Change is a good thing right?

So Gretel’s gone to that great eviction stage in the sky, or a donkey sanctuary or something, meaning this year there is a very visible change in the form of Kyle and Jackie O.

It seems a risky appointment – but that’s far better than going for some reliable autocue reader with little personality – and it could just work. And if it doesn’t, well I think it’ll be entertaining watching their careers just slip away.

The more important change of course though is that of the production team. Love him (his mum) or hate him (the rest of us), four years is just too long to be in charge of a show like Big Brother, and Kris Noble ran out of ideas at least two years before he left.

So far the new producers (Rory Callaghan and Virginia Hodgson) seem to be heading in the right direction, but it’s not what they’re promising, it’s what they deliver which they will be judged on – and we all know how many promises have been broken in the past.

It’s not so much about what twists they come up with or what they steal from abroad and pass off as a “world first” – but it’s how they execute the things they do.

In many respects it doesn’t matter too much what they do – but it’s very important that what they do do, they do well.

After all, it only take one bad move for the series to be written off once again.

So what do you think – add you comments on our new BBBA community blogs here. And if you’d like a place to share your thoughts, why not try the brand spanking new BBBA user blogs and get blogging yourself.

Also on Behind Big Brother

World First: Some twists BB08 could make their own

OK, while of course something completely original would be preferred, despite what some people think I don’t have a problem with them nicking (good) ideas from other Big Brother’s. The problem I’ve had is they almost always screw them up.

So a few ideas – some which I think might work, some which wouldn’t – and one in particular I’d really not like to see, but it’s the sort of thing BB Aus would probably do…

So we’ll begin with that one then…

The Family
Italy put a family in the house this year – a 50-something mum and dad and their three sons. The three sons were automatically up for eviction during the first week, though I’m not sure whether they had to keep their family connections a secret or whether they were up front with it.

Now, obviously we all know in the last couple of years Australia have loved their relationship twists and this is probably the ultimate one. I think it needs to be strangers this year, but if done, I think they need to be upfront in putting the family in and see how the HMs react to that family, rather than the whole secret relationship twist yet again.

Soulmates
BBUSA’s latest twist sees the houseguests paired with their “perfect soulmate” and then play the game as pairs – being nominated together and evicted together. Throw in one pair of exes, plus one secret couple split into two different partnerships, and leave to boil. The jury’s still out on whether the twist was a success – IMO it’s been a bit of a slow burner, but an interesting twist.

I think if BB Aus did this they’d probably only do it up until the first eviction – but really to get the benefit out of the twist it needs to run a little longer.

Celebrity Hijack
I mentioning this more for the sake of mentioning it than anything else, but the premise is a series of celebrities step into the Big Brother role, talking to the housemates, chatting to them in the diary room and setting tasks.

This was an experimental series in the UK with a new celeb every day for about three weeks – and as an experiment it kind of works. However, as a full 100-day series I don’t think it would, and I think it strays too far from the “no outside contact” principle to be includes as just a one-week twist.

Secret Story
From France last year, each housemate goes into the house with a secret and the mission to identify each others secrets. Each secret is worth cash and when you think you know a secret, you can confront them and if correct, win their cash.

Secrets included being triplets, a married couple, a transexual, the son of a celebrity, an “insider”, being in contact with aliens and having OCD.


.. and now two classic formats which often crop up for discussion prior to each series.

Head of Household

OK, most are probably familiar with the US format where each week the “houseguests” compete for the role of Head of Household, aka the HoH. The HoH then nominates two people for eviction.

The houseguests then compete again for the Power of Veto, which enables the winner to save a nominee (if they choose) and force the HoH to nominate a replacement. Then at the end of the week the other houseguests vote for which nominee should be evicted and the process starts again.

When two remain, the last seven evictees vote for the winner.

Now, some people view the FNL twist as a nod to the format but IMO it’s a poor mans HoH, though last year the prize was effectively the Veto. However, it was a mistake IMO not to allow the winner to leave the nominees unchanged – which could cause just as many problems as them saving a nominee. Giving the nominees a week to think about the changes the FNL winner had made also would surely have been better than telling them just minutes prior to the eviction.

Back to HoH though and if Australia adapted it I’m sure it would be more along the Brazilian lines, keeping the public vote. Basically the HoH chooses the one nominee, with the other housemates voting for a second before they go head to head in the public vote, though I suspect if Australia did it they’d keep the three nominees so probably have the HoH choose one and the other HMs choose a further two.

and finally:
Big Brother: The Battle

If BB08 were to borrow any twist this is the one I really think could work for Australia. The concept is pretty simple – divide the house into “rich” and “poor”, with all the luxuries such as the kitchen, bathroom, pool, gym etc. – and the week’s food budget, available to the “rich” housemates, while the “poor” housemates have to live in more basic surroundings with an outside toilet, outdoor showers and an outdoor stove – with just the bland basics to live on.

It’s a very visual twist which can be adapted in many ways. Who lives where would be a great new focus for the challenges on Friday Night Live – either with big team challenges or a series of head to head battles, while further challenges during the week could give individual housemates the chance to swap sides.

Nominations too can remain as they are, or be split so housemates vote separately in the “rich house” and the “poor house”, with one or two from each side going up for eviction.

It’s a twist which BB Aus has never really explored – it was used for a week in BB04, but that missed the whole idea. It’s when people have been stuck on the poor side for two or three weeks the format really develops – knowing it’ll all be over in a few days doesn’t have the same effect.

However, it’s also an example of how Australia should be adopting twists and making them into something new, as they did with the two houses in BB03 – which basically saw each begin as a “poor house” and then merge into a “rich house”.

So what do you think – would you like BB Aus to try any of these ideas this year, or is there something else from elsewhere you think could work?

Is it a good time to do something that might be new to Australia, but has been tried and tested elsewhere, or for the revamp to work does any twist have to be truly original, not just for the benefit of international fans like myself, but for the Australian audience as a whole?

Share your views in the BBBA forum.

Also on Behind Big Brother

A reluctant hijacking

Well I’ve been putting this blog off for over a week now as despite this being the best BBUK series for at least a couple of years, it kind of went out on a low. Continue reading “A reluctant hijacking”

Also on Behind Big Brother

Faking It

A quick recap of the last couple of weeks in BBUK as the housemates face the Seven Deadly Sins before Big Brother unleashes Fake Week.

Continue reading “Faking It”

Also on Behind Big Brother

I give in – I’m no good at blog chicken

After a slow start Big Brother UK is finally beginning to get back on track – so here is a quick round up of the last couple of weeks…

Continue reading “I give in – I’m no good at blog chicken”

Also on Behind Big Brother

The blog with no name

I’m struggling for a title this week – so be prepared for some random ramblings, plus a brief round up of the latest BBUK activity.

I’m going to start with the Ice Cave – the first thing in several weeks which has caught my attention in BB07.

Yes, they may have done the camping thing before – and yes, other countries may have had twists on the same premise before – but for once that didn’t really matter.

Firstly, the producers just about managed not too screw this twist up – letting it play out over the week and not seemingly making it up as it went along.

And secondly, and this is my new buzz phrase, it was an “original interpretation” of a twist seen elsewhere, even in regards to the camping in BB Aus. They took the basic idea but managed to turn it into a twist of their own without compromising the twist themselves.

And for that, I’ll congratulate the producers. It was well executed and pretty well timed too – though of course it’s a shame we haven’t seen anything near that calibre of creativity earlier in the season.

ORIGINAL INTERPRETATION

It’s that phrase again – and it’s an important one. Alot of people seem to misunderstand our criticism of reusing BBUK tasks, but it’s all down to creativity – so if they can’t come up with something themselves, at least when using borrowed ideas, they should try and add their own original twist to them to make something new – and at the same time, not completely screw it up in the process.

Therefore, when it was revealed that Big Brother had gone away and not left an automated version of itself in charge, I tried to avoid jumping in with the criticism and instead wait to see how it played out.

It turns out though perhaps I was giving the producers too much credit. “Automated Big Brother” made the twist on BBUK – and although it wasn’t necessary to be incorporated into Australia’s equivalent, they really did need something else to maintain the interest in the twist.

And this is where the phone could have really come in useful – rather than just using it to check up on the housemates, Big Brother could have upped the ante by setting secret “Insider” style secret missions for whoever they were communicating with (Joel) – and then perhaps we wouldn’t have seen the housemates rule themselves so strictly.

Though that itself is down to Big Brother’s petty authority over the series – it seems he probably suppresses the characters of the housemates rather than encouraging them.

NOMINATIONS

Unfair and sexist maybe – but who gives a shit? Four duds are up for eviction, and for once I’m relieved it’s a double.

The gender imbalance needed addressing and for once there is no denying – even by the producers – that they’ve fixed proceedings to ensure two of the boring blokes go.

However, surely they could have been more cunning about it. It’s pretty obvious that the “biggest threat” twist a couple of weeks ago (which I didn’t really agree with) was intended to see a man walking out of the door, but it spectacularly backfired.

The obvious way to fix this weeks nominations was to allow just the Intruders to nominate – I’m assuming Michelle and Zach are more likely to nominate the boys than the girls, but of course that too could backfire. However, perhaps that would be worth the risk.

AND FINALLY IN BBUK

So here we’ve gone from an all-girl house to a fairly even split of 8 girls and 7 men – but will it see an end to the bitching?   Probably not until Charley is evicted.

The four new fellas are all straight (so they claim), and all quite different.   Billi is a 25 year-old model who seems to have slipped through the audition process, while Jonathan, 49, is a millionaire businessman and former journalist.   Liam, 22, is a tree-surgeon who was an instant hit with the girls, while Brian, 19, works in IT and seems to have met half the housemates at the auditions.

Half an hour after they arrived the first eviction finally occured.   Earlier in the week, last Friday’s new intruders had selected the twins to join them in being the only housemates to nominate this week – and as a result Carole, Shabnam and Tracey all faced the public vote.   With 81..4% of the eviction votes, Shabnam got the boot, and didn’t enhance her popularity by taking forever to leave the house – even stopping to sing and dance for the crowd on the eviction balcony – much to their disgust!

Now with the guys finally providing a match for the girls, for many BBUK has now begun and it’s already evident from just one daily show what a difference they’ve made.    It feels like Big Brother once again – not the ladies toilets in a local nightclub!

Keep up to date with BBUK in the International Forum, while there is a full live rundown of each week’s eviction show at our sister site Being Big Brother.   Also catch a rundown of each week’s events in the last 15-minutes or so of BBBA Radio, which airs live at 7pm on “Satdays” and can be downloaded from Sundays.  

P.S.  We’ve not posted any guest blogs lately – so anyone feeling like an extended rant, send them in to the Mailbag.

Also on Behind Big Brother