Big Brother | |
---|---|
Series 8 | |
Presented by | Davina McCall |
No. of days | 94 |
No. of housemates | 22 |
Winner | Brian Belo |
Runner-up | Amanda & Sam Marchant |
Companion shows | |
No. of episodes | 96 |
Release | |
Original network | Channel 4 |
Original release | 30 May – 31 August 2007 |
Series chronology |
Big Brother 2007, also known as Big Brother 8, was the eighth series of the British reality television series Big Brother . The show followed twenty-three contestants, known as housemates, who were isolated from the outside world for an extended period of time in a custom built House. Each week, one or more of the housemates were eliminated from the competition and left the House. The last remaining housemate, Brian Belo, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £100,000 (the second housemate to do so after Liam McGough was awarded the same amount in the third week).
The series launched on Channel 4 on 30 May 2007 and ended on 31 August 2007, lasting 94 days - the longest British edition of Big Brother to date. Davina McCall returned as presenter for her eighth consecutive year. Eleven housemates entered on launch night, with an additional seven men being introduced by the time of the fourth week. The series was watched by an average of 3.9 million viewers, the lowest viewed series of the show at the time.
The first series of Big Brother to air since the highly controversial fifth celebrity series, Big Brother 8 was the subject of viewer complaints and press attention, mainly regarding the ejection of a housemate for the use of a racial slur.
The first round of auditions started on 6 January 2007 [1] at the SECC in Glasgow, where there was a queue of three hundred people. [2]
On 8 March 2007, it was announced that The Carphone Warehouse would not return to sponsor Big Brother 8 after cancelling its sponsorship of Celebrity Big Brother 5 , [3] and on 21 March, that Virgin Media would sponsor the show, for a reported £3 million. [4] Virgin Media's idents for the show use footage from Big Brother programmes from all around the world, including Germany, Brazil, Philippines and the Netherlands.[ citation needed ]
The iconic Big Brother eye has been redesigned to what has been described as a "centrifugal inter-locking RGB rainbow test card" [5] by its designer Daniel Eatock. [6]
On Channel 4, Davina McCall remained as main host of the live shows such as live launch, evictions, finale and other special shows where there may be a twist taking place. Marcus Bentley returned as narrator of the nightly highlight shows. For the first time since Big Brother 5 in 2004, there were no highlight shows broadcast on Saturday nights. In the early years of Big Brother, a live stream would feature on Channel E4, however this was omitted from the schedule until the final series (BB11-2010). Sunday night's highlight show would show just a short amount of footage from Friday, and would instead focus more on Saturday's events in the house.
McCall also hosted Big Brother: On the Couch , a psychology show broadcast on Sunday before the main show. It was similar to Big Brother's Big Brain , which was broadcast the previous year before being axed. [7] It did not return in any subsequent series' of Big Brother.
Dermot O'Leary returned to host Big Brother's Little Brother . On 28 November 2007 he announced his departure from the show. [8] His last presenting role was for the following Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack in January 2008.
Diary Room Uncut returned in the same time slot as the previous year. On Fridays, housemates would make podcasts.
Big Brother's Big Mouth returned in the same late night timeslot, however Russell Brand did not return, having quit the show earlier in the year. [9] No permanent replacement was made and a different presenter/host took control each week.
Before the launch programme, Channel 4 presented a statement from Ofcom explaining the racism incidents from Celebrity Big Brother earlier in the year.
In January 2007, Ofcom received over 44,500 complaints, mainly about potentially racist material.
Ofcom has concluded that Channel 4 failed to handle appropriately the strong content it was transmitting. This resulted in breaches of the Ofcom Broadcasting Code, which is designed to ensure that when broadcasters show potentially offensive material, they do so in a way which offers adequate protection to the viewer.
Ofcom has found that Channel 4 breached the Code on three separate occasions. Its decision to repeat one of these incidents in its early morning show resulted in a further breach for failing to protect children.
There was also a serious failure in Channel 4's compliance processes which meant that it was not aware of all the relevant activity in the House at a particularly critical time. This compounded its failure to ensure compliance with the Code.
These are significant failings. Ofcom has therefore imposed a formal sanction on Channel Four, directing it to broadcast this statement. This ensures that the largest number of viewers will be made fully aware of the seriousness of Channel 4's failure to comply.
This was followed immediately by a Channel 4 ident, and then the Big Brother titles. Channel 4 also broadcast the Ofcom statement on the morning of 31 May 2007 before the early morning repeat, and again immediately before the first eviction on Friday 15 June. [10]
It was initially believed that this would be the last series to be aired from the house in Elstree Studios, with a new house set to be built in Hammersmith for 2008, although, Endemol decided to renew the lease at its current location for another two years. The layout of the house remained much the same as the previous series, although the kitchen moved to the other side of the main living area.[ citation needed ] One big theme in the house was annoyance; the kitchen appliances were scattered around the house, with the oven and heat proof surface in the bedroom and the fridge in the garden. As further annoyance, the bathtub was placed in an open space right next to the main living room. Where the oven was in the bedroom was approximately where the kitchen area was located in Big Brother 7 . [11] The bedroom contained a single, double and triple bed as well as two four-person beds. Outside the bedroom window, in the main living area, is a lip shaped sofa that the presenters of the show refer to as "the lips". The house also contains a salon/bathroom, which houses two large hair dryers and two steam suits.[ citation needed ]
As well as the kitchen fridge, the garden contained a swimming pool, a seating area[ citation needed ] and, due to the smoking ban that came into effect in all public places during the series, a smoking area which housemates had to use from Day 1, even though the smoking ban didn't come into play until 1 July. This was checked by health officials, and deemed acceptable. [12] The grass from the previous series has been replaced with AstroTurf.[ citation needed ] The garden was one of the smallest this year, in comparison to the garden in Big Brother 7 . On Day 25 it was revealed that a caravan was hidden behind a garden wall. The caravan came with two single beds and sleeping bags. Brian and Charley went "on holiday" to the caravan for one night. The caravan was again accessible from day 36, this time any of the housemates were allowed to use the room. [13] An extension to the pool was revealed on Day 67, along with a bar area. The area was hidden behind the "wet" sign in the garden. [14] "The Insider" on BBLB revealed that there was a fully functioning washing machine hidden in the garden, throughout the show. [15] Dermot O'Leary revealed this to the housemates during the BBLB reunion show. Because of the Big Brother 7 water shortage, the garden included a water tower, which at the beginning of the series was full. The water tower was located next to the fridge and the mangle.
Between the entrance/exit stairs and the main house was a vestibule area. This was used for several tasks, rewards and punishments, such as Ziggy's dating task, Amanda and Sam's birthday party, the punishments on Day 43, and the "Sin Bin" which is the room Charley was made to stay in while the rest of the housemates had their sin party.[ citation needed ]
A corridor was added between the Diary Room door and the main house which changes colour from red to blue to green when the "eye" button to open the door is pressed. The diary room chair was changed to a much larger see-through chair which contains white neon lights. For Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack , the lights inside the chair were coloured purple, to keep up with E4's theme. The diary room resides in almost the same place as last year, but set back a bit, making the living area larger. As in recent years, the diary room was used for several tasks. The Time Machine from Big Brother's time machine task was in the diary room. It was also used for the Seven Deadly Sins task.
The House contained a number of hidden rooms that were accessed either through the diary room or through a store room off the living area. At various points in the show, all or part of these rooms were opened up for various tasks and twists.
Periodically throughout the series, housemates conducted various tasks in some of these rooms.
On Day 59, five new housemates Amy, Jonty, Shanessa, David and Kara entered the house and were told they would live in the Halfway House which was reached by going through the store room or through the diary room and down a corridor. The Halfway Housemates and ordinary house mates were swapped around for different reasons. Day 59 Amy, David, Jonty, Kara and Shanessa enter the Halfway House. David visits the main house. Day 60 In the morning Amy visits the main house, followed by Jonty in the afternoon. Day 61 In the morning Shanessa visits the main house, followed by Kara in the afternoon. Day 62 Housemates in the main house choose David and Kara to enter the house swapped with Ziggy. Day 63 The Halfway Housemates have a task called Jack in a box to win a place in the main house. Shanessa won and was swapped with Liam who Shanessa chose. Day 64 The four Halfway housemates had to choose to swap with four housemates in the main house they chose David, Kara, Shanessa and Tracey who moved in halfway house and were automatically faced eviction. Day 65 The halfway housemates are given a last night to go into the main house for a few hours. Day 66 The first halfway housemate to be evicted is Shanessa, the second is David. Then Kara and Tracey re-enter the main house for good.
There were a total of 22 housemates in this series of Big Brother. Each week, two or more housemates were nominated to be evicted by the general public until the winner was left. All of the housemates that entered on the first day were female, then on the third day; a male housemate – Ziggy – entered the house. [21] On 7 June 2007 it was announced on Big Brother's Big Mouth that Day 10 would see the addition of two male housemates, in replacement of the cancelled eviction. [22] These two housemates were Gerry and Seány. On 15 June, four new male housemates entered the house. They were Billi, Jonathan, Liam, and Brian. Jonathan left on Day 35 due to a family death from day 34 that he wanted to attend to.[ citation needed ]
The series was eventually won by housemate Brian Belo on 31 August 2007, with twin housemates Sam and Amanda polling second place, and housemate Liam in third. The main eye colour featured this year was multi-coloured. [23] A new housemate called "Pauline" entered the house on 8 July, supposedly from Big Brother Australia , however, her true identity was actress Thaila Zucchi, and worked as a mole for Big Brother, before being removed on Day 42. Five new housemates, Amy, Jonty, Shanessa, David & Kara entered the house in a separate room called Halfway House on Day 59. [24] Rylan Clark, who would go on to appear in Celebrity Big Brother 11 , was scheduled to be a surprise housemate during this series, passing the auditions and waiting in hiding to enter the house. However, the day before he was due to enter, his identity was leaked in the press. [25]
Name | Age on entry | Hometown | Day entered | Day exited | Result |
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Brian Belo | 19 | Essex (originally from Nigeria) | 17 | 94 | Winner |
Amanda & Sam Marchant [a] | 18 | Stoke-on-Trent | 1 | 94 | Runner-up |
Liam McGough | 22 | County Durham | 17 | 94 | 3rd Place [b] |
Ziggy Lichman | 26 | London | 3 | 94 | 4th Place |
Carole Vincent | 53 | London | 1 | 94 | 5th Place |
Jonty Stern | 36 | London | 59 | 94 | 6th Place |
Kara-Louise Horne | 22 | London | 59 | 87 | Evicted |
Tracey Barnard | 36 | Cambridgeshire | 1 | 87 | Evicted |
Gerry Stergiopoulos | 31 | London (originally from Greece) | 10 | 80 | Evicted |
Amy Alexander | 21 | Grimsby, Lincolnshire | 59 | 73 | Evicted |
David Parnaby | 25 | Ayr | 59 | 66 | Evicted |
Shanessa Reilly | 27 | Cardiff | 59 | 66 | Evicted |
Chanelle Hayes | 19 | Wakefield | 1 | 62 | Walked [c] |
Charley Uchea | 21 | London | 1 | 59 | Evicted |
Nicky Maxwell | 27 | Watford | 1 | 52 | Evicted |
Laura Williams | 23 | Rhondda Valleys | 1 | 38 | Evicted |
Jonathan Durden | 49 | London | 17 | 35 | Walked |
Billi Bhatti | 25 | London | 17 | 31 | Evicted |
Seany O'Kane | 26 | Derry | 10 | 24 | Evicted |
Shabnam Paryani | 22 | London | 1 | 17 | Evicted |
Lesley Brain | 60 | Tetbury | 1 | 11 | Walked |
Emily Parr | 19 | Bristol | 1 | 9 | Ejected |
Housemate | Day | Reason |
---|---|---|
Emily Parr | 9 | Used the n-word in reference to Charley Uchea. |
Housemate | Day | Reason | Method |
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Lesley Brain | 11 | She was bored during her stay in the house. | Diary Room |
Jonathan Durden | 35 | Death of his 104-year-old grandmother. | |
Chanelle Hayes | 62 | Multiple altercations with Charley Uchea and argued with Ziggy Lichman and misses her family. |
Week 1 | Entrances |
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Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Week 2 | Entrances |
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Tasks |
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Twists |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 3 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 4 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 5 | Tasks |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 6 (Fake Week) | Entrances |
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Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 7 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 8 | Tasks |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 9 | Entrances |
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Tasks |
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Transfers |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 10 | Tasks | For this week's task, housemates have to 'travel through time' and each complete mini-tasks.
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 11 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 12 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Nominations |
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Exits |
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Week 13 | Tasks |
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Punishments |
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Exits |
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Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 [4] | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 [8] | Week 12 [9] | Week 13 [10] Final | Nominations received | ||
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Brian | Not in House | Seány, Carole | Billi, Gerry | Gerry, Carole | Tracey, Carole | Gerry, Tracey | Gerry, Charley | No nominations | Jonty, Kara-Louise | No nominations | Jonty, Kara-Louise | Winner (Day 94) | 3 | ||
Amanda | Not eligible | Carole, Nicky [2] | Carole, Tracey | Tracey, Charley | Carole, Tracey | Carole, Nicky | Carole, Tracey | Carole, Tracey | No nominations | Jonty, Kara-Louise [7] | No nominations | Jonty, Kara-Louise | Runners-up (Day 94) | 0 | |
Sam | Not eligible | Shabnam, Carole [2] | Carole, Liam | Billi, Carole | Carole, Tracey | Carole, Charley | Carole, Tracey | Carole, Tracey | No nominations | 0 | |||||
Liam | Not in House | Jonathan, Charley | Tracey, Billi | Tracey, Charley | Nicky, Charley | Charley, Nicky | Charley, Tracey | No nominations | Kara-Louise, Jonty | No nominations | Kara-Louise, Jonty | Third place (Day 94) | 4 | ||
Ziggy | Shabnam, Emily [1] | Not eligible | Charley, Nicky | Billi, Charley | Laura, Charley | Nicky, Charley | Nicky [5] | Tracey, Charley | No nominations | Amy, Gerry | No nominations | Kara-Louise, Tracey | Fourth place (Day 94) | 12 | |
Carole | Not eligible | Not eligible | Laura, Nicky | Laura, Nicky | Laura, Chanelle | Nicky, Tracey | Nicky, Chanelle | Charley, Ziggy | No nominations | Amy, Kara-Louise | Nominated | Tracey, Ziggy | Fifth place (Day 94) | 21 | |
Jonty | Not in House | No nominations | Gerry, Kara-Louise | No nominations | Brian, Liam | Sixth place (Day 94) | 9 | ||||||||
Kara-Louise | Not in House | Halfway Housemate [6] | Jonty, Amy | No nominations | Tracey, Liam | Evicted (Day 87) | 11 | ||||||||
Tracey | Not eligible | Not eligible | Seány, Jonathan | Carole, Billi | Ziggy, Chanelle | Ziggy, Gerry | Gerry, Ziggy | Gerry, Ziggy | Halfway Housemate [6] | Amy, Gerry | No nominations | Kara-Louise, Jonty | Evicted (Day 87) | 26 | |
Gerry | Not in House | Shabnam, Tracey [2] | Charley, Liam | Nicky, Tracey | Laura, Nicky | Charley, Nicky | Nicky, Charley | Charley, Tracey | No nominations | Amy, Jonty | Nominated | Evicted (Day 80) | 17 | ||
Amy | Not in House | No nominations | Kara-Louise, Gerry | Evicted (Day 73) | 5 | ||||||||||
David | Not in House | Halfway Housemate [6] | Evicted (Day 66) | N/A | |||||||||||
Shanessa | Not in House | Halfway Housemate [6] | Evicted (Day 66) | N/A | |||||||||||
Chanelle | Not eligible | Not eligible | Charley, Seány | Charley, Billi | Charley, Laura | Charley, Nicky | Charley [5] | Charley, Tracey | Walked (Day 62) | 9 | |||||
Charley | Not eligible | Not eligible | Nicky, Seány | Chanelle | Chanelle, Brian | Chanelle, Gerry | Gerry, Ziggy | Chanelle, Gerry | Evicted (Day 59) | 25 | |||||
Nicky | Not eligible | Not eligible | Jonathan, Seány | Billi, Carole | Gerry, Ziggy | Gerry, Ziggy | Ziggy, Gerry | Evicted (Day 52) | 20 | ||||||
Laura | Not eligible | Not eligible | Carole, Jonathan | Carole, Ziggy | Ziggy, Chanelle | Evicted (Day 38) | 7 | ||||||||
Jonathan | Not in House | Nicky, Tracey | Tracey, Nicky | Laura, Chanelle | Walked (Day 35) | 5 | |||||||||
Billi | Not in House | Carole, Jonathan | Charley | Evicted (Day 31) | 8 | ||||||||||
Seány | Not in House | Tracey, Shabnam [2] | Brian, Tracey | Evicted (Day 24) | 5 | ||||||||||
Shabnam | Not eligible | Not eligible | Evicted (Day 17) | 4 | |||||||||||
Lesley | Not eligible | Walked (Day 11) | 0 | ||||||||||||
Emily | Not eligible | Ejected (Day 9) | 1 | ||||||||||||
Against public vote | Emily, Shabnam | Carole, Shabnam, Tracey | Carole, Jonathan, Seány | Billi, Carole, Tracey | Chanelle, Laura | Charley, Nicky | Gerry, Nicky | Charley, Tracey | David, Kara-Louise, Shanessa, Tracey | Amanda & Sam, Amy, Jonty, Kara-Louise [7] | Brian, Carole, Gerry, Jonty, Kara-Louise, Liam | Jonty, Kara-Louise, Tracey | Amanda & Sam, Brian, Carole, Jonty, Liam, Ziggy | ||
Walked | none | Lesley | none | Jonathan | none | Chanelle | none | ||||||||
Ejected | Emily | none | |||||||||||||
Evicted | Eviction cancelled [1] | Shabnam 81.4% to evict | Seány 44.5% to evict | Billi 55.1% to evict | Laura 68.1% to evict | Charley 75.8% to fake evict | Nicky 76% to evict | Charley 85.6% to evict | Shanessa 38% to evict | Amy 58% to evict | Gerry 3 of 3 votes to evict | Tracey 38.5% to evict | Jonty 3.0% (out of 6) | Liam 19.1% (out of 3) | |
Carole 4.9% (out of 6) | |||||||||||||||
Amanda & Sam 39.7% (out of 2) | |||||||||||||||
David 37% to evict | Kara-Louise 30.8% to evict | Ziggy 15.3% (out of 4) | |||||||||||||
Brian 60.3% to win |
Official ratings are taken from BARB. [26]
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 | Week 12 | Week 13 | ||
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Sun | No show | 3.79 | 2.85 | 3.34 | 3.6 | 2.43 | 3.66 | 3.79 | 3.44 | 3.77 | 3.53 | 3.33 | 3.52 | 2.75 |
Mon | 4.4 | 2.73 | 3.68 | 3.38 | 3.69 | 3.99 | 3.73 | 3.43 | 3.88 | 3.33 | 3.31 | 3.29 | 2.93 | |
Tue | 4.35 | 4.2 | 3.97 | 4.01 | 4.15 | 4.28 | 3.39 | 3.68 | 4.14 | 3.53 | 3.33 | 3.27 | 3.2 | |
Wed | 6.59 | 4.4 | 2.31 | 3.31/4.04 | 4.14 | 3.93 | 3.85 | 3.92 | 3.46 | 3.77 | 3.82 | 3.47 | 2.84 | 3.53 |
Thu | 4.26 | 5.06 | 2.79 | 3.9 | 3.94 | 3.74 | 3.5 | 3.87 | 3.72 | 3.93 | 3.5 | 3.91 | 3.6 | 3.56 |
Fri | 3.5 | 4.3 | 3.27 | 3.99 | 3.71 | 4.26 | 4.94 | 4.26 | 4.57 | 3.86 | 3.81 | 4.21 | 3.96 | 5.42 |
5.02 | 4.89 | 3.34 | 4.09 | 3.9 | 4.59 | 5.99 | 4.29 | 5.28 | 3.78 | 4.04 | 4.3 | 3.85 | 5.6 | |
Weekly average | 4.6 | 3.07 | 3.79 | 3.81 | 3.83 | 4.32 | 3.89 | 3.94 | 3.88 | 3.65 | 3.69 | 3.48 | 3.86 | |
Running average | 4.6 | 4 | 3.82 | 3.82 | 3.82 | 3.90 | 3.90 | 3.91 | 3.90 | 3.89 | 3.86 | 3.83 | 3.83 | |
Series average | 3.83 |
Nine days into the series, Channel 4 was criticised for deciding to air the word "nigger" on their daily highlights show. [27] After the criticism they received for not handling the Celebrity Big Brother racism allegations properly back in January, they were quick to intervene after Emily used the word in conversation with Charley. On the other hand, Charley and Nicky subsequently used the same contentious word several times, in reference to Emily's use. No action was seen to be taken against them. [28] After Emily's disqualification from the competition was announced, 922 viewers complained to Ofcom, the British television regulator, believing that it was unfair. [29] Another 270 people expressed dissatisfaction with Channel 4's decision to air the word "nigger" uncensored. [29] Parr was invited on BBLB, which also caused disturbances, but postponed her appearance. The press and Dermot presumed she postponed due to the controversy, but as she revealed in her BBLB interview, it was not.
Furthermore, on Day 40, Channel 4 confirmed that Charley had been called to the Diary Room and reprimanded after using the word "nigger" twice on one night. This was not broadcast on the nightly highlights programme or the live feed, further inflaming rumours about favouritism towards Charley. A Big Brother spokesperson claimed "Charley used the N-word as a black woman to refer to another black person. We judged her use of the term different from Emily's. But Big Brother called her to the Diary Room to remind her that this word could cause offence." [30] [31]
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Celebrity Big Brother 2011, also known as Celebrity Big Brother 8, was the eighth series of the British reality television series Celebrity Big Brother. It was the first series of Celebrity Big Brother to air on Channel 5, and the first celebrity series not to air in January since Celebrity Big Brother 2, which was broadcast in November 2002. The series launched on 18 August 2011, and ended after 22 days on 8 September 2011, making it the shortest Channel 5 series. It was followed by the twelfth regular series, which launched the following night after the final. Davina McCall did not return to host the main show, and was replaced by former winner Brian Dowling. Emma Willis presented the spin-off show Big Brother's Bit on the Side, alongside Jamie East and Alice Levine. Marcus Bentley returned as commentator for the live shows and highlights whilst also providing voice over for viewer competitions.
Big Brother 2011, also known as Big Brother 12, was the twelfth series of the British reality television series Big Brother and the first not to be broadcast on Channel 4. It was broadcast on Channel 5 for the first time since the show's transfer from Channel 4. It launched on 9 September 2011 with an hour and a half-long special launch show, the day after the final of Celebrity Big Brother 8. It was hosted by Brian Dowling, the winner of Big Brother 2 and Ultimate Big Brother. This was the first presenter change since the departure of Davina McCall in September 2010. The series ran for 64 days, ending on 11 November 2011 when the winner, Aaron Allard-Morgan, won half of the £100,000 prize fund, with the remainder split between the five finalists. The runner up was Jay McKray.
Big Brother 2012, also known as Big Brother 13, was the thirteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, and the second series to broadcast on Channel 5. The series premiered with a live launch on 5 June 2012 and ran for 70 days, concluding on 13 August 2012. The series was originally planned to run for thirteen weeks, but was cut back to ten weeks in order to accommodate Celebrity Big Brother 10. The series was won by Luke Anderson, who won half of the £100,000 prize fund, with the remainder taken by Conor McIntyre as part of the White Room twist. Anderson is the second transgender contestant to win the show, the first being Nadia Almada who won the show back in 2004. The runner-up was Adam Kelly. The series was announced in April 2011 when Channel 5 signed a two-year contract to air the show. With Big Brother 12 having been broadcast in autumn 2011, this is the first series to air in the show's regular summer period on Channel 5 since it acquired the show from Channel 4 in 2011.
Big Brother 2013, also known as Big Brother 14 and Big Brother: Secrets and Lies, was the fourteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It launched on 13 June 2013 on Channel 5 and 5*, and lasted for 68 days, ending on 19 August 2013. It was part of a new two-year contract with Endemol, which secured the show until 2014. It was the third regular series to air on Channel 5 and the seventh series of Big Brother to air on the channel since they acquired the show. The series was won by 23-year-old Sam Evans from Llanelli. He won the full £100,000 prize fund, making him the first winner since 2010 to do so.
Big Brother 2014, also known as Big Brother 15 and Big Brother: Power Trip, was the fifteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, hosted by Emma Willis and narrated by Marcus Bentley. It began on 5 June 2014 on Channel 5 and lasted for 72 days ending on 15 August 2014, making it the longest series to air on Channel 5. It was the fourth regular series and the tenth series of Big Brother overall to air on the channel. The series was officially confirmed on 3 April 2012 when Channel 5 renewed the show until 2014. It was therefore the final regular series to be included under the then contract.
Big Brother 2015, also known as Big Brother 16 and Big Brother: Timebomb, was the sixteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, hosted by Emma Willis and narrated by Marcus Bentley. The series launched on Channel 5 in the United Kingdom and TV3 in the Republic of Ireland on 12 May 2015 and ended on 16 July 2015, a week earlier than planned. This was the earliest launch of a Big Brother series since the show's inception in 2000. It is the fifth regular series and the thirteenth series of Big Brother overall to air on Channel 5, and is the first regular series to air in May since Big Brother 8 in 2007. It is also the first series to air in Ireland since its move to Channel 5 in 2011. On 2 February 2015, it was revealed that Willis had stepped down as a host on the show's spin-off series Big Brother's Bit on the Side, though Rylan Clark will continue.
Big Brother 2016, also known as Big Brother 17, is the seventeenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, hosted by Emma Willis and narrated by Marcus Bentley. The series launched on 7 June 2016 on Channel 5 in the United Kingdom and TV3 in Ireland.
Big Brother 2017, also known as Big Brother 18 and The United Kingdom of Big Brother, was the eighteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, hosted by Emma Willis and narrated by Marcus Bentley. The series launched on 5 June 2017 on Channel 5, and ended after 54 days on 28 July 2017. Rylan Clark-Neal continues to present the spin-off show Big Brother's Bit on the Side. The series, along with its spin-off, continues to air on 3e in Ireland, as part of a three-year deal between the Irish broadcaster and Endemol Shine Group. It is the seventh regular series and the nineteenth series of Big Brother in total to air on Channel 5 to date. The series received a 1.24 million average.
Thousands of Big Brother hopefuls turned up to Glasgow's SECC at the weekend having travelled from all corners of Scotland to audition for the show. These auditions took place at the same time celebrity big brother was shown.
Meanwhile the proof of the failing interest in the "ordinary" Big Brother series was shown when only 300 turned up at Glasgow's SECC.
The eye was once again designed by Daniel Eatock who said his brief was to "embrace all colours within the spectrum, opposites, complimentaries (sic) and all shades in-between." He described his creation as "Centrifugal Inter-locking RGB Rainbow Test Card" and revealed that "the colours are very specific to the TV test cards that used to be broadcast to enable television cameras and receivers to be adjusted to show the picture correctly."