This week’s edition of “Survivor” saw viewers bid goodbye to Ali Elliott when the 24-year-old celebrity assistant found herself blindsided during Tribal Council.

Her ouster came after a tense blowup at camp when Ali confronted Ryan about keeping her out of the loop.

As a result, Ryan, Chrissy and JP all cast their votes for Ali, making her the sixth castaway to be voted off in the current “Heroes vs. Heroes vs. Hustlers” edition.

ET Canada caught up with Ali following this week’s episode to get her perspective on being blindsided.

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RELATED: ‘Survivor: Heroes Vs. Healers Vs. Hustlers’ Roark Interview: ‘It Was An Absolute Blindside’

For the whole first act of the season it seemed as if you had the most power. How did it kind of all go wrong for you?

“I think that was kind of perceived power. I think it seemed as though I was in control — and I felt like I was in control — but with the swap happening and with the Super Idol, those took tolls on my game, and I had no idea they were even happening until watching them back later. So I would say the power was shifted once I got to that new tribe.”

So how much of a blindside was it for you?

“It was a hopeful non-blindside. I was hoping that I wasn’t going to be blindsided. I was hoping that anything I would have said would change their minds. I had a gut feeling it was going to be me, but I don’t know if I would really call it a blindside as much as a disappointment.”

How betrayed do you feel by Ryan?

“Now I understand. During the moment I felt very, very betrayed. I didn’t understand his game play, I didn’t understand why he would trust people he had never even talked to or met over someone he had known, and been on the same side of the same boat. But now I’m like, ‘OK, I understand his game play,’ but I still don’t understand why he didn’t include me in the vote against Roark. From then on out he could have had two strong allies moving forward.”

Why do you think he made the move against you rather than against JP?

“Because he already burned that bridge with me. Ryan had already burned that bridge when he decided to not include me in the last vote, so he knew that I was never going to completely trust him again. He knew that I was going to blow up his game if he let me go into the merge. I would have definitely told Lauren and Devon that Ryan flipped, and he would have looked worse to people who trusted him initially, in their eyes.”

Why do you think that Ryan was so untouchable?

“I think that Ryan, you look at him and you think that you can get him out at anytime. He doesn’t look like a competitor, he’s nice, a great guy to have around and so you think, ‘I can still use this kid.’ Because he’s not going to win every challenge and he’s not going to be a difficult person to get out. So I think that’s why he’s been so easy just to keep around.”

How frustrating was it to try to strategize with JP?

“Oh my gosh! I don’t think strategizing with JP even happened. I think one day I said, ‘What are you thinking?’ and he said, ‘We just need to stay strong.’ And I’m like, ‘Really? That’s how vague you’re going to be?’ It was hard. It was grasping at straws to even try to have a conversation with JP about the game.”

What was the most challenging thing you had to do out there?

“The most challenging thing I had to do that I didn’t even accomplish was trying to get that bag of rice over that balance beam. It was very unfortunate. I felt bad that I couldn’t do it. I think the only woman who was able to do it was Desi. Knowing that we had one strong male, and JP had to go back and around the whole time, it was definitely difficult watching that. The last few days I was very much by myself, so it was hard. It was lonely, I was alone, and had to figure out how I was going to get out of this situation.”

How much did the hunger get to you?

“The hunger didn’t really affect me that much. The first few days I was hungry, but as time goes on and you just know you can’t have food, you just get over it. You have to learn to cope and you learn to wait every night until you can get your quarter of a cup of rice.”

Watching your game on TV, what was your favourite moment of the season?

“My favourite moment of the season, for me at least, was that first immunity challenge. Because we felt like misfits. We felt like we were put together as a losing tribe. We didn’t think that we could even compete with the Healers and the Heroes. Winning that first challenge really showed us that we were capable of something more than we thought.”

If you were to do another season, like a second chance-type of thing, and you were in the running, what would be your campaign to get back on the show?

“I think my campaign would be that I played the best game to my possibility, but I was screwed by the actual game. I was screwed by the Super Idol. That’s what got me. If I could get another chance, I would show that I’d be the one with the Super Idol this time.”

“Survivor” airs Wednesdays at 8 p.m. ET/PT on Global.