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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Premise  





2 History  



2.1  Name  





2.2  Creation  





2.3  International expansion  







3 Reception  



3.1  Overview  





3.2  Isolation  







4 Format changes and twists  



4.1  Regional versions  





4.2  Twists involving single franchises  



4.2.1  Multiple areas and houses  





4.2.2  Evil Big Brother  





4.2.3  Twin or triplet housemates  





4.2.4  Pairs competitions  





4.2.5  Secret missions  





4.2.6  Opening night twists  





4.2.7  Fake evictions  





4.2.8  Coaches  





4.2.9  Red button  





4.2.10  Legacy rewards or penalties  





4.2.11  Most valuable player  





4.2.12  Multiple heads of household  





4.2.13  America's Favorite HouseGuest  





4.2.14  Multiple winners  





4.2.15  Reserve housemates  





4.2.16  Big Brother Zoom  







4.3  Twists involving multiple franchises  



4.3.1  Housemate exchanges  





4.3.2  Evicted housemate exchanges  





4.3.3  Other exchanges  





4.3.4  Evicted housemate visits  





4.3.5  Housemates competing in another country  







4.4  Multiple-franchise competitions  



4.4.1  Eurovision Song Contest  









5 Special editions  



5.1  Celebrity and VIP Big Brother  



5.1.1  Variations  







5.2  American format  





5.3  Other editions  







6 Versions  





7 Big Brother: The Game  





8 Controversies  



8.1  Legal  





8.2  Sexual assault  







9 References  





10 Bibliography  





11 External links  














Big Brother (franchise)






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Big Brother (TV series))

Big Brother
International logo of Big Brother since 2019
Created byJohn de Mol Jr.
Original workBig Brother (Netherlands)
OwnerBanijay Entertainment[1]
Years1999–present

Big Brother is a reality competition television franchise created by John de Mol Jr., first broadcast in the Netherlands in 1999 and subsequently syndicated internationally.[2] The show features contestants called "housemates" or "HouseGuests" who live together in a specially constructed house that is isolated from the outside world. The name is inspired by Big Brother from George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, and the housemates are continuously monitored during their stay in the house by live television cameras as well as personal audio microphones. Throughout the course of the competition, they are voted out (usually on a weekly basis) until only one remains and wins the cash prize.

As of 5 August 2023, there have been 508 seasons of Big Brother in over 63 franchise countries and regions. English-language editions of the program are often referred to by its initials "BB".[3] The title of many Spanish-language editions of the program is translated as Gran Hermano (GH).

Premise[edit]

The international Big Brother logo used from 1999 to 2018

At regular intervals, the housemates privately nominate a number of their fellow housemates whom they wish to be evicted from the house.[4] The housemates with the most nominations are then announced, and viewers are given the opportunity to vote via telephone for the nominee they wish to be evicted or saved from eviction. The last person remaining is declared the winner.

Some more recent editions have since included additional methods of voting, such as voting through social media and smartphone applications. Occasionally, non-standard votes occur, where two houseguests are evicted at once or no one is voted out. In the earlier series of Big Brother, there were 10 contestants with evictions every two weeks. However, the UK version introduced a larger number of contestants with weekly evictions. Most versions of Big Brother follow the weekly eviction format, broadcast over approximately three months for 16 contestants.

The contestants are required to do housework and are assigned tasks by the producers of the show (who communicate with the housemates via the omnipresent authority figure known to them only as "Big Brother"). The tasks are designed to test their teamwork abilities and community spirit. In some countries, the housemates' shopping budget or weekly allowance (to buy food and other essentials) depends on the outcome of assigned tasks.

History[edit]

Name[edit]

The term Big Brother originates from George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, with its theme of continuous oppressive surveillance.[2] The program also relies on other techniques, such as a stripped back-to-basic environment, evictions, weekly tasks and competitions set by Big Brother, and the "Diary Room" (or "Confession Room") where housemates convey their private thoughts to the camera and reveal their nominees for eviction.

Creation[edit]

The first version of Big Brother was broadcast in 1999 on Veronica in the Netherlands. In the first season of Big Brother, the house was very basic. Although essential amenities such as running water, furniture, and a limited ration of food were provided, luxury items were often forbidden. This added a survivalist element to the show, increasing the potential for social tension. Nearly all later series provide a modern house for the contest with a Jacuzzi, sauna, VIP suite, loft, and other luxuries.

International expansion[edit]

The format has become an international TV franchise. While each country or region has its own variation, the common theme is that the contestants are confined to the house and have their every action recorded by cameras and microphones and that no contact with the outside world is permitted.

Most international versions of the show remain quite similar to each other: their main format remains true to the original fly on the wall observational style with the emphasis on human relationships, to the extent that contestants usually are forbidden from discussing nominations or voting strategy. In 2001, the American version adopted a different format since the second season, where the contestants are encouraged to strategize to advance in the game; in this format, the contestants themselves vote to evict each other. Big Brother Canada, introduced in 2013, also follows the American format. In 2011, the UK version controversially adopted the discussion of nominations before reversing this rule after a poll by Big Brother broadcaster Channel 5.[5] The Australian series also used an American-styled format when the series was rebooted in 2020.

Reception[edit]

Overview[edit]

From a sociological and demographic perspective, Big Brother allows an analysis of how people react[6] when forced into close confinement with people outside of their comfort zone (having different opinions or ideals, or from a different socioeconomic group). The viewer has the opportunity to see how a person reacts from the outside (through the constant recording of their actions) and the inside (in the Diary or Confession Room). The Diary Room is where contestants can privately express their feelings about the game, strategy and the other contestants. The results range from violent or angry confrontations to genuine and tender connections (often including romantic interludes).

In 2011, Brazilian sociologist Silvia Viana Rodrigues wrote a thesis at University of São Paulo analyzing reality shows as spectacles that proliferate rituals of suffering.[7] She analyzes such rituals in various cultural products from Hollywood and Brazilian television, with special attention to Big Brother Brasil. When investigating the openly eliminatory and cruel face of the game,[8] Silvia Viana points out that such characteristics are liable to be entertainment with great and crucial public engagement because such processes of elimination, competition, exclusion, the affirmation of the war of all against all, of self-management and personal self-control through socio-emotional skills, entrepreneurship, the banality of evil, the naturalization of torture, the "battle for survival" logic and the incorporation of Nazi language and elements are already part of contemporary social life, especially in the context of work under neoliberalism.[9] The thesis was later published as a book.[10]

The show is notable for involving the Internet. Although the show typically broadcasts daily updates during the evening (sometimes criticized by viewers and former contestants for heavy editing by producers),[11] viewers can also watch a continuous feed from multiple cameras on the Web in most countries. These websites were successful, even after some national series began charging for access to the video stream. In some countries, Internet broadcasting was supplemented by updates via email, WAP and SMS. The house is shown live on satellite television, although in some countries there is a 10–15 minutes delay to allow libelous or unacceptable content (such as references to people not participating in the program who have not consented to have personal information broadcast) to be removed.

Contestants occasionally develop sexual relationships; the level of sexual explicitness allowed to be shown in broadcast and Internet-feed varies according to the country's broadcasting standards.

Isolation[edit]

Big Brother contestants are isolated in the house, without access to television, radio, or the Internet. They are not permitted routine communication with the outside world. This was an important issue for most earlier series of the show. In more-recent series, contestants are occasionally allowed to view televised events (usually as a reward for winning at a task). In most versions of the program, books and writing materials are also forbidden, although exceptions are sometimes made for religious materials such as the Bible, Tanakh or the Qur'an. Some versions ban all writing implements, even items that can be used to write (such as lipstick or eyeliner). Despite the housemates' isolation, some contestants are occasionally allowed to leave the house as part of tasks. Contestants are permitted to leave the house in an emergency.

News from the outside world may occasionally be given as a reward. Additionally, news of extraordinary events from the outside world may be given to the Housemates if such information is considered important, such notable past examples include that of national election results,[12][13] (along with Housemates being able participate in said elections, for countries with compulsory voting)[14] the September 11 attacks,[15] and the COVID-19 pandemic.[16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23]

Contestants have regularly-scheduled interactions with the show's host on eviction nights. Throughout each day, the program's producer, in the "Big Brother" voice, issues directives and commands to contestants. Some versions of the show allow private counselling sessions with a psychologist. These are allowed at any time and are often conducted by telephone from the Diary Room.

Format changes and twists[edit]

Regional versions[edit]

World map, with different shading for "Big Brother" versions
Locations of Big Brother versions:
  With individual franchises
  Part of Big Brother Africa
  Part of Big Brother Angola e Moçambique; Also part of Big Brother Africa
  With individual franchises; Also part of Big Brother Africa
  Part of Big Brother: الرئيس
  Part of Gran Hermano del Pacífico
  With individual franchises; Also part of Gran Hermano del Pacífico
  Part of Veliki brat
  With individual franchises; Also part of Big Brother of Scandinavia

Due to the intelligibility of certain languages across several nations, it has been possible to make regional versions of Big Brother. All of these follow the normal Big Brother rules, except that contestants must come from each of the countries in the region where it airs: Big Brother AlbaniaofAlbania and Kosovo, Big Brother Angola e MoçambiqueofAngola and Mozambique, Big Brother Africa of Africa (includes Angola, Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe), Big Brother: الرئيس of the Middle East (includes Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria and Tunisia), Gran Hermano del Pacífico of South America (includes Chile, Ecuador and Peru), Big Brother of Scandinavia (includes Norway and Sweden) and Veliki brat of the Balkans (includes Serbia, Montenegro, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia). The British version of the show previously accepted Irish applicants, however the terms and conditions of ITV2's reboot state you must reside in the UK.

On the other hand, some countries have multiple franchises based on language. Bigg Boss of India has the most regional-based versions Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Bengali, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam language versions; Canada has French- and English-language versions; and the United States has English- and Spanish-language versions of the show.

The Pakistani television program Tamasha recently became a part of the franchise. Initially produced by ARY Digital, a Pakistani TV channel, the reality show's first season garnered significant success and audience engagement, with its different twists and tasks being the main concept of the show. During its second season, the show officially adopted the original format of Big Brother. As of 2023, it stands as the sole franchise of the Big Brother format in Pakistan, with the show being conducted exclusively in the Urdu language.

Twists involving single franchises[edit]

Multiple areas and houses[edit]

In 2001, Big Brother 3 of the Netherlands introduced the "Rich and Poor" concept, in which the house is separated into a luxurious half and a poor half and two teams of housemates compete for a place in the luxurious half. The Dutch version continued this concept to the end of its fourth season. Other versions later followed and introduced a similar concept, of which some have their own twists: Africa (in2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013), Albania (in2007), Australia (in2003 and 2013), Balkan States (inVIP 2010 and 2011), Brazil (2009–present), Canada (2013–present), Denmark (in2003), Finland (in2009 and 2014), France (in2009, 20112017), Germany (in2003, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2008, 2008–09 and since Celebrity 2014), Greece (in2003), India (in2012 and 2013), Israel (in2009), Italy (in2006 and 2007), Norway (in2003), Philippines (in2009, Teen 2010 and 2011), Poland (in2002), Portugal (inVIP 2013 and 2016), Slovakia (in2005), Slovenia (in2008, 2015 and 2016), Scandinavia (in2005), South Africa (in2014), Spain (inVIP 2004, 2008, 2009–10 and 2010), United Kingdom (in2002, Celebrity 2007, 2008, Celebrity 2013 and 2016), United States (2009–present) and Tamil Nadu, India (2023-24)

In 2011–12, the seventh Argentine series added La Casa de al Lado ("The House Next Door"), a smaller, more luxurious house which served multiple functions. The first week it hosted 4 potential housemates, and the public voted for two of them to enter the main house. The second week, two pairs of twins competed in the same fashion, with only one pair allowed in. Later, the 3rd, 4th and 5th evicted contestants were given the choice of staying on their way out and they competed for the public's vote to reenter the house. Months later, after one of the contestants left the house voluntarily, the House Next Door reopened for four contestants who wanted to reenter and had not been in such a playoff before. The House Next Door was also used in other occasions to accommodate contestants from the main house for limited periods of time, especially to have more privacy (which of course could be seen by the public).[citation needed]

The ninth Brazilian season featured the "Bubble": a glass house in a shopping mall in Rio de Janeiro where four potential housemates lived for a week. Later in the season, a bubble was built inside the Big Brother house, with another two housemates living in it for a week until they were voted in and the glass house dismantled. The Glass House was reused in the eleventh season, featuring five evicted housemates competing for a chance to join the house again, and in the thirteenth season, with six potential housemates competing for two places in the main house. A dividing wall from the ninth season was reused in the fourteenth Brazilian season, when mothers and aunts of the housemates entered for International Women's Day and stayed in the house for 6 days, though they could not be seen by the housemates. Every season brings back the glass house. Some editions also featured an all-white panic room, where contestants were held until one of them decided to quit the show.

In the fourth English-Canadian season, two house guests were evicted and moved into a special suite where they were able to watch the remaining house guests. A week later, the houseguests were required to unanimously decide which of them to bring back into the house.

Evil Big Brother[edit]

In 2004, the fifth UK series introduced a villainous Big Brother with harsher punishments, such as taking away prize money, more difficult tasks and secret tricks. This concept has also been used in Australia, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Finland, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, South America,[clarification needed] Scandinavia,[clarification needed] Serbia, Spain, Thailand, Philippines and Mexico.

Twin or triplet housemates[edit]

In 2004, the fifth US season introduced twins who were tasked with secretly switching back and forth in the house; they were allowed to play the game as individual house guests after succeeding at the deception for four weeks. This twist was reused in the seventeenth US season without the deception element – the pair simply needed to survive five weeks without being evicted. HouseGuests who discovered this twist could use the twins to their strategic advantage.

This twin or triplet twist was used in several countries. Some made modifications to this twist; others have had twins in the house together without this element of secrecy. The following are the countries that have featured twins or triplets: Australia (in2005), Germany (in2005–06), Brazil (in2006 and 2015), Bulgaria (in2006, 2012 and VIP 2017), United Kingdom (in2007, Celebrity 2011, Celebrity 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016 and Celebrity 2017), France (in2007, 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2016), Spain (in2007 and 2013), Poland (in2007 and 2019), India (in2008), Africa (in2009), Balkan Region (in2009 and 2013), Philippines (in2009, Teen 2012 and 2014), Portugal (in2010 and 2012), Israel (in2011), Ukraine (in2011), Argentina (in2011 and 2016), Albania (in2013, 2017, Celebrity 2021-22 and Celebrity 2022-23), Greece (in2020) and Kosovo (inCelebrity 2022-23).

Pairs competitions[edit]

Several versions of the program feature variations of the housemates competing in pairs:

Secret missions[edit]

Secret missions are a common element of the show since their introduction during the sixth UK series. During these missions, one or more housemates are set a task from Big Brother with the reward of luxuries for the household and/or a personal reward if the task is successful. Some versions of Big Brother have secret tasks presented by another character who lives in plain sight of the housemate. Such characters include Marsha the Moose (from BB Canada) and Surly the Fish (from BB Australia).

The third Belgian season introduced a mole. This housemate was given secret missions by Big Brother.[24]

The eighth US season introduced "America's Player", where a selected house guest must complete various tasks (determined by public vote) in secret for the duration of their stay in the house in exchange for a cash reward. It was repeated in the tenth US season for a week. The eleventh US season featured Pandora's Box, in which the winning head of household was tempted to open a box, with unintended consequences for the house. The twelfth US season featured a saboteur, who entered the house to wreak havoc with tasks suggested by viewers. The sixteenth US season featured "Team America", in which 3 houseguests were selected to work as a team to complete tasks (determined by public voting) for a cash reward; this continued for the entire season despite the eviction of a team member.

The fourth Argentine series added a telephone in the living room. This telephone rang once a week for ten seconds, and the person to pick up the receiver was given an order or news from Big Brother (which typically no other housemate could hear). The order could be beneficial or detrimental, but a refused order resulted in the nomination for eviction. If nobody picked up the call, the whole house would be nominated for eviction.[citation needed]

Opening night twists[edit]

Since Big Brother 2, the UK series has opened with a twist. This has included having potential Housemates being voted upon by the public for one to enter the house (Big Brother 2 & Big Brother 13); public voting for least-favourite housemates, with the housemates choosing between two nominees to evict (Big Brother 3); first-night nominations (Big Brother 4 & Big Brother 13); suitcase nominations (Big Brother 5); Unlucky Housemate 13 (Big Brother 6); Big Brother Hood (Big Brother 7); an all-female house and a set of twins as contestants (Big Brother 8); a couple entering as housemates, who must hide their relationship (Big Brother 9); housemates having to earn housemate status (Big Brother 10); a mole entering the house with an impossible task (Big Brother 11); Pamela Anderson entering as a guest for 5 days (Big Brother 12); a professional actor posing as a housemate and a mother and daughter as contestants (Big Brother 14); one contestant gets a pass to the final (Big Brother 15); first night eviction (Big Brother 16); two houses with "the other house" featuring enemies from the main house housemates past (Big Brother 17); Jackie Stallone entering a house containing her son's ex-wife Brigitte Nielsen (Celebrity Big Brother 3); a "fake celebrity" (a civilian contestant pretending to be a celebrity) in a celebrity edition (Celebrity Big Brother 4); a visit from Jade Goody's family (Celebrity Big Brother 5) and unlocked bedrooms allowing housemates to immediately claim beds[25] with the last housemate becoming the Head of House (Celebrity Big Brother 6).

A common opening twist is to only introduce a cast of a single-sex on the premiere of the show while having members of the opposite sex introduced over the next few days. The eighth UK series first used this twist with an initial all-female house, adding a male housemate two days later. The same twist was used in the fourth Bulgarian series, and an all-male premiere was used on Big Brother Africa 4. The second Belgian season was used a similar twist in 2001, where eleven male housemates and one female housemate entered the house on launch night and the second female housemate entered the house on the third day.

Fake evictions[edit]

The fifth UK series introduced fake evictions, where Big Brother misleads housemates that eviction has taken place, only for the "evicted" housemate to reenter the house sometime later.

In the eighth UK series, one housemate was evicted, interviewed and sent back into the house.

In the fifth Philippine season, four housemates were fake-evicted and stayed in a place called bodega. In the second batch of the eight Philippine season, four housemates were fake-evicted due to losing their duel challenge and temporarily stayed in a secret room. In the adult edition of the tenth Philippine season, two housemates, and later three more, were fake-evicted after failing in two different Ligtask challenges and temporarily stayed in the task room until the end of their weekly task.

The concept of the fake-eviction was incorporated into the Australian series for the first time in the sixth Australian season, when housemates Camilla Severi and Anna Lind-Hansen were both fake-evicted in Day 8 and were moved into a secret room in the house, the Revenge Room. Severi and Lind-Hansen could see who nominated them for eviction and were given the opportunity to wreak havoc upon the house and those who nominated them by constructing extravagant tasks for the housemates to complete and for making mess in the house when they were not looking. Severi and Lind-Hansen returned to the house in a live special on Day 10. In the tenth Australian season, Benjamin Zabel was fake-evicted for 24 hours before being returned to the house with immunity from eviction for that week. In the eleventh Australian season Travis Lunardi was fake-evicted and received advice from Benjamin Zabel for 24 hours; Travis returned to the house after a 3-day absence with immunity from eviction for that week.

In the thirteenth Brazilian series, Anamara Barreira was fake-evicted. She was removed and put into a small private apartment without the other housemates knowing she was still in the house. After 24 hours, she returned to the house as Head of Household and with immunity from eviction that week. In the sixteenth Brazilian series, Ana Paula Renault was similarly fake-evicted, put into a small private apartment, and returned after 48 hours with immunity from eviction that week. In the eighteen Brazilian series, Gleici Damasceno was similarly fake-evicted, put into a small private apartment, and returned after 72 hours with immunity from eviction and with the power to put someone to eviction.

In the first Turkish series, there is a fake eviction in week 10.

The Indian version Bigg Boss sees frequent fake evictions. In Kannada Bigg Boss season 4, winner Pratham and co-contestant Malavika were kept in secret room after fake eviction for one week and they were both allowed in the Bigg Boss house.

Similarly in Kannada Bigg Boss season 5, firstly Jaya Srinivasan and Sameer Acharya were put into the secret room after fake eviction for one week and then Sameer Acharya was allowed into the house but Jaya Srinivasan was evicted from the secret room itself. In the same season, the runner up Divakar was put into the secret room after fake eviction for one week.

Coaches[edit]

The fourteenth US season had four house guests from past seasons return to coach twelve new house guests, playing for a separate prize of $100,000. However, in a reset twist, they opted to join the normal game alongside the other house guests.

Red button[edit]

The seventh Argentine series incorporated a red button into the Confession Room, which would sound an alarm throughout the house. This button was to be used when a contestant wanted to leave the house voluntarily, and the contestant would be given five minutes to leave the house. A red button is also used in Secret Story series, however, in this case whoever presses the button will try to guess someone's secret.

Legacy rewards or penalties[edit]

InCelebrity Hijack UK, evicted housemates were given the opportunity to choose if a "ninja" delivered good or bad gifts to the house. Later that year, the eighth Australian series introduced the Housemate Hand Grenade, where an evicted housemate decided which remaining housemate received a penalty. A similar punishment used on Big Brother Africa was called the Molotov Cocktail, Dagger or Fuse.

Most valuable player[edit]

The fifteenth US season allowed viewers to vote for a house guest to be made M.V.P., who then secretly nominates a third houseguest for eviction (in addition to the two selected by the Head of Household).

In a further twist introduced part-way through the MVP twist, the viewers themselves decided who the third nominee would be, with the HouseGuests still thinking one of their own is the MVP. Like many such twists, this was ended halfway into the season as the pool of contestants shrank.

Multiple heads of household[edit]

The sixteenth and seventeenth US seasons featured two Heads of Household every week and had four houseguests nominated for eviction. There was also a "Battle of the Block" competition where the two sets of nominees competed to save themselves; the winning pair not only saved themselves but dethroned the Head of Household who nominated them, who was then vulnerable as a replacement nominee if a veto was used. It is also used in specific weeks in Brazil since Big Brother Brasil 16 where the HOH's have to choose which HoH will get R$10,000 and who is the one that will win immunity.

America's Favorite HouseGuest[edit]

In the US version, each season there are three cash prizes: $750,000 for the winner, $75,000 for second, and $50,000 for who was voted by the viewers to be America's Favorite HouseGuest.

Multiple winners[edit]

In 2011, Big Brother Africa (season 6) was the first season of Big Brother to have two winners, each getting US$200,000.

In 2012, the four finalists from Gran Hermano 12+1 (Spain) were given the chance to choose a formerly evicted housemate to be their partner. The companion of the winner became the "+1 winner" and received a secondary prize of €20,000.

In 2015, the sixth Philippine season, also had two winners; one from the teens and one from the regular adults. Each of which received PHP1,000,000.

Bigg Boss 8 (India) ended with a twist, where the top five contestants were crowned 'champions'. The season was extended by 35 days (total 135) as a spin-off called Bigg Boss Halla Bol, where ex-contestants from previous seasons entered the house to compete with the five champions.

Reserve housemates[edit]

The fourth Philippine season introduced the concept of having reserved housemates, those of whom are short-listed auditioners who were given a chance to be a housemate by completing tasks assigned by Big Brother. It was eventually done also in the eighth Philippine season where the reserved housemates were placed in a camp (a separate House but is just adjacent to the Main House) and that reserved housemate must compete amongst other reserved housemates while gaining points by participating in various tasks, including those that required the participation of doing such tasks outside of the Big Brother House premises. As the eviction was done weekly, once an official housemate is evicted from the Main House, the housemate(s) with the most points earned for that particular week crossovers to the Main House and becomes an official housemate.

This reserved housemates twist was also used in Argentina's seventh season and Brazil's ninth season.

Big Brother Zoom[edit]

In 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Big Brother Portugal revival started with a twist, where all the contestants were isolated in different apartments for 14 days, in line with World Health Organisation (WHO) recommendations. Cameras were filming them 24 hours a day as usual, and they were able to communicate with each other and host Cláudio Ramos using tablets.[26]

Twists involving multiple franchises[edit]

Housemate exchanges[edit]

In 2002, the Mexican and Spanish editions (BBM1 and GH3) made temporary housemate exchanges. Mexico's Eduardo Orozco swapped with Spain's Andrés Barreiro for 7 days. In 2010, the first 2-housemate exchange was held by Spain and Italy (GH11 and GF10). Gerardo Prager and Saray Pereira from Spain were swapped with Carmela Gualtieri and Massimo Scattarella of Italy for 7 days.

In later years, several housemate exchanges were done around the world: Argentina (GH3) and Spain (GH4), Ecuador (GH1) and Mexico (BBM2), and Africa (BBA1) and United Kingdom (BB4) in 2003; Scandinavia (BB2) and Thailand (BBT2) in 2006; Philippines (PBB2) and Slovenia (BB1), and Argentina (GH5) and Spain (GH9) in 2007; Africa (BBA3) and Finland (BB4) in 2008; Finland (BB5) and Philippines (PBB3) in 2009; Finland (BB6) and Slovenia (BBS1) in 2010; Spain (GH12) and Israel (HH3) in 2010–11; Finland (BB7) and Norway (BB4) in 2011; Argentina (GH7) and Israel (HH4) in 2012; Mexico (BB4) and Spain (GH16) in 2015; and Spain (GHVIP5) and Brazil (BBB17) in 2017.

Evicted housemate exchanges[edit]

In 2003, Mexico's Isabel Madow (BB VIP2) and Spain's Aída Nízar (GH5) were swapped for 7 days. This twist was also done between Russia (BBR1) and Pacific (GHP1) in 2005, and Argentina (GH4) and Brazil (BBB7) in 2007.

Other exchanges[edit]

In 2009, as part of the casting process for Italy's GF9, Doroti Polito and Leonia Coccia visited Spain's GH10.

In 2012, four contestants from Denmark's BB4 visited Sweden's BB6 and competed in a Viking-themed challenge. The Danish team won and 'kidnapped' Swedish contestant Annica Englund to the Denmark house for the following week.

In 2012, evicted housemate Laisa Portella of Brazil (from BBB12) was a guest on Spain's Gran Hermano 13 for a week; the following week, non-evicted Noemí Merino of GH13 stayed in the Brazilian Big Brother house for 5 days.

In 2016, Big Brother UK housemate Nikki Grahame and Big Brother Australia housemate Tim Dormer were voted in by Canada to be houseguests on the 4th season of Big Brother Canada. Similarly, Big Brother UK housemate Jade Goody appeared as a housemate on Bigg Boss India.

Big Brother Australia (2015) contestant Priya Malik joined Bigg Boss 9 (India) the same year as a wild card.

In 2017, GHVIP5 contestant Elettra Lamborghini visited Brazil's BBB17.

In 2019, the winner of Italy's GF15, Alberto Mezzetti visited Brazil's BBB19.

In 2022, Bindhu Madhavi, 4th Runner-up of Bigg Boss Tamil 2017 made her entry as a contestant in a Telugu back to win spin-off named Bigg Boss Non-Stop and emerged as the winner of that show respectively.

After winning the debut season of Bigg Boss Marathi (regional version of Big Brother), winner Megha Dhade made her entry in Bigg Boss season 12 as a wild card contestant.

After winning Season 2 of Bigg Boss Marathi (regional version of Big Brother), winner Shiv Thakare made her entry in Bigg Boss 16.

Evicted housemate visits[edit]

Anouska Golebiewski, an evicted housemate from the United Kingdom (housemate from BB4) visited Australia (BB3) in 2003. In 2005, United Kingdom (Nadia Almada of BB5) visited Australia (BB5) again. In 2006, United Kingdom (Chantelle HoughtonofCBB4) visited Germany (BBG6). This twist was used in later years by other countries: Africa (Ricardo Ferreira of BBA3) visited Brazil (BBB9) in 2009; Germany (Annina Ucatis and Sascha Schwan of BBG9) visited the Philippines (PBB3), and Italy (George Leonard and Veronica Ciardi of GF10) visited Albania (BB3) in 2010; Sweden (Martin Granetoft and Peter OrrmyrSara Jonsson of BB5) visited Norway (BB4) in 2011; Brazil (Rafael Cordeiro of BBB12) visited Spain (GH12), and Argentina (Agustín Belforte of GH4) visited Colombia (GH2) in 2012; United States (Dan Gheesling of BB10/BB14) visited Canada (BB1 and the BB2 Jury) in 2013; Canada (Emmett Blois of BB1) visited South Africa (BBM3) in 2014; and Spain (Paula Gonzalez of GH 15) visited Mexico (BBM4) in 2015.

A similar event took place between the United States and Canada in 2014 wherein Rachel Reilly (from BB12/BB13) made a video chat to Canada (BB2). Rachel Reilly also appeared on Big Brother Canada's side show, which airs after the eviction episode.

Housemates competing in another country[edit]

There were occasions that a former housemate from one franchise participated and competed in a different franchise: Daniela Martins of France (SS3) competed in Portugal (SS1); Daniel Mkongo of France (SS5) competed in Italy (GF12); Brigitte Nielsen of Denmark (BB VIP) competed in the United Kingdom (CBB3); Jade Goody of the United Kingdom (BB3, BB Panto, and CBB5) competed in India (BB2); Sava Radović of Germany (BB4) competed in the Balkan States (VB1); Nikola Nasteski of the Balkan States (VB4) competed in Bulgaria (BB All-Stars 1); Žarko Stojanović of France (SS5) competed in the Balkan States (VB VIP5); Željko Stojanović of France (SS5) competed in the Balkan States (VB VIP5); Kelly Baron of Brazil (BBB13) competed in Portugal (BB VIP); Lucy Diakovska of Bulgaria (VIP B4) competed in Germany (PBB1); Leila Ben Khalifa of Italy (GF6) competed in France (SS8); Priya Malik of Australia (BB11) competed in India (BB9); Tim Dormer of Australia (BB10) and Nikki Grahame of the United Kingdom (BB7, UBB) competed in Canada (BB4) after beating Jase Wirey of the United States (BB5, BB7) and Veronica Graf of Italy (GF13) in a public vote; Leonel Estevao-Luto of Africa (BB4) competed in Angola & Mozambique (BB3); Frankie Grande of the United States (BB16) competed in the United Kingdom (CBB18); Fanny Rodrigues of Portugal (SS2) competed in France (SS10); and Tucha Anita of Angola (BB3); Amor Romeira of Spain (GH9) competed in Portugal (SS6) and Alain Rochette of Spain (GH17) competed in France (SS11); Despite being American, Brandi Glanville competed first in the United Kingdom (CBB20) then later competed in first Celebrity series in the United States (CBB1); Aída Nizar of Spain (GH5 and GHVIP5) competed in Italy (GF15); Ivana Icardi of Argentina (GH9) competed in Italy (GF16); Gianmarco Onestini of Italy (GF16) competed in Spain (GHVIP7); Michael Terlizzi of Italy (GF16) competed in Spain (GHVIP8).

Multiple-franchise competitions[edit]

Eurovision Song Contest[edit]

Team and Song Jury's points Dates Winner
Italy GF11 Greece BB5 Argentina GH6 Total Tests Israel Performance Spain Performance Ratings Closed
GH12: "A-Ba-Ni-Bi" 12 12 12 36 30 December 2010 to 4 January 2011 5 January 2011 6 January 2011 7 January 2011 8 January 2011 GH12
HH3: "Bandido" 10 10 10 30
Series participants Prize Points Winner Date
BB10 Germany
BB11 United Kingdom
A screening of the 2010 FIFA World Cup (round of 16) Germany vs. England game After five penalties, the score was 1–1 and the game went to sudden death. After 36 penalties, German housemate Robert shot the ball wide and UK housemate Ife scored, winning 2–1. United Kingdom BB11 26 June 2010

Special editions[edit]

Celebrity and VIP Big Brother[edit]

The Big Brother format has been adopted in some countries; the housemates are local celebrities, and the shows are called Celebrity Big BrotherorBig Brother VIP. In some countries, the prize money normally awarded to the winning housemate is donated to a charity, and all celebrities are paid to appear in the show as long as they do not voluntarily leave before their eviction or the end of the series. The rest of the rules are nearly the same as those of the original version.

Variations[edit]

The 2006 Netherlands series was entitled Hotel Big Brother. This variation introduced a group of celebrity hoteliers and a Big Boss, who run a hotel and collect money for charity without nominations, evictions or a winner.

Another variation appeared in the UK in early 2008, entitled Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack. Instead of being housemates the celebrities became Big Brother himself, creating tasks and holding nominations with the help of Big Brother. The housemates were considered by the producers "Britain's most exceptional and extraordinary" 18- to 21-year-olds. The prize for the winner of the series was £50,000.[27]

In 2009, VIP Brother 3 Bulgaria introduced the concept of celebrities competing for charitable causes, which changed each week. Housemates were sometimes allowed to leave the house to raise money for the charity. Ten out of Thirteen seasons of Bigg Boss (the Indian version of Big Brother) have been celebrity-only seasons. The 10th season of Big Boss had celebrities put up against commoners, where a commoner ultimately won.

American format[edit]

The US and Canadian versions of Big Brother differ from most global versions of the series. The US series began in 2000 with the original Dutch format—i.e., housemates, or HouseGuests, as they are styled in the US, nominating each other for eviction and the public voting on evictions and the eventual winner. But due to both poor ratings and the concurrent popularity of Survivor, a gameplay-oriented format was introduced in the second season, with HouseGuests allowed to strategize, politic and collude to survive eviction, with the entire nomination and eviction process being determined by the HouseGuest themselves.

Each week the HouseGuests compete in several competitions in order to win power and safety inside the house, before voting off one of the HouseGuests during the eviction. The main elements of the format are as follows:

Before the sixteenth US season, HouseGuests competed in a Have/Have-Not challenge similar to the shopping tasks on Big Brother UK and other international editions. The winners become Haves and enjoy a full pantry of food, while Have-Nots, will be left with a staple diet of "slop" (fortified oatmeal), sleep in designated uncomfortable beds and take cold showers. In later seasons, the Haves & Have-Nots are determined either by the HoH themself or by the results of the HoH Competition.

When only two contestants remain, a jury formed of the most recently evicted HouseGuests (generally seven or nine) votes which of the two finalists wins the grand prize. Beginning in the fourth (2003) US season, jury members were sequestered off-site so that they would not be privy to the day-to-day goings-on in the house. (Celebrity Big Brother US does not sequester its jury members—all evicted celebrity HouseGuests vote on the winner.).[35] The final Head of Household competition is split into three parts; the winners of the first two rounds compete in the third and final round. Once only two HouseGuests remain, the members of the jury cast their votes for who should win the series.[36]

In addition, US and Canadian Big Brother do not air a live launch show, as is customary in international editions—by the time the network show and live online feeds begin airing, it is not uncommon for at least one HouseGuest to already have been evicted. Also, the North American editions currently air only three times a week, compared with daily or six days a week for the recently rebooted UK franchise. As a result, the TV episodes focus primarily on the main events regarding the gameplay and house politics versus the day-to-day goings-on in the house; to see the latter, watching the live feeds is necessary.

In 2013, English-speaking Canada introduced its own version of the show on the cable channel Slice; the series moved to Global TV for its third (2015) season. The show followed the US format but with more elaborate twists and greater viewer participation in the game. Secret tasks were introduced, usually presented by the show's mascot, "Marsha the Moose"; also, as in most global franchises, Big Brother was a distinct character who interacted with the HouseGuests. The French Canadian version mostly followed the US/Anglophone Canadian format, but the public could evict a housemate on some occasions and decided the winner.

The 2020 revival of the Big Brother Australia series adopted a slightly altered version of the American format (having previously used the international format) while pre-recording the series months in advance. A "Nomination Challenge" is held to determine who holds the power to nominate for that round, with the winner naming three Nominations for Eviction. During each eviction, all Housemates (excluding the Nominating Housemate) vote to evict. There is no rule prohibiting individuals holding Nomination Power in consecutively between weeks and no Power of Veto is held. Additionally, the Australian public still decided the winner between the final 3.

Big Brother Brasil combines the US/Canada and international formats. Brazil votes on evictions and the winner, but housemates compete for HoH, Power of Immunity, and Power of Veto; there is also a weekly shopping competition. HoH nominates one housemate for eviction, while the rest of the house nominates a second housemate. The winner of the Power of Immunity competition gets to choose someone to be safe from nomination.

The pilot for Big Brother China, which premiered exclusively online in 2015, had housemates voting on evictions but the public voting for the winner.[37] A similar format was used for Big Brother: Over the Top, an online-only spin-off of the US series that ran in 2016.

The nineteenth seriesofBig Brother UK saw the adaption of the "Game Changer" competition which is very similar to the Power of Veto competition. The winner of this competition has the opportunity to save a nominee from eviction. Like the PoV, there are six people that play in the "Game Changer" competition. The process of how the contestants are chosen is different as the people who have been nominated play in the competition along with the richest housemate. If there are empty left in the competition, then the richest housemate hand picks who will playing in that weeks "Game Changer" competition. The winner of the competition, like the PoV, has the option to save housemate from eviction for the week or not use the power at all. Unlike the PoV however, if the winner does save someone then no replacement nominee was named leaving the remaining nominees up for eviction and facing the public vote.[38][39][40]

Other editions[edit]

The Big Brother format has been otherwise modified in some countries:

There are also "test runs", with a group of celebrities (or journalists) living in the house for several days to test it. There are occasions where people who have auditioned for the show are also put in the house, most notably in the British edition, where many housemates claim to have met before. These series have been televised in Argentina, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Germany, Mexico, the Pacific region, the Philippines and Spain. In some cases, it is not broadcast, but in others, such as the US edition, it is used as a promotional tool.

Versions[edit]

As of 1 July 2024, Big Brother has produced 510 winners in over 63 franchises.

  Currently airing (5)
  An upcoming season (19)
  Status unknown (16)
  No longer airing (31)
Country/Region Official name Network(s) Winner(s) Presenter(s)
Africa
(Angola, Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, South Africa, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Zambia)
Big Brother Africa M-Net
Africa Magic
Mzansi Magic
DStv (live)
  • Season 2, 2007: Richard Dyle Bezuidenhout
  • Season 3, 2008: Ricardo Venancio
  • Season 4, 2009: Kevin Chuwang
  • Season 5, 2010: Uti Nwachukwu
  • Season 6, 2011: Karen Igho & Wendall Parsons
  • Season 7, 2012: Keagan Petersen
  • Season 8, 2013: Dillish Matthews
  • Season 9, 2014: Idris Sultan
  • Kabelo Ngakane (2–3)
  • IK Osakioduwa (4–9)
  • Secret Story Africa[41] Canal+ Afrique Season 1, 2024: Current Season Jean Michel Onnin
    Stéphanelle Ouattara
    Albania Big Brother Albania Top Channel
    DigitAlb (live)
  • Season 2, 2009: Qetsor Ferunaj
  • Season 3, 2010: Jetmir Salaj
  • Season 4, 2010–11: Ermela Mezuraj
  • Season 5, 2012: Arbër Zeka
  • Season 6, 2013: Anaidi Kaloti
  • Season 7, 2014: Nevila Omeri
  • Season 8, 2015: Vesel Kurtishaj
  • Season 9, 2017: Danjel Dedndreaj & Fotini Derxho
  • Ledion Liço (8)
  • Big Brother VIP[42]
  • Season 2, 2022–23: Luiz Ejlli
  • Season 3, 2024: Egla Ceno
  • Season 4, 2025: Upcoming season
    • Current
  • Ledion Liço (3–)
  • Former
  • Arbana Osmani (1–2)
  • Angola
    Mozambique[43]
    Big Brother Angola (1–2)[44]
    Big Brother Angola e Moçambique (3)
    Jango Magic
    DStv
  • Season 2, 2015: Luna Vambano & Mr. Norway Vunge
  • Season 3, 2016: Anderson Mistake & Papetchulo
    • Dicla Burity (1–3)
  • Emerson Miranda (3)
  • Arab world
    (Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria and Tunisia)
    Big Brother: الرئيس
    Big Brother: The Boss
    MBC 2 Season 1, 2004: Discontinued[45] Razan Moughrabi
    Argentina Gran Hermano Telefe
    DirecTV (live;1–3, 6–7, 11)
    Cablevisión (live; 4–5)
    Multicanal (live; 4)
    TDT (live; 6–7)
    Pluto TV (live; 10)
  • Season 2, 2001: Roberto Parra
  • Season 3, 2002–03: Viviana Colmenero
  • Season 4, 2007: Marianela Mirra
  • Season 5, 2007: Esteban Morais
  • Season 6, 2010–11: Cristian Urrizaga
  • Season 7, 2011–12: Rodrigo Fernández
  • Season 10, 2022–23: Marcos Ginocchio
  • Season 11, 2023–24: Current season
  • Main host:
  • Jorge Rial (4–7)
  • Mariano Peluffo (7)
  • Santiago del Moro (10–)
  • Debate:
    • Juan Alberto Badía (1–3)
  • Mariano Peluffo (4–7)
  • Santiago del Moro (10–)
  • América TV
    DirecTV (live)
    Cablevisión (live)
  • Season 9, 2016: Luis Fabián Galesio
  • Main host: Debate:
    Gran Hermano Famosos Telefe
    Cablevisión (live)
    Multicanal (live)
    • Season 1, 2007: Diego Leonardi
    Main host: Debate:

    Australia

    Big Brother Australia Network 10
    TV2 (1–3, 5)
    Prime (4)
  • Season 2, 2002: Peter Corbett
  • Season 3, 2003: Regina Bird
  • Season 4, 2004: Trevor Butler
  • Season 5, 2005: Greg Matthew
  • Season 6, 2006: Jamie Brooksby
  • Season 7, 2007: Aleisha Cowcher
  • Season 8, 2008: Terri Munro
  • Gretel Killeen (1–7)
    Kyle Sandilands (8)
    Jackie O (8)
    Nine Network
    TV3 (10–11)
  • Season 10, 2013: Tim Dormer
  • Season 11, 2014: Ryan Ginns
  • Sonia Kruger
    Seven Network
    Three (12)
    RTL 5 (12)[46][47]
    Ruutu.fi (12)[48]
    TVNZ OnDemand (13)
  • Season 13, 2021: Marley Biyendolo
  • Season 14, 2022: Reggie Sorensen
  • Season 15, 2023: Tay & Ari Wilcoxson
  • Season 16, TBA: Upcoming season[49]
  • Celebrity Big Brother Network 10 Season 1, 2002: Dylan Lewis Gretel Killeen
    Big Brother VIP Seven Network
    Sonia Kruger
    Balkans
    (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia)
    Veliki Brat
    Big Brother
    Pink BH (1–4)
    Pink M (1–4)
    B92 (1–3, 5)
    A1 (3)
    Pink (4)
    RTL (4–5)
    OBN (5)
    RTRS (5)
    Sitel (5)
    Prva (5)
  • Season 2, 2007: Discontinued[50]
  • Season 3, 2009: Vladimir Arsić „Arsa"
  • Season 4, 2011: Marijana Čvrljak
  • Season 5, 2015: Darko "Spejko" Petkovski
  • Irina Vukotić (1, 3)
  • Ana Grubin (2)
  • Antonija Blaće (4–5)
  • Sky Wikluh (5)
  • Veliki Brat VIP
    Big Brother VIP
    Pink M (1–4)
    Pink BH (1–4)
    B92 (1–2, 5)
    Pink (3–4)
    A1 (4)
    BN (5)
    Prva (5)
    OBN (5)
    Sitel (5)
  • Season 2, 2008: Mirjana „Mimi" Đurović
  • Season 3, 2009: Miroslav „Miki" Đuričić
  • Season 4, 2010: Milan Marić „Švaba"
  • Season 5, 2013: Žarko Stojanović
  • Irina Vukotić (1)
  • Milan Kalinić (2–3)
  • Marijana Mićić (3–5)
  • Dragan Marinković (4)
  • Veliki Brat: Generalna Proba[51]
    Veliki Brat: General Rehearsal
    B92 Season 1, 2006: Jelena Provči & Marko Miljković Marijana Mićić
    Belgium Big Brother Kanaal Twee
  • Season 2, 2001: Ellen Dufour
  • Season 3, 2002: Kelly Vandevenne
  • Season 4, 2003: Kristof van Camp
  • Season 5, 2006: Kirsten Janssens
  • Season 6, 2007: Diana Ferrante
  • Walter Grootaers
    Big Brother
    (Netherlands and Belgium)[52][53]
    VIER/Play4
    Telenet (live)
  • Season 8, 2022: Salar Abassi Abrassi
  • Season 9, 2023: Bart Vandenbroek [55]
  • Season 10, 2024: Glenn Van Himst
  • Current
    Geraldine Kemper
    Tatyana Beloy (9–)
    Former
    Peter Van de Veire (7–8)
    Big Brother VIPs VTM
    Kanaal Twee
  • Season 2, 2006: Pim Symoens
  • No presenters
    Big Brother All-Stars Kanaal Twee Season 1, 2003: Heidi Zutterman Walter Grootaers
    Brazil Big Brother Brasil TV Globo
    Multishow
    Globoplay (live on PPV)
  • Season 2, 2002: Rodrigo Leonel
  • Season 3, 2003: Dhomini Ferreira
  • Season 4, 2004: Cida dos Santos
  • Season 5, 2005: Jean Wyllys
  • Season 6, 2006: Mara Viana
  • Season 7, 2007: Diego Gasques
  • Season 8, 2008: Rafinha Ribeiro
  • Season 9, 2009: Maximiliano Porto
  • Season 10, 2010: Marcelo Dourado
  • Season 11, 2011: Maria Melillo
  • Season 12, 2012: Fael Cordeiro
  • Season 13, 2013: Fernanda Keulla
  • Season 14, 2014: Vanessa Mesquita
  • Season 15, 2015: Cézar Lima
  • Season 16, 2016: Munik Nunes
  • Season 17, 2017: Emilly Araújo
  • Season 18, 2018: Gleici Damasceno
  • Season 19, 2019: Paula von Sperling
  • Season 20, 2020: Thelma Assis
  • Season 21, 2021: Juliette Freire
  • Season 22, 2022: Arthur Aguiar
  • Season 23, 2023: Amanda Meirelles
  • Season 24, 2024: Davi Brito
  • Season 25, 2025: Upcoming season
    • Current
  • Tadeu Schmidt (22–)
  • Former
  • Marisa Orth (1)
  • Pedro Bial (1–16)
  • Tiago Leifert (17–21)
  • Bulgaria Big Brother Nova Television
    Nova+ (live; 1–4)
    Diema Family (live; 5)
  • Season 2, 2005: Miroslav Atanasov
  • Season 3, 2006: Lyubov Stancheva
  • Season 4, 2008: Georgi Alurkov
  • Season 5, 2015: Nikita Jönsson
  • Season 6, 2024: Upcoming season
  • Main host:
    Niki Kunchev (1–3, 5)
    Milen Tsvetkov (4)
    TBA (6)
    Co-host:
    Evelina Pavlova (1–2)
    Rumen Lukanov (4)
    Aleksandra Sarchadjieva (5)

    Big Brother Family Nova Television
    Diema Family (live)
    • Season 1, 2010: Eli & Veselin Kuzmovi
    Niki Kunchev
    VIP Brother Nova Television
    Nova+ (live; 1–2)
    Diema2(live; 3)
    Diema Family (live; 4-6)
  • Season 2, 2007: Hristina Stefanova
  • Season 3, 2009: Deyan Slavchev – Deo
  • Season 4, 2012: Orlin Pavlov
  • Season 5, 2013: Stanka Zlateva
  • Season 6, 2014: Vladislav Karamfilov – Vladi Vargala
  • Season 7, 2015: Georgi Tashev – Gino Biancalana
  • Season 8, 2016: Miglena Angelova
  • Season 9, 2017: Yonislav Yotov – Toto
  • Season 10, 2018: Atanas Kolev
  • Main host:
    Niki Kunchev
    Co-host:
    Evelina Pavlova (1)
    Dimitar Rachkov (3)
    Maria Ignatova (3)
    Aleksandra Sarchadjieva (4–10)
    Miglena Angelova (9)
    Azis (10)

    Big Brother All Stars (1–4)
    Big Brother: Most Wanted (5–6)
    Nova Television
    Diema Family (live; 1-3)
  • Season 2, 2013: Zlatka Dimitrova
  • Season 3, 2014: Todor Slavkov
  • Season 4, 2015: Desislava
  • Season 5, 2017: Georgi Tashev – Gino Biancalana
  • Season 6, 2018: Stefan Ivanov – Wosh MC
  • Main host:
    Niki Kunchev
    Co-host:
    Aleksandra Sarchadjieva
    Azis (6)

    Canada
    (English)
    Big Brother Canada Slice
  • Season 2, 2014: Jon Pardy
  • Arisa Cox
    Global
    7plus (10)[56]
  • Season 4, 2016: Nicholas & Philippe Paquette
  • Season 5, 2017: Kevin Martin
  • Season 6, 2018: Paras Atashnak
  • Season 7, 2019: Dane Rupert
  • Season 8, 2020: Discontinued[57]
  • Season 9, 2021: Tychon Carter-Newman
  • Season 10, 2022: Kevin Jacobs
  • Season 11, 2023: Terrell "Ty" McDonald
  • Season 12, 2024: Bayleigh Pelham[58]
  • Canada
    (French)
    Loft Story TQS[59]
    • Season 1, 2003: Julie Lemay & Samuel Tissot
  • Season 2, 2006: Mathieu Baron & Stéphanie Bélanger
  • Season 3, 2006: Shawn-Edward, Jean-Philippe Anwar & Kim Rusk
  • Season 4, 2007: Mathieu Surprenant
  • Season 5, 2008: Charles-Éric Boncoeur
    • Renée-Claude Brazeau (1)
  • Isabelle Maréchal (2)
  • Marie Plourde (3–5)
  • Loft Story: La Revanche
    Loft Story: The Revenge
    Season 6, 2009: Sébastien Tremblay Pierre-Yves Lord
    Big Brother V Season 1, 2010: Vincent Durand Dubé Chéli Sauvé-Castonguay
    Big Brother Célébrités Noovo
  • Season 2, 2022: Stephanie Harvey[61]
  • Season 3, 2023: Mona de Grenoble
  • Season 4, 2024: Danick Martineau
  • Season 5, 2025: Upcoming season
  • Marie-Mai Bouchard
    Chile Gran Hermano Chilevisión Season 1, 2023: Constanza Capelli
    Season 2, 2024: Upcoming Season
    Current
    Diana Bolocco
    Emilia Daiber (2)[62]
    Former
    Julio Rodríguez (1)
    China 室友一起宅 – Big Brother China
    Housemates, Let's Stay Together
    Youku.com
    Tudou.com
    Pilot season, 2015–16: Tan Xiangjun Zhou Wentao (Live Final)
    Yang Ruilei (Live Final)
    Colombia Gran Hermano Caracol Televisión Season 1, 2003: Mónica Patricia Tejón Adriana Arango
    Citytv Bogotá[63] Season 2, 2012: Diana Hernández Agmeth Escaf
    La casa de los famosos Colombia
    The House of the Famous Colombia[64]
    Canal RCN
    ViX (live)
    • Season 1, 2024: Karen Sevillano
  • Season 2, 2025: Upcoming season
  • Carla Giraldo
    Cristina Hurtado
    Croatia Big Brother RTL
  • Season 2, 2005: Hamdija Seferović
  • Season 3, 2006: Danijel Rimanić
  • Season 4, 2007: Vedran Lovrenčić
  • Season 5, 2008: Krešimir Duvančić
  • Season 6, 2016: Romano Obilinović
  • Season 7, 2018: Antonio Orač
    • Daria Knez (1)
  • Neno Pavinčić (1, 6)
  • Boris Mirković (1–3)
  • Renata Sopek (2–4)
  • Antonija Blaće (2–5, 7)
  • Filip Brajković (4)
  • Marko Lušić (5)
  • Korana Gvozdić (5)
  • Marijana Batinić (6)
  • Celebrity Big Brother Season 1, 2008: Danijela Dvornik Antonija Blaće
    Marko Lušić
    Czech Republic Big Brother TV Nova
    • Season 1, 2005: David Šín
    • Eva Aichmajerová (1)
  • Lejla Abbasová (1)
  • Leoš Mareš (1)
  • Big Brother Česko & Slovensko
    (Czech Republic and Slovakia)
    TV Nova
    Voyo
    • Season 2, 2023-24: Stanislav Liška[65]
    Míra Hejda (2)
    Denmark Big Brother TvDanmark
    • Season 1, 2001: Jill Liv Nielsen
  • Season 2, 2001: Carsten B. Berthelsen
  • Season 3, 2003: Johnni Johansen
  • Lisbeth Janniche
    Kanal 5
    The Voice TV (live; 4)
    7'eren (live; 5–6)
  • Season 5, 2013: Bjørn Clausen
  • Season 6, 2014: David Feldstedt
    • Marie Egede (4)
  • Anne Kejser (5)
  • Oliver Bjerrehuus (6)
  • Big Brother VIP TvDanmark Season 1, 2003: Thomas Bickham Lisbeth Janniche
    Big Brother Reality All-Stars Season 1, 2004: Jill Liv Nielsen
    Ecuador Gran Hermano Ecuavisa Season 1, 2003: David Burbano Toty Rodríguez
    Finland Big Brother Suomi Sub
  • Season 2, 2006: Sari Nygren
  • Season 3, 2007: Sauli Koskinen
  • Season 4, 2008: Anniina Mustajärvi
  • Season 5, 2009: Aso Alanso
  • Season 6, 2010: Niko Nousiainen
  • Season 7, 2011: Janica Kortman
  • Season 8, 2012: Teija Kurvinen
  • Season 10, 2014: Andte Gaup-Juuso
    • Mari Sainio (Kakko) (1–2, 10)
  • Vappu Pimiä (3–5)
  • Susanna Laine (6–7)
  • Elina Kottonen (6–8)
  • Nelonen
    Jim (11; Daily recaps)
    Ruutu.fi (stream; live 24/7)
  • Season 12, 2020: Joel Jämsinen
  • Season 14, 2021: Jasmiina Yildiz
  • Season 15, 2022: Reeo Tiiainen
  • Elina Kottonen (11–12, 14)
    Kimmo Vehviläinen (11–14)
    Alma Hätönen (11–12, 14)
    Anni Hautala (13, 15)
    Tinni Wikström (13)
    Sami Kuronen (15)
    Janni Hussi (15)
    Julkkis Big Brother (9)
    Celebrity Big Brother
    Big Brother Suomi VIP (13)
    Sub Season 9, 2013: Jori Kopponen Mari Sainio
    Nelonen
    Ruutu.fi (stream; live 24/7)
    Season 13, 2021: Petra Maarit Olli Anni Hautala
    Tinni Wikström
    Kimmo Vehviläinen
    France Loft Story M6
    • Season 1, 2001: Christophe Mercy & Loana Petrucciani
  • Season 2, 2002: Karine Delgado & Thomas Saillofest
  • Benjamin Castaldi
    Secret Story TF1
    NT1/TFX (Daily recaps: 9, aftershow: 12–)
    CanalSat (live; 1)
    TF1+ (live feed: 12–)
  • Season 2, 2008: Matthias Pohl
  • Season 3, 2009: Emilie Nefnaf
  • Season 4, 2010: Benoît Dubois
  • Season 5, 2011: Marie Garet
  • Season 6, 2012: Nadège Lacroix
  • Season 7, 2013: Anaïs Camizuli
  • Season 8, 2014: Leila Ben Khalifa
  • Season 9, 2015: Émilie Fiorelli
  • Season 12, 2024: Alexis André Jr.[66]
  • Christophe Beaugrand (9–present)
  • After Secret
  • Adrien Lemaître (3–9)
  • Nadège Lacroix (7)
  • Leila Ben Khalifa (9)
  • Julie Taton (9–10)
  • Emilie Fiorelli (10)
  • Julien Geloën (11)
  • NT1
  • Season 11, 2017: Noré Tir
  • Germany Big Brother RTL II
    Single TV (2)
    RTL (2–3)
    MTV2 Pop (4–5)
    Tele 5 (4–6)
    9Live (8)
    VIVA (5, 9)
    Premiere (live; 5–9)
    Clipfish (live; 10–11)
    Sky (live; 10–11)
  • Season 2, 2000: Alida Nadine Kurras
  • Season 3, 2001: Karina Schreiber
  • Season 4, 2003: Jan Geilhufe
  • Season 5, 2004–05: Sascha Sirtl
  • Season 6, 2005–06: Michael Knopf
  • Season 7, 2007: Michael Carstensen
  • Season 8, 2008: Silke Kaufmann
  • Season 9, 2008–09: Daniel Schöller
  • Season 10, 2010: Timo Grätsch
  • Season 11, 2011: Marc Sonnen
  • Oliver Geissen (2–3)
  • Aleksandra Bechtel (4, 10–11)
  • Ruth Moschner (5–6)
  • Oliver Petszokat (6)
  • Charlotte Karlinder (7–8)
  • Miriam Pielhau (8–9)
  • Sonja Zietlow (Opening show, 11)
  • sixx
    Sky (live)
    7TV (stream)
    • Jochen Bendel
    Sat.1
    sixx (Weekly recaps; 13)
    Joyn (live feed, daily & weekly recaps; 14–)
  • Season 14, 2024: Marcus Bräuer
  • Promi Big Brother Sat.1
    sixx (Daily recaps; 2–4, 6–8)
    IGTV (Daily recaps; 7–)
    Sat.1 emotions (1)
    Sky (live 3 hours; 1, live; 3)
    maxdome (live; 2)
    Bild (live; 4)
    7TV (stream; 2–6)
    Joyn (stream; 7–; live feed; 11–)
  • Season 2, 2014: Aaron Troschke
  • Season 3, 2015: David Odonkor
  • Season 4, 2016: Ben Tewaag
  • Season 5, 2017: Jens Hilbert
  • Season 6, 2018: Silvia Wollny
  • Season 7, 2019: Janine Meissner
  • Season 8, 2020: Werner Hansch
  • Season 9, 2021: Melanie Müller
  • Season 10, 2022: Rainer Gottwald
  • Season 11, 2023: Yeliz Koc
  • Season 12, 2024: Upcoming Season
    • Current
  • Jochen Schropp (2–)
  • Marlene Lufen (6–)
  • Former
  • Cindy aus Marzahn (1)
  • Oliver Pocher (1)
  • Jochen Bendel (5)
  • Greece
    Cyprus
    Big Brother ANT1
  • Season 2, 2002: Alexandros Moskhos
  • Season 3, 2003: Thodores Jspógloy
  • Season 4, 2005: Nikos Papadopoulos
  • Tatiana Stefanidou (4)
  • Alpha TV
    Sigma TV
    Nova (live)
    Skai TV
    Sigma TV
  • Season 7, 2021: Nikos Taklis
    • Harry Varthakouris (6)
  • Grigoris Gountaras (7)
  • Natali Kakava (7)
  • Hungary Big Brother TV2
    • Season 1, 2002: Éva Párkányi
  • Season 2, 2003: Zsófi Tóth
    • Claudia Liptai
  • Attila Till
  • Big Brother VIP
    • Season 1, 2003: Gábor Bochkor
  • Season 2, 2003: Lajos Boros
  • Season 3, 2003: Zolee Ganxsta
  • Való Világ powered by Big Brother[67] Cool TV(12–)
    RTL Kettő (8–11)
    RTL+ (stream)
  • Season 9, 2018–19: Zsuzsanna Varga
  • Season 10, 2020–21: Vivien Szilágyi
  • Season 11, 2022–23: Krisztina Karnics
  • Season 12, 2024: Current season
    • Current
  • Peti Puskás (9–)
  • Csilla Megyeri (12–)
  • Former
  • Bence Istenes (6–8)
  • Anikó Nádai (8–11)
  • Vanda Schumacher (11)
  • India
    (Hindi-language)
    Bigg Boss
    (Television edition)
    SET (1) Season 1, 2006–07: Rahul Roy Arshad Warsi
    Colors TV (2–)
    Voot (Live; 4–16)
    Jio Cinema (Live; 17–)
  • Season 3, 2009: Vindu Dara Singh
  • Season 4, 2010–11: Shweta Tiwari
  • Season 5, 2011–12: Juhi Parmar
  • Season 6, 2012–13: Urvashi Dholakia
  • Season 7, 2013: Gauahar Khan
  • Season 8, 2014–15: Gautam Gulati
  • Season 9, 2015–16: Prince Narula
  • Season 10, 2016–17: Manveer Gurjar
  • Season 11, 2017–18: Shilpa Shinde
  • Season 12, 2018: Dipika Kakar
  • Season 13, 2019–20: Sidharth Shukla
  • Season 14, 2020–21: Rubina Dilaik
  • Season 15, 2021–22: Tejasswi Prakash
  • Season 16, 2022–23: MC Stan
  • Season 17, 2023–24: Munawar Faruqui
    • Current
  • Salman Khan (4–)
  • Former
  • Shilpa Shetty (2)
  • Amitabh Bachchan (3)
  • Sanjay Dutt (5)
  • Bigg Boss Halla Bol
    (Spin-off)
    Bigg Boss OTT
    (Digital edition)
    Voot (Live; 1)
    JioCinema (Live; 2–)
  • Season 2, 2023: Elvish Yadav
  • Season 3, 2024: Current Season
    • Current
  • Anil Kapoor (3–)
  • Former
  • Salman Khan (2)
  • Karan Johar (1)
  • India
    (Kannada-language)
    Bigg Boss Kannada ETV Kannada (1) Season 1, 2013: Vijay Raghavendra Sudeepa
    Asianet Suvarna (2) Season 2, 2014: Akul Balaji
    Colors Kannada (3–4; 7–)
    Colors Super (4–6)
    Voot (Live; 3–9)
    Jio Cinema (Live; 10–)
  • Season 4, 2016–17: Pratham
  • Season 5, 2017–18: Chandan Shetty
  • Season 6, 2018–19: Shashi Kumar
  • Season 7, 2019–20: Shine Shetty
  • Season 8, 2021: Manju Pavagada[68][69]
  • Season 9, 2022: Roopesh Shetty
  • Season 10, 2023-24: Karthik Mahesh
  • Bigg Boss Mini Season
    (Spin-off)
    Colors Kannada
    • Season 1, 2021: No Winner
    Bigg Boss Kannada OTT
    (Digital edition)
    Voot (Live; 1)
    India
    (Bengali-language)
    Bigg Boss Bangla ETV Bangla (1) Season 1, 2013: Aneek Dhar Mithun Chakraborty
    Colors Bangla (2)
    Voot (2)
    Season 2, 2016: Joyjeet Banerjee Jeet
    India
    (Tamil-language)
    Bigg Boss
    (Television edition)
    Star Vijay
    Disney+ Hotstar (Live; 1–)
  • Season 2, 2018: Riythvika
  • Season 3, 2019: Mugen Rao
  • Season 4, 2020–21: Aari Aarjunan
  • Season 5, 2021–22: Raju Jeyamohan
  • Season 6, 2022-23: Mohammed Azeem
  • Season 7, 2023: Archana Ravichandran
  • Kamal Haasan
    Bigg Boss Ultimate
    (Digital edition)
    Disney+ Hotstar (Live; 1)
    Silambarasan
    India
    (Telugu-language)
    Bigg Boss
    (Television edition)
    Star Maa
    Disney+ Hotstar (Live; 1–)
  • Season 2, 2018: Kaushal Manda
  • Season 3, 2019: Rahul Sipligunj
  • Season 4, 2020: Abijeet Duddala
  • Season 5, 2021: VJ Sunny
  • Season 6, 2022: L. V. Revanth
  • Season 7, 2023: Pallavi Prashanth
    • Current
  • Nagarjuna (3–)
  • Former
  • Jr. NTR (1)
  • Nani (2)
  • Bigg Boss Non-Stop
    (Digital edition)
    Disney+ Hotstar (Live; 1) Nagarjuna
    India
    (Marathi-language)
    Bigg Boss Marathi Colors Marathi
    Voot (Live; 1–3)
    Jio Cinema (Live; 4–)
  • Season 2, 2019: Shiv Thakare
  • Season 3, 2021: Vishal Nikam
  • Season 4, 2022–23: Akshay Kelkar
  • Season 5, 2024: Upcoming Season
    • Current
  • Riteish Deshmukh (5–)
  • Former
  • Mahesh Manjrekar (1-4)
  • India
    (Malayalam-language)
    Malayalee House Surya TV Season 1, 2013: Rahul Easwar Revathi
    Bigg Boss Malayalam Asianet
    Disney+ Hotstar (Live; 1–)
  • Season 2, 2020: Discontinued[70][71]
  • Season 3, 2021: Manikuttan
  • Season 4, 2022: Dilsha Prasannan
  • Season 5, 2023: Akhil Marar
  • Season 6, 2024: Jinto Bodycraft
  • Mohanlal
    Indonesia Big Brother Indonesia Trans TV Season 1, 2011: Alan Wangsa
    • Ferdi Hassan
  • Indra Herlambang
  • Sarah Sechan
  • Shara Aryo
  • Israel האח הגדול
    HaAh HaGadol
    Big Brother
    Channel 2-Keshet
    Hot (live)
    yes (live)
  • Season 2, 2009–10: Eliraz Sade
  • Season 3, 2010–11: Yaakov "Jackie" Menahem
  • Season 4, 2012: Yekutiel "Kuti" Sabag
  • Season 5, 2013: Tahounia Rubel
  • Season 6, 2014: Tal Gilboa
  • Season 7, 2015–16: Shay Mika Ifrah
  • Season 8, 2016–17: Avihai Ohana
  • Assi Azar (1–6)
  • Korin Gideon (7–8)
  • Channel 13
    Channel 26 (live)
  • Season 10, 2020: Tikva Gidon
  • Season 11, 2020–21: Zehava Ben
  • Season 12, 2022: Talia Ovadia
  • Season 13, 2023: Yuval Maatook
  • Season 14, 2024: Current season
    • Current
  • Liron Weizman
  • Guy Zu-Aretz (10–)
  • Former
  • Ofer Shechter (9)
  • Asi Israelof (9)
  • VIP האח הגדול
    HaAh HaGadol VIP
    Big Brother VIP
    Channel 2-Keshet
    Hot (live)
    Yes (live)
  • Season 2, 2015: Moshik Afia
  • Assi Azar (1–2)
  • Channel 13
    Channel 26 (live)
  • Season 4, 2021: Oren Hazan
  • Guy Zu-Aretz
  • Italy Grande Fratello Canale 5
    Italia 1 (Daily recaps; 13–)
    Stream TV (live; 1–3)
    Sky (live; 4–5, 8–9)
    Mediaset Premium (live; 6–14)
    Mediaset Extra (live; 15–)
    La5 (live; 11–)
  • Season 2, 2001: Flavio Montrucchio
  • Season 3, 2003: Floriana Secondi
  • Season 4, 2004: Serena Garitta
  • Season 5, 2004: Jonathan Kashanian
  • Season 6, 2006: Augusto De Megni
  • Season 7, 2007: Milo Coretti
  • Season 8, 2008: Mario Ferretti
  • Season 9, 2009: Ferdi Berisa
  • Season 10, 2009–10: Mauro Marin
  • Season 11, 2010–11: Andrea Cocco
  • Season 12, 2011–12: Sabrina Mbarek
  • Season 13, 2014: Mirco Petrilli
  • Season 14, 2015: Federica Lepanto
  • Season 15, 2018: Alberto Mezzetti
  • Season 16, 2019: Martina Nasoni
  • Season 17, 2023–24: Perla Vatiero
  • Season 18, 2024: Upcoming Season
    • Current
  • Alfonso Signorini (17–)
  • Former
  • Daria Bignardi (1–2)
  • Barbara D'Urso (3–5, 15–16)
  • Alessia Marcuzzi (6–14)
  • Grande Fratello VIP Canale 5
    Italia 1 (Daily recaps)
    Mediaset Extra (live)
    La5 (live)
  • Season 2, 2017: Daniele Bossari
  • Season 3, 2018: Walter Nudo
  • Season 4, 2020: Paola Di Benedetto
  • Season 5, 2020–21: Tommaso Zorzi
  • Season 6, 2021–22: Jessica Hailé Selassié
  • Season 7, 2022–23: Nikita Pelizon
    • Current
  • Alfonso Signorini (4–7)
  • Former
  • Ilary Blasi (1–3)
  • Kosovo Big Brother VIP Kosova Klan Kosova
    Artmotion (live)
    • Season 1, 2022–23: Arkimed "Stresi" Lushaj
  • Season 2, 2023: Lumbardh Salihu
    • Alaudin Hamiti
  • Jonida Vokshi
  • Lithuania Paslapčių namai
    The House of Secrets
    TV3 Season 1, 2013: Gintautas Katulis
    • Agnė Grigaliūnienė
  • Marijus Mikutavičius
  • Malta Big Brother Malta[72] TVM
    • Season 1, 2024: Upcoming season
    TBA
    Mexico Big Brother México
    Big Brother PM (4)
    Televisa
    Sky (live)
    • Season 1, 2002: Rocío Cárdenas
  • Season 2, 2003: Silvia Irabien
  • Season 3, 2005: Evelyn Nieto
  • Verónica Castro (3)
  • Canal 5
    Sky (live)
    Adela Micha
    Big Brother VIP Televisa
    Sky (live)
  • Season 2, 2003: Omar Chaparro
  • Season 3, 2004: Eduardo Videgaray
  • Season 4, 2004: Roxanna Castellanos
  • Season 5, 2005: Sasha Sökol
  • Verónica Castro (2–4)
  • La casa de los famosos México
    The House of the Famous Mexico [73]
    Las Estrellas
    Canal 5
    ViX (live)
  • Season 2, 2024: Upcoming season
  • Galilea Montijo
    [74]
    Diego de Erice
    Odalys Ramirez[74]
    Mongolia Big Brother Mongolia Mongol TV Season 1, 2021: Enku Bulgan
    Unknown
    Netherlands Big Brother
    (Original edition)
    Veronica
  • Season 2, 2000: Bianca Hagenbeek
    • Rolf Wouters (1)
  • Daphne Deckers (1)
  • Esther Duller (2)
  • Beau Van Erven Dorens (2)
  • Yorin
  • Season 4, 2002: Jeanette Godefroy
  • Martijn Krabbé (4)
  • Talpa
  • Season 6, 2006: Jeroen Visser
  • Ruud de Wild (5)
  • Big Brother
    (Netherlands and Belgium)[52][53]
    RTL 5
    Videoland (stream; live)
  • Season 8, 2022: Salar Abassi Abrassi
  • Season 9, 2023: Bart Vandenbroek
  • Season 10, 2024: Glenn Van Himst
  • Current
    Geraldine Kemper
    Tatyana Beloy (9-)
    Former
    Peter Van de Veire (7-8)
    Big Brother VIPs (1)
    Hotel Big Brother (2)
    Veronica Season 1, 2000: No winner Unknown
    Talpa Season 2, 2006: No winner Caroline Tensen
    Secret Story Net5 Season 1, 2011: Sharon Hooijkaas
    • Renate Verbaan
  • Bart Boonstra
  • Nigeria Big Brother Nigeria (1)
    Big Brother Naija (2–8)
    M-Net
    DStv (live)
    Season 1, 2006: Katung Aduwak
    • Olisa Adibua
  • Michelle Dede
  • Africa Magic
    GOtv
    DStv (live)
  • Season 3, 2018: Miracle Ikechukwu Igbokwe
  • Season 4, 2019: Mercy Eke
  • Season 5, 2020: Olamilekan "Laycon" Agbeleshe
  • Season 6, 2021: Hazel Oyeze "Whitemoney" Onou
  • Season 7, 2022: Ijeoma Josephina "Phyna" Otabor
  • Season 8, 2023: Ilebaye Odiniya
  • Season 9, 2024: Upcoming season
  • Ebuka Obi-Uchendu
    Big Brother Titans
    (Nigeria and South Africa)
    Africa Magic
    DStv (stream; live)
    • Season 1, 2023 : Khosi Twala
    Lawrence Maleka
    Ebuka Obi-Uchendu
    Norway Big Brother TVN
    • Season 1, 2001: Lars Joakim Ringom
  • Season 2, 2002: Veronica Agnes Roso
  • Season 3, 2003: Eva Lill Baukhol
    • Arve Juritzen (1–2)
  • Trygve Rønningen (3)
  • TV 2 Bliss Season 4, 2011: Tine Barstad
  • Sarah Natasha Melbye
  • Pacific Region
    (Chile, Ecuador and Peru)
    Gran Hermano del Pacífico RedTeleSistema
    RED Televisión
    ATV
    Season 1, 2005: Juan Sebastián López
    • Lorena Meritano (Main)
  • Álvaro Ballera & Álvaro García (Regional)
  • Janine Leal (Regional)
  • Juan Francisco Escobar (Regional)
  • Pakistan Tamasha ARY Digital
    ARY Zap
  • Season 2, 2023: Aruba Mirza
  • Panama Big Brother Panamá TVN Season 1, 2016: Katherine Sandoval
    • Rolando Sterling
  • Gaby Garrido
  • Peru La Casa de Los Secretos
    The House of Secrets
    Frecuencia Latina Season 1, 2012: Álvaro de la Torre
    • Carla García
  • Jason Day
  • Philippines Pinoy Big Brother
    (Civilian edition)
    A2Z (9–)
    Kapamilya Channel (9–)
    ABS-CBN (1–8)
    TFC (Worldwide)
    Sky Cable (live)
    Studio 23 (live; 1–3)
  • Season 2, 2007: Beatriz Saw
  • Season 3, 2009–10: Melisa Cantiveros
  • Season 4, 2011–12: Slater Young
  • Bianca Gonzalez (2–4)
  • Mariel Rodriguez (1–3)
  • Willie Revillame (1)
  • Robi Domingo (4)
  • Pinoy Big Brother
    (Mixed edition)
  • Season 6, 2015: Miho Nishida & Jimboy Martin
  • Season 7, 2016–17: Maymay Entrata
  • Season 8, 2018–19: Yamyam Gucong
  • Season 9, 2020–21: Liofer Pinatacan
  • Season 10, 2021–22: Anji Salvacion
  • Season 11, 2024: Upcoming season
    • Current
  • Bianca Gonzalez (5–)
  • Robi Domingo (5–)
  • Melisa Cantiveros (8–)
  • Kim Chiu (8–)
  • Enchong Dee (6*, 9–)
  • Former
  • John Prats (5)
  • Alex Gonzaga (5*,8)
  • Toni Gonzaga (5–10)
  • Mariel Rodriguez (7)
  • Maymay Entrata (9–10)
  • Edward Barber (9–10)
  • Richard Juan (9–10)
  • Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Edition
  • Season 2, 2007–08: Ruben Gonzaga
  • Mariel Rodriguez (1–2)
  • Luis Manzano (1)
  • Bianca Gonzalez (2)
  • Pinoy Big Brother: Teen Edition
  • Season 2, 2008: Ejay Falcon
  • Season 3, 2010: James Reid
  • Season 4, 2012: Myrtle Abigail Sarrosa
  • Mariel Rodriguez (1–3)
  • Toni Gonzaga (2–4)
  • Luis Manzano (2)
  • Robi Domingo (4)
  • John Prats (4)
  • Poland Big Brother TVN
  • Season 2, 2001: Marzena Wieczorek
  • Season 3, 2002: Piotr Borucki
    • Grzegorz Miecugow (1–3)
  • Martyna Wojciechowska (1–3)
  • Andrzej Sołtysik (2–3)
  • TV4
  • Season 5 (part 2), 2008: Janusz Strączek
    • Jakub Klawiter (4–5)
  • Karina Kunkiewicz (4)
  • Małgorzata Kosik (5)
  • TVN 7
  • Season 7, 2019: Kamil Lemieszewski
    • Agnieszka Woźniak-Starak (6)
  • Gabi Drzewiecka (7)
  • Big Brother VIP TV4 Season 5 (part 1), 2008: Jarosław Jakimowicz
    • Jakub Klawiter
  • Małgorzata Kosik
  • Portugal Big Brother TVI
    TVI Reality (live; 5–)
    TVI Internacional (5)
    TVI Eventos (live; 1)
  • Season 2, 2001: Henrique Guimarães
  • Season 3, 2001: Catarina Cabral
  • Season 4, 2003: Fernando Geraldes
  • Season 5, Spring 2020: Soraia Moreira
  • Season 6, Autumn 2020: Zena Pacheco
  • Season 7, 2021: Ana Barbosa
  • Season 8, 2022: Miguel Vicente[75]
  • Season 9, 2023: Francisco Monteiro
  • Season 10, 2024: Inês Morais [76]
    • Current
  • Cláudio Ramos (5; 7; 10–)
  • Former
  • Teresa Guilherme (1–4; 6)
  • Manuel Luís Goucha (7)
  • Cristina Ferreira (8–9)
  • Big Brother Famosos (1–2, 4–)
    Big Brother VIP (3)
    TVI
    TVI Direct (live; VIP)
  • Season 2, 2002: Vítor Norte
  • Season 3, 2013: Pedro Guedes
  • Season 4, 2022: Francisco "Kasha" Pereira
  • Season 5, 2022: Bernardo Sousa
    • Current
  • Cristina Ferreira (4–)
  • Former
  • Teresa Guilherme (1–3)
  • Big Brother: Duplo Impacto
    Big Brother: Double Impact
    TVI
    TVI Reality (live)
    • Season 1, 2021: Joana Albuquerque
  • Cláudio Ramos
  • Big Brother: Desafio Final
    Big Brother: Final Challenge
  • Season 2, 2024: Bruno Savate[76]
    • Current
  • Cláudio Ramos (2–)
  • Former
  • Cristina Ferreira (1)
  • Secret Story: Casa dos Segredos
    Secret Story: House of Secrets
    TVI
    TVI Reality (live; 6–)
    TVI Direct (live; 1–5)
  • Season 2, 2011: João Mota
  • Season 3, 2012: Rúben Boa Nova
  • Season 4, 2013: Luís Nascimento
  • Season 5, 2014: Elisabete Moutinho
  • Season 6, 2016: Helena Patrício
  • Season 7, 2018: Tiago Rufino
  • Season 8, 2024: Upcoming season[77]
  • Teresa Guilherme (2–6)
  • Manuel Luís Goucha (7)
  • Secret Story: Desafio Final
    Secret Story: Final Challenge
  • Season 2, 2014: Érica Silva
  • Season 3, 2015: Sofia Sousa
  • Season 4, 2017: Carlos Sousa
  • Teresa Guilherme
    Secret Story: Luta Pelo Poder
    Secret Story: Power Struggle
    Season 1, 2015: Bruno Sousa
    Secret Story: O Reencontro
    Secret Story: The Reunion
    Season 1, 2018: Carina Ferreira Manuel Luís Goucha
    Romania Big Brother Prima TV
    • Season 1, 2003: Sorin Pavel Fisteag
  • Season 2, 2004: Iustin Popovici
    • Andreea Raicu
  • Virgil Ianțu
  • Russia Большой Брат
    Bolshoy Brat
    Big Brother
    TNT Season 1, 2005: Anastasia Yagaylova Ingeborga Dapkunaite
    Scandinavia
    (Norway and Sweden)[78]
    Big Brother Kanal 5
    FEM
    • Season 1, 2005: Britt Goodwin
  • Season 2, 2006: Jessica Lindgren
    • Brita Møystad Engseth (1–2)
  • Adam Alsing (1)
  • Hannah Rosander (2)
  • Kanal 9
    FEM
    Season 3, 2014: Anders Olsson
    • Pia Lykke
  • Adam Alsing
  • Second Life Big Brother Second Life World Wide Web Season 1, 2006: Madlen Flint None
    Slovakia Big Brother: Súboj (1)
    Big Brother: Duel
    Markíza
    • Season 1, 2005: Richard Tkáč
    Viliam Rozboril (1)
    Zuzana Belohorcová (1)
    Big Brother Česko & Slovensko
    (Czech Republic and Slovakia)
    Markíza
    Voyo
    • Season 2, 2023-24: Stanislav Liška[65]
    Míra Hejda (2)
    Slovenia Big Brother Kanal A
  • Season 2, 2008: Naske Mehić
  • Season 3, 2015: Pia Filipčič
  • Season 4, 2016: Mirela Lapanović
    • Main hosts:
  • Nina Osenar (1–2)
  • Ana Maria Mitič (3)
  • Manja Plešnar (4)
  • Co-hosts:
  • Matej Grm-Gušti (2)
  • Emi Nikočević (4)
  • Tibor Baiee (4)
  • Big Brother Slavnih
    Big Brother Famous
    Pop TV
    • Season 1, 2010: Jože Činč
    Nina Osenar
    South Africa Big Brother South Africa M-Net
    Mzansi Magic
    DStv (live)
  • Season 2, 2002: Richard Cawood
  • Gerry Rantseli
  • Big Brother Mzansi
  • Season 2, 2015: Nkanyiso "Ace" Khumalo & Ntombi Tshabalala
  • Season 3, 2022: Michelle "Mphowabadimo" Mvundla
  • Season 4, 2024: Siphephelo "McJunior" Zondi
  • Lungile Radu (1–2)
    Lawrence Maleka (3–)
    Celebrity Big Brother Season 1, 2002: Bill Flynn
  • Gerry Rantseli
  • Big Brother Titans
    (Nigeria and South Africa)
    • Season 1, 2023 : Khosi Twala
    Lawrence Maleka
    Ebuka Obi-Uchendu
    Spain Gran Hermano Telecinco (Main show and Debate)
    Telecinco Estrellas (9)
    Telecinco 2 (10)
    LaSiete (11–14)
    Nueve (14)
    Divinity (15–18)
    Be Mad (live; 18)
    Quiero TV (live; 1–3)
    Vía Digital (live; 4–5)
    Digital+ (live; 6–11)
    GH 24H (live; 12)
    Mitele.es (live; 13–19)
  • Season 2, 2001: Sabrina Mahí
  • Season 3, 2002: Javito García
  • Season 4, 2002–03: Pedro Oliva
  • Season 5, 2003–04: Nuria Yáñez
  • Season 6, 2004: Juanjo Mateo
  • Season 7, 2005–06: Pepe Herrero
  • Season 8, 2006: Naiala Melo
  • Season 9, 2007: Judit Iglesias
  • Season 10, 2008–09: Iván Madrazo
  • Season 11, 2009–10: Ángel Muñoz
  • Season 12, 2010–11: Laura Campos
  • Season 13, 2012: Pepe Flores
  • Season 14, 2013: Susana Molina
  • Season 15, 2014: Paula González
  • Season 16, 2015: Sofía Suescun
  • Season 17, 2016: Beatriz Retamal
  • Season 18, 2017: Hugo Sierra
  • Season 19, 2024: Upcoming Season[79]
  • Main host:
    Mercedes Milá (1–2, 4–16)
    Pepe Navarro (3)
    Jorge Javier Vázquez (17–)
    Debate:
    Jesús Vázquez (4–5)
    Carolina Ferre (6)
    Jordi González (7–9, 11–13, 15–18)
    Jorge Javier Vázquez (10)
    Frank Blanco (14)
    Ion Aramendi (19–)[80]
    Gran Hermano VIP Telecinco (Main show and Debate)
    Cuatro (7)
    Divinity (3–6)
    Be Mad (live; 6)
    Mitele.es (live; 3–8)
  • Season 2, 2005: Ivonne Armant
  • Season 3, 2015: Belén Esteban
  • Season 4, 2016: Laura Matamoros
  • Season 5, 2017: Alyson Eckmann
  • Season 6, 2018: Miriam Saavedra
  • Season 7, 2019: Adara Molinero
  • Season 8, 2023: Naomi Asensi [81]
  • Main host:
    Jesús Vázquez (1–2)
    Jordi González (3–5; 7)
    Jorge Javier Vázquez (6–7)
    Marta Flich (8–)
    Debate:
    Carolina Ferre (1)
    Jordi González (2–3; 7)
    Sandra Barneda (4–6)
    Ion Aramendi (8–)
    Gran Hermano 12+1: La Re-vuelta
    Gran Hermano 12+1: The Revolt
    Telecinco (Main show and Debate)
    LaSiete
    Mitele.es (live)
    Season 1, 2012: Alessandro Livi Main host:
    Mercedes Milá
    Debate:
    Jordi González
    Gran Hermano Dúo Telecinco (Main show and Debate)
    Divinity
    Be Mad (live)
    Mitele.es (live)
    CincoMAS (Americas)
  • Season 2, 2024: Lucía Sánchez
  • Main host:
    Jorge Javier Vázquez (1)
    Jordi González (1)[82]
    Marta Flich (2–)
    Debate:
    Jordi González (1)
    Ion Aramendi (2–)
    Gran Hermano: El Reencuentro (1)
    El Reencuentro (2)
    The Reunion
    Telecinco (Main show and Debate)
    LaSiete
    Digital+ (live; 1)
  • Season 2, 2011: Juan Miguel Martínez & Yola Berrocal
  • Main host:
    Mercedes Milá (1)
    Jordi González (2)
    Debate:
    Jordi González (1)
    Christian Gálvez (2)
    El Tiempo del Descuento Telecinco
    CincoMAS (Americas)
    Season 1, 2020: Gianmarco Onestini Main host:
    Jorge Javier Vázquez
    Debate:
    Nuria Marín Font
    Secret Story Telecinco Season 1, 2021: Luca Onestini
    Season 2, 2022: Rafa Martinez[83]
    Main host:
    Jorge Javier Vázquez (1)
    Carlos Sobera (2)
    Countdown:
    Carlos Sobera (1)
    Sandra Barneda (2)
    Debate:
    Jordi González (1)
    Toñi Moreno (2)
    Sweden Big Brother Sverige Kanal 5
    • Season 1, 2000: Angelica Freij
  • Season 2, 2002: Ulrica Andersson
  • Season 3, 2003: Danne Sörensen
  • Season 4, 2004: Carolina Gynning
  • Adam Alsing
    TV11
  • Season 6, 2012: Hanna Johansson
  • Gry Forssell
    Kanal 11 Season 7, 2015: Christian Sahlström Adam Alsing
    Sjuan
    TV4 Play (stream)
    C More (live)
    TV4 (8; Premiere)
  • Season 9, 2021: Tanja Helen Ingebretsen Kallin
  • Malin Stenbäck (8–)
    Arantxa Álvarez (9)
    Adrian Boberg (8; Premiere)
    Big Brother Stjärnveckan
    Big Brother Week of the Stars
    Kanal 5 Season 1, 2002: Anki Lundberg Adam Alsing
    Switzerland Big Brother Schweiz
    Big Brother Switzerland
    TV3
    • Season 1, 2000: Daniela Hahn
  • Season 2, 2001: Christian Ponleitner
    • Daniel Fohrler (1)
  • Eva Wannemacher (2)
  • Thailand Big Brother Thailand iTV (1–2)
  • Season 2, 2006: Arisa Sonthirod
    • Saranyu Vonkarjun (1–2)
  • Nana Raibeena (2)
  • Turkey Big Brother Türkiye Star TV Season 1, 2015–16: Sinan Aydemir Asuman Krause
    Ukraine Big Brother Україна
    Big Brother Ukraine
    K1 Season 1, 2011: Kristina Kotvickaja
    • Olha Horbachova
  • Oleksiy Kurban
  • United Kingdom Big Brother Channel 4
    S4C (1–10)
    TVN Lingua (2–4)
  • Series 2, 2001: Brian Dowling
  • Series 3, 2002: Kate Lawler
  • Series 4, 2003: Cameron Stout
  • Series 5, 2004: Nadia Almada
  • Series 6, 2005: Anthony Hutton
  • Series 7, 2006: Pete Bennett
  • Series 8, 2007: Brian Belo
  • Series 9, 2008: Rachel Rice
  • Series 10, 2009: Sophie Reade
  • Series 11, 2010: Josie Gibson
  • Davina McCall
    Channel 5
    MTV (16–19)
    TV3 (16–18)
    Virgin Media One (19)
  • Series 13, 2012: Luke Anderson
  • Series 14, 2013: Sam Evans
  • Series 15, 2014: Helen Wood
  • Series 16, 2015: Chloe Wilburn
  • Series 17, 2016: Jason Burrill
  • Series 18, 2017: Isabelle Warburton
  • Series 19, 2018: Cameron Cole
  • Emma Willis (14–19)
  • ITV2
    ITV1 (20, select live episodes)
    ITVX (stream, live feed)
    Virgin Media One
  • Series 21, 2024: Upcoming Series[84]
  • Will Best
    AJ Odudu
    Celebrity Big Brother Channel 4
    BBC One (1)
    S4C (2–7)
  • Series 2, 2002: Mark Owen
  • Series 3, 2005: Bez
  • Series 4, 2006: Chantelle Houghton
  • Series 5, 2007: Shilpa Shetty
  • Series 6, 2009: Ulrika Jonsson
  • Series 7, 2010: Alex Reid
  • Davina McCall
    Channel 5
    MTV (15–22)
    TV3 (16–18)
    3e (19–22)
    Virgin Media Two (22)
  • Series 9, Winter 2012: Denise Welch
  • Series 10, Summer 2012: Julian Clary
  • Series 11, Winter 2013: Rylan Clark
  • Series 12, Summer 2013: Charlotte Crosby
  • Series 13, Winter 2014: Jim Davidson
  • Series 14, Summer 2014: Gary Busey
  • Series 15, Winter 2015: Katie Price
  • Series 16, Summer 2015: James Hill
  • Series 17, Winter 2016: Scott 'Scotty T' Timlin
  • Series 18, Summer 2016: Stephen Bear
  • Series 19, Winter 2017: Coleen Nolan
  • Series 20, Summer 2017: Sarah Harding
  • Series 21, Winter 2018: Shane Jenek / Courtney Act
  • Series 22, Summer 2018: Ryan Thomas
  • Emma Willis (12–22)
  • ITV
    ITVX (stream, live feed)
    Virgin Media Two
    Virgin Media Player
    Series 23, 2024: David Potts Will Best
    AJ Odudu
    Teen Big Brother Channel 4/E4
    S4C
    Series 1, 2003: Paul Brennan Dermot O'Leary
    Big Brother Panto Series 1, 2004–05: No winner Jeff Brazier
    June Sarpong
    Big Brother: Celebrity Hijack Series 1, 2008: John Loughton Dermot O'Leary
    Ultimate Big Brother Series 1, 2010: Brian Dowling Davina McCall
    United States
    (English)
    Big Brother
    (Broadcast edition)
    CBS
    Showtime 2 (8–14)
    Pop (15–21)
    CBS.com/AOL (Live; 1)
    CBS All Access (Live; 15–22)
    Paramount+ (Live; 23–)
    Pluto TV (Live; 25–)[85]
  • Season 2, 2001: Will Kirby
  • Season 3, 2002: Lisa Donahue
  • Season 4, 2003: Jun Song
  • Season 5, 2004: Drew Daniel
  • Season 6, 2005: Maggie Ausburn
  • Season 8, 2007: Dick Donato
  • Season 9, Winter 2008: Adam Jasinski
  • Season 10, Summer 2008: Dan Gheesling
  • Season 11, 2009: Jordan Lloyd
  • Season 12, 2010: Hayden Moss
  • Season 13, 2011: Rachel Reilly
  • Season 14, 2012: Ian Terry
  • Season 15, 2013: Andy Herren
  • Season 16, 2014: Derrick Levasseur
  • Season 17, 2015: Steve Moses
  • Season 18, 2016: Nicole Franzel
  • Season 19, 2017: Josh Martinez
  • Season 20, 2018: Kaycee Clark
  • Season 21, 2019: Jackson Michie
  • Season 23, 2021: Xavier Prather
  • Season 24, 2022: Taylor Hale
  • Season 25, 2023: Jagateshwar "Jag" Bains
  • Season 26, 2024: Upcoming Season
    • Current
  • Julie Chen Moonves
  • Former
  • Ian O'Malley (1)
  • Big Brother: All-Stars
  • Season 22, 2020: Cody Calafiore[86][87]
  • Big Brother: Over the Top
    (Digital edition)
    CBS All Access Season 1, 2016: Morgan Willett Julie Chen Moonves
    Celebrity Big Brother CBS
    Pop
    CBS All Access (Live; 1–2)
    Paramount+ (Live; 3–)
  • Season 2, 2019: Tamar Braxton
  • Season 3, 2022: Miesha Tate
  • Big Brother Reindeer Games[88] CBS
    Paramount+
    Season 1, 2023: Nicole Franzel-Arroyo
    • Derek Xiao
  • Tiffany Mitchell
  • Jordan Lloyd
  • United States
    (Spanish)
    Gran Hermano Telemundo Season 1, 2016: Pedro Orta[89] Giselle Blondet
    La casa de los famosos
    The House of the Famous
  • Season 2, 2022: Ivonne Montero[91]
  • Season 3, 2023: Madison Anderson
  • Season 4, 2024: Maripily Rivera
  • Current
    Nacho Lozano (4–)[92]
    Jimena Gallego

    Former
    Héctor Sandarti (1–3)

    La casa de los famosos: All-Stars
    The House of the Famous: All-Stars[93]
    Season 5, 2025: Upcoming Season[94]
    Vietnam Người Giấu Mặt
    The person who hides his face
    Big Brother Vietnam
    VTV6 Season 1, 2013–14: Hoàng Sơn Việt Huy Khánh

    Big Brother: The Game[edit]

    On 5 May 2020, Endemol Shine Group announced that an official Big Brother mobile game named Big Brother: The Game was being developed by Irish gaming company 9th Impact, with a worldwide release expected later that year.[95][96] The game uses the US format, with competitions determining the Head of Household and Power of Veto holders, with an eviction cycle occurring each day. Players must form alliances with one another to stay in the game and advance to the next tier. Other users may spectate other games, but outside interference is strictly forbidden. Players were able to win up to $1,000,000 in prizes.[97]

    A trial season took place in the Republic of Ireland during the summer of 2020. The player Aoife Cheung won a €5000 prize after surviving four evictions. The game was officially launched on 15 October 2020 worldwide for both iOS, Android devices and PC platforms.[98][99]

    The first season concluded on 29 July 2021 and was won by Amy Elizabeth, a 31-year-old special education teacher from Delaware who won a grand prize of $33,270.[100]

    On March 7, 2023, a third season of the game was announced to launch later that year on mobile and PC platforms, including Steam.[101][102] The grand prize was stated to be for up to $1,000,000, with new features being added in response to fan feedback. However, no global third season took place, with a special UK and Ireland-only version launching to coincide with the show returning to ITV2 and ITVX, in an official partnership with the broadcaster. This version featured overhauled graphics, with Banijay announcing that previous games had reached 500K players.[101]

    Controversies[edit]

    Legal[edit]

    In April 2000, Castaway, an independent production company, filed a lawsuit against John de Mol and Endemol for stealing the concepts of their own show called Survive!, a reality television show where contestants are placed on a deserted island and have to take care of themselves alone. These contestants were also filmed by cameras around them.[103] The court later dismissed the lawsuit filed by Castaway against de Mol and Endemol. The Survive! reality television format was later turned into Survivor.[104]

    In 2000, the estate of George Orwell sued CBS Television and Endemol for copyright and trademark infringement, claiming that the program infringed on the Orwell novel 1984 and its trademarks. After a series of court rulings adverse to the defendants (CBS and Endemol), the case was settled for an undisclosed amount of money on the evening of the trial.[105][106][107][108][109]

    Sexual assault[edit]

    There have been three documented occurrences of possible rape happening during the show. In Big Brother South Africa, a male housemate was accused of assaulting a fellow housemate while she was asleep. The pair were filmed kissing and cuddling in bed before the cameras moved away and the male housemate reportedly claimed to housemates the next day that he had intercourse with the contestant. However, the female housemate was apparently shocked by the claims and informed female housemates that she had not consented to have sex with him (under South African law, this act would be constituted as rape).[110] This male housemate was expelled immediately after the allegations surfaced and was later arrested pending investigation, while the female housemate was removed from the house for her own protection and counselling. After this incident, the other housemates were warned not to attempt any further obscene actions, or they would be subject to a penalty of 43 years in prison and immediate expulsion from the house.

    InBig Brother Brasil, many viewers reported that they watched a male housemate allegedly force himself on a female housemate while she was passed-out drunk after a "boozy party". Soon after, the Polícia Federal entered the house and arrested the offending housemate, who was later banned from ever appearing on the show again.[111]

    Additionally, an incident of sexual assault occurred in the Australian Big Brother house in 2006, during the show's sixth season. Contestant Michael "John" Bric held down fellow contestant Camilla Severi in her bed while a second man, Michael "Ashley" Cox, "slapped" her in the face with his penis, an indecent act illegal under Australian law.[112] The incident was shown on the 'Adults-only' late-night segment, Big Brother: Adults Only, leading to the show's cancellation. Both men involved in the incident were removed from the house.

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  • ^ https://tvi.iol.pt/bigbrother/casa-dos-segredos/secret-story/o-regresso-mais-esperado-casa-dos-segredos-esta-de-volta-a-tvi-inscricoes-abertas
  • ^ Co-produced version with Norway and Sweden taking part.
  • ^ https://www.telecinco.es/granhermano/20240424/apuntate-al-casting_18_012321442.html
  • ^ https://www.telecinco.es/granhermano/20240528/jorge-javier-vazquez-presentara-proxima-edicion_18_012611145.html
  • ^ mediaset.es (15 June 2023). "Marta Flich presentará la nueva edición de 'GH VIP', que regresará en otoño a Telecinco". Mediaset (in Spanish). Retrieved 17 June 2023.
  • ^ From Gala 12, Jordi González replaced Jorge Javier Vázquez as main host. Due to Vázquez was hospitalized for health problem.
  • ^ "Mediaset España prepara una edición de 'Secret Story' con caras nuevas en televisión y Carlos Sobera, Sandra Barneda y Toñi Moreno como presentadores". telecinco (in European Spanish). 17 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  • ^ "Big Brother 2024: Release date speculation and latest news". Radio Times. Retrieved 17 November 2023.
  • ^ Petski, Denise (1 August 2023). "'Big Brother' Season 25 Live Feeds Head To Pluto TV". Deadline. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  • ^ Dietz, Jason (15 May 2019). "UPFRONTS: CBS'S NEW SHOWS AND 2019–20 SCHEDULE". Metacritic. Archived from the original on 23 June 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  • ^ "CBS UNVEILS 2019–2020 PRIMETIME LINEUP; 8 NEW SERIES JOIN 24 RETURNING SHOWS". CBS Press Express. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  • ^ "'Big Brother' to air 'Reindeer Games' all-stars mini-season". EW.com. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  • ^ "Auditions Begin for Telemundo's Upcoming "Gran Hermano" (Big Brother) Scheduled to Premiere in 2016 for the First Time in Spanish in the United States". NBC Universal Media Village. NBC Universal. Retrieved 28 October 2015.[permanent dead link]
  • ^ "Telemundo Revives 'Celebrity Big Brother' as 'La Casa De Los Famosos' and Confirms Gabriela Spanic". cheatsheet.com. 29 July 2021. Archived from the original on 29 July 2021. Retrieved 29 July 2021.
  • ^ "¡Es oficial! Habrá 'La Casa de los Famosos 2', segunda temporada, en Telemundo". 16 November 2021.
  • ^ "Telemundo confirma la salida de Héctor Sandarti como conductor de La Casa de los Famosos: los detalles". El Diario NY (in Spanish). 13 September 2023. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
  • ^ https://www.elvocero.com/escenario/television/asoma-la-casa-de-los-famosos-all-stars/article_ad6260d2-170f-11ef-86d6-bfa007c096c4.html
  • ^ Cordero, Rosy (9 May 2024). "Telemundo Sets 2024-25 Programming Slate: 'El Señor De Los Cielos' Spinoff, 'Señora Acero' Reboot, La Casa de Los Famosos' & More". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 9 May 2024.
  • ^ "Endemol Shine Group partners with 9th Impact for Big Brother Game". Endemol Shine Group. 5 May 2020.
  • ^ "Big Brother: The Game will launch for iOS and Android later this year, with prizes available for series winners". Pocket Gamer. 5 May 2020.
  • ^ "Big Brother: The Game is available now for iOS and Android, offering a minimum cash prize of 10,000 USD to the winner". Pocket Gamer. 15 October 2020.
  • ^ "Big Brother: The Game announces October global launch date". bbspy.co.uk. 24 September 2020. Archived from the original on 20 October 2020. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  • ^ "Big Brother: The Game announces real cash prize of up to $1million". bbspy.co.uk. 15 October 2020. Archived from the original on 17 October 2020. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  • ^ Big Brother: The Game [@Game_BigBrother] (30 July 2021). "Just announced by @Mrs_ARockstar the winner of BBTG T7 HODL is: 👑 Queen, Amy Elizabeth ...who walks out of HODL House with $33,270.25 and more importantly @AndyHerren hat courtesy of @mccraechum" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  • ^ a b "Banijay Brands Confirms 'Big Brother: The Game 3' | License Global". www.licenseglobal.com. Retrieved 20 October 2023.
  • ^ "Big Brother: The Game on Steam". store.steampowered.com. Retrieved 20 October 2023.
  • ^ "Geldof's Big Brother battle". BBC News. 20 April 2000. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
  • ^ "Blow for mogul's Big Brother claim". BBC News. 24 August 2000. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
  • ^ Estate of George Orwell v. CBS, et al. 00-C-5034 (N.D. Ill.)
  • ^ Variety, "Orwellian Suit Socks 'Brother", 5 September 2000
  • ^ The Times of London, "US Big Brother Is Sued over 1984 Link", 6 September 2000
  • ^ New York Post, "CBS Loses 'Bro Battle', 4 January 2001
  • ^ Chicago Tribune, "CBS, Orwell Estate Settle 'Big Brother' Lawsuit", 28 September 2001.
  • ^ Paterson, Mark. "Big Brother's South African rape horror show". The Week. Dennis Publishing. Archived from the original on 9 January 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
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  • ^ "How Big Brother's Infamous Turkey Slap Incident Changed Reality TV Forever". 5 April 2018.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


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