Big Brother | |
---|---|
Series 10 | |
Presented by | Davina McCall |
No. of days | 93 |
No. of housemates | 22 |
Winner | Sophie Reade |
Runner-up | Siavash Sabbaghpour |
Companion shows | |
No. of episodes | 108 |
Release | |
Original network | Channel 4 |
Original release | 4 June – 4 September 2009 |
Series chronology |
Big Brother 2009, also known as Big Brother 10, was the tenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother . The show followed a total of twenty-two contestants, 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 evicted by a public vote. The last remaining housemate, Sophie Reade, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £71,320.
The series launched on Channel 4 on 4 June 2009 and ended on 4 September 2009, lasting 93 days – the joint-second longest British edition of Big Brother to date (together with the seventh and ninth series, and one day shorter than the eighth series). Davina McCall returned as presenter for her tenth consecutive year. Sixteen housemates entered on launch night, with an additional six being introduced in later weeks.
Big Brother 10 was watched by an average of 2.5 million viewers. It was the lowest rated series of the show since its inception, becoming the first series to draw an average of less than 3 million, and remains the lowest rated series of Big Brother to be broadcast on Channel 4. During the series, Channel 4 announced that it would not be renewing its contract to show the series with Endemol once it expired in 2010, meaning that the subsequent eleventh series would be the last to be broadcast on Channel 4.
Big Brother 10 was produced by Brighter Pictures, a division of Endemol. [1] This series of the programme had been confirmed since 2006 as part of a £180 million contract between Endemol and Channel 4. [2] Phil Edgar-Jones was the creative director of the series whilst Sharon Powers was the executive producer. [3] [4] Open auditions for the programme, which were confirmed during the final of Celebrity Big Brother 6 , began on 3 January 2009 in Edinburgh and ended on 7 February in Manchester. [5] Internet auditioning via YouTube, which saw 2,600 apply, ended on 3 February 2009. [1] [6] Auditionees were subjected to three interviews with various producers, additional meetings with a psychologist and a psychiatrist and a final "talk of doom", in which they were warned about the negative impact that appearing on Big Brother could have on their lives. [3] In the weeks preceding the series, the selected housemates were put into "hiding" with no access to the outside world. [4] Housemates were offered aftercare from the production team for up to six months after they left the programme. [3]
The programme's logo, the Big Brother Eye, is based on a black, purple and blue thumbprint and was released on 11 May. [7] It was designed by Daniel Eatock. [8] From 19 May, Channel 4 began uploading teaser clips to the official Big Brother UK YouTube channel; these were also aired during commercial breaks on Channel 4 and its related channels. [9] The series was sponsored by Lucozade Energy and the promotional break bumpers were created by M&C Saatchi and are based upon a 'little brother versus big brother' scenario. [10] The programme began on 4 June, with a 95-minute special programme which introduced the initial 16 participants, and was broadcast on Channel 4 and E4 over a period of 93 days, concluding with the final on 4 September. [1] [11] [12]
The main television coverage of Big Brother 10 was screened using daily highlights programmes, narrated by Marcus Bentley. [13] These episodes summarised the events of the previous day in the House. Alongside these highlights shows were spin-off programmes, Big Brother's Big Mouth and Big Brother's Little Brother , that commented on fandom, cultural reaction to the events within the House and included interviews with celebrities, former housemates and family and friends of housemates. On Fridays, a live eviction programme was hosted by Davina McCall in which the evicted contestant left the house and received an interview from McCall and two guests. For 2009, BBLB returned with George Lamb presenting five weekday evening programmes and one Sunday edition per week. Big Mouth was also fronted by McCall and was broadcast on E4 on Friday nights for an hour after the main eviction programme. [14]
In a change to normal eviction interviews this series saw McCall and the evictee on a panel joined by two celebrity fans or psychologists, joining them were:
The panel was not used for the finale, however, Judi James made a recorded segment about each finalist. The panel format was scrapped for the following celebrity and regular series, where McCall interviewed the evictee in the traditional format.
As with each series since Big Brother 2002 , the programme was filmed at Elstree Studios in Borehamwood, Hertfordshire. [11] A total of 27 editing suites, manned by over 300 members of staff, were situated in the "George Lucas Stage" to produce the programme. [11] In the 18 May issue of Star magazine, aerial photographs of the House were published, showing the garden under construction. [15] Official pictures of the House interior were released by Channel 4 on 1 June, showing the entrance stairway, living room and garden. [16] The entrance stairway had images of insects on its walls whilst the garden and living room had a science fiction theme; the former included a bus stop as the designated smoking area. [17] On 3 June, Metro published an image of the Diary Room, which has a multicoloured chair and wall pattern. [18] There was also a shipping container-based bathroom, a sitting room with red sofas, a wood panelled kitched with purple, black and white fittings and a bedroom with splats of paint covering the walls. [12] The house contained 44 cameras, 75 two-way mirrors and 57 fixed microphones, as well as individual microphones for each housemate. [11]
The format remained largely unchanged from previous series. Housemates were incarcerated in the Big Brother House with no contact to and from the outside world. Each week, the housemates took part in a compulsory task that determined the amount of money they were allocated to spend on their shopping; if they passed, they received a luxury budget and they were allocated a basic budget if they failed. Housemates were instructed to nominate two fellow housemates for eviction each week. This compulsory vote was conducted in the privacy of the Diary Room and housemates were not allowed to discuss the nomination process or influence the nominations of others. On Day 68, Big Brother changed the rules to allow housemates to discuss nominations until further notice. The two or more housemates who gathered the most nominations per week faced a public vote and the housemate receiving the most votes was evicted from the House on the Friday and interviewed by Davina McCall. Housemates could voluntarily leave the House at any time and those who broke the rules could have been ejected by Big Brother. [19] [20]
In a change from previous series, Channel 4 announced that it would no longer donate any of its income from the premium-rate telephone lines, by which viewers vote for whom they would like to see evicted or win the programme, to charitable organisations. [21] The broadcaster said that the current economic downturn is to blame for this decision and that the change would bring Big Brother into line with other programmes of its kind, such as The X Factor and Strictly Come Dancing . [21] The format of the live eviction interview programme was altered for this series. [22] Unlike previous series in which McCall interviewed evicted housemates by herself, she was instead joined by two guest panellists to "interrogate" the evictee. [23] Panellists included former housemates, journalists, psychologists, and fans of the programme. [23] A new rule was added to the programme at the start of the series; "fake romances" were not permitted. [24]
Big Brother 10 saw 22 contestants competing to win. Sixteen participants entered the House on Day 1 and an additional five housemates entered the House on Day 44, followed by one other on Day 56. [25]
Name | Age on entry | Hometown | Day entered | Day exited | Result | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sophie "Dogface" Reade | 20 | Nantwich, Cheshire | 1 | 93 | Winner | [26] |
Siavash Sabbaghpour | 23 | London (originally from Iran) | 1 | 93 | Runner-up | [26] |
David Ramsden | 28 | Dewsbury | 44 | 93 | 3rd Place | [27] |
Charlie Drummond | 22 | Newcastle | 1 | 93 | 4th Place | [26] |
Rodrigo Lopes | 23 | Leeds (originally from Brazil) | 1 | 93 | 5th Place | [28] |
Lisa Wallace | 41 | Birmingham | 1 | 90 | Evicted | [26] |
Marcus Akin | 35 | London | 1 | 86 | Evicted | [26] |
Rebecca "Bea" Hamill | 24 | Bristol | 44 | 79 | Evicted | [29] |
Freddie "Halfwit" Fisher | 23 | Market Drayton | 1 | 72 | Evicted | [26] |
Hira Habibshah | 25 | Dublin (originally from Pakistan) | 44 | 65 | Evicted | [30] |
Isaac Stout | 23 | Cleveland, United States | 56 | 58 | Walked | [31] |
Nóirín Kelly | 25 | Dublin | 1 | 58 | Evicted | [26] |
Tom Oliver | 27 | Northampton | 44 | 53 | Walked | [32] |
Kenneth Tong | 24 | Edinburgh (originally from Hong Kong) | 44 | 50 | Walked | [33] |
Karly Ashworth | 21 | Fife | 1 | 44 | Evicted | [26] |
Kris Donnelly | 24 | Shrewsbury | 1 | 37 | Evicted | [26] |
Sree Dasari | 25 | Hatfield (originally from India) | 1 | 30 | Evicted | [34] |
Angel McKenzie | 35 | London (originally from the Russian Federation) | 1 | 23 | Evicted | [26] |
Cairon Austin-Hill | 18 | London (originally from the United States) | 1 | 16 | Evicted | [26] |
Sophia Brown | 26 | London | 1 | 9 | Evicted | [26] |
Saffia Corden | 27 | Nottingham | 1 | 8 | Walked | [26] |
Beinazir Lasharie | 28 | London (originally from Pakistan) | 1 | 4 | Evicted | [26] |
Housemate | Day | Reason | Method |
---|---|---|---|
Saffia Corden | 8 | She had altercations with Sophia Brown and misses her two children. | Diary Room |
Kenneth Tong | 50 | Unspecified reason. | Garden Wall with the help of Marcus Akin |
Tom Oliver | 53 | Found the experience boring. | Diary Room |
Issac Stout | 58 | He left after his ex-girlfriend Nóirín Kelly was evicted. | Diary Room |
Week 1 | Entrances |
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Week 5 | ||
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Week 9 | ||
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Week 10 | ||
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Week 11 | ||
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Week 12 | ||
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Week 13 | ||
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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 | Nominations received | ||||
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Day 4 | Day 6 | Day 88 | Final | ||||||||||||||
Sophie Dogface | Housemate | Charlie, Sree | Halfwit, Marcus | Angel, Halfwit | Halfwit, Marcus | Halfwit, Marcus | Marcus, Nóirín | Marcus | Hira, Marcus | Halfwit | Marcus, Halfwit | Rodrigo, Bea | David, Marcus | Refused | Winner (Day 93) | 6 | |
Siavash | Non- Housemate | Charlie, Halfwit | Charlie, Lisa | Angel, Sree | Sree, Kris | Charlie, Lisa | Nóirín, Karly | Charlie, Lisa | Hira, Lisa | Refused | Bea, David | Bea, Sophie | Charlie, Sophie | Refused | Runner-up (Day 93) | 20 | |
David | Not in House | Failed mission | Nóirín, Marcus | Bea | Halfwit, Marcus | Siavash, Marcus | Siavash, Marcus | Sophie | Third place (Day 93) | 14 | |||||||
Charlie | Housemate | Sophia, Halfwit | Halfwit, Marcus | Banned | Halfwit, Siavash | Marcus, Rodrigo | Marcus, Nóirín | Halfwit, Siavash | Nóirín, Siavash | Halfwit | Halfwit, Marcus | Siavash, Marcus | Siavash, Marcus | Refused | Fourth place (Day 93) | 10 | |
Rodrigo | Housemate | Cairon, Siavash | Cairon, Halfwit | Halfwit, Sree | Sree, Halfwit | Marcus, Halfwit | Lisa, Karly | Nóirín, Marcus | Nóirín, Marcus | Bea | Halfwit, Marcus | Bea, David | Siavash, Marcus | Lisa, David | Fifth place (Day 93) | 5 | |
Lisa | Housemate | Halfwit, Karly | Marcus, Halfwit | Angel, Halfwit | Marcus, Halfwit | Marcus, Halfwit | Nóirín, Marcus | Halfwit, Nóirín | Nóirín, Bea | Marcus | Halfwit, Marcus | Bea, Marcus | Siavash, Marcus | Rodrigo | Evicted (Day 90) | 26 | |
Marcus | Non- Housemate | Lisa, Sree | Lisa, Halfwit | Sree, Lisa | Sree, Lisa | Lisa, Halfwit | Lisa, Karly | Lisa, Charlie | Hira, Nóirín | David | David, Bea | David, Bea | David, Sophie | Evicted (Day 86) | 46 | ||
Bea | Not in House | Failed mission | David, Lisa | Lisa | Marcus, David | Rodrigo, David | Evicted (Day 79) | 12 | |||||||||
Freddie Halfwit | Housemate | Sree, Lisa | Sree, Lisa | Kris, Sree | Sree, Lisa | Nóirín, Lisa | Lisa, Karly | Charlie, Lisa | Charlie, Lisa | David | Marcus, David | Evicted (Day 72) | 45 | ||||
Hira | Not in House | Failed mission | Marcus, Siavash | Marcus | Evicted (Day 65) | 3 | |||||||||||
Isaac | Not in House | Walked (Day 58) | N/A | ||||||||||||||
Nóirín | Housemate | Halfwit, Sophia | Halfwit, Cairon | Angel, Halfwit | Halfwit, Sree | Halfwit, Siavash | Karly, Lisa | Rodrigo, Lisa | Marcus, Lisa | Evicted (Day 58) | 15 | ||||||
Tom | Not in House | Failed mission | Walked (Day 53) | N/A | |||||||||||||
Kenneth | Not in House | Failed mission | Walked (Day 50) | N/A | |||||||||||||
Karly | Housemate | Halfwit, Marcus | Halfwit, Angel | Angel, Halfwit | Halfwit, Marcus | Halfwit, Marcus | Nóirín, Marcus | Evicted (Day 44) | 6 | ||||||||
Kris | Housemate | Halfwit, Sophia | Halfwit, Angel | Angel, Halfwit | Halfwit, Siavash | Halfwit, Siavash | Evicted (Day 37) | 2 | |||||||||
Sree | Non- Housemate | Sophia, Marcus | Cairon, Halfwit | Halfwit, Siavash | Marcus, Nóirín | Evicted (Day 30) | 16 | ||||||||||
Angel | Non- Housemate | Dogface, Sophia | Cairon, Siavash | Sree, Siavash | Evicted (Day 23) | 9 | |||||||||||
Cairon | Housemate | Sree, Charlie | Angel, Sree | Evicted (Day 16) | 5 | ||||||||||||
Sophia | Non- Housemate | Saffia, Nóirín | Evicted (Day 9) | 6 | |||||||||||||
Saffia | Housemate | Sophia, Marcus | Walked (Day 8) | 1 | |||||||||||||
Beinazir | Non- Housemate | Evicted (Day 4) | N/A | ||||||||||||||
Nomination note | 1 | none | 2 | none | 3 | 4 | 5 | none | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | |||
Against public vote | Angel, Beinazir, Marcus, Siavash, Sophia, Sree | Halfwit, Sophia | Cairon, Halfwit | Angel, Halfwit | Halfwit, Sree | Charlie, Dogface, Halfwit, Kris, Marcus | Dogface, Karly, Nóirín, Siavash | Bea, Charlie, David, Dogface, Halfwit, Hira, Marcus, Nóirín, Siavash, Tom | Marcus, Nóirín | Bea, Charlie, David, Dogface, Halfwit, Hira, Lisa, Marcus, Rodrigo, Siavash | Halfwit, Marcus | Bea, David, Marcus | Marcus, Siavash | Charlie, David, Lisa, Rodrigo, Siavash, Sophie | Charlie, David, Rodrigo, Siavash, Sophie | ||
Walked | none | Saffia | none | Kenneth | Tom, Isaac | none | |||||||||||
Evicted | Beinazir 6.8% to be a housemate | Sophia 91.2% to evict | Cairon 73.2% to evict | Angel 81.0% to evict | Sree 85.0% to evict | Kris 63.0% to evict | Karly 50.4% to evict | Eviction cancelled | Nóirín 60.0% to evict | Hira 5.7% to save | Freddie 53.6% to evict | Bea 88.2% to evict | Marcus 64.0% to evict | Lisa 68.6% to evict | Rodrigo 11.0% (out of 5) | Charlie 13.2% (out of 5) | |
David 19.0% (out of 3) | Siavash 25.6% (out of 2) | ||||||||||||||||
Sophie 74.4% to win | |||||||||||||||||
Source | [61] [62] | [51] [63] | [64] | [65] | [66] [67] | [68] | [69] [70] | [71] | [72] | [12] [73] [74] [75] |
Three special, one-off programmes aired on E4 before the launch to commemorate ten years of the programme. The first of which, entitled Jade: As Seen On TV aired on 26 May and commented on the life of Big Brother 2002 contestant Jade Goody and the infamy that surrounded her. [76] The most successful Big Brother housemate worldwide, Goody died of cervical cancer two months before the programme aired. [76] The programme was watched by 305,000 people; 1.8% of the TV audience. [77]
Big Brother's Big Quiz, hosted by Davina McCall, aired on 29 May and featured celebrity team captains singer Jamelia, TV presenter and Celebrity Big Brother winner Ulrika Jonsson and comedians Danny Wallace and Jack Whitehall. [78] It also featured former Big Brother housemates such as Craig Phillips and Sam and Amanda Marchant. [78]
Big Brother: A Decade in the Headlines was transmitted on 30 May and looked back at the social, political and cultural changes that Big Brother had made to society since it began. [79] The documentary was hosted by Grace Dent and featured participation from Mark Frith, Carole Malone, Oona King, Peter Tatchell, Krishnan Guru-Murthy and Ian Hyland. [79] [80] [81]
Spin-off programme Big Brother's Little Brother featured new competitions and features to mark the event. The first, The George Lamb Quiz of the Decade, was launched on 7 June. The participants had to show their knowledge of the programme by participating in a quiz relating to every series of Big Brother. [82] Another competition was established as part of the Greek-themed task in week eight. Here, male Big Brother's Little Brother viewers were asked to apply to become a date for Bea Hammill, who was playing the role of Aphrodite. [83] The contestant chosen was Robin from Bristol. [84] The programme also offered a viewer the chance to become Big Brother and talk to the housemates via the Diary Room on the final day of the programme; this was won by Simon "Jobby" Jobson, a 22-year-old DJ from Alnwick, Northumberland. [85] Former housemates, such as Nadia Almada and Rachel Rice, also appeared as guests to mark the occasion. [86]
The shopping task for week seven saw housemates from the previous nine series temporarily return, as current housemates competed against them in a series of "classic" tasks. [87] Former housemates were not paid; a donation was made to Jade Goody's trust fund instead. [87] Phillips was drafted in after "Nasty" Nick Bateman withdrew. [87] Later that day, Lisa competed in a task to build a sugar cube tower alongside Dean O'Loughlin of series two. [88] Day 41 saw Alex Sibley, Sophie Pritchard and Lee Davey from the programme's third edition compete in a re-creation of the egg and spoon race task with Rodrigo trying to predict the outcome. [89] Later that day, Federico Martone from series four participated in a gymkhana competition against Nóirín using fake horses and Dogface and Michelle Bass both sang Pie Jesu , which featured in the wedding task of series five, with viewers deciding which performance was the best. [90] [91] On Day 42, Craig Coates and Makosi Musambasi challenged Siavash to the box task from the sixth series and series seven's Nikki Grahame reenacted her silent disco task alongside Karly. [92] The task drew to a close on Day 43 when Rex Newmark from the previous series returned to participate in the electric shock task with Marcus, in which the rest of housemates were subjected to shocks. [93] The housemates failed to pass the required minimum of seven of the nine challenges and therefore failed the overall task. [94]
In comparison with other contemporary reality television programmes and previous editions of Big Brother, this series has received lower viewing figures and less press coverage. [95] [96] One Bookmaker reported the series had attracted the lowest amount of bets placed in a single day for any reality programme in the last decade. [97] Four weeks before the programme began, former chat show presenter Michael Parkinson was critical of the programme; "I object to the exploitation of the underclass in shows like Big Brother. It is the modern version of Bedlam, where you pay to see the poor benighted people making asses of themselves". [98] Charlie Brooker of The Guardian said that the series contained forgettable participants and that the producers were alienating the viewers with confusing tasks that seemed to take place "every four minutes". [99] [100] Simmy Richman of The Independent wrote that the programme had become predictable after ten editions and that it had a "here-we-go-again feel". [101] They also complained that the format had become clichéd and the housemates stereotypical, and they criticised the producers for enrolling participants who were using the programme as "a springboard to a Heat magazine cover and temporary free entry to dodgy nightclubs". [101] Maggie Brown, writing in her book A Licence to be Different — The Story of Channel 4, believed that the programme limited its broadcaster as the cost to produce the programme were not justified by the number of viewers it attracted. [102] Mark Lawson, also writing in The Guardian, suggested that the lack of viewers linked with a tired format and minimal press coverage, claiming that the newspapers had become preoccupied with stories such as the outbreak of swine flu, death of Michael Jackson and MPs' expenses scandal. [103] Lawson also believed that the death of Big Brother 2002 participant Jade Goody prior to the launch of Big Brother 2009 contributed to the low viewing figures. [103] Journalist James Donaghy branded the programme a "sorry atrocity" and celebrity gossip blogger Darryn Lyons said that the series had been "massively disappointing", pinpointing Isaac Stout's entrance as a "desperate stunt" to attract viewers. [104] [105] Despite returning to the House to participate in a task, former housemate Dean O'Loughlin has also been critical of this series, describing it as "way too superficial". [106]
However, the series has also received praise from various parties. For example, Gerard Gilbert of The Independent argued that in comparison to contemporary TV dramas, Big Brother provides much more entertainment, psychological depth and social impact. [107] Gilbert also commented that the storylines of the programme were equal to that of the works of Samuel Beckett. [107] Craig Phillips, the winner of the first series of Big Brother, and the programme's presenter Davina McCall have responded to the criticisms of the programme's decreasing viewing figures, respectively arguing that the programme achieves low numbers due to the different way in which viewers can watch the programme and that the programme is achieving well considering its timeslot and broadcaster. [108] [109] Brian Dowling, who won the second edition of Big Brother in 2001, defended both the programme and the reality genre as a whole, telling BBC Breakfast that producers were simply providing viewers what they want, such as extreme participants. [110] The Guardian's Heidi Stephens also complimented the series by claiming that it has "seen the emergence of some truly fascinating personalities" and welcomed the return to the basic format of the programme. [111] Stephens went on to compare the storylines and characters of the programme with that of a John Hughes film. [111] Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace, who came third in the seventh series, and Big Brother 2003 winner Cameron Stout praised the selection of housemates, both claiming that the quality of the programme had improved on previous years. [112] [113] Entertainment website Digital Spy was also complimentary of the series, naming Sophie "Dogface" Reade and Kris Donnelly as two of the sexiest housemates of the past ten years and Angel McKenzie as one of the most outrageous. [114] [115] [116] Towards the end of the programme's airing, Neil Boom of The Independent argued that the series is "one of the best ever" despite a decline in the number of viewers. He claimed that there was still high interest on internet forums and that the lower television ratings might be due to the removal of the 24-hour live feed. He praised the selection of housemates and highlighted Siavash, Freddie and Marcus as particular examples. [117] Following the end of the series, Davina McCall also considered Big Brother 10 to be "Big Brother at its best." [118]
These viewing figures are taken from BARB.
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 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday | 2.06 | 1.62 | 1.66 | 1.43 | 1.57 | 1.52 | 1.75 | 1.67 | 1.83 | 1.59 | 1.8 | 1.73 | 1.58 | |
Sunday | 2.03 | 2.18 | 2.14 | 1.84 | 2.01 | 1.7 | 2.28 | 2.19 | 2.06 | 2.13 | 2.1 | 2.01 | 1.82 | |
Monday | 2.16 | 2.13 | 2.12 | 1.63 | 2.11 | 2.3 | 2.28 | 2.23 | 2.24 | 2.36 | 2.24 | 2.18 | 2.18 | |
Tuesday | 2.27 | 2.26 | 2.02 | 2.08 | 1.92 | 2.42 | 2.47 | 2.38 | 2.25 | 2.2 | 2.34 | 2.08 | 2.69 | |
2.32 | ||||||||||||||
Wednesday | 2.44 | 2.19 | 1.95 | 2.06 | 2.18 | 2.16 | 2.22 | 2.09 | 2.02 | 1.97 | 2.17 | 2.33 | 2.07 | |
2.01 | ||||||||||||||
Thursday | 5.15 | 2.18 | 2.11 | 1.99 | 1.91 | 2.12 | 2.35 | 2.31 | 2.45 | 2.15 | 2.64 | 2.33 | 2.36 | 2.14 |
Friday | 3 | 2.9 | 2.38 | 2.12 | 2.51 | 2.24 | 2.9 | 2.29 | 2.73 | 2.67 | 2.61 | 2.7 | 2.49 | 2.88 |
2.14 | 2.31 | 1.93 | 2.46 | 2.5 | 2.97 | 2.12 | 2.75 | 2.64 | 2.58 | 2.75 | 2.55 | 3.23 | ||
Weekly average | 2.63 | 2.15 | 1.99 | 1.99 | 2.08 | 2.29 | 2.22 | 2.31 | 2.23 | 2.26 | 2.3 | 2.22 | 2.32 | |
Running average | 2.63 | 2.42 | 2.28 | 2.21 | 2.19 | 2.2 | 2.2 | 2.22 | 2.22 | 2.18 | 2.18 | 2.23 | 2.24 | |
Series average | 2.24 |
Big Brother 2004, also known as Big Brother 5, was the fifth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. The show followed thirteen 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, Nádia Almada, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £63,500.
Big Brother 2005, also known as Big Brother 6, was the sixth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. The show followed sixteen contestants, known as housemates, who were isolated from the outside world for an extended period in a custom-built House. One or more housemates were evicted by a public vote each week. The last remaining housemate, Anthony Hutton, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £50,000. Runner-up Eugene Sully also won the same amount during a task two days before the final.
Big Brother 2006, also known as Big Brother 7, was the seventh series of the British reality television series Big Brother. The show followed a total of twenty-two 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, Pete Bennett, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £100,000.
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.
Big Brother 2008, also known as Big Brother 9, was the ninth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. The show followed twenty-one 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, Rachel Rice, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £100,000.
Sophie Victoria Reade is an English model and pornographic actress, best known for winning the tenth series of Big Brother in 2009. She entered the adult film industry in 2023, and began appearing in scenes for Brazzers.
Big Brother 2010, also known as Big Brother 11, was the eleventh series of the British reality television series Big Brother, and the final series of the show to be broadcast by Channel 4. The show followed twenty-one 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 evicted by a public vote. The last remaining housemate, Josie Gibson, was declared the winner, winning a cash prize of £100,000 and a place as a Housemate on Ultimate Big Brother, an All Star edition of Big Brother which began immediately after the conclusion of Big Brother 2010
Ultimate Big Brother was the final series of the UK reality television programme Big Brother to air on Channel 4. The series was produced by Remarkable Pictures, a division of Endemol.
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.
Celebrity Big Brother 10 was the tenth series of the British reality television series Celebrity Big Brother. It launched on 15 August 2012, two days after the final of Big Brother 13, and aired on Channel 5 and 5* for 24 days until 7 September 2012. It was the third celebrity series to air on Channel 5 as part of a contract extension of the current two-year contract with Endemol, and the fifth series of Big Brother to air on Channel 5 since they acquired the show. The series was sponsored by hair product brand Schwarzkopf Live Color XXL. It was won by comedian Julian Clary, with television presenter Coleen Nolan as runner-up. First evictee, Jasmine Lennard, later appeared as a guest for a two-day stint on Big Brother 16.
Celebrity Big Brother 12 was the twelfth series of the British reality television series Celebrity Big Brother. It launched on 22 August 2013, three days after the fourteenth regular series final, in two parts. The series ended after 23 days on 13 September 2013, with Charlotte Crosby being voted the winner of the series by the public. It continued to air on Channel 5 as part of a two-year contract with Endemol, which secured the show until 2014. It was the fifth celebrity series to air on Channel 5 and the eighth series of Big Brother to air on the broadcaster overall since they acquired the show.
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.
Celebrity Big Brother 13 was the thirteenth series of the British reality television series Celebrity Big Brother. The series launched on 3 January 2014 on Channel 5 and was originally meant to end after 22 days on 24 January 2014. However, it was extended due to ratings success and instead ended after 27 days on 29 January 2014, making it the longest Channel 5 series of the show and the joint-longest series, along with Celebrity Big Brother 7 in 2010. It is the sixth celebrity series and the ninth series of Big Brother overall to air on the channel. Emma Willis returned to host the series, whilst Rylan Clark returned to present spin-off show Big Brother's Bit on the Side along with Willis.
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.
Celebrity Big Brother 19, also known as Celebrity Big Brother: All-Stars vs. New Stars, was the nineteenth series of the British reality television series Celebrity Big Brother, hosted by Emma Willis and narrated by Marcus Bentley. The series launched on 3 January 2017 and concluded after 32 days on 3 February 2017, making it the joint longest celebrity series to date along with Celebrity Big Brother 17. The series was shown on Channel 5 in the United Kingdom and 3e in Ireland. Rylan Clark-Neal continued to present the spin-off show Celebrity Big Brother's Bit on the Side. It was the twelfth celebrity series and eighteenth series of Big Brother overall to air on Channel 5.
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.