George Santos will trade one unlikely career for another this fall, appearing as a contestant on Fox’s “Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test” after stints as a congressman, a felon, and a podcast host.
The network announced Wednesday that Santos will appear in the show’s fifth season, which sends contestants through military-style challenges in a Malaysian jungle, including exposure to chemical gas and other combat-simulation exercises. Santos confirmed the news himself on X, posting a promotional photo of himself standing next to a tree with a serious expression.
“I took my fat behind off the coach and tried something new!” Santos wrote. “And it changed EVERYTHING! I can’t wait to share this experience with y’all!”
He joins a cast of more than a dozen contestants, including former NBA player Matt Barnes and actor Ruby Rose. Fox describes the show as a test of physical, mental and emotional endurance, with challenges this season including a claustrophobic search through an underground bunker and a supply retrieval mission while suspended above the jungle floor.
From Congress to prison to reality TV

Santos was elected to the House of Representatives from New York in 2022 as a Republican, but his time in office lasted less than a year. Reporters uncovered that he had invented large parts of his biography, including claims about his education, employment history and financial background, none of which held up to scrutiny.
The House voted to expel him in December 2023 as he faced federal charges connected to stealing from campaign donors, collecting unemployment benefits he wasn’t entitled to, and lying to Congress about his personal wealth. He pleaded guilty to the charges and was sentenced to prison, though President Donald Trump commuted his sentence after Santos had served about 84 days behind bars.
Santos attempted a political comeback afterward, launching another campaign for his old House seat. That effort collapsed quickly when he failed to raise any meaningful campaign funds, and he dropped out of the race.
Since leaving politics, Santos has built a public presence as a podcast host, using the platform to comment on politics and his own downfall. His reality TV appearance extends a run of media ventures that have kept him visible despite his expulsion from Congress.
Santos did not respond to a message seeking comment on his upcoming appearance.
What “Special Forces” puts contestants through
“Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test” strips celebrity contestants of the usual reality show comforts, placing them under the direction of former special forces operatives who run them through simulated combat training. Past seasons have featured challenges built around sleep deprivation, interrogation drills, and physically demanding tasks meant to break down contestants both physically and psychologically.
This season’s Malaysian jungle setting adds heat and terrain to the list of obstacles. The bunker search and the suspended supply retrieval Fox previewed Wednesday reflect the show’s format of pairing claustrophobic, high-stress environments with physical risk. Contestants who don’t meet the demands of a given task can withdraw voluntarily, a option the show frames as a real test of whether they can push past their own limits.
The series has drawn a mix of athletes, actors and public figures in previous seasons looking to demonstrate resilience outside their usual public roles. Santos’s addition to the cast fits that pattern, though his path to the show runs through a criminal case rather than a sports career or acting resume.
A pattern of reinvention
Santos’s move to reality television isn’t a sharp break from his recent public life so much as a continuation of it. Since his expulsion from Congress, he has leaned into his notoriety rather than away from it, using his podcast to discuss his conviction, his time in prison and his views on national politics. His social media presence has remained active, often mixing self-deprecating humor with defenses of his conduct in office.
His new post on X captures that same tone, framing the “Special Forces” appearance as a personal reinvention rather than an attempt to escape his past. The self-deprecating reference to his physical condition, paired with the promise that the experience “changed EVERYTHING,” suggests Santos is positioning the show as both entertainment and a personal narrative device, an attempt to demonstrate change through physical hardship rather than political rehabilitation.
Whether audiences respond to that framing remains to be seen. Santos remains one of the more recognizable figures to leave Congress under a cloud in recent years, and his fabricated biography, ranging from invented Wall Street jobs to a nonexistent college volleyball career, became a defining feature of his brief time in office. That history gives his reality show appearance an added layer of scrutiny, since viewers and cast mates alike may test how much of what Santos says about himself, on camera or off, can be taken at face value.
Fox has not released a premiere date for the new season, nor has it detailed the full roster of challenges contestants will face beyond the bunker search and supply retrieval. The network’s announcement Wednesday focused primarily on cast additions, with Santos, Barnes and Rose named among the higher-profile participants set to compete.
For Santos, the show offers a national platform distinct from his podcast audience, one built around physical performance rather than political commentary. It also places him alongside professional athletes and entertainers, a considerable distance from the House Ethics Committee findings that detailed his financial misconduct and led to his removal from office.
His comeback attempt at the ballot box failed for lack of resources. His comeback attempt in the jungle will test something else entirely: whether he can physically endure what the show’s format is designed to make grueling, without the option of simply walking away from the cameras the way he stepped back from his House race.































