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‘Summer Camp’ no picnic for local man

Justin Jackson, who owns a house in Bayfield, is a reality television star on “Summer Camp,” a USA Network game show that airs Thursday nights.

With roots in Southwest Colorado, Justin Jackson has been cast as the conservative Second Amendment hunter type in a new reality television show.

“It all sort of fell into my lap,” said the 41-year-old outdoorsman. “An old high school friend knew someone who knew someone.”

Last October, Jackson auditioned to star in the USA Network game show “Summer Camp.” In April in Los Angeles, he competed against 50 other hopefuls. Three weeks later, he was competing for a $250,000 prize with cameras filming his every move throughout an entire month.

“Summer Camp” airs Thursday evenings. Almost 2 million viewers watched the premiere July 11.

“Summer Camp” features 16 contestants from different backgrounds and jobs – from a hunter to a supermodel to a vegan yoga instructor – packing their bags and heading to a lakeside retreat in Big Bear, Calif. There, they take part in competitions inspired by classic camp games and eventually face off in a “Campathalon,” an Olympic-style event.

Being a reality television star has its drawbacks, Jackson said. Since the competition, he made his first journey to New York earlier this month for publicity purposes, including an interview on NBC’s “Today Show.”

“New York was definitely a learning experience,” he said. “I don’t want to go back. They can have the Big Apple.”

Competing on the show also forced Jackson not to have any outside contact with friends or loved ones during taping. His fiancée took it the hardest, but the couple since have married.

“She watches every show to see if there was any romance,” Jackson said jokingly. “And she tells me there’s still time for an annulment.”

Jackson’s father and grandfather once logged areas surrounding Dolores and Norwood. An archer, Jackson said he’s been hunting the area since his early teens. He now has a ranch at Groundhog Lake and a house in Bayfield.

“Being an outdoorsman is my calling card, and Southwest Colorado has been a huge influence on my life,” he said.

His father, Dale Jackson, said the greatest lesson he tried to instill in his son was the value of hard work. While he doesn’t recall ever seeing a television twinkle in his son’s eye, the elder Jackson said he wasn’t surprised to see his son become a reality television star.

The game show is not Jackson’s first appearance in front of a camera. He’s previously worked on air for various outdoor hunting shows, but with only a single camera capturing his moves.

Looking back, Jackson said he might have played the game differently, but he didn’t have any regrets of becoming a reality star. Except for one, perhaps.

“There were so many cameras, I’m worried about what my mom might hear me say,” he said, cringing.

The eight-episode series is expected to wrap Aug. 29.



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