Getting Real
Five days into Survivor 46: Fiji, Chong was the second contestant to be voted off of her tribe, but she left the show with a stronger sense of herself. “Somehow, I tapped into a deep well of inner strength, and I managed to be calm amidst the chaos and brutality of my circumstances,” Chong said. “I am proud that I stayed true to myself, and that I didn’t say or do anything that I’d regret while I was out there. So often in mass media, we see Asian/Asian-American people get flattened. I wanted to represent my community in such a way that people would humanize us for all our complexity—the good and the bad, the serious and the silly—and I think I managed to do that.”
Chong, who played rugby while she was at Vassar, said she was touched by the outpouring of support she received from fellow alums. “When [Head Rugby Coach] Tony Brown found out I was going to be on the show, he sent an email blast to the entire Vassar rugby community,” Chong said. “At first, I didn’t want anyone to watch, but since it aired, I’ve received letters and emails from all kinds of people—from eight-year-olds to seniors—who told me they related to my plight, including a lot of people from Vassar that I hadn’t talked to since I was in class or in a dorm with them. I even had a ride-share driver tell me that her ten-year-old daughter was so upset about how I left the game.”
Chong began her career as a Communications Assistant at the Social Science Research Council in Brooklyn, then moved to her native Hong Kong to work in publishing and at a web agency, before embarking on a freelance career as a web designer.
In 2015, she won a scholarship to attend a coding boot camp, and became a software engineer. She first caught the attention of the Survivor casting team in 2019 because of a social media post about her advocacy for scholarships to help people from underrepresented communities transition into careers in software.
Chong is the second alum to compete on Survivor. Ethan Zohn ’96 won the million-dollar prize in Survivor’s third season in 2002, and signed on again in 2020 for the Survivor: Winners at War all-star episode. As for her own experience, Chong said she would not trade the opportunity to be on Survivor for anything. “It has been one of the joys of my adult life to meet new people, hear their stories, and embark on a shared journey together.”