Big Brother (British TV series) series 10

(Redirected from Big Brother 10 (UK))

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.

Big Brother
Series 10
Series ten logo
Presented byDavina McCall
No. of days93
No. of housemates22
WinnerSophie Reade
Runner-upSiavash Sabbaghpour
Companion shows
No. of episodes108
Release
Original networkChannel 4
Original release4 June (2009-06-04) –
4 September 2009 (2009-09-04)
Series chronology
← Previous
Series 9
Next →
Series 11

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.

Production

edit
 
This series was filmed at Elstree Studios.

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]

edit

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]

Broadcasts

edit

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]

Interview panel

edit

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.

House

edit

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]

Format

edit
 
After a housemate was evicted, they were subject to an interview with Davina McCall.

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]

Housemates

edit

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]

Walks

edit
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
  • Angel McKenzie (born 10 June 1973) is a 35-year-old professional boxer and artist from Moscow, Russia.[34][35] She is the adoptive daughter of former British and European light welterweight boxing champion, Clinton McKenzie[36] She became a housemate as the result of a public vote on Day 4. She kept her birthday a secret from her fellow housemates, celebrating it alone in the Diary Room. On Day 21, in a special live nominations show, she was nominated for the first time. On Day 23, became the fourth housemate to be evicted with 81% of the public vote.
  • Rebecca "Bea" Hamill entered the House on Day 44 with four other new housemates. Alongside them she was tasked with ensuring that Nóirín and Halfwit received the most nominations but refused to participate claiming it went against her morals. She was evicted on Day 79, in week twelve just one week before the final.[37]
  • Beinazir Lasharie (born 8 January 1981) is a study support assistant from Pakistan.[34] Her family, after receiving death threats due to their support of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto were given asylum in the United Kingdom when she was a year old.[35] On Day 4, Beinazir did not gain full housemate status by public vote and became the first evictee.[38] There was no crowd present as she left the House and she was escorted from the premises in a red AEC Routemaster bus.[38]
  • Cairon Reon Austin-Hill (born 5 July 1990) is a student and the youngest contestant in this year's Big Brother.[39]
  • Charles Andrew "Charlie" Drummond (born 3 January 1987) is a 22-year-old Jobcentre customer service advisor from Cleadon.[35]
  • David Ramsden (born 2 September 1980) is a clothing recycler from Dewsbury, near Leeds in West Yorkshire. He entered the House on Day 44 with four other new housemates. With them he was tasked with ensuring that Nóirín and Halfwit received the most nominations, but the new housemates failed their task and faced the public vote, though the eviction was ultimately cancelled. On Day 91, David celebrated his 29th birthday, and he received a birthday message from fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, who he claims is his hero. David has also been on UK television show Golden Balls. He finished 3rd
  • Frederick "Freddie/Halfwit" George Fisher,[40] (born 21 June 1985) is an Oxford graduate. On Day 26, Halfwit was nominated for eviction along with Sree, surviving for the fourth consecutive time on Day 30 with 15% of the public vote.[41] Halfwit survived the most consecutive evictions out of anyone in the history of the show, having survived the public vote 5 times in a row and 7 times in total. On Day 72 as a special prize, Halfwit and Dogface legally changed their names back to Freddie and Sophie. On the same day Freddie was evicted from the house over Marcus gaining 53.6% of the public vote to evict.
  • Hira Habibshah entered on Day 44, and was given a secret mission in which she had to brief her fellow new housemates, it involved ensuring that Nóirín and Halfwit were nominated. The task was failed, resulting in her nomination along with the other new housemates. On Day 59, she was named the 'Most Entertaining Housemate' by Big Brother. On Day 65 she became the ninth person to be evicted with 5.65% of the public vote.
  • Isaac Stout was a castmember on MTV's The Real World: Sydney in 2007 where he entered into a relationship with fellow Housemate Nóirín during the series despite his fear of commitment.[42] He ends up walking out of the House after Nóirín is evicted on Day 58.[31]
  • Karly Ashworth (born 14 April 1988) is a part-time glamour model from Fife in Scotland.[34] She was polled as one of FHM's Top High Street Honeys.[34] She became the seventh housemate after being tricked into believing that she had a motorbike ridden over her stomach. On Day 39, Karly was nominated for eviction by her fellow housemates. Karly was evicted on Day 44, the same night as her boyfriend, Kenneth, entered the house as a new housemate.[43]
  • Kenneth Tong entered the house on Day 44, minutes before his girlfriend Karly was evicted. Alongside his fellow new housemates, he had to ensure that both Nóirín and Halfwit were nominated for eviction but the new housemates failed their task so faced the public vote. On Day 50, Kenneth fled the house via the rooftop with Marcus' assistance. As a result, the eviction for week eight was cancelled.[citation needed]
  • Kris Donnelly became the fourth person to be confirmed as a housemate when he was selected by Lisa, who had earned the privilege to choose by answering a ringing phone. On Day 33, Big Brother told Kris to remain silent until 2 a.m. as punishment for discussing nominations or automatically face the public vote. He failed to keep quiet and faced eviction. On Day 37, he was evicted with 63% of the public vote. Kris was voted as the 3rd best looking housemate there's ever been.[44]
  • Lisa Elizabeth Wallace (born 12 February 1968) is the oldest contestant in the series who entered the House with a distinctive pink mohican haircut, which she shaved off during the series.[35] She became the third person to be rewarded with housemate status when she answered a ringing telephone. She was evicted on day 90 in the final eviction of the series with 68.59% to evict.
  • Marcus Akin (born 10 August 1973) was made a housemate as the result of a public vote on Day 4. On Day 29, Marcus was warned about comments he made to fellow housemate Sree, which Marcus hotly denied.[45] On Day 50, he helped Kenneth Tong escape from the Big Brother house. Marcus was the twelfth housemate to be evicted with 64% of the vote on day 86.
  • Nóirín Kelly also appeared on The Real World: Sydney in 2007 as the girlfriend of fellow contestant Isaac Stout.[46] She was granted housemate status when she allowed Rodrigo to shave her eyebrows and draw a moustache and glasses with permanent marker on her face. She had to do this every day until further notice.[47] On Day 58, Nóirín was evicted from the Big Brother house with 60.0% of the public vote. Outside of the house in September 2009 Norin appeared on the front cover of Nuts and 10 pages of the magazine consisted of pictures of her and an interview with her.[48]
  • Rodrigo Lopes (born 1 December 1985) is a Brazilian student living in Leeds. Rodrigo was the twelfth person to enter the house and earned housemate status after convincing Nóirín to allow her eyebrows to be shaved and to draw a moustache and glasses on her face under the order of Big Brother. At the time of Big Brother's filming, she presented and identified as male, but she now identifies as female and is now known as Rebekah Shelton.[49]
  • Saffia May Corden (born 14 October 1981) is a beauty consultant from Hucknall, Nottingham and single mother of two children.[35] She became a housemate for successfully walking barefoot on broken sugar glass, believing it to be real glass. She walked from the House on Day 8.[50]
  • Siavash Sabbaghpour (born 25 April 1986) is an event organiser who left his homeland Iran at an early age to live in London.[35] Siavash was made a housemate as the result of a public vote on Day 4 and finished in second place.
  • Sophia Brown was made a housemate as the result of a public vote on Day 4. On Day 6 Sophia was nominated for eviction by her fellow housemates. On Day 9 she became the second evictee with 91.2% of the public vote.[51] Sophia died on 17 May 2012.[52]
  • Sophie/Dogface Victoria Reade (born 18 May 1989) is a glamour model from Nantwich, Cheshire, has appeared in Hot Shots Calendar and was the winner of the series.[34][53] Reade changed her name by deed poll to Dogface, to become a house-mate during the show's first week. On Day 33 Big Brother told Reade that she had to remain silent until 2 am as punishment for discussing nominations; she failed to keep quiet and therefore faced the public vote.[54] Reade had a romantic relationship with Kris in the House. On Day 39 she and Siavash were punished by Big Brother for talking about nominations, and told they were not allowed to swear before 3 pm; they both failed and faced eviction. On Day 72, as a special prize, Dogface (Reade) legally changed her name back to Sophie.[55] Since Day 88, Sophie was the bookies' favourite to win.[56] She left the house to huge cheers and a lively crowd chanting her name.[57]
  • Sree Dasari (born 14 September 1984) is from India.[34] A students' union president, he was in the United Kingdom studying for a master's degree in International Business at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield. He was made a housemate as the result of a public vote on Day 4. On Day 31, with 85% of the public vote, Sree became the fifth evictee and crowned Best Housemate Award for the season 10.[41] He attempted suicide by slashing his wrists shortly after being evicted.[58]
  • Thomas "Tom" Oliver (born 3 April 1982) entered on Day 44. On Day 53, Tom voluntarily left the Big Brother after 9 days.[59][60]

Weekly summary

edit
Week 1 Entrances
  • On Day 1, Freddie, Lisa, Sophie, Kris, Nóirín, Cairon, Angel, Karly, Marcus, Beinazir, Sophia, Rodrigo, Charlie, Saffia, Sree and Siavash entered the house.
Twists
  • On Day 1, it was revealed that the 16 people in the house were non-housemates and had to earn their housemate status in order to stay in the house. Over the next three days, the non-housemates would face a series of tasks, with those completing it earning housemate status and full access to the house. All non-housemates were to wear a special uniform to designate their status and had to wear it at all times. Any housemate who did not succeed at these tasks would face a public vote on Day 4, with viewers deciding on who would become a housemate; the person with the fewest votes would be unceremoniously evicted.
Tasks
  • Rodrigo had to convince Nóirín to have him shave her eyebrows and apply a curly mustache and glasses on her face with a permanent marker. Nóirín had to reapply this drawing on her face when necessary until further notice. They successfully passed this task and earned housemate status.
  • Lisa answered a ringing phone in the communal area. After gaining housemate status, she then had 15 minutes to select another person to become a housemate. She chose Kris, and he also became a housemate.
  • Charlie and Saffia had to walk barefoot over broken sugar glass, believing it to be real glass. They successfully passed this task and earned housemate status.
  • Karly was tricked in to believing that a motorbike was being ridden over her stomach. She successfully passed this task and earned housemate status.
  • Freddie and Sophie agreed to change their names by deed poll and be legally known as Halfwit and Dogface respectively until further notice. They then earned housemate status.
  • The remaining non-housemates competed in a biscuit dunking competition, where they had to dunk a biscuit into tea for as long as possible without it disintegrating. Cairon dunked his biscuit in his tea for the longest time and earned housemate status.
  • Because Angel, Beinazir, Marcus, Siavash, Sophia and Sree failed to earn housemate status, they all faced the public vote.
Tasks
  • This week's shopping saw Kris negotiate his way through a field of laser beams to retrieve the "Emerald of Hope", with one of his fellow housemates being soaked by a bursting balloon full of gunge whenever he interrupted a beam. He completed the task successfully, earning a luxury budget.
Punishments
  • As punishment for Marcus, Sophia and Sree discussing nominations, Big Brother doubled the price of every item on the shopping list.
Nominations
  • For failing to earn housemate status, Angel, Beinazir, Marcus, Siavash, Sophia and Sree faced the public vote.
  • On Day 6, the housemates nominated for the first time. Halfwit and Sophia received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 4, Beinazir was evicted from the house, receiving 6.8% of the public vote to become a housemate.
  • On Day 8, Saffia walked from the house.
  • On Day 9, Sophia was evicted from the house, receiving 91.2% of the public vote to evict.
Week 2
Tasks
  • This week's shopping task required the housemates to learn and perform the song and dance routine "Me Ol' Bamboo" from the film Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. They passed and won a luxury shopping budget of £5 per person per day.
  • On Day 10, housemates participated in a task where Cairon and Charlie were blindfolded and dressed as a pantomime bull. Guided by Siavash's voice (who was seated in the dining room), they had 2 minutes to enter the task room—which was lined with red and white ceramic plates—and smash at least 10 red plates to win four tokens. Having smashed 19 red plates, the group passed the task.
  • On Day 11, six housemates were transformed into dancing flowers. They had to dance for at least 3 hours, 27 minutes, 8 seconds (of which this time was not made privy to them) to win four tokens for the group. As the dancing flowers danced for 5 hours, 45 minutes, they passed the task.
Nominations
  • On Day 12, the housemates nominated for the second time. Cairon and Halfwit received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 16, Cairon was evicted from the house, receiving 73.2% of the public vote to evict.
Week 3
Tasks
  • On Day 17, Big Brother set the housemates a Russian task, where they had to translate sentences and phrases correctly in Russian to win two tokens. As a native Russian speaker, Angel could help with revision and could also participate in the task. The group passed their task.
  • On Day 18, Big Brother threw a day-long, hippie and summer solstice-themed celebration of Halfwit's 24th birthday. All housemates had to participate in all events of Halfwit's birthday celebrations to Big Brother's satisfaction to win eight tokens for the group. They passed, winning the eight tokens as well as food and drink for a party later that day.
  • This week's shopping task was Tudor-themed, where housemates had to portray historic figures and partake in activities of that time period, like singing a madrigal, and dancing the volta. Housemates failed all tasks involved and won a basic shopping budget for the week.
Twists
  • As part of his birthday celebrations, Big Brother presented Halfwit with the "Gift of Normality," in which he could keep for himself or give to Nóirín or Dogface. Halfwit chose Nóirín, freeing her from the obligation to draw a moustache and glasses on her face every day.
  • As part of the Tudor-themed shopping task, Siavash, playing the part of Henry VIII, was called to ban one housemate from nominating and grant another immunity from eviction. He chose Charlie and Marcus respectively.
Nominations
  • On Day 21, the housemates nominated for the third time. Angel and Halfwit received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 23, Angel was evicted from the house, receiving 81% of the public vote to evict.
Week 4
Tasks
  • On Day 25, housemates competed in an extreme Sports Day task; they were split into two teams and competed in a best-of-five-event match. The team of Nóirín, Sophie, Lisa, Charlie and Rodrigo won themselves a school disco party. Marcus, as referee of the games, was also invited, having correctly predicted who would win the Sports Day. However, as all housemates participated to Big Brother's satisfaction, the group was awarded 3 tokens.
  • This week's shopping task was Italian-themed. Siavash played the role of a fashionista who was required to change his outfit at Big Brother's request and strike a pose whenever Madonna's "Vogue" was played into the House. Karly, Halfwit and Rodrigo had to perform Nessum dorma in the style of the Three Tenors. Sree and Dogface's contribution was to run a 24-hour ice cream delivery service, while Marcus and Nóirín created paintings based on the works of Leonardo da Vinci and Sandro Botticelli. Charlie and Kris played Italian footballers and Lisa had to predict football scores correctly. Housemates passed and won a luxury shopping budget for the week.
Nominations
  • On Day 26, the housemates nominated for the fourth time. Halfwit and Sree received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 30, Sree was evicted from the house, receiving 85% of the public vote to evict.
Week 5
Tasks
  • On Day 31, Rodrigo was given a secret mission to convince one housemate to get on their hands and knees and bark like a dog within 30 minutes. As he successfully convinced Dogface, Rodrigo won a hamper of goodies and one token.
  • On Day 32, housemates competed to see who was the fastest, with a crash test simulator set up in the garden and housemates grouped in teams to compete against each other. The team of Dogface, Halfwit and Kris won a party for themselves, where they had to eat burgers, drink alcohol, and continuous dance for one hour to win tokens for the house. They won five tokens.
  • The housemates had a circus-themed shopping task for this week. Having failed it, they received a basic shopping budget.
Punishments
  • On Day 33, as punishment for discussing nominations, Charlie, Dogface and Kris were told to keep quiet for the rest of the day, or face the public vote. Having failed to keep quiet, they joined Halfwit and Marcus up for eviction.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the fifth time. Halfwit and Marcus received the most nominations and faced the public vote. As a punishment for discussing nominations, Charlie, Dogface and Kris also faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 37, Kris was evicted from the house, receiving 63.0% of the public vote to evict.
Week 6
Tasks
  • For their shopping task, as part of the 10th anniversary celebrations of Big Brother, housemates competed against former housemates in tasks featured in the nine previous civilian series. Housemates failed, and received a basic shopping budget for the week.
Punishments
  • On Day 39, as punishment for discussing nominations the week prior, Dogface and Siavash were told not to swear for five and a half hours or face the public vote. As they both failed to do so, they joined Karly and Nóirín in facing eviction.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the sixth time. Karly and Nóirín received the most nominations and faced the public vote. Due to discussing nominations, Dogface and Siavash also faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 44, Karly was evicted from the house, receiving 50.4% of the public vote to evict.
Week 7
Entrances
  • On Day 44, Bea, David, Hira, Kenneth and Tom entered the house.
Twists
  • Shortly after their entry on Day 44, Big Brother set the new housemates a secret mission to avoid facing eviction next week: to ensure that Halfwit and Nóirín (randomly selected by Hira in the Diary Room) received the most nomination votes. If they failed, they would all face eviction.
Tasks
  • As a conclusion to the 10th anniversary celebrations that took place last week, Big Brother treated the housemates to a party on Day 45.
  • Housemates took part in a Greek-themed shopping task with a twist, which involved learning choreography by Stavros Flatley—a dance duo featured on Britain's Got Talent—running a kebab shop, learning the movements of the Greek presidential guards, and portraying Greek gods. However, playing Zeus, Halfwit was the only housemate aware of the true nature of the shopping task. In each of three challenges he had to ensure, while still keeping the secret, that his chosen champion defeated the appropriate Greek god. As he failed, housemates received a basic shopping budget.
Punishments
  • On Day 50, as punishment for aiding Kenneth in escaping the house through the roof, Big Brother sent Marcus to the jail in the garden.
  • On Day 51, as punishment for discussing nominations, Big Brother sent Tom to jail.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the seventh time. Charlie and Lisa received the most nominations and faced the public vote. However, as Bea, David, Hira, Kenneth and Tom failed their secret mission in ensuring Halfwit and Nóirín received the most nominations, they faced eviction. Furthermore, as punishment for Charlie, Dogface, Marcus, Nóirín and Siavash discussing nominations (as well as Dogface failing to nominate two people for eviction), Big Brother voided all nominations, and all housemates, except for Lisa and Rodrigo, faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 49, Kenneth walked from the house. As a result, the eviction scheduled for the following day was cancelled.
Week 8
Entrances
  • On Day 56, Isaac entered the house.
Tasks
  • On Day 53, housemates took part in a quiz to win items for a party later that day. They also won four tokens, but forfeited them due to Marcus calling Big Brother a wanker and destroying the task props.
  • For the shopping task, the housemates split into two groups, creating human puppets with one housemate providing the head and feet and another providing the arms, and making them dance to music by Girls Aloud and Take That. Visitors to the Big Brother web site decided by voting that the housemates had failed the task.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the eighth time. Marcus and Nóirín received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 52, Tom walked from the house.
  • On Day 57, Nóirín was evicted from the house, receiving 60% of the public vote to evict.
  • On Day 58, Isaac walked from the house.
Week 9
Tasks
  • On Day 59, housemates held a talent competition, and voted on who they thought was most and least entertaining. Hira and Dogface won these awards respectively.
  • The shopping task was based on Lewis Carroll's Victorian children's novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland in which Hira, in the role of Alice, having first been "shrunk" in the Diary Room, spent more than five hours searching for a key buried inside a giant cupcake using only her face.The housemates passed the task and received a luxury shopping budget.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the ninth time. Bea, David and Marcus received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Punishments
  • As punishment for Marcus attempting to influence nominations and for Siavash refusing to nominate, Big Brother voided all nominations this week, and all housemates instead faced the public vote. Housemates were unaware that the public would instead be voting to save, not evict.
Exits
  • On Day 65, Hira was evicted from the house, receiving 5.7% of the public vote to save.
Week 10
Tasks
  • The housemates took part in a "Best of British" shopping task in which they had to bog snorkel, play the bagpipes and convince Rodrigo he had met the Queen, who was in fact the impersonator Janette Charles. Housemates won £240 for the shopping budget. Furthermore, as a reward for passing, housemate received letters from home, and each housemate won a personalized prize. These included: Rodrigo winning a personal letter and teacup from Buckingham Palace; Marcus being given one hour to recreate his housemate profile photo, as well as fan mail which he would reply to with a signed copy of his new profile photo; Charlie receiving 30 minutes of Girls Aloud music in the Diary Room; and Halfwit and Dogface legally changing their names back to Freddie and Sophie respectively.
Twists
  • Following continuous rule breaking by a number of housemates, Big Brother decided to permit the discussion of nominations until further notice.
Punishments
  • On Day 72, as punishment for not wearing her microphone, Big Brother sent Bea to jail.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the tenth time. Halfwit and Marcus received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 72, Freddie was evicted from the house, receiving 53.6% of the public vote to evict.
Week 11
Tasks
  • On Day 73, housemates participated in an alphabet-themed task, where they had name as many words as possible in 60 seconds beginning with a randomly selected letter of the alphabet. Siavash won this task, and was rewarded with a hamper of items beginning with S, the letter he randomly selected.
  • In the House of Horrors-themed shopping task Charlie, in the role of Dr Frankenstein, played a version of the game Operation in which Bea, playing his Monster, received a shock whenever his hand faltered. Housemates passed the overall task and won a luxury shopping budget for the week.
Punishments
  • As punishment for refusing to nominate, Big Brother decided, without telling them, that the first two housemates that Siavash made physical contact with and the first two housemates Sophie named would be their nominations for the week.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the eleventh time. Bea and Marcus received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 79, Bea was evicted from the house, receiving 88.2% of the public vote to evict.
Week 12
Tasks
  • On Day 80, housemates took part in an oil wrestling championship. Siavash won and received a championship belt.
  • On Day 81, housemates took part in a task where they had to brush their teeth for one minute with disgusting food items, like stinky cheese, pureed cat food, and shrimp paste. Housemates won six tokens, but lost out on a collection of their favourite music, due to Sophie failing to complete the task to Big Brother's satisfaction.
  • On Day 82, Sophie took part in a geography quiz, identifying countries of the world on a map. She won music for Rodrigo and Charlie to be played into the house later that day.
  • The housemates participated in a future-related shopping task during week twelve, in which Sophie and Rodrigo learned a robotic dance routine to Daft Punk's song "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger,"Lisa and David left the House with instructions to have photographs taken by members of the public in front of three London landmarks whilst dressed as aliens, Charlie was tested on his knowledge of constellations and Siavash and Marcus had to create an effigy of Big Brother with recycled materials as well as compose and perform an original song. All housemates had to also ensure a light bulb was continuously illuminated by pedalling a stationary bicycle for about seven hours. Housemates passed all aspects of the tasks and won a luxury shopping budget.
  • During the shopping task on Day 83, Big Brother tasked Charlie, Siavash, Marcus, Rodrigo and Sophie to be entertaining, after finding them boring. They then decided to attempt to escape the house. As housemates succeeded in their task, but breached rules to do so, housemates were not given a reward.
  • Housemates were given the chance over the next ten days to win back money to the prize fund.
  • On Day 85, housemates won a £20 cheque after requesting a mystery prize from the weekly shopping list. However, Marcus rejected a £15,000 offer to cut off his ponytail, and the group rejected a £1,500 offer to swim 1,500 lengths of the pool.
  • On Day 85, Siavash accepted an offer of £10,000 towards the prize fund for exchanging all his clothes with an outfit provided by Big Brother, that he had to wear until he left the house, and the amount would then be added to the prize fund. As Siavash finished runner-up and left the house in the outfit given to him by Big Brother, £10,000 was added to the prize fund during the live final show.
  • On Day 86, Rodrigo won £6,000 out of a possible £10,000 towards the prize fund by correctly guessing the regional locations of three animals after listening to a series of sound effects.
Punishments
  • As punishment for refusing to nominate, Big Brother allocated Siavash's nominations to Sophie and Charlie, two housemates randomly chosen to receive votes on behalf of anyone attempting to disrupt the nominations.
  • Whilst Lisa and David were away from the house for their task, the remaining housemates attempted to break out of the house. Big Brother punished them by depleting the prize fund from £100,000 to £0, and let them know they had opportunities to win back the money over the course of the next few days.
Nominations
  • The housemates nominated for the twelfth time. Marcus and Siavash received the most nominations and faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 86, Marcus was evicted from the house, receiving 64% of the vote to evict.
Week 13
Tasks
  • The housemates continued attempting tasks to win back money to the prize fund.
  • On Day 87, housemates took in a "task with no name", where the housemates had four hours to solve several challenges and puzzles in the task room. They were unaware that these were mere diversions. The real task was to leave the room within four hours. They passed and successfully won £10,000 to the prize fund.
  • On Day 88, Big Brother showed the housemates a video compilation of their previous nominations, and set them a quiz on what they had seen in order to add money to the prize fund. The group answered 53 of the 60 questions correctly, gaining £5,300 to the prize fund.
  • On Day 91, Charlie, Rodrigo, Siavash and Sophie were instructed to rank themselves in different categories. David, who was isolated in the diary room, had to answer questions based on their answers. David answered 4 of the 10 questions correctly, gaining £40,000 to the prize fund.
  • On Day 89, the housemates were shown the episode of Big Brother which documented Day 50 in the House and were told to re-enact it over a five-hour period. They passed this task, earning a luxury shopping budget.
  • On Day 90, the housemates had to replicate the music video of "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)", a song by Beyoncé, in order to win a screening of the task they filmed yesterday. The group were successful, with David portraying Knowles, and were therefore rewarded with a screening of the task later that day, after the eviction.
Nominations
  • On Day 88, the housemates nominated for thirteenth and final time. Big Brother warned housemates that anyone refusing to nominate would automatically face the public vote. Charlie, Siavash and Sophie refused to nominated, and Lisa, David and Rodrigo each received one nomination vote. As a result, all housemates faced the public vote.
Exits
  • On Day 90, Lisa was evicted from the house, receiving 68.6% of the public vote to evict.
  • On Day 93, Rodrigo left the house in fifth place, Charlie left the house in fourth place and David left the house in third place. It was then revealed that Sophie was the winner, leaving Siavash as the runner-up.

Nominations table

edit
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
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
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
Marcus,
Bea
Halfwit,
Marcus
Siavash,
Marcus
Siavash,
Marcus
Siavash,
Sophie
Third place
(Day 93)
14
Charlie Housemate Sophia,
Halfwit
Halfwit,
Marcus
Banned Halfwit,
Siavash
Marcus,
Rodrigo
Marcus,
Nóirín
Halfwit,
Siavash
Nóirín,
Siavash
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
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
Bea,
Marcus
Halfwit,
Marcus
Bea,
Marcus
Siavash,
Marcus
Siavash,
Rodrigo
Evicted
(Day 90)
26
Marcus Non-
Housemate
Lisa,
Sree
Lisa,
Halfwit
Sree,
Lisa
Sree,
Lisa
Lisa,
Halfwit
Lisa,
Karly
Lisa,
Charlie
Hira,
Nóirín
Dogface,
David
David,
Bea
David,
Bea
David,
Sophie
Evicted
(Day 86)
46
Bea Not in
House
Failed
mission
David,
Lisa
David,
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
Lisa,
David
Marcus,
David
Evicted
(Day 72)
45
Hira Not in
House
Failed
mission
Marcus,
Siavash
Bea,
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,
Kenneth,
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]

Notes

edit
  • ^Note 1 : As they did not achieve housemate status by successfully completing a challenge, Angel, Beinazir, Marcus, Siavash, Sophia and Sree faced a public vote on Day 4 to decide which five remaining non-housemates would be given housemate status. Beinazir received the fewest votes and was therefore evicted.
  • ^Note 2 : Siavash, playing King Henry VIII in the week's shopping task, was called upon to ban one housemate from nominating and to grant another immunity. He chose Charlie and Marcus respectively.
  • ^Note 3 : As punishment for discussing nominations, Charlie, Dogface and Kris had to remain silent for several hours or they would automatically face eviction. All three failed this task and automatically faced eviction.
  • ^Note 4 : As punishment for discussing nominations, Dogface and Siavash were told not to swear for several hours or they would automatically face eviction. They failed to do so and therefore automatically faced eviction. As this took place before nominations, they were ineligible to be nominated by their fellow housemates.
  • ^Note 5 : As new housemates, Bea, David, Hira, Kenneth and Tom could not nominate and could not be nominated by their fellow housemates. However, they were set a secret mission, in which they had to get Halfwit and Nóirín (who were randomly chosen by Hira) nominated for eviction by the other housemates. Failure meant automatically facing the public vote. Charlie and Lisa received the most nominations, therefore the new housemates failed their mission and faced eviction themselves. As punishment for discussing nominations, Charlie, Dogface (who also failed to nominate the required two people for eviction this week), Halfwit, Marcus, Nóirín and Siavash also faced the public vote and Big Brother voided all nominations. Therefore, Lisa and Rodrigo were the only two housemates not to face eviction this week. The eviction was later cancelled due to Kenneth walking from the house. During the time the lines were available to vote, Kenneth had received the most votes.
  • ^Note 6 : Bea and Marcus received the most nominations, however Big Brother declared the result void due to Marcus attempting to influence his fellow housemates on several occasions and Siavash refusing to nominate. As punishment, all housemates faced the public vote. Unlike previous weeks, this week was a vote to save.
  • ^Note 7 : On Day 72, Big Brother announced to Halfwit and Dogface that they would revert their names back by deed poll to Freddie and Sophie respectively. As he was evicted on the evening of that same day, the table lists Freddie and not Halfwit as the tenth person to be evicted.
  • ^Note 8 : Siavash and Sophie both refused to nominate. As punishment Big Brother decided, without telling them, that the first two housemates with whom Siavash made physical contact and the first two that Sophie named after leaving the Diary Room would be deemed to be their nominations. Siavash touched Bea and Sophie, and Sophie named Rodrigo and Bea. Therefore, Bea received an additional two nominations and Sophie and Rodrigo each received one extra nomination.
  • ^Note 9 : As a warning to anyone considering to disrupt the nominations process this week, Big Brother chose Charlie and Sophie at random and announced to the House that they would each automatically receive one nomination from anyone refusing to nominate.
  • ^Note 10 : Any housemate who refused to nominate this week was automatically put up for eviction.
  • ^Note 11 : There were no nominations after Lisa's eviction on Day 90. The public voted for whom they wanted to win, rather than evict.

Tenth year commemorations

edit

Additional programming

edit

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]

Week seven shopping task

edit

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]

Reception

edit
 
Craig Phillips, winner of the first series of Big Brother, defended this edition of the programme from its critics.

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]

Viewing figures

edit

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

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Parker, Robin (4 June 2009). "Big Brother housemates set for gruelling start". Broadcast. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  2. ^ "C4 secures Big Brother until 2010". BBC. 30 November 2006. Retrieved 13 May 2009.
  3. ^ a b c Holmwood, Leigh (24 August 2009). "The fallout from 15 minutes of fame". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  4. ^ a b McKenzie, Greg (4 June 2009). "What's the Big Brother house like?". BBC. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  5. ^ Davina McCall (23 January 2009). "Celebrity Big Brother 6: Live Final". Celebrity Big Brother. Season 6. Channel 4.
  6. ^ "Big Brother YouTube auditions". Manchester Evening News. 30 December 2008. Retrieved 13 May 2009. [dead link]
  7. ^ Fletcher, Alex (12 May 2009). "Big Brother 10 eye revealed". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 15 May 2009. Retrieved 13 May 2009.
  8. ^ Eatock, Daniel (11 May 2009). "Big Brother 10 Logo". www.eatock.com. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  9. ^ "Big Brother 10 - Get ready.... - Channel 4". Channel 4/YouTube. 19 May 2009. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 25 May 2009.
  10. ^ Thomas, Joe (19 May 2009). "Tonic for Big Brother 10 as Lucozade Energy signs up as main sponsor". Marketing Magazine. Retrieved 29 May 2009.
  11. ^ a b c d Parker, Robin (20 August 2009). "Big Brother: The house of confrontation". Broadcast. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  12. ^ a b c Davina McCall, Marcus Bentley, Sophie Reade, Rodrigo Lopes, Charlie Drummond, Siavash Sabbaghpour, David Ramsden, Judy James (4 September 2009). "Big Brother 2009: Live Final". Big Brother. Season 10. Channel 4.
  13. ^ Gilbert, Gerard (1 June 2009). "The return of Big Brother". Herald. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  14. ^ Balls, David (26 March 2009). "McCall to front weekly 'Big Mouth'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 29 April 2009. Retrieved 13 May 2009.
  15. ^ Allen, Kelly (18 May 2009). "Big Brother 10 - Secrets Revealed". Star.
  16. ^ Fletcher, Alex (1 June 2009). "Big Brother 10 house pictures revealed". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 3 June 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  17. ^ "Big Brother 10: inside the 2009 contestants' house". The Guardian. London. 1 June 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  18. ^ "BB housemates facing 'hell'". Metro. 3 June 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  19. ^ "Rules". Channel 4. 5 June 2008. Archived from the original on 13 June 2009. Retrieved 5 June 2009.
  20. ^ "About Big Brother". Channel 4. 4 June 2009. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 5 June 2009.
  21. ^ a b Plunkett, John (8 June 2009). "Big Brother phone vote charity donations scrapped by Channel 4". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 12 June 2009. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  22. ^ "BB eviction-night twist is going to be UNMISSABLE!". Heat. 12 June 2009. Archived from the original on 15 June 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  23. ^ a b Nissim, Mayer (12 June 2009). "BB promises evictee 'interrogation'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 15 June 2009. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  24. ^ Fletcher, Alex (4 June 2009). "Fake romances banned in Big Brother 10". Digital Spy. Retrieved 8 August 2009.
  25. ^ "Karly out as boyfriend joins BB". BBC. 17 July 2009. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Big Brother 10 underway". Broadcast. 5 June 2009. Retrieved 25 August 2009.
  27. ^ Atkinson, Neil (27 July 2009). "Starstruck David Ramsden's a real big brother". The Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  28. ^ Duarte, Fernando (29 June 2009). "Brasileiro bissexual faz sucesso em Big Brother inglês". O Globo. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
  29. ^ "Big Brother: Bea booted out". Manchester Evening News. 22 August 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
  30. ^ "Hira latest Big Brother evictee". BBC. 8 August 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
  31. ^ a b "BB pals set to boot out Noirin as old flame rattles love rival". Evening Herald. 31 July 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2009.
  32. ^ "Tom quits the Big Brother house". BBC. 27 July 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
  33. ^ "Kenneth walks out of Big Brother". BBC. 23 July 2009. Retrieved 23 July 2009.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g "Big Brother 10: Meet the housemates". BBC News Online. 5 June 2009. Retrieved 5 June 2009.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Singh, Anita (5 June 2009). "Big Brother 10: housemates announced". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 5 June 2009.
  36. ^ Worden, Andrew (4 June 2009). "Big Brother contestant is adopted daughter of Croydon boxing legend". thisiscroydontoday.co.uk. Archived from the original on 12 September 2009. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  37. ^ TalkTalk plc - Web Studio. "Unlimited TV, Broadband and Phone Packages: Now with FREE YouView Box - TalkTalk". tiscali.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 August 2009.
  38. ^ a b "Big Brother claims first victim". BBC News. 8 June 2009. Retrieved 9 June 2009.
  39. ^ "Big Brother: Cairon Austin-Hill". Biogs.
  40. ^ Singh, Anita (5 June 2009). "Big Brother 10: housemates announced". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  41. ^ a b Sree evicted from the Big Brother 10 house Archived 1 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  42. ^ "Gettin' Down". The Real World. Season 19. Episode 23.
  43. ^ "Karly bookies' favourite to be evicted". Digital Spy. 16 July 2009.
  44. ^ men Administrator (27 April 2010). "BB10: Kris booted out". men.
  45. ^ "Marcus given warning over Sree argument". Digital Spy. 3 July 2009.
  46. ^ "Noirin said she was going to US, not into BB house -- mum". Evening Herald. 6 June 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2009.
  47. ^ Risley, Matt (14 June 2009). "Noirin to go on hunger strike?". Digital Spy. Retrieved 14 June 2009.
  48. ^ Nuts - 11–17 September 2009. Pages 50-60
  49. ^ "Big Brother star Rebekah Shelton not dead after 'hack'". BBC Newsbeat. 12 January 2018. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  50. ^ Silverstein, Adam (11 June 2009). "Saffia leaves Big Brother house". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 June 2009.
  51. ^ a b Hilton, Beth (12 June 2009). "Sophia: 'I was myself in house'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 12 June 2009.
  52. ^ "Big Brother 10 contestant Sophia Brown dies, aged 30". Digital Spy. 17 May 2012.
  53. ^ "Sophie Reade". Hot Shots Calendar. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  54. ^ Harris, Will (15 July 2009). "Nantwich glamour model Sophie Reade faces eviction for second week running". Crewe Chronicle. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  55. ^ Channel 4. "Back To Normal", 14 August 2009. Retrieved 14 August 2009
  56. ^ Ellington-Brown, Lara (5 September 2009). "Sophie Reade wins Big Brother". Daily Express. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  57. ^ "Sophie Reade wins Big Brother 10". The Telegraph. 4 September 2009. Retrieved 8 January 2014.
  58. ^ Addley, Esther (30 July 2009). "Big Brother contestant Sree Dasari slashes his wrists". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  59. ^ "insidebigbrother.net - Sinner Street". insidebigbrother.net. Archived from the original on 29 July 2009.
  60. ^ Tom Oliver
  61. ^ "Big Brother claims first victim". BBC. 8 June 2009. Archived from the original on 12 June 2009. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
  62. ^ Routledge, Rebecca (6 June 2009). "Cairon wins final housemate place". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 8 June 2009. Retrieved 6 June 2009.
  63. ^ Grieves, Jen (10 June 2009). "Freddie, Sophia up for eviction". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 12 June 2009. Retrieved 10 June 2009.
  64. ^ Wightman, Catriona (10 July 2009). "Kris evicted!". Digital Spy. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
  65. ^ Wightman, Catriona (17 July 2009). "Karly: 'Marcus is a disgusting pig'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  66. ^ Grieves, Jen (26 July 2009). "Tom walks out of the Big Brother house". Digital Spy. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
  67. ^ Wightman, Catriona (31 July 2009). "Noirin: 'I did lead Siavash on'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  68. ^ "Big Brother: Halfwit and Marcus face eviction". What's on TV. 12 August 2009. Retrieved 4 April 2010.
  69. ^ "Big Brother 10 - Bea's best bits". TalkTalk Group. Archived from the original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2009.
  70. ^ Routledge, Rebecca (18 August 2009). "Bea, Marcus, David up for eviction". Digital Spy. Retrieved 19 February 2009.
  71. ^ Wightman, Catriona (28 August 2009). "Marcus: 'Nothing I did was serious'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 2 October 2009. Retrieved 29 August 2009.
  72. ^ Wightman, Catriona (1 September 2009). "Lisa: 'I feel lucky to have got so far'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 5 October 2009. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  73. ^ Wightman, Catriona (4 September 2009). "Rodrigo finishes in fifth place". Digital Spy. Retrieved 5 September 2009.
  74. ^ "Big Brother: Rodrigo fifth, Charlie fourth!". What's on TV. 4 September 2009. Archived from the original on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2010.
  75. ^ Wightman, Catriona (4 September 2009). "David finishes in third place". Digital Spy. Retrieved 5 September 2009.
  76. ^ a b "TV Preview: Jade: As Seen On TV – E4, 10pm". This is Staffordshire. 26 May 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2009.
  77. ^ French, Dan (27 May 2009). "12.8 million tune in for third 'Talent' semi". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 30 May 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  78. ^ a b "Big Brother's Big Quiz". Borehamwood Times. 27 May 2009. Archived from the original on 22 July 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2009.
  79. ^ a b "Big Brother: A Decade in the Headlines". Sky News. 27 May 2009. Archived from the original on 15 June 2009. Retrieved 29 May 2009.
  80. ^ Dent, Grace (29 May 2009). "Grace Dent's 10 unsung Big Brother heroes". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 30 May 2009.
  81. ^ "Satellite Pick of the Day - June 01, 2009". California Chronicle. 1 June 2009. Archived from the original on 6 July 2009. Retrieved 1 June 2009.
  82. ^ George Lamb, Luke Pasqualino, Klariza Clayton, Neil Hamilton, Rob Yeung, Makosi Musambasi (7 June 2009). "Big Brother's Little Brother: Day 3". Big Brother. Season 9. E4.
  83. ^ "Win a date with Bea!". TalkTalk Group. 21 July 2009. Archived from the original on 13 August 2009. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  84. ^ Routledge, Rebecca (22 July 2009). "Bea meets her date in Greek task". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  85. ^ Brooks, Robert (3 September 2009). "Meet the voice of Big Brother". Northumberland Gazette. Retrieved 4 September 2009.
  86. ^ Wightman, Catriona (17 July 2009). "Previous winners to appear on BBLB". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  87. ^ a b c "Nasty Nick pulls out of BB return". BBC. 13 July 2009. Archived from the original on 15 July 2009. Retrieved 13 July 2009.
  88. ^ Taylor, Polly (13 July 2009). "Lisa, Dean compete in sugar tower task". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  89. ^ Reynolds, Matthew (14 July 2009). "Rodrigo bets on BB3 egg and spoon race". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  90. ^ Marsh, Jenni (14 July 2009). "Federico, Noirin tackle gymkhana task". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  91. ^ "Big Brother - Michelle Bass v Dogface YOU decided - Channel 4". Channel 4/YouTube. 14 July 2009. Archived from the original on 16 November 2021. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  92. ^ "Makosi and Craig confuse housemates". Channel 4. 16 July 2009. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  93. ^ Routledge, Rebecca (16 July 2009). "Noirin, Lisa quit electric shock task". Digital Spy. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  94. ^ Reynolds, Matthew (21 July 2009). "Housemates set Greek shopping task". Digital Spy. Retrieved 19 February 2010.
  95. ^ Holmwood, Leigh (8 July 2009). "Big Brother prompts 290 complaints". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 12 July 2009. Retrieved 11 July 2009.
  96. ^ Holmwood, Leigh (1 June 2009). "Will enough people be watching Big Brother?". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 13 June 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  97. ^ Reynolds, Matthew (19 June 2009). "Bets on BB at an all-time low". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 22 June 2009. Retrieved 13 July 2009.
  98. ^ Day, Elizabeth (17 May 2009). "This much I know: Michael Parkinson, journalist, 74, London". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  99. ^ Brooker, Charlie (13 June 2009). "Charlie Brooker's screen burn". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 16 June 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  100. ^ Brooker, Charlie (11 July 2009). "Charlie Brooker's screen burn". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 15 July 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  101. ^ a b Richman, Simmy (14 June 2009). "Big Brother, Channel 4, Living With Monkeys: Tales From the Treetops, BBC1". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  102. ^ Brown, Maggie (24 July 2009). "Big Brother is holding Channel 4 back". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 27 July 2009. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
  103. ^ a b Lawson, Mark (24 July 2009). "Is it time to kill off Big Brother?". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 26 July 2009. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
  104. ^ Donaghy, James (25 July 2009). "James Donaghy's screen burn". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 28 July 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  105. ^ Lyons, Darryn (30 July 2009). "Noirin's Ex-Boyfriend Boosts BB Ratings..." Mr Paparazzi.com. Archived from the original on 4 August 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  106. ^ Fletcher, Alex (31 July 2009). "Dean O'Loughlin ('Big Brother 2')". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  107. ^ a b Gilbert, Gerard (29 May 2009). "The return of Big Brother". The Independent. London. Retrieved 26 July 2009.
  108. ^ Fletcher, Alex (28 May 2009). "BB Craig defends falling viewing figures". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 22 June 2009. Retrieved 27 July 2009.
  109. ^ Nissim, Mayer (9 June 2009). "Davina McCall: 'Get over BB ratings'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 12 June 2009. Retrieved 27 July 2009.
  110. ^ Silverton, Kate; Turnbull, Bill; Dowling, Brian; Thompson, Chris (2 June 2009). "Reality TV gone too far?". BBC News. Archived from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  111. ^ a b Stephens, Heidi (30 July 2009). "Look again: Big Brother's back on form". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  112. ^ Fletcher, Alex (2 July 2009). "Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace ('Big Brother 7')". Digital Spy. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  113. ^ Fletcher, Alex (25 June 2009). "Cameron Stout ('Big Brother 4')". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 28 June 2009. Retrieved 2 August 2009.
  114. ^ Fletcher, Alex (15 July 2009). "Big Brother: The Sexiest BB Women". Digital Spy. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  115. ^ Fletcher, Alex (14 July 2009). "The Sexiest BB Men". Digital Spy. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  116. ^ Fletcher, Alex (16 July 2009). "Big Brother: The Most Outrageous". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 19 July 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  117. ^ Neil Boom (31 August 2009). "My Orwellian nightmare: a future without Big Brother". The Independent. London. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  118. ^ Mayer Nissim (8 September 2009). "Davina McCall: 'BB10 was show at its best'". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on 14 October 2009. Retrieved 8 September 2009.
edit

51°39′23″N 0°16′02″W / 51.65639°N 0.26722°W / 51.65639; -0.26722