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Big Brother (franchise) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search This article is about the franchise. For other uses, see Big Brother (disambiguation). Big Brother International Logo of Big Brother.png International logo of Big Brother Created by John de Mol Jr. Original work Big Brother (Netherlands) Films and television Television series Big Brother (independent international versions, see below and special editions) Celebrity/VIP Big Brother Miscellaneous First aired 16 September 1999 Distributor Endemol Based on Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell Official website http://www.endemol.com/programme/big-brother Big Brother is a Dutch reality competition television franchise created by John de Mol Jr., broadcast in the Netherlands and subsequently syndicated internationally.[1] As of 26 November 2018, there have been 445 seasons of Big Brother in over 54 franchise countries and regions.

Contents 1 Synopsis 2 Premise 3 History 3.1 Name 3.2 Creation 3.3 International expansion 4 Reception 4.1 Overview 4.2 Isolation 5 Format changes and twists 5.1 Regional versions 5.2 Twists involving single franchises 5.3 Twists involving multiple franchises 5.4 Multiple-franchise competitions 6 Special editions 6.1 Celebrity and VIP Big Brother 6.2 US and English-Canadian formats 6.3 Other editions 7 Versions 8 Controversies 8.1 Legal 8.2 Sexual assault 9 References 10 Bibliography Synopsis In the show, contestants called "housemates" (or "HouseGuests") live together in a specially-constructed house that is isolated from the outside world. Housemates are voted out (usually on a weekly basis) until only one remains and wins the cash prize. During their stay in the house, contestants are continuously monitored by live television cameras as well as personal audio microphones.

English-language editions of the program are often referred to as "BB".[2] Many Spanish-language editions of the program are called Gran Hermano (GH).

Premise At regular intervals, the housemates privately nominate a number of their fellow housemates whom they wish to be evicted from the house.[3] 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 Name The term Big Brother originates from George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, with its theme of continuous oppressive surveillance.[1] 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 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 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 US version adopted a different format during its 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. In 2011, the UK version controversially adapted the discussion of nominations before reversing this rule after a poll by Big Brother broadcaster Channel 5.[4]

Reception Overview From a sociological and demographic perspective, Big Brother allows an analysis of how people react[citation needed] 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).

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),[5] 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 minute delay to allow libelous or unacceptable content (such as references to people not participating in the program who have not consented to having 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 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.

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 counseling sessions with a psychologist. These are allowed at any time, and are often conducted by telephone from the Diary Room.

Format changes and twists Regional versions 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 Albania of Albania and Kosovo, Big Brother Angola e Moçambique of Angola 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 Macedonia). The British version of the show accepts Irish applicants and was available between 2000 and 2010 as Channel 4 was available; as of 2015 the show returned to Irish screens as TV3 bought the rights from UK broadcaster Channel 5 to air the show.

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

Twists involving single franchises Multiple areas and houses In 2001, Big Brother 3 of the Netherlands introduced the "Rich and Poor" concept, wherein 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 until its fourth season. Other versions later followed and introduced a similar concept, of which some have their own twists: Africa (in 2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013), Albania (in 2010), Australia (in 2003 and 2013), Balkan States (in VIP 2010 and 2011), Brazil (in 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013 and 2014), Canada (2013–present), Denmark (in 2003), Finland (in 2009 and 2014), France (in 2009, 2011–present), Germany (in 2003, 2004–05, 2005–06, 2008 and 2008–09), Greece (in 2003), India (in 2012 and 2013), Israel (in 2009), Italy (in 2006 and 2007), Norway (in 2003), Philippines (in 2009, Teen 2010 and 2011), Poland (in 2002), Portugal (in VIP 2013 and 2016), Slovakia (in 2005), Slovenia (in 2008, 2015 and 2016), Scandinavia (in 2005), South Africa (in 2014), Spain (in VIP 2004, 2008, 2009–10 and 2010), United Kingdom (in 2002, Celebrity 2007, 2008, Celebrity 2013 and 2016) and United States (2009–present).

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).[6]

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.

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 house guests were required to unanimously decide which of them to bring back into the house.

Evil Big Brother 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 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 five weeks. This twist was reused in the seventeenth US season with an easier task of successfully changing places for five weeks without being evicted.

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 (in 2005), Germany (in 2005–06), Bulgaria (in 2006, 2012 and VIP 2017), United Kingdom (in 2007, Celebrity 2011, Celebrity 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016 and Celebrity 2017), France (in 2007, 2011, 2013, 2015 and 2016), Spain (in 2007 and 2013), Poland (in 2007), India (in 2008), Africa (in 2009), Balkan Region (in 2009 and 2013), Philippines (in 2009, Teen 2012 and 2014), Portugal (in 2010 and 2012), Israel (in 2011), Ukraine (in 2011), Argentina (in 2011 and 2016) and Albania (in 2013).

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

In sixth American series, each HouseGuest had a secret partner with whom had a pre-existing relationship. While each player was nominated and evicted as an individual, each pair had the goal of reaching being the Final 2 HouseGuests. Should a secret pair succeed in this goal, the prize money awarded to the winner and runner-up would increase (with the winner’s prize doubling from $500,000 to $1,000,000 and the runner-up’s prize quintupling from $50,000 to $250,000). During the tenth week of the seventh UK series, the housemates were paired with their "best friend" in the house and had to nominate and face eviction as couples. The ninth US season added a romantic theme by pairing up the HouseGuests with their “Soulmate” and having them compete as couples. This twist was active for the first 3 weeks of the season. The 13th US season fetured a further twist to the pairs format by introducing the "Dynamic Duos" twist, where contestants formed pairs that would be nominated together but evicted separately. The nominee not evicted would be immune from further nomination until there were 10 HouseGuests remaining, at which point the pairs were dissolved. The second season of the Philippine teen edition also featured the parents or guardians of the teens staying in the house; if a teen housemate was evicted, the coinciding parent or guardian would also be evicted. A similar twist was used on the fourth Greek season was dubbed "Big Mother", and featured housemates accompanied by their mothers. In the ninth season of Indian Big Brother, "Big Boss: Double Trouble", contestants entered the house tied up in pairs by the waist. They had joint chairs, beds, spoons, and even mugs. The upcoming twelfth season of Indian Big Brother "Bigg Boss 12" will also feature pairs 'jodis' who can be mother-daughter,boss-employee,brother-sister etc. In the ninth Albania series all the housemates wherever were in couples and for the first time in the history of Big Brother, the winner was a couple (Danjel Dedndreaj and Fotini Derxho). Secret missions 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 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 nomination for eviction. If nobody picked up the call, the whole house would be nominated for eviction.[7]

Opening night twists Since Big Brother 2, the UK series has opened with a twist. This has included having three finalists (Big Brother 2); public voting for least-favourite housemates, with the housemates choosing between two nominees to evict (Big Brother 3); first-night nominations (Big Brother 4); 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); first-night nominations and a public vote for a wildcard to become a housemate (Big Brother 13); 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 non-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[8] with the last housemate becoming the Head of House (Celebrity Big Brother 6).

A common opening twist is to only introduce 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.

Fake evictions The fifth UK series introduced fake evictions, where Big Brother misleads housemates that an 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 edition, four housemates were fake-evicted and stayed in a place called bodega.

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.

Coaches 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 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.[9] 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 In Celebrity 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 The fifteenth US season allowed viewers to vote for a house guest to be made M.V.P., who then secretly nominates a third house guest 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 The sixteenth US season and seventeenth US season featured two Heads of Household every week and had four house guests 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 was also used on Big Brother Brasil 16, Big Brother Brasil 17 and Big Brother Brasil 18 where the HOH's had to nominate one person and they had to choose between 10 thousand dollars or immunity.

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

In 2016, on season 4 of Big Brother Canada brothers Nick and Phil Paquette won the season, playing together as one.

Reserve house mates The fourth Philippine season introduced reserved housemates, short-listed auditioners who were given a chance to be a housemate by completing tasks assigned by Big Brother. This was also done in Argentina's seventh season and Brazil's ninth season.

Twists involving multiple franchises Housemate exchanges 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; and Mexico (BB4) and Spain (GH16) in 2015; Spain (GHVIP5) and Brazil (BBB17) in 2017.

Evicted housemate exchanges 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 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.

Evicted housemate visits 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 Houghton of CBB4) 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 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); 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 United Kingdom (CBB20) then later competed in first Celebrity series in the United States (CBBUS); Aída Nizar of Spain (GH5 and GHVIP5) competed in Italy (GF15),

Multiple-franchise competitions Eurovision Song Contest Team and Song Jury's points Dates Winner Italy GF11 Greece BB5 Argentina GH6 Total Tests Israel Performance Spain Performance Ratings Closed Spain GH12: "A-Ba-Ni-Bi" 12 12 12 36 30 Dec 2010 to 4 Jan 2011 5 Jan 2011 6 Jan 2011 7 Jan 2011 8 Jan 2011 Spain GH12 Israel HH3: "Bandido" 10 10 10 30 FIFA World Cup Series participants Prize Points Winner Date Germany BB10 Germany United Kingdom 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 Celebrity and VIP Big Brother Main article: Celebrity Big Brother The Big Brother format has been adapted in some countries; the housemates are local celebrities, and the shows are called Celebrity Big Brother or Big 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 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.[10]

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. Nine out of ten 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.

US and English-Canadian formats Further information on these Big Brother versions: Big Brother (U.S.) and Big Brother Canada 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 encouraged to openly strategize and form alliances to survive eviction, with evictions being determined by the HouseGuests themselves.

In this format, HouseGuests vote each other out and choose the winner. Each week, one HouseGuest is chosen (usually by competition) as the Head of Household (HoH), who sleeps in a luxurious bedroom and nominates two fellow HouseGuests for eviction in a formal Nomination Ceremony. HoH also chooses Haves, who enjoy luxury foods and other special privileges, and Have-Nots, who must eat "slop" (a fortified oatmeal), sleep in designated uncomfortable beds, and take cold showers. 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 winner of the Power of Veto (PoV), introduced in the third US season, has the option to save one nominee (including him/herself) from eviction, forcing the HoH to nominate another HouseGuest in the former nominee's place. The HouseGuests then vote to evict one of the nominees. 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.

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.

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 Haves/Have-Nots. HoH nominates one housemate for eviction, while the rest of the house nominates a second housemate. Power of Immunity is similar to the US/Canada PoV, with the winner getting to choose not only someone to "take off the block" but also someone to punish.

The pilot for Big Brother China, which premiered exclusively online in 2015, had housemates voting on evictions but the public voting for the winner.[11] The same format was used for Big Brother: Over the Top, an online-only spinoff of the US series that ran in 2016.

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

Big Brother: All-Stars (Belgium, 21 days; Bulgaria: Season 1–5, 27–29 days; United States, 72 days; United Kingdom, 18 days; French Canada, 64 days; Africa, 91 days; Spain, 56 days; Portugal Secret Story: Season 1–4, 22–50 days): Previous housemates from previous seasons compete. Belgium was the first country to have an All-Stars season (2003). Bulgaria was the first country to complete 3 All-Stars seasons (2014). Portugal was the first country to complete 4 All-Stars seasons (2015). Portugal was the first country to complete 5 All-Stars seasons (2017). Portugal was the first country to complete 6 All-Stars seasons (2018). Big Brother: Reality All-Stars (Sweden, 6 days; Denmark, 32 days; Spain, 56 days): Contestants from different reality shows, including Big Brother, compete. Big Brother: You Decide / Big Brother: Back in the House / Big Brother: Try Out (Poland: Season 1–2, 7–13 days; Norway, 9 days; Serbia, 7 days): Housemates, new or old, compete for a spot in the next regular season without nominations or evictions. Teen Big Brother (United Kingdom, 10 days; Philippines: Season 1–4, 42–91 days): Teenagers 13 and older compete. Big Brother: All In (Philippines: Season 11,13): A mix of teenagers, regular adults, and celebrities compete in one season. A variation, Big Brother: Lucky 7, has three batch of housemates stay inside until a number for each batch is left, and is joined by other members of other batches to form one new batch. Secret Story (France, Lithuania, Portugal, Netherlands, Peru and Albania): Each housemate has a secret. Big Brother Panto (United Kingdom, 11 days): Housemates from previous series spent time in the Big Brother House to perform a pantomime at the series' end. Big Brother – The Village (Germany: Season 6, 363 days): The village had a class system of bosses, assistants and servants, living in separate houses, who competed in mixed teams; winning bosses could promote employees, while losing bosses became servants. Cash prizes were awarded weekly in an ongoing contest. Big Brother Family (Bulgaria: 81 days): Whole families entered the house with their spouses, children and relatives. They received a salary for their stay and the winning family received a cash prize, a car and an apartment. 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, the 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 As of 5 November 2018, Big Brother has produced 427 winners in over 54 franchises.

    Currently airing (3)
    An upcoming season (10)
    Status unknown (5)
    No longer airing (37) Country/Region	Official name	Network(s)	Winner(s)	Presenter(s) Flag of Angola.svg Flag of Botswana.svg Flag of Ethiopia.svg Flag of Ghana.svg Flag of Kenya.svg Flag of Liberia.svg Flag of Malawi.svg Flag of Mozambique.svg Flag of Namibia.svg Africa Flag of Nigeria.svg Flag of Rwanda.svg Flag of South Africa.svg Flag of Sierra Leone.svg Flag of Tanzania.svg Flag of Uganda.svg Flag of Zimbabwe.svg Flag of Zambia.svg Big Brother Africa	M-Net DStv (live)	 Season 1, 2003: Flag of Zambia.svg Cherise Makubale Season 2, 2007: Flag of Tanzania.svg Richard Dyle Bezuidenhout Season 3, 2008: Flag of Angola.svg Ricardo Venancio Season 4, 2009: Flag of Nigeria.svg Kevin Chuwang Season 5, 2010: Flag of Nigeria.svg Uti Nwachukwu Season 6, 2011: Flag of Nigeria.svg Karen Igho & Flag of Zimbabwe.svg Wendall Parsons Season 7, 2012: Flag of South Africa.svg Keagan Petersen Season 8, 2013: Flag of Namibia.svg Dillish Matthews Season 9, 2014: Flag of Tanzania.svg Idris Sultan Mark Pilgrim (1) Kabelo Ngakane (2–3) Ikponmwosa Osakioduwa (4–9)
Albania
Kosovo	Big Brother Albania	Top Channel DigitAlb (live)	 Season 1, 2008: Arbër Çepani 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 Current Arbana Osmani (1–7, 9–present) Former Ledion Liço (8) Big Brother VIP	 Season 1, 2019: Upcoming season TBA
Angola
Mozambique[12]	Big Brother Angola[13]	DStv[13]	 Season 1, 2014: Larama da Silva Season 2, 2015: Luna Vambano & Mr. Norway Vunge Flag of Angola.svg Dicla Burity (1–) Flag of Mozambique.svg Emerson Miranda (3) Big Brother Angola e Moçambique	Season 3, 2016: Flag of Mozambique.svg Anderson Mistake & Flag of Angola.svg Papetchulo Flag of Bahrain.svg Flag of Egypt.svg Flag of Iraq.svg Flag of Jordan.svg Flag of Kuwait.svg Flag of Lebanon.svg Arab World Flag of Oman.svg Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg Flag of Somalia.svg Flag of Syria.svg Flag of Tunisia.svg Big Brother: الرئيس Big Brother: The Boss	MBC 2	Season 1, 2004: Discontinued[14]	Razan Moughrabi
Argentina	Gran Hermano	Telefe Canal 4 DirecTV (live;1–3, 6–8) Cablevisión (live; 4–5, 8)	 Season 1, 2001: Marcelo Corazza 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 Main host: Soledad Silveyra (1–3) Jorge Rial (4–6, 8–9) Mariano Peluffo (7) Debate: Juan Alberto Badía (1–3) Mariano Peluffo (4–7) Pamela David (8–9) América TV	 Season 8, 2015: Francisco Delgado Season 9, 2016: Luis Fabián Galesio Gran Hermano Famosos	Telefe Cablevisión (live)	 Season 1, 2007: Diego Leonardi Main host: Jorge Rial (1) Debate: Mariano Peluffo (1)
Australia	Big Brother Australia	Network Ten Flag of New Zealand.svg TV2 (1–3, 5) Flag of New Zealand.svg Prime (4)	 Season 1, 2001: Ben Williams 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 Flag of New Zealand.svg TV3 (10–11)	 Season 9, 2012: Benjamin Norris Season 10, 2013: Tim Dormer Season 11, 2014: Ryan Ginns Sonia Kruger Celebrity Big Brother	Network Ten	Season 1, 2002: Dylan Lewis	Gretel Killeen Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Flag of Croatia.svg Flag of Macedonia.svg Flag of Montenegro.svg Flag of Serbia.svg Balkans Veliki Brat – Big Brother	Flag of Croatia.svg RTL (4–5) Flag of Serbia.svg B92 (1–3, 5) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg OBN (5) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg RTRS (5) Flag of Macedonia.svg Sitel (5) Flag of Montenegro.svg Prva (5) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Pink BH (1–4) Flag of Montenegro.svg Pink M (1–4) Flag of Serbia.svg Pink (4) Flag of Macedonia.svg A1 (3)	 Season 1, 2006: Flag of Serbia.svg Ivan Ljuba Season 2, 2007: Discontinued[15] Season 3, 2009: Flag of Serbia.svg Vladimir Arsić Season 4, 2011: Flag of Croatia.svg Marijana Čvrljak Season 5, 2015: Flag of Macedonia.svg Darko Petkovski

Marijana Mićić (1, 3–4) Antonija Blaće (4–5) Ana Grubin (2) Sky Wikluh (5) Veliki Brat VIP Flag of Serbia.svg B92 (1–2, 5) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg BN (5) Flag of Montenegro.svg Prva (5) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg OBN (5) Flag of Macedonia.svg Sitel (5) Flag of Serbia.svg Pink (3–4) Flag of Montenegro.svg Pink M (1–4) Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg Pink BH (1–4) Flag of Macedonia.svg A1 (4) Season 1, 2007: Flag of Serbia.svg Saša Ćurčić Season 2, 2008: Flag of Montenegro.svg Mimi Đurović Season 3, 2009: Flag of Serbia.svg Miki Đuričić Season 4, 2010: Flag of Serbia.svg Milan Marić Season 5, 2013: Flag of Serbia.svg Flag of France.svg Žarko Stojanović Marijana Mićić (3–5) Milan Kalinić (2–3) Ana Grubin (1–2) Veliki Brat – Generalna proba[16] Flag of Serbia.svg B92 Season 1, 2006: Flag of Serbia.svg Jelena Provči & Marko Miljković Marijana Mićić

Belgium	Big Brother	Kanaal Twee	 Season 1, 2000: Steven Spillebeen 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 VIPs	vtm Kanaal Twee	 Season 1, 2001: Sam Gooris Season 2, 2006: Pim Symoens No Presenters Big Brother All-Stars	Kanaal Twee	Season 1, 2003: Heidi Zutterman	Walter Grootaers
Brazil	Big Brother Brasil	Rede Globo Multishow Canal BBB (live on PPV)	 Season 1, 2002: Kléber de Paula 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: Upcoming season Current Tiago Leifert (17–present) Former Pedro Bial (1–16) Marisa Orth (1)
Bulgaria	Big Brother	Nova Television Nova+ (live; 1–4) Diema Family (live; 5)	 Season 1, 2004–05: Zdravko Vasilev Season 2, 2005: Miroslav Atanasov Season 3, 2006: Lyubov Stancheva Season 4, 2008: Georgi Alurkov Season 5, 2015: Nikita Jönsson Main host: Niki Kunchev (1–3, 5) Milen Tsvetkov (4) Co-host: Evelina Pavlova (1–2) Aleksandra Sarchadjieva (5)

Big Brother Family Nova Television Diema Family (live) Season 1, 2010: Eli & Veselin Kuzmovi Main host: Niki Kunchev VIP Brother Nova Television Nova+ (live; 1–2) Diema 2 (live; 3) Diema Family (live; 4) Season 1, 2006: Konstantin Slavchev 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–present) Miglena Angelova (9) Azis (10–present) Big Brother All Stars Nova Television Diema Family (live; 1) Season 1, 2012: Flag of Macedonia.svg Nikola Nasteski - Lester 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–present)

Canada (English)	Big Brother Canada	Slice	 Season 1, 2013: Jillian MacLaughlin Season 2, 2014: Jon Pardy Arisa Cox Global	 Season 3, 2015: Sarah Hanlon Season 4, 2016: Nicholas & Philippe Paquette Season 5, 2017: Kevin Martin Season 6, 2018: Paras Atashnak Season 7, 2019: Upcoming season
Canada (French)	Loft Story	TQS[17]	 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 Marie Plourde (3–5) Isabelle Maréchal (2) Renée-Claude Brazeau (1) Loft Story: La Revanche	Season 6, 2009: Sébastien Tremblay	Pierre-Yves Lord Big Brother	V	Season 1, 2010: Vincent Durand Dubé	Chéli Sauvé-Castonguay
China	室友一起宅: 先导季 Big Brother China: Pilot Season	Youku Tudou	Season 1, 2015–16: Tan Xiangjun	Zhou Wentao (Live Final)
Colombia	Gran Hermano	Caracol TV	Season 1, 2003: Mónica Patricia Tejón	Adriana Arango Citytv Bogotá[18]	Season 2, 2012: Diana Hernández	Agmeth Escaf
Croatia	Big Brother	RTL	 Season 1, 2004: Saša Tkalčević 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) Boris Mirković (1–3) Renata Sopek (2–4) Filip Brajković (4) Marko Lušić (5) Korana Gvozdić (5) Neno Pavinčić (1, 6) Marijana Batinić (6) Antonija Blaće (2–5, 7–) 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 Lejla Abbasová Leoš Mareš
Denmark	Big Brother	TV Danmark	 Season 1, 2001: Jill Liv Nielsen Season 2, 2002: Carsten B. Berthelsen Season 3, 2004: Johnni Johansen Lisbeth Janniche Kanal 5 The Voice TV (live; 4) 7'eren(live; 5-6)	 Season 4, 2012: Amanda Heisel Season 5, 2013: Bjørn Clausen Season 6, 2014: David Feldstedt Oliver Bjerrehuus (6) Anne Kejser (5) Marie Egede (4) Big Brother VIP	TV Danmark	Season 1, 2003: Thomas Bickham	Lisbeth Janniche Big Brother Reality All-Stars	Season 1, 2005: Jill Liv Nielsen	Lisbeth Janniche
Ecuador	Gran Hermano	Ecuavisa	Season 1, 2003: David Burbano	Toty Rodríguez
Finland	Big Brother	Sub	 Season 1, 2005: Perttu Sirviö Season 2, 2006: Sari Nygren Season 3, 2007: Sauli Koskinen Season 4, 2008: Anniina Mustajärvi Season 5, 2009: Flag of Iran.svg Aso Alanso Season 6, 2010: Niko Nousiainen Season 7, 2011: Janica Kortman Season 8, 2012: Teija Kurvinen Season 9, 2014: Andte Gaup-Juuso Elina Viitanen (6–8) Susanna Laine (6–7) Vappu Pimiä (3–5) Mari Sainio (Kakko) (1–2, 9) Julkkis Big Brother	Season 1, 2013: Jori Kopponen	Mari Sainio
France	Loft Story	M6	 Season 1, 2001: Christophe Mercy & Loana Petrucciani Season 2, 2002: Karine Delgado & Thomas Saillofest Benjamin Castaldi Secret Story	TF1 NT1 (Daily recaps: 9) CanalSat (live; 1)	 Season 1, 2007: Marjorie, Cyrielle & Johanna Bluteau Season 2, 2008:Flag of Belgium.svg Matthias Pohl Season 3, 2009: Emilie Nefnaf Season 4, 2010: Benoit Dubois Season 5, 2011: Marie Garet Season 6, 2012: Flag of Switzerland.svg Nadège Jones Season 7, 2013: Anaïs Camizuli Season 8, 2014: Flag of Italy.svg Flag of Tunisia.svg Leila Ben Khalifa Season 9, 2015: Émilie Fiorelli Season 10, 2016: Julien Geloën Season 11, 2017: Noré Abdelali Christophe Beaugrand (9–11)  Benjamin Castaldi (1–8) After Secret Adrien Lemaître (3–) Leila Ben Khalifa (9–) Julie Taton (9–11) Nadège Lacroix (7) Emilie Fiorelli (10) Julien Geloën (11)

NT1 Season 10, 2016: Julien Geloën Season 11, 2017: Noré Tir Celebrity Big Brother TF1 Season 1, 2019: Upcoming season TBA

Germany	Big Brother	RTL II Sky (live; 10–11) Clipfish (live; 10–11) Premiere (live; 5–9) VIVA (5, 9) 9Live (8) Tele 5 (4–6) MTV2 Pop (4–5) RTL (2–3) Single TV (2)	 Season 1, 2000: John Milz 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 Aleksandra Bechtel (4, 10–11) Sonja Zietlow (Opening show, 11) Miriam Pielhau (8–9) Charlotte Karlinder (7–8) Oliver Petszokat (6) Ruth Moschner (5–6) Oliver Geissen (2–3) Percy Hoven (1) sixx Sky (live)	 Season 12, 2015: Flag of Belarus.svg Lusy Skaya Jochen Bendel (12) Promi Big Brother	Sat.1 sixx (2–4, 6) Bild (live; 4) Sky (live; 3) maxdome (live; 2) Sky (live 3 hours; 1) Sat.1 emotions (1)	 Season 1, 2013: Jenny Elvers Season 2, 2014: Flag of Russia.svg Aaron Troschke Season 3, 2015: Flag of Ghana.svg David Odonkor Season 4, 2016: Ben Tewaag Season 5, 2017: Jens Hilbert Season 6, 2018: Silvia Wollny Season 7, 2019: Upcoming Season[19] Current Jochen Schropp (2–) Marlene Lufen (6–) Former Cindy aus Marzahn (1) Oliver Pocher (1) Jochen Bendel (5)
Greece
Cyprus	Big Brother Greece	ANT1	 Season 1, 2001: Giorgos Triantafyllidis Season 2, 2002: Alexandros Moskhos Season 3, 2003: Thodores Jspógloy Season 4, 2005: Nikos Papadopoulos Andreas Mikroutsikos (1–3) Tatiana Stefanidou (4) Flag of Greece.svg Alpha TV  Flag of Cyprus.svg Sigma TV	 Season 5, 2010–11: Giannis Foukakis Roula Koromila
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[20]	RTL II	 Season 8, 2016: Soma Farkas Season 9, 2018-19: Current season Puskás Péter (9–) Nádai Anikó (8–) Istenes Bence (6–8)
India	Bigg Boss (Hindi Version)	SET	Season 1, 2006–07: Rahul Roy	Arshad Warsi Colors TV  MTV India (11-12)

Flag of Pakistan.svg ARY Digital Flag of the United States.svg Flag of Canada.svg Aapka Colors Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Colors TV UK Season 2, 2008: Ashutosh Kaushik 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: Gauhar Khan Season 8, 2014–15: Ali Quli Mirza, Dimpy Mahajan, Gautam Gulati, Karishma Tanna & Pritam Singh Season 9, 2015–16: Prince Narula Season 10, 2016–17: Manveer Gurjar Season 11, 2017–18: Shilpa Shinde Season 12, 2018: Dipika Kakar Current Salman Khan (4–present) Former Shilpa Shetty (2) Amitabh Bachchan (3) Sanjay Dutt (5) Bigg Boss Halla Bol! (Hindi Spin-Off) Season 1, 2015: Gautam Gulati Farah Khan Bigg Boss Kannada (Kannada Version) ETV Kannada Season 1, 2013: Vijay Raghavendra Sudeep Suvarna TV Season 2, 2014: Akul Balaji Colors Kannada (3–4) Colors Super (4–present) Season 3, 2015–16: Shruthi Season 4, 2016–17: Pratham Season 5, 2017–18: Chandan Shetty Season 6, 2018–19: Current Season Bigg Boss Bangla (Bengali Version) ETV Bangla Season 1, 2013: Aneek Dhar Mithun Chakraborty Colors Bangla Season 2, 2016: Joyjeet Banerjee Jeet Bigg Boss Tamil (Tamil Version) Star Vijay Season 1, 2017: Nafeez Arav Kizar Season 2, 2018: Riythvika Kamal Haasan Bigg Boss Telugu (Telugu Version) Star Maa Season 1, 2017: Siva Balaji Season 2, 2018: Kaushal Manda Jr. NTR (1) Nani (2) Bigg Boss Marathi (Marathi Version) Colors Marathi Season 1, 2018: Megha Dhade Mahesh Manjrekar Bigg Boss Malayalam (Malayalam Version) Asianet Season 1, 2018: Sabumon Abdusamad 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	Channel 2-Keshet HOT (live) Yes (live)	 Season 1, 2008: Shifra Cornfeld Season 2, 2009–10: Eliraz Sadeh Season 3, 2010–11: Yaakov Menahem Season 4, 2012: Yekutiel Sebbag Season 5, 2013: Tahounia Rubel Season 6, 2014: Tal Gilboa Season 7, 2015–16: Shay Mika Ifrah Season 8, 2016–17: Avihai Ohana Erez Tal Korin Gideon (7–8) Assi Azar (1–6) Reshet 13 Channel 26 (live)	 Season 9, 2018: Israel Ogalbo Season 10, TBA: Upcoming Season Liron Weizman Ofer Shechter(9) Asi Israelof(9) VIP האח הגדול HaAh HaGadol VIP	Channel 2-Keshet HOT (live) Yes (live)	 Season 1, 2009: Dudi Melitz Season 2, 2015: Moshik Afia Erez Tal Assi Azar (1–2) Reshet 13 Channel 26 (live)	 Season 3, 2019: Upcoming Season Liron Weizman Guy Zu-Aretz
Italy	Grande Fratello	Canale 5 Italia 1 (Daily recaps; 13–15) Stream TV (live; 1–3) SKY (live; 4–5, 8–9) Mediaset Premium (live; 6–14) Mediaset Extra (live; 15) La5 (live; 11–15)	 Season 1, 2000: Cristina Plevani Season 2, 2001: Flavio Montrucchio Season 3, 2003: Floriana Secondi Season 4, 2004: Serena Garitta Season 5, 2004: Flag of Israel.svg Jonathan Kashanian Season 6, 2006: Augusto De Megni Season 7, 2007: Milo Coretti Season 8, 2008: Mario Ferretti Season 9, 2009: Flag of Montenegro.svg Ferdi Berisa Season 10, 2009–10: Mauro Marin Season 11, 2010–11: Andrea Cocco Season 12, 2011–12: Flag of Tunisia.svg Sabrina Mbarek Season 13, 2014: Mirco Petrilli Season 14, 2015: Federica Lepanto Season 15, 2018: Alberto Mezzetti Season 16, 2019: Upcoming Season Current Barbara D'Urso (3–5; 15-) Former Daria Bignardi (1–2) Alessia Marcuzzi (6–14) Grande Fratello VIP	Canale 5 Italia 1 (Daily recaps; 1–3) Mediaset Extra (live; 1–3) La5 (live; 1–3)	 Season 1, 2016: Flag of Ireland.svg Alessia Macari Season 2, 2017: Daniele Bossari Season 3, 2018: Flag of Canada.svg Walter Nudo Ilary Blasi
Lithuania	Paslapčių namai The House of Secrets	TV3 Lithuania	Season 1, 2013: Gintautas Katulis	 Agnė Grigaliūnienė Marijus Mikutavičius
Mexico	Big Brother México	Televisa SKY (live)	 Season 1, 2002: Rocío Cárdenas Season 2, 2003: Silvia Irabien Season 3, 2005: Evelyn Nieto Verónica Castro (3) Adela Micha (1–2) Big Brother PM	Canal 5 SKY (live)	 Season 4, 2015: Eduardo "Chile" Miranda Adela Micha Big Brother VIP	Televisa SKY (live)	 Season 1, 2002: Galilea Montijo Season 2, 2003: Omar Chaparro Season 3, 2004: Eduardo Videgaray Season 4, 2004: Roxanna Castellanos Season 5, 2005: Sasha Sökol Verónica Castro (2–4) Víctor Trujillo (1)
Netherlands	Big Brother	Veronica	 Season 1, 1999: Bart Spring in 't Veld Season 2, 2000: Bianca Hagenbeek Esther Duller (2) Beau Van Erven Dorens (2) Rolf Wouters (1) Daphne Deckers (1) Yorin	 Season 3, 2001: Sandy Boots Season 4, 2002: Jeanette Godefroy Martijn Krabbé (4) Patty Brard (3) Talpa	 Season 5, 2005: Joost Hoebink Season 6, 2006: Jeroen Visser Bridget Maasland (5–6) Ruud de Wild (5) Big Brother VIPs	Veronica	Season 1, 2000: No winner	Unknown Talpa	Season 2, 2006: No winner	Caroline Tensen Secret Story	NET 5	Season 1, 2011: Sharon Hooijkaas	 Renate Verbaan Bart Boonstra
Nigeria	Big Brother Nigeria	M-Net DStv (live)	Season 1, 2006: Katung Aduwak	 Olisa Adibua Michelle Dede Big Brother Naija	GOtv DStv (live)	 Season 2, 2017: Efe Ejeba Season 3, 2018: Miracle Ikechukwu Igbokwe 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 Trygve Rønningen (3) Arve Juritzen (1–2) TV 2 Bliss	Season 4, 2011: Tine Barstad	 Petter Pilgaard Sarah Natasha Melbye Flag of Chile.svg Flag of Ecuador.svg Pacific Region Flag of Peru.svg Gran Hermano del Pacífico	Flag of Ecuador.svg RedTeleSistema Flag of Chile.svg RedTV Flag of Peru.svg ATV	Season 1, 2005: Flag of Ecuador.svg Juan Sebastián López	 Lorena Meritano (Main) Álvaro Ballera & Álvaro García (Regional) Janine Leal (Regional) Juan Francisco Escobar (Regional)
Panama	Big Brother Panamá	TVN Canal 2	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	ABS-CBN TFC (Worldwide) SkyCable (live) Studio 23 (live; 1–3)	 Season 1, 2005: Nene Tamayo Season 2, 2007: Beatriz Saw Season 3, 2009–10: Melisa Cantiveros Season 4, 2011–12: Slater Young Toni Gonzaga (1–4) Bianca Gonzalez (1–4) Robi Domingo (4) Mariel Rodriguez (1–3) Willie Revillame (1) Pinoy Big Brother (Special Edition)	 Season 5, 2014: Flag of Brazil.svg Daniel Matsunaga Season 6, 2015: Flag of Japan.svg Miho Nishida & Jimboy Martin Season 7, 2016–17: Maymay Entrata Season 8, 2018–19: Current season Current Toni Gonzaga (5–) Bianca Gonzalez (5–) Robi Domingo (5–) Alex Gonzaga (5*, 8–) Kim Chiu (8–) Melisa Cantiveros (8–) Former John Prats (5) Enchong Dee (6) Mariel Rodriguez (7) Pinoy Big Brother: Celebrity Edition	 Season 1, 2006: Keanna Reeves Season 2, 2007–08: Ruben Gonzaga Toni Gonzaga (1–2) Mariel Rodriguez (1–2) Bianca Gonzalez (2) Luis Manzano (1) Pinoy Big Brother: Teen Edition	 Season 1, 2006: Kim Chiu Season 2, 2008: Ejay Falcon Season 3, 2010: Flag of Australia.svg James Reid Season 4, 2012: Myrtle Abigail Sarrosa Bianca Gonzalez (1–4) Toni Gonzaga (2–4) Robi Domingo (4) John Prats (4) Mariel Rodriguez (1–3) Luis Manzano (2)
Poland	Big Brother	TVN	 Season 1, 2001: Janusz Dzięcioł Season 2, 2001: Marzena Wieczorek Season 3, 2002: Piotr Borucki Grzegorz Miecugow Martyna Wojciechowska (1–3) Andrzej Sołtysik (2–3) TV4	 Season 4, 2007: Jolanta Rutowicz Season 5 (part 2), 2008: Janusz Strączek Kuba Klawiter (4–5) Małgorzata Kosik (5) Karina Kunkiewicz (4) TVN 7	 Season 6, 2019: Upcoming season [21] TBA Big Brother VIP	TV4	Season 5 (part 1), 2008: Jarek Jakimowicz	 Kuba Klawiter Małgorzata Kosik
Portugal	Big Brother	TVI TVI Eventos (live; 1)	 Season 1, 2000: Zé Maria Seleiro Season 2, 2001: Henrique Guimarães Season 3, 2001: Catarina Cabral Season 4, 2003: Fernando Geraldes Teresa Guilherme Big Brother Famosos	TVI TVI Direct (live; VIP)	 Season 1, 2002: Ricardo Vieira Season 2, 2002: Vítor Norte Big Brother VIP	 Season 3, 2013: Pedro Guedes Secret Story: Casa dos Segredos	TVI TVI Direct (live; 1–5) TVI Reality (live; 6–)	 Season 1, 2010: António Queirós 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 Isabel Season 7, 2018: Tiago Rufino Season 8, 2019: Upcoming season Current Manuel Luís Goucha (7–) Former Teresa Guilherme (2–6) Júlia Pinheiro (1) Secret Story: Desafio Final	 Season 1, 2013: Cátia Palhinha Season 2, 2014: Érica Silva Season 3, 2015: Sofia Sousa Season 4, 2017: Carlos Sousa Teresa Guilherme Secret Story: Luta Pelo Poder	Season 1, 2015: Bruno Sousa Secret Story: O Reencontro	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 Big Brother	TNT	Season 1, 2005: Anastasia Yagaylova	Ingeborga Dapkunaite Flag of Norway.svg Flag of Sweden.svg Scandinavia[22]	Big Brother	Flag of Sweden.svg Kanal5 Flag of Norway.svg FEM	 Season 1, 2005: Flag of Norway.svg Britt Goodwin Season 2, 2006: Flag of Sweden.svg Jessica Lindgren Brita Møystad Engseth Hannah Rosander (2) Adam Alsing (1) Flag of Sweden.svg Kanal 9 Flag of Norway.svg FEM	Season 3, 2014: Flag of Sweden.svg 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	TV Markíza	Season 1, 2005: Richard Tkáč	Zuzana Belohorcová
Slovenia	Big Brother	Kanal A	 Season 1, 2007: Andrej Novak Season 2, 2008: Naske Mehić Season 3, 2015: Pia Filipčič Season 4, 2016: Mirela Lapanović 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	POP TV	 Season 1, 2010: Jože Činč Nina Osenar
South Africa	Big Brother South Africa	M-Net DStv (live)	 Season 1, 2001: Ferdinand Rabie Season 2, 2002: Richard Cawood Mark Pilgrim Gerry Rantseli Big Brother Mzansi	 Season 3, 2014: Mandla Hlatshwayo Season 4, 2015: Ace Khumalo & Ntombi Tshabalala Lungile Radu Celebrity Big Brother	Season 1, 2002: Bill Flynn	 Mark Pilgrim Gerry Rantseli
Spain	Gran Hermano	Telecinco (Main show and Debate) Divinity (Daily highlights) Mitele.es (live)	 Season 1, 2000: Ismael Beiro 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: Flag of Brazil.svg 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: Flag of Uruguay.svg Hugo Sierra Mercedes Milá (1–2, 4–16) Pepe Navarro (3) Jorge Javier Vázquez (17–18) Debates: Jordi González (6–9, 11–13, 15–18) Jesús Vázquez (4–5) Jorge Javier Vázquez (10) Frank Blanco (14)

Gran Hermano VIP Season 1, 2004: Flag of France.svg Marlène Mourreau Season 2, 2005: Flag of Mexico.svg Ivonne Armand Season 3, 2015: Belén Esteban Season 4, 2016: Laura Matamoros Season 5, 2017: Flag of the United States.svg Alyson Eckmann Season 6, 2018: Flag of Peru.svg Miriam Saavedra Current Jorge Javier Vázquez (6–) Former Jesús Vázquez (1–2) Jordi González (3–5) Debates: Current Sandra Barneda (4–) Former Carolina Ferre (1) Jordi González (2–3)

Gran Hermano: El Reencuentro Season 1, 2010: Pepe Herrero & Raquel López Season 2, 2011: Juan Miguel Martínez & Yola Berrocal Mercedes Milá (1) Jordi González (2) Gran Hermano: La Revuelta Season 1, 2012: Flag of Italy.svg Alessandro Livi Mercedes Milá Gran Hermano Dúo Season 1, 2019: Upcoming season Jorge Javier Vázquez (1–) Debates: Jordi González (1–)

Sweden	Big Brother	Kanal5	 Season 1, 2000: Angelica Freij Season 2, 2002: Ulrica Andersson Season 3, 2003: Danne Sörensen Season 4, 2004: Carolina Gynning Adam Alsing TV11	 Season 5, 2011: Simon Danielsson Season 6, 2012: Hanna Johansson Gry Forssell Kanal 11	 Season 7, 2015: Christian Sahlström Adam Alsing Big Brother Stjärnveckan	Kanal5	Season 1, 2002: Anki Lundberg	Adam Alsing
 Switzerland	Big Brother Schweiz	TV3	 Season 1, 2000: Daniela Kanton Season 2, 2001: Christian Ponleitner Eva Wannemacher (2) Daniel Fohrler (1)
Thailand	Big Brother Thailand	iTV	 Season 1, 2005: Nipon Perktim Season 2, 2006: Arisa Sonthirod Saranyu Vonkarjun Nana Raibeena (2)
Turkey	Big Brother Türkiye[23]	Star TV	Season 1, 2015–16: Sinan Aydemir	Asuman Krause[24]
Ukraine	Big Brother Україна	K1	Season 1, 2011: Khrystyna Kotvytska	 Olha Horbachova Oleksiy Kurban
United Kingdom	Big Brother	Channel 4 and  S4C (1–10) Flag of Poland.svgTVN Lingua	 Series 1, 2000: Craig Phillips Series 2, 2001: Flag of Ireland.svg Brian Dowling Series 3, 2002: Kate Lawler Series 4, 2003: Cameron Stout Series 5, 2004: Flag of Portugal.svg Nadia Almada Series 6, 2005: Anthony Hutton Series 7, 2006: Pete Bennett Series 8, 2007: Flag of Nigeria.svg Brian Belo Series 9, 2008: Rachel Rice Series 10, 2009: Sophie Reade Series 11, 2010: Josie Gibson Davina McCall Channel 5 MTV (16–19) Flag of Ireland.svg TV3 (16–18) Flag of Ireland.svg Virgin Media One (19)	 Series 12, 2011: Aaron Allard-Morgan Series 13, 2012: Flag of South Africa.svg 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 Brian Dowling (12–13) Emma Willis (14–19) Celebrity Big Brother	Channel 4 and  S4C (2–7) BBC One (1)	 Series 1, 2001: Jack Dee Series 2, 2002: Mark Owen Series 3, 2005: Bez Series 4, 2006: Chantelle Houghton Series 5, 2007: Flag of India.svg Shilpa Shetty Series 6, 2009: Flag of Sweden.svg Ulrika Jonsson Series 7, 2010: Alex Reid Davina McCall Channel 5 MTV (15–22) Flag of Ireland.svgTV3 (16–18) Flag of Ireland.svg3e (19–22) Flag of Ireland.svgVirgin Media Two (22)	 Series 8, 2011: Flag of Ireland.svg Paddy Doherty Series 9, 2012: Denise Welch Series 10, 2012: Julian Clary Series 11, 2013: Rylan Clark Series 12, 2013: Charlotte Crosby Series 13, 2014: Jim Davidson Series 14, 2014: Flag of the United States.svg Gary Busey Series 15, 2015: Katie Price Series 16, 2015: James Hill Series 17, 2016: Scott 'Scotty T' Timlin Series 18, 2016: Stephen Bear Series 19, 2017: Coleen Nolan Series 20, 2017: Sarah Harding Series 21, 2018: Flag of Australia.svg Shane Jenek / Courtney Act Series 22, 2018: Ryan Thomas Brian Dowling (8–11) Emma Willis (12–22) Teen Big Brother	Channel 4/E4 and  S4C	Series 1, 2003: Paul Brennan	Dermot O'Leary Big Brother Panto	Series 1, 2004–05: No winner	Jeff Brazier June Sarpong Celebrity Hijack	Series 1, 2008: John Loughton	Dermot O'Leary Ultimate Big Brother	Series 1, 2010: Flag of Ireland.svg Brian Dowling	Davina McCall
United States (English)	Big Brother (Broadcast Edition)	CBS (1–) Showtime 2 (8–14) Pop (15–)

Flag of Canada.svg Slice Flag of Canada.svg Global Flag of Canada.svg Global Reality Channel Flag of the United Kingdom.svg E4 (4, 9) Season 1, 2000: Eddie McGee 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, 2008: Adam Jasinski Season 10, 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[25] Season 20, 2018: Kaycee Clark Julie Chen-Moonves Big Brother: All-Stars Season 7, 2006: Mike Malin Big Brother: Over The Top (Digital Edition) CBS All Access Season 1, 2016: Morgan Willett Celebrity Big Brother CBS (1-) Pop (1-)

Flag of Canada.svg Global (1) Flag of Australia.svg 9Now (1) Flag of Australia.svg9Go! (1) Season 1, 2018: Marissa Jaret Winokur Season 2, 2019: Upcoming Season[26]

United States (Spanish)	Gran Hermano	Telemundo	Season 1, 2016: Pedro Orta[27]	Giselle Blondet
Vietnam	Người giấu mặt	VTV6	Season 1, 2013–14: Hoàng Sơn Việt	Huy Khánh Controversies Legal 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.[28] The court later dismissed the lawsuit filed by Castaway against de Mol and Endemol. The Survive! reality television format was later turned into Survivor.[29]

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 eve of trial.[30][31][32][33][34]

Sexual assault There have been two 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 having sex with him. (Under South African law, this act would be constituted as rape.)[35] This male housemate was expelled immediately after the allegations surfaced, while the female housemate was removed from the house for her own protection and counselling.

In Big 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".[36] As a result, the male housemate was later escorted out of the Big Brother house by the federal police.

References

Drotner, Kirsten. "New Media, New Options, New Communities?" (PDF) (PDF). Nordicom. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
"Celebrity Big Brother". www.channel5.com.
"Big Brother". Endemol. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
Scott, Matt (8 June 2012). "POLL: Should housemates be able to talk nominations?". BBSpy. Retrieved 23 May 2014.
Blake, Dawn (27 May 2008). "Complaint by Ms Dawn Blake" (PDF). Ofcom Broadcast Bulletin (PDF) (110).
es:Anexo:Séptima temporada de Gran Hermano (Argentina)#Casa de al lado
es:Anexo:Cuarta temporada de Gran Hermano (Argentina)#Cambios en el Juego
Bryant, Tom (25 January 2009). "Celebrity Big Brother exclusive: La Toya Jackson's diva demands - 3am & Mirror Online". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
es:Anexo:Séptima temporada de Gran Hermano (Argentina)#Bot.C3.B3n rojo
"BB Celebrity Hijack - NEWS". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 21 June 2007. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
bbspy. "Big Brother China launches with twelve-day 'pilot series'".
Mozambique became also eligible to participate since 2016.
"Big Brother Angola on DStv Portuguesa". DStv. 15 May 2014. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
"Arab Big Brother show suspended". BBC News. 1 March 2004.
Due to the car accident that killed three former housemates, Elmir Kuduzović, Stevan Zečević and Zorica Lazić, the producer decided to discontinue the series. The winning prize was divided by the surviving housemates.
This version was only produced in Serbia.
On August 31, 2009, TQS changed its name to V.
"Gran hermano, por Citytv" (in Spanish). El Tiempo. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
Promi Big Brother 2019: Sat.1 bestätigt Staffel 7 - Was bisher bekannt ist..., 2018-08-31. (German)
Seasons 1 through 7 were not based on the Big Brother license.
""Big Brother" wraca, nowa edycja wiosną w TVN7" (in Polish). wirtualnemedia.pl. 22 November 2018.
Co-produced version with Norway and Sweden taking part.
"Big Brother Türkiye Full HD izle - Star TV".
"Big Brother Türkiye". www.facebook.com.
"CBS RENEWS HIT SUMMER SERIES "BIG BROTHER" FOR TWO MORE EDITIONS". CBS. Retrieved 2016-08-10.
Andreeva, Nellie (5 May 2018). "'Celebrity Big Brother' Renewed For Season 2 By CBS". Deadline.
"gran-hermano"-big-brother-scheduled-premiere-2016-first "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.
"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", September 5, 2000
The Times of London, "US Big Brother Is Sued over 1984 Link", September 6, 2000
New York Post, "CBS Loses 'Bro Battle', January 4, 2001
Chicago Tribune, "CBS, Orwell Estate Settle 'Big Brother' Lawsuit", September 28, 2001.
Paterson, Mark. "Big Brother's South African rape horror show". The Week. Dennis Publishing. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
Roper, Matt. "Housemate on Brazilian version of Big Brother was 'raped on live TV' after alcohol-fuelled party". Daily Mail. Associated Newspapers Ltd. Retrieved 12 January 2015. Bibliography Johnson-Woods, Toni (2002). Big Brother: Why Did That Reality TV Show Become Such a Phenomenon?. Australia: University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-3315-3. vte Big Brother Africa	 Africa Angola Nigeria South Africa Big brother countries.PNG Location of different versions of Big Brother. Americas	 Argentina Brazil Canada Québec Colombia Ecuador Mexico Pacific Panama Peru United States Celebrity Digital Spanish Asia-Pacific	 Arab States Australia China India Hindi Kannada Bangla Tamil Telugu Marathi Malayalam Indonesia Israel Celebrity Philippines Thailand Vietnam Europe	 Albania Celebrity Belgium Bulgaria Celebrity Croatia Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Loft Story Secret Story Germany Celebrity Greece Hungary TV2 RTL II Italy Celebrity Lithuania Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Romania Russia Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain Celebrity Sweden Sweden and Norway Switzerland Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom Celebrity Virtual	 Second Life Authority control Edit this at Wikidata	 GND: 4599258-7 Categories: 1990s Dutch television series1999 Dutch television series debutsBig Brother (TV series)Television franchisesTelevision series by EndemolReality television series franchises

האח הגדול (תוכנית טלוויזיה)
קפיצה לניווטקפיצה לחיפוש
פירוש נוסף ערך זה עוסק בתוכנית טלוויזיה המשודרת בעשרות ארצות. אם התכוונתם לגרסה הישראלית של התוכנית, ראו האח הגדול (תוכנית טלוויזיה ישראלית).
האח הגדול
Big Brother International Logo.gif
הלוגו הבינלאומי של הסדרה
סוגה תוכנית מציאות
יוצרים ג'ון דה מול
ארץ מקור הולנד הולנד
שפות הולנדית
הפקה
חברת הפקה אנדמול
הפצה אנדמול
שידור
רשת שידור ורוניקה TV עריכת הנתון בוויקינתונים
תקופת שידור מקורית 16 בספטמבר 1999 – רץ
קישורים חיצוניים
האתר הרשמי
דף התוכנית ב-IMDb
לעריכה בוויקינתונים שמשמש מקור לחלק מהמידע בתבנית OOjs UI icon info big.svg
האח הגדול (באנגלית: Big Brother) היא תוכנית מציאות הולנדית.

בכל אחת מעונות השידור, קבוצה של אנשים שונים חיים ביחד ב"בית האח הגדול" למשך 3 חודשים בדרך כלל, מנותקים לגמרי מהעולם אך מצולמים כל הזמן על ידי עשרות מצלמות טלוויזיה. במהלך העונה מודחים משתתפים מהתוכנית ועקב כך יוצאים מהבית השמור. האחרון שנשאר ולא הודח זוכה בפרס כספי גדול.

ההפקה הראשונה של "האח הגדול" הייתה בהולנד. הרעיון להפקה זו החל בתור תוכנית כלוב הזהב, ופותח בידי חברת ההפקות אנדמול בבעלותו של ג'ון דה מול וב-1999 הפכה ללהיט פריים טיים ב-70 מדינות שונות. שם התוכנית מגיע מהרומן 1984 מאת ג'ורג' אורוול, ששם "האח הגדול" הוא ה"רואה כל" השולט של הדיסטופיה אוקיאניה.

העונה הארוכה ביותר בתולדות האח הגדול הייתה העונה החמישית של הגרסה הגרמנית, בה שהו המתמודדים כ-365 יום בין כותלי הבית.

תוכן עניינים
1 אופן המשחק
2 גרסת ה-VIP
3 זכיונות הפורמט ברחבי העולם
3.1 ארצות הברית
3.2 ישראל
3.3 אפריקה
4 ביקורת
5 ראו גם
6 קישורים חיצוניים
7 הערות שוליים
אופן המשחק
כמעט כל מדינה בה משודרת התוכנית משנה במעט את החוקים ומתאימה אותם לתרבות המקומית אולם הקונספט הכללי נשאר דומה: "דיירי הבית" סגורים בבית מגורים אחד, כל פעילותיהם מוקלטות על ידי מצלמות ומיקרופונים כל הזמן, והם מנותקים לחלוטין מכל קשר עם העולם בחוץ.

ברוב הגרסאות, בפער קבוע, בדרך כלל פעם בשבוע (אף על פי שברוב העונות המוקדמות זה היה כל שבועיים), דיירי הבית מזומנים להצביע לאחד ממספר המועמדים להדחה שיודח מהבית. בכמה מקרים, שני משתתפים עלולים להיות מודחים בו-זמנית ("הדחה כפולה"), או לעיתים נדירות, אף משתתף לא יודח באותו שבוע. בסוף המשחק, המשתתף האחרון שנשאר, מוכרז כמנצח של העונה וזוכה בפרס, בדרך כלל כולל סכום כסף גדול, מכונית, חופשה וגם (בכמה גרסאות; כגון בעונה השביעית של הגרסה הישראלית) – בית

מבחינה חברתית ודמוגרפית, הפורמט הזה בוחן איך אנשים יגיבו למגורים בבית סגור עם אנשים שמחוץ למעגל החברתי שלהם.

בעונה השלישית בבריטניה, התבקשו דיירי הבית לבצע משימות בליל שבת, כדי לזכות בפרסים. הפורמט הזה הופסק בעונה החמישית עקב מדרוג נמוך, אך באוסטרליה החלו להשתמש בו.

קיים שוני רב בין תוכניות המשודרות בארצות שונות, שוני הנובע מתרבות שונה או אף מתקדימים שהיו באותה מדינה בעונות קודמות של התוכנית. כך למשל, בגרסה המופקת בארצות סקנדינביה מקיימים דיירי הבית יחסי מין מלאים, בבריטניה ובמדינות נוספות יחסי מין חלקיים או מרומזים ובמדינות אחרות קיימת פוריטניות האוסרת על מגע קרוב בין משתתפים.

גרסת ה-VIP
מטרת חלק גדול ממשתתפי התוכנית האלמוניים היא להתפרסם. ברוב המדינות קיימות עונות נפרדות בהן משתתפים ידוענים שכבר התפרסמו בתחומם במטרה לאפשר לקהל הצופים לגלות מי הוא האדם שמאחורי השם וכיצד הוא מתפקד בחיי היום-יום. רוב משתתפי תוכניות ה-VIP מקבלים תשלום עבור השתתפותם.

זכיונות הפורמט ברחבי העולם

גרסאות האח הגדול על פי מדינות:

 גרסה מקומית לתוכנית
 משתתפת ב"האח הגדול אפריקה"
 משתתפת ב"האח הגדול אנגולה ומוזמביק"; כמו כן, משתתפת ב"האח הגדול אפריקה"
 גרסה מקומית לתוכנית; כמו כן, משתתפת ב"האח הגדול אפריקה"
 משתתפת ב"האח הגדול: ארצות ערב"
 משתתפת ב"האח הגדול פסיפיקו (אמריקה הדרומית)"
 גרסה מקומית לתוכנית; כמו כן, משתתפת ב"האח הגדול פסיפיקו (אמריקה הדרומית)"
 משתתפת ב"האח הגדול- המדינות הסלאביות" (Veliki Brat)
 גרסה מקומית לתוכנית; כמו כן, משתתפת ב"האח הגדול סקנדינביה"

ארצות הברית
ביולי 2000 החלה ארצות הברית לשדר את "האח הגדול", בערוץ CBS. בעונתה הראשונה, פורמט הסדרה היה ברוב הארצות, וההדחות נקבעו על פי הצבעות הקהל. הפורמט לא נחל הצלחה רבה, והוא שונה מהשנה שאחרי. מעונתה השנייה של התוכנית, נבחר בכל שבוע מנצח במשימת "Head of Household" (ראש הבית), אותו זוכה מקבל חדר גדול ומפואר בשבילו, אך עם זאת, עליו גם להעמיד שני דיירים להדחה, לאחר שמועמדים שני דיירים, על חברי הבית להצביע להדחת אחד מהם, והוא עוזב את הבית. כשנותרים שני מתמודדים בלבד, חבר המושבעים, המורכב מהמתמודדים שהודחו מהבית (מעונה 4 הוא מורכב משבעת המודחים האחרונים בלבד) מצביע לניצחון של אחד משני הפיינליסטים. מעונתההשלישית של התוכנית, נוסף לתוכנית "כוח הווטו" (Power of veto). משימה הנערכת בין דיירי הבית, והזוכה בה מקבל את האפשרות להציל את אחד המועמדים להדחה, ולגרום לראש הבית להעמיד להדחה מישהו אחר. במידה והזוכה בווטו אינו מועמד, אך הוא בוחר להציל את אחד המועמדים להדחה. ראש הבית אינו יכול להעמיד אותו. מנחת התוכנית היא ג'ולי צ'ן.

ישראל
Postscript-viewer-shaded.png ערך מורחב – האח הגדול (תוכנית טלוויזיה ישראלית)
בספטמבר 2008 הצטרפה ישראל לרשימת המדינות המשדרות את "האח הגדול", כאשר זכיינית ערוץ 2 "קשת" החלה לראשונה לשדר אותה. התוכנית, בהנחייתם של ארז טל ואסי עזר ומאוחר יותר קורין גדעון, זכתה להצלחה רבה ולאחוזי צפייה גבוהים מאוד. עד כה עלו לשידור בישראל שמונה עונות, וכן שתי עונות נוספות שהן גרסת ה-VIP של התוכנית. בתום העונה השמינית והאחרונה במסגרת הזכיינית "קשת", עברה התוכנית לזכיינית "רשת" והיא משודרת ברשת 13.

עונה שם הוזכה
1 שפרה קורנפלד
1 VIP דודי מליץ
2 אלירז שדה
3 ג'קי מנחם
4 קותי סבג
5 טהוניה רובל
6 טל גלבוע
2 VIP מושיק עפיה
7 שי מיקה יפרח
8 אביחי אוחנה
9 ישראל אוגלבו
3 VIP ? - טרם שודר
אפריקה
במאי 2003 עלה "האח הגדול אפריקה". התוכנית היא הגירסה האפריקאית של האח הגדול. בתוכנית תחילה השתתפו 12 מדינות מאפריקה: אנגולה, בוצואנה, גאנה, קניה, מלאווי, נמיביה, ניגריה, דרום אפריקה, טנזניה, אוגנדה, זמביה וזימבבואה. בעונה 4 נוספו גם המדינות אתיופיה ומוזמביק, בעונה 7 נוספו ליבריה וסיירה ליאונה ובעונה 9 רואנדה נוספה. כל מדינה מספקת לפחות מתחרה אחת מהמדינה שלה. ב-7 בדצמבר 2014 שודר הפרק האחרון של התוכנית.

ביקורת
אל מול ההצלחה של התוכנית נמתחת עליה ביקורת לא מועטה וטענות כי יש להפסיק את שידורה נשמעות לעיתים קרובות.

מתנגדים רבים של התוכנית טוענים כי ההפקה היא זו שמתווה את כיוון התוכנית וקובעת את מהלכה, ובכך נפגעת אובייקטיביות התוכנית.[1] במרץ 2012 נחשף בעיתון ידיעות אחרונות כי חלק ממשתתפי האח הגדול ישראל אולצו לקחת כדורים פסיכיאטריים ללא הסבר מדוע וללא הסבר אודות תופעות הלוואי שיגרמו מהם. בפברואר 2013 התפרסם כי מפיקי התוכנית וד"ר אילן רבינוביץ' ישלמו פיצויים לנפגעים מכך.[2] מקרה זה מובא פעמים רבות כהוכחה להתערבות ההפקה בתוכנית.

העובדה כי מרגע כניסת הדיירים לבית ועד לרגע יציאתם אין ביניהם כל קשר לעולם החיצון והם אינם יכולים לצאת אל מחוץ לבית (אלא במקרה של פרישה) גורם להמשלה של בית האח לבית כלא, ממנו לא ניתן לצאת.[3] מתנגדי התוכנית טוענים כי על אף שקיימת אפשרות טכנית לצאת מהבית, ההשלכות של יציאה כזו הן פגיעה נואשת בשמו של המשתתף.

בנוסף, נטען כי חוסר הפרטיות של הדיירים מוגזם ותקף גם במקומות שבהם הפרטיות היא בסיסית ביותר. כך, נטען כי המקלחות השקופות למחצה בבית האח הגדול הישראלי אינן הולמות ופוגעות בדיירים, שלא העלו בדעתן שלא תינתן להם פרטיות בדבר בסיסי זה.[4] הטענות מתגברות כאשר פרטיות המשתתפים, בגרסאות שונות של האח הגדול, קטנה אף יותר, ואף נהפכות לטענות בדבר המיניות המוגזמת של התוכנית. כך, באוסטרליה נעשו מאמצים כבירים להפסקת שידורי האח הגדול: מבוגרים בלבד ששידרה את דיירי הבית מתרחצים במשותף, בעירום מלא, גברים ונשים,[5][6] מעסים את חבריהם העירומים,[7] ואף מסתובבים עירומים ברחבי הבית.[8] מאמצים אלו אף הביאו להפסקת התוכנית. כמו כן, בבריטניה קיימת ביקורת רבה כלפי המתירנות של התוכנית[9][10], באח הגדול גרמניה בה מתרחצים הדיירים בעירום לעיני המצלמות,[11][12] בברזיל[13], בארגנטינה[14], בדנמרק בה התקיימה משימה בה על הדיירים להתפשט כאשר נשמעת מוזיקה, ואם לא יעשו כן יועמדו להדחה,[15][16], באח הגדול פינלנד[17], באח הגדול של ארצות הבלקן[18][19], באח הגדול שוודיה[20], ובעוד גרסאות רבות של האח הגדול. בכולן העירום הוא מרכיב מרכזי של התוכנית ונשמעת ביקורת בנוגע לצפייתם של ילדים בתכנים, וכן בנוגע לחשיפה המוגזמת הנדרשת מהמתמודדים.[21]

ראו גם
אפקט הצופה
דד סט
מתים להתפרסם, סיפור שכתב בן אלטון בהשראת הגרסאות הבריטית והאוסטרלית
קישורים חיצוניים
ויקישיתוף מדיה וקבצים בנושא האח הגדול בוויקישיתוף
IMDB Logo 2016.svg "האח הגדול", במסד הנתונים הקולנועיים IMDb (באנגלית)
יעל אבן אור‏, "האח הגדול אפריקה" מחוללת שערוריות בכל היבשת, באתר וואלה! NEWS‏, 14 במאי 2012
הערות שוליים

אלפר, רוגל (30 בדצמבר 2015). "ערוץ 26 הוא מכשיר עינויים, ואחרי עשר דקות רצופות בו מודים ברצח". הארץ (בעברית). בדיקה אחרונה ב-30 באוגוסט 2016.
פרשת הכדורים הפסיכיאטריים: "האח הגדול" יפצה את נפגעי התוכנית בכ-2 מי...
"בית האח הגדול הוא כמו כלא", ‏2008-11-23
האח הגדול - סיור בבית, mako
Big Brother Australia 2005 - Day 72 - Uncut Live #9 - YouTube, YouTube
Big Brother Australia 2005 - Day 51 - Uncut Live #6, YouTube
Big Brother Australia 2005 - Day 51 - Uncut Live #6, YouTube
Big Brother Australia 2005 - Day 72 - Uncut Live #9, YouTube
האח הגדול בריטניה שוב משדר עירום בלי צנזורה, ‏2016-08-09
הסקס ב"האח הגדול" בבריטניה עולה שלב, ‏2016-06-14
בלי צנזורה: זה מה שקורה באח הגדול גרמניה, ‏2015-08-31
האח הגדול גרמניה מציג: מקלחות ללא צנזורה, ‏2013-08-14
Claudia Colucci Big Brother Brasil, YouTube
ויקטוריה אירולג'י מארגנטינה מתקלחת בעירום, עומרי חיון
Big Brother Denmark 2013 Naked Or Nominated 5, YouTube
Big Brother Denmark 2013 Naked Or Nominated 2, YouTube
"עירום באח הגדול: זה קורה גם בפינלנד". mako. 20 בינואר 2013. בדיקה אחרונה ב-2 בינואר 2017.
VELIKI BRAT 2016 - 2015 (10 באוקטובר 2015), VELIKI BRAT UZIVO - 38.DAN*00:50 - 02:00 18+, בדיקה אחרונה ב-2 בינואר 2017
blaze btahristov (6 בספטמבר 2015), Veliki brat 2015 Goran masira Stefani ..., בדיקה אחרונה ב-2 בינואר 2017
"הכול מותר: זה מה שקורה באח הגדול שוודיה". mako. 22 באוקטובר 2015. בדיקה אחרונה ב-23 במרץ 2017.
Adam Starkey for Metro.co.uk, People are campaigning for Celebrity Big Brother to be axed because of the sex, Metro, ‏2016-08-11

קטגוריה: האח הגדול (טלוויזיה)