I wish I could better,

and time's not over with.

God's still merciful.

Things might change.

I'd like to have
more involvement and time

with him, and I've tried a lot,

but can only do so much
from one end, you know?

People make mistakes.

¶ ¶

I think we're good.

I mean, I look at this thing
and I really don't see

anything escaping
out of here that would matter.

That thing is pretty solid.

You know, it's got some holes,
but it's all small,

and anything that would get
through these openings,

you know, it's the kind of stuff

that I'm already getting
in my little trap,

so no loss, really.

And I don't want to trap
every little fish out of there.

I want--you know,
I don't want to do any damage

to the population
of anything here.

So this is where we are
on the funneling,

channeling structure.

I feel like, I mean, yeah,
there's a hole or two there,

but I see no reason why we
couldn't go ahead and try this.

Now we've got the cone in.

There it is in all its glory.

¶ ¶

[grunts]

We'll start to see results
or a lack of result.

There will be fish
or a lack of fish.

Those are the two
possible outcomes.

So I have a 50/50 shot,
which is,

statistically, pretty good.

One thing you learn
when you spend a lot of time

with yourself is that no one's
perfect, especially you.

And this is my dead level best
I can do right now

with a fish trap.

I don't know
what I'm doing with it.

I'm just trying.

That's all you can do is try.

Yeah.

I'm gonna take this home with me
when it's all over.

Could you see me showing up
at the airline with this?

Just put that with
my checked luggage, please.

Thank you.

I wonder if it's ever
happened before,

if anybody's every shown up
with a fish trap.

Put your little name tag on it.

I'm gonna do that,
or try to.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Alan)
All righty.

The sun is trying to peek
through, actually, a little bit,

so I've taken off
a couple layers,

and gonna check out
the fish basket

that I put out yesterday.

I've never trapped fish,

so netting them
and trapping them

is all calculated guesses.

Yeah, I'm doing this
with a view toward food.

More food,
different food, variety.

Take what I can get.

Some better than none.

And--
[humming]

Day one on the fish basket
is a strike.

No joy.

No joy on the fish basket.

You know, I've had successes
and failures with the gill net.

It's been on and off.

So you can't just,
you know, on day one, go,

"Oh, well,
there's nothing in there.

It's a wrap."

You know,
I've got to give it time.

I'ma give it a week and see
if there's any traffic at all.

Let that bait
in there get real funky

and rotten a little bit,
let the smell dissipate.

And then, if nothing,
I'll shoot for deeper water,

you know.

I think the biggest thing

that I took away from making
this thing was the realization

that I'm a lot stronger
than I give myself credit for.

And I think when you do
think you've hit a wall

or found a limit,
it's usually just a mental one,

so you just examine it,
dismiss it, and step over it,

and go to the next one.

And you just keep doing that
over and over.

And there's probably even
no such thing as limits.

Oh.

Madness.

Lots of work went into this.

¶ ¶

(Sam)
None of the traps
were triggered last night.

Maybe it was just because
it was so freaking cold.

I've got of frost all over
everything, including the traps.

Blanketed.

Everything's
blanketed with frost.

Frost is everywhere.

It's cold.

¶ ¶

Nothing positive
to report right now at all.

[sighs]

Nothing positive to report.

I mean, other than
making it another day.

It just gets depressing
after a while, you know.

You think you found something
that's working really well,

and then it fails.

It's almost like
there's no sure way

of doing anything out here.

I guess such a big part of
survival is luck, to an extent.

It has a lot
to do with your skills,

but then there's
a big ck factor involved,

and I've got to be
the least lucky person

on the planet,

at least in regards to survival.

Anyway,
sorry for depressing you.

¶ ¶

The more I stay out here,

the more the urgency for food
kind of increases.

I'm not used
to feeling this way.

I'm not used
to feeling this helpless.

There's nothing I can
really do right now for myself.

There's literally no other way
to get food out here.

There are no wild edibles
out right now.

I have no access to any good
place to fish at the moment.

I've never, ever
been so hungry in my life.

Never.

I'm definitely losing it.

Not good mentally.

I am not good
in the head right now.

¶ ¶

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Sam)
Morning of day 32.

Another hungry, hungry night.

Pretty hungry.

We're gonna go check the traps.

Hopefully we can find a mouse
or something in there.

It's freezing cold,
so we'll have to do this quick.

Looking around at the traps,

I can just see that only
one of them was triggered.

But this one is
the one that was triggered,

and if we look at
it ever so closely,

that looks like a tail.

Five, four,
three, two, one.

Whammo.

Mousy feast coming right up.

Now, skinning and gutting mice
is not a task

for the faint of heart.

Kind of nice,
it's a big fat one, too.

This guy's got
a lot meat on him.

I freaking hate mice, though.

I like how they taste,
but I hate the animals.

Now comes the hard part,

gutting the beast.

Because you don't want
to pierce any

of those gross internal things.

You don't want
to taint the meat.

It's hard with these
big old gloves on

to actually get down
in there.

But I'm just not tough enough
to do it without gloves yet.

When it's all said and done,
see that little guy?

Hardly even looks like a mouse.

Just a delicious piece of meat.

[liquid sizzling]

[metal clanks]

In a few minutes,
we'll be good to go.

Cooking in the shelter
can be really frustrating.

Smoke gets all in your eyes,

and you're like, "Ah, gross."

Let's see how
this mousy's doing.

[meat sizzling]

And the mouse is...

[sizzling]

Done.

Let's eat him.

It looks so glorious.

Cooked to perfection.

¶ ¶

Mmm.

[Italian accent]
You could eat the mouse

all day, you see.

It's good.
It's good.

The deep-fried mouse,
it tastes good.

It tastes very good.

[growls]

Mmm.
Dang.

¶ ¶

I'm super skinny now,

which is a good thing,
I guess.

At least my wife will be happy.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶

(Lucas)
I'm realizing that maybe
my camp isn't in the best spot.

Food isn't close.

So I'm gonna move the camp,

but I don't have a roof
over my head tonight.

It's so cold.

(Mitch)
This environment is so brutal.

It's just ice cold.

My whole plan has gone
out the window.

(Sam)
I started losing it.

I've been out here for so long

and I'm so sick of it.

At this point,
I just want to go home.

(Alan)
It is frigid.

It's the coldest it's been,

and I'm really
thinking to myself,

"What are you doing here?"

I am so over it.

[dramatic music]

¶ ¶