So funny! These are bringing it all back. I’d definitely rate 2007 as one my favourite seasons.
14:52 LMAO I am PMSL at Travis' nominations. Wtf is he saying.
So funny! These are bringing it all back. I’d definitely rate 2007 as one my favourite seasons.
14:52 LMAO I am PMSL at Travis' nominations. Wtf is he saying.
I completely agree. I have it in my definite top 3 or 4. It's between 05 and 07 for me at this point. I feel like just based on bias 2012 and 2013 may jump in as I got to experience those seasons live. But 07 has been really great so far, I am really loving it.So funny! These are bringing it all back. I’d definitely rate 2007 as one my favourite seasons.
Yes it seems we share the same opinions. 01 is also way ahead at the top bunch as well for me. Whenever I feel sad I actually watch Sara-Marie's eviction episode. When I wrote in my write up that she made me laugh I meant it. For me my first exposure to Big Brother was walking into dreamworld when I was 4 visiting the 2004 house. As a very young child I was mesmerised with the idea of so many people lining up to visit a house. The fact it was in dreamworld made it seem like such a big deal to me too.I feel we are similar on this - I have always considered 2005 one of my all-time favourites, a lot of which has to do with the nostalgia of watching it with family at the time and of-course our shared love for Vesna.
2001 will also forever be in my top 3, not just because it’s the first but for similar reasons of being introduced to the show, the phenomena of the franchise and the nostalgia of watching it live (even though at that time the rest of my family hated the show, funnily enough). I distinctly recall walking in to my living room during the first ever launch episode as a 9-year-old and becoming instantly consumed by the concept of the show. The attraction was immediate for me, and I never missed a single episode after that (minus Uncut at the time, obviously).
God, I miss those days.
I agree that other people wouldn't understand it. Especially within my age people just associate BB with Dreamworld and FNL so there is no understanding of the deeper meaning. I think watching BB as an adolescent plays a big role in learning and developing. For me I heard a lot of my first discussions about sexual and intimate topics in the late night feasts in 2013. And as much as people don't like Ben Norris here, for me as a 12-year-old who was in the closet and dealing with my own sexuality at the time, it was extremely comforting to see a gay man on TV, and to know I wasn't alone in the world. This was also a time where social media was still finding it's feet so I had no means of being able to communicate with any other gay people, so hearing Benjamin's stories and experience gave me great comfort.That is so beautiful.
I would never admit to people nowadays my love for Big Brother because there’s just no way they’d understand. But, to so many people (and to all of us here), there’s definitely a deeper connection to it. A lot of key moments throughout the first eight seasons completely defined stages of my life growing up, in one way or another, and I have such an affinity to certain scenes or “eras” of the show because of it. It had such a profound impact on my adolescent and teenage years.
I actually re-watched the 2006 finale today and found myself literally sobbing through most of it - partly because of how much I miss those days, not necessarily my life in ‘06 but definitely the “event TV” days and how “simpler” reality television was, and also because it just made me reflect on life in general… particularly our current state of the world.
Similarly, I still can’t watch the 2008 farewell tribute and not cry to this day.
…which makes it all the more sadder that 20 years later I now actively refuse to watch the current version of the show.
I agree that other people wouldn't understand it. Especially within my age people just associate BB with Dreamworld and FNL so there is no understanding of the deeper meaning. I think watching BB as an adolescent plays a big role in learning and developing. For me I heard a lot of my first discussions about sexual and intimate topics in the late night feasts in 2013. And as much as people don't like Ben Norris here, for me as a 12-year-old who was in the closet and dealing with my own sexuality at the time, it was extremely comforting to see a gay man on TV, and to know I wasn't alone in the world. This was also a time where social media was still finding it's feet so I had no means of being able to communicate with any other gay people, so hearing Benjamin's stories and experience gave me great comfort.
As I am also someone with ASD, so the concept of Big Brother has always intrigued me. I have always been fascinated that other humans were able to form bonds with people so early on and were thrown into uncomfortable situations and were able to get through it. I always felt envy for people who did Big Brother, and I thought of them as amazingly skilled socially. I had longed to give this experience a go to be able to see if I could do it. Big Brother has always been more than just a show to me, I don't think there'd be many people that understand why.
And yes, the 08 farewell video makes me sad too. For me it symbolises my childhood ending, as corny as that it is. I too miss the event feel reality TV used to give off. Pre-Netflix I'd still go to high school in the 2010s and there would be discussion between students and teachers about Big Brother, Masterchef, MKR, Survivor, The Block and any other shows that were airing. I also get why you don't watch to watch, my mum refuses to as well, although I've managed to convince her to tune it to see Reggie again. I wish there was a positive I could tell you that would make you want to watch the 2020 and 2021 versions, but there isn't. I had to force myself to watch 2021 excruciatingly. 2020 I just watched out of habit each night.
I can heavily relate to this omg. Big Brother isn’t just a show I enjoy. It’s a special interest, something I can’t let go of and something feeds comfort to me. I made Big Brother seasons and pretended I won a series of got evicted. I literally often talk to myself as if I’m hosting the show or a housemate myself in a situation with people I’ve literally never met in my life. Big Brother has basically helped me understand human interaction and why people feel the way they do and why they do the things they do. There are so many intricacies that make everything feel so right. So when watching this current format… I just feel the emptiness and longing for a format I probably got to spend at most 5 seasons of. Because I was born shortly after the show had first came out.As I am also someone with ASD, so the concept of Big Brother has always intrigued me. I have always been fascinated that other humans were able to form bonds with people so early on and were thrown into uncomfortable situations and were able to get through it. I always felt envy for people who did Big Brother, and I thought of them as amazingly skilled socially. I had longed to give this experience a go to be able to see if I could do it. Big Brother has always been more than just a show to me, I don't think there'd be many people that understand why.
I don't like that it wasn't completely random. I don't recall the show narrowing it down to five finalists based on auditions. I liked how BBUK did it with Aisleyne having to choose a numbered ball from a bingo style machine and that number would determine which candidate would enter the house completely randomly.
Totally agree. The UK one felt a lot more real, especially since only 35 or so people actually registered their golden key. Just a simple pick of a ball and in you go. The star burst competition and the randomness of the final key was fine, but why whittle them down to 5 based on production choice? I don't like that it wasn't random and actually forgot all about it till I watched it. Nick wasn't even that great of a housemate either.They just took a simple BBUK twist and completely ruined it by over complicating it and undermining the whole purpose of it.
I don't necessarily disagree with the idea of a production shortlist. Nick was relatively inconsequential, but he was inoffensive and to throw the door wide open to just anyone could've led to potentially bad outcomes.Totally agree. The UK one felt a lot more real, especially since only 35 or so people actually registered their golden key. Just a simple pick of a ball and in you go. The star burst competition and the randomness of the final key was fine, but why whittle them down to 5 based on production choice? I don't like that it wasn't random and actually forgot all about it till I watched it. Nick wasn't even that great of a housemate either.
Most of the time yes I agree, anyone going in probably was at a disadvantage. Susie in the UK version managed to do quite well within the group and lasted to the last fortnight. It probably just comes down to the type of cast.I don't necessarily disagree with the idea of a production shortlist. Nick was relatively inconsequential, but he was inoffensive and to throw the door wide open to just anyone could've led to potentially bad outcomes.
The whole idea though was it might attract someone who producers wouldn't usually shortlist to be a housemate, even if that person had auditioned time and time again to be on the show. I don't know if Nick had but Susie certainly had but not got in. She was one of my favourite HMs though of that series - not someone I was backing to win or probably would have been that good as an original housemate but someone who as an intruder actually made an impact on events in the house for much of the duration of her stay and gave us gems like this.I don't necessarily disagree with the idea of a production shortlist. Nick was relatively inconsequential, but he was inoffensive and to throw the door wide open to just anyone could've led to potentially bad outcomes.
Had it not been for Suzie we would never have gotten the iconic "who is she?!" moment too.The whole idea though was it might attract someone who producers wouldn't usually shortlist to be a housemate, even if that person had auditioned time and time again to be on the show. I don't know if Nick had but Susie certainly had but not got in. She was one of my favourite HMs though of that series - not someone I was backing to win or probably would have been that good as an original housemate but someone who as an intruder actually made an impact on events in the house for much of the duration of her stay and gave us gems like this.