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1.5 Billion votes in BBBrazil eviction

Gabriel

Member
This night was aired the 10th eviction in BB20 and there's a new record of votes, the old record was 416 million in this season..mm

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Felipe Prior - 56,73% (869.639.322 votes)
Manu Gavassi - 42,51% (651.654.637 votes)
Mari Gonzalez - 0,76% (11.650.376 votes)

Top 15 votes in BBB history

1 - BBB 20 | Felipe X Manu X Mari - 1.532.944.337 votes
2 - BBB 20 |
Gizelly X Guilherme X Pyong - 416.649.126 votes
3 - BBB 20 | Babu X Pyong X Rafa - 385.000.000 votes
4 - BBB 19 | Carolina X Elana X Paula - 202.406.432 votes
5 - BBB 10 | Fernanda X Cadu X Dourado - 154.878.460 votes [FINAL]
6 - BBB 19 | Carolina X Danrley X Paula - 150.090.640 votes
7 - BBB 17 | Emilly X Ieda X Vivian - 144.000.000 votes [FINAL]
8 - BBB 18 | Gleici X Kaysar X Família Lima - 140.000.000 votes [FINAL]
9 - BBB 20 | Bianca X Felipe X Flayslane - 132.000.000 votes
10 - BBB 10 | Dicésar X Dourado - 125.413.692 votes
11 - BBB 19 | Carolina X Paula - 118.000.000 votes
12 - BBB 17 | Marcos X Ilmar - 112.889.105 votes
13 - BBB 20 | Daniel X Ivy X Flayslane - 111.000.000 votes
14 - BBB 16 | Ana Paula X Juliana - 103.255.946 votos
15 - BBB 16 | Ana Paula X Munik X Tamiel - 97.744.688 votes
 
Channel 7 be kicking themselves it’s not live now. Imagine all the people home to vote 😂
 
Free multiple online/app votes but still impressive - remember the time they topped 100m votes a decade or so ago (back in the day of phone voting). Won't be far off a houseguest having a billion votes to evict - that was quite evenly split this week, though love that 1.5billion votes were cast and one nominee only got 11,000 votes.
 
The 20th season of reality show “Big Brother Brazil” hit a historic milestone this week when the trio disputing the final two spots on the show’s tenth eviction night lured a whopping 1.5 billion votes. The massive number of casting votes set an all-time record in the “Big Brother” franchise, licensed to Brazilian media giant Globo by Endemol Shine. Since its debut in January, “Big Brother Brazil 20” reached 159 million viewers on free-to-air Globo TV. The March 31 episode nabbed a share of 51% in the city of São Paulo and 55% in Rio de Janeiro.
“Thank you very much for this unprecedented voter participation on this unimaginable eviction day,” said host Tiago Leifert, who interrupted Globo’s regular programming to break the news. The finale is slated for April 23. Voters are allowed to vote multiple times.

“The numbers we are seeing for “Big Brother” in Brazil are eye-popping,” said Endemol Shine Americas Chairman Cris Abrego who, together with Endemol Shine Latino president Laurens Drillich, spearheaded the license arrangement with Globo. “They are historic even for a hit global franchise like this one; it’s amazing how the team at Globo have galvanized an entire country with this series,” Abrego added.
As in the original Dutch television series conceived by media tycoon John de Mol in 1997, the show places a group of strangers in a Big Brother house to live together twenty-four hours a day in complete lockdown, with no exposure to newspapers, telephones, television and the internet. Cameras record their every move, with virtually no privacy, for about three months. The housemates compete with each other to avoid the weekly eviction; the last person remaining at the end of the season claims the grand prize.

The concept of “Big Brother” seems even more timely given the lockdown most people worldwide are experiencing due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“To see audiences identifying themselves with the houseguests and their personal stories, embarking with them on their emotional journey throughout the game, has been most gratifying. It has always been this way. But now, in face of the current world reality, “being confined together” has gained a new meaning,” said “BBB” general director Rodrigo Dourado, adding: “We made the decision to tell the contestants about the pandemic during the live airing of the show, as a great opportunity to inform and alert our viewers about the COVID-19, but also to ensure the safety of our houseguests.”

“I am aware now that we have been providing entertainment to distract people amidst the constant broadcast of bad news. Our role to offer quality entertainment has gained a whole new meaning,” said J.B. Oliveira, who has directed the show for 20 seasons.
The Brazilian version suspended its live studio audience since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis. Other measures include heightened on-site sanitation, monitoring all people with access to the already restricted location and 24-7 monitoring of all the contestants by a medical team.
“Big Brother Brazil” airs live daily on free-to-air Globo and is also available 24 hours a day on Globo’s pay TV and OTT platform, Globoplay, which is accessible in Brazil and the U.S.
“Big Brother” is currently produced in more than 20 territories around the world by Endemol Shine.

https://variety.com/2020/tv/global/...one-1234569516/amp/?__twitter_impression=true
 
The 20th season of reality show “Big Brother Brazil” hit a historic milestone this week when the trio disputing the final two spots on the show’s tenth eviction night lured a whopping 1.5 billion votes. The massive number of casting votes set an all-time record in the “Big Brother” franchise, licensed to Brazilian media giant Globo by Endemol Shine. Since its debut in January, “Big Brother Brazil 20” reached 159 million viewers on free-to-air Globo TV. The March 31 episode nabbed a share of 51% in the city of São Paulo and 55% in Rio de Janeiro.
“Thank you very much for this unprecedented voter participation on this unimaginable eviction day,” said host Tiago Leifert, who interrupted Globo’s regular programming to break the news. The finale is slated for April 23. Voters are allowed to vote multiple times.

“The numbers we are seeing for “Big Brother” in Brazil are eye-popping,” said Endemol Shine Americas Chairman Cris Abrego who, together with Endemol Shine Latino president Laurens Drillich, spearheaded the license arrangement with Globo. “They are historic even for a hit global franchise like this one; it’s amazing how the team at Globo have galvanized an entire country with this series,” Abrego added.
As in the original Dutch television series conceived by media tycoon John de Mol in 1997, the show places a group of strangers in a Big Brother house to live together twenty-four hours a day in complete lockdown, with no exposure to newspapers, telephones, television and the internet. Cameras record their every move, with virtually no privacy, for about three months. The housemates compete with each other to avoid the weekly eviction; the last person remaining at the end of the season claims the grand prize.

The concept of “Big Brother” seems even more timely given the lockdown most people worldwide are experiencing due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“To see audiences identifying themselves with the houseguests and their personal stories, embarking with them on their emotional journey throughout the game, has been most gratifying. It has always been this way. But now, in face of the current world reality, “being confined together” has gained a new meaning,” said “BBB” general director Rodrigo Dourado, adding: “We made the decision to tell the contestants about the pandemic during the live airing of the show, as a great opportunity to inform and alert our viewers about the COVID-19, but also to ensure the safety of our houseguests.”

“I am aware now that we have been providing entertainment to distract people amidst the constant broadcast of bad news. Our role to offer quality entertainment has gained a whole new meaning,” said J.B. Oliveira, who has directed the show for 20 seasons.
The Brazilian version suspended its live studio audience since the beginning of the COVID-19 crisis. Other measures include heightened on-site sanitation, monitoring all people with access to the already restricted location and 24-7 monitoring of all the contestants by a medical team.
“Big Brother Brazil” airs live daily on free-to-air Globo and is also available 24 hours a day on Globo’s pay TV and OTT platform, Globoplay, which is accessible in Brazil and the U.S.
“Big Brother” is currently produced in more than 20 territories around the world by Endemol Shine.

https://variety.com/2020/tv/global/...one-1234569516/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

Now why can't they do that in Australia. It would be amazing to be able to tune into Big Brother Australia whenever you want.
 
er, that's 11 million votes
Whoops. Still kind of stands though! ;)

Anyway, the much more remarkable thing is having had 20 housemates and now being down to the final 10 is that of those final 10 only one of them is male. Never seen females dominate any version of Big Brother in the way they are doing here - nine of the ten evictees so far have been men.
 
Big Brother teaching series 20 in Brazil and still being so big is very alien to me as a British fan.

Is the show still culturally relevant in Brazil? I’ve had a look at the Wikipedia page and the ratings have held up really well considering it’s a show 20 years into its life. It seems they’ve adapted the show over time, notably with housemates having phones to take pictures and videos to share with the viewers. I’m surprised that’s something that hasn’t been adapted worldwide. The housemates taking photos and videos and the production team uploading them to the social media accounts seems a good way to get the viewers immersed in a different way.
 
The US has done things like that for ages too - used to be a digital camera and think it's things like Snapchat goggles now.
 
Oh that’s interesting! I haven’t watched BBUS for a good few years now.

it would certainly be interesting to watch the day unfold on social media through the eyes of the housemates. Live feed is of course preferred, but it would be a great way to keep the viewers up to date in modern times.
 
I think that was a fair few years ago. Don't think they push the content too widely. IIRC didn't they use to have the HoH write a blog too?

I think BB Brazil has had a bit of a resurgence in recent years too after going through the lull most long running versions have.
 
Big Brother teaching series 20 in Brazil and still being so big is very alien to me as a British fan.

Is the show still culturally relevant in Brazil? I’ve had a look at the Wikipedia page and the ratings have held up really well considering it’s a show 20 years into its life. It seems they’ve adapted the show over time, notably with housemates having phones to take pictures and videos to share with the viewers. I’m surprised that’s something that hasn’t been adapted worldwide. The housemates taking photos and videos and the production team uploading them to the social media accounts seems a good way to get the viewers immersed in a different way.
Still by far the most popular TV show in the whole country...
The official account has over 9 million followers, 2 housemates from this season with over 15 milllion followers, other 2 above 10 million.

The final got like 34 million viewers and 56% of share.
There's no shows with these ratings like BB
 
So if my maths is correct every one of those 34m viewers had to vote 44 times for there to be 1.5 billion votes.
 
So if my maths is correct every one of those 34m viewers had to vote 44 times for there to be 1.5 billion votes.

The 1.5 billion votes were for one of the evictions not the final. The person evicted received 840 million votes.
 
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