'Pinoy Big Brother' will wow RP, says TV host
abs-cbnnews
It's survival of the toughest.
This was how TV host Willie Revillame summed up the challenge awaiting 12 contestants of ABS-CBN's "Pinoy Big Brother" - the country's most awaited reality TV show for 2005.
Revillame told DZMM Friday that the network's latest show, which was franchised from Holland, is not for the weak.
"Kailangan dito psychologically, mentally normal ka (You have to be psychologically and mentally normal for this)," Revillame, one of the program's three hosts, said.
He added: "Dumaan sila sa psychiatrist [ng show] kasi baka may suicidal or violent tendencies (They had to go through the show's psychiatrist to check if they had suicidal or violent tendencies)."
The comedian, who hosts the top-rated noontime game show "Wowowee", said the final 12 contestants who will play housemates for 100 days on national TV were chosen from about 35,000 individuals from all over the country who auditioned for the show.
He boasted that "Pinoy Big Brother" is the Kapamilya Network's grandest show to date. He said the "Pinoy Big Brother" house cost P18 million, while the technical requirements for the show added another P128 million.
Indeed, the network giant spared no expense in bringing the show that took the world by storm to the Filipino audience.
It had Filmal Realty Corp. build a cozy two-story house for the contestants at the Eugenio Lopez Drive in front of ABS-CBN’s The Loop.
The house has two bedrooms, two bathrooms, a dining room-kitchen, a spacious living room, a swimming pool and a "confession room" where each contestant could communicate with "Big Brother."
The contestants will be allowed only on the ground floor of the house; the second floor will be used by the show’s staff.
For 100 days, the housemates will have no contact whatsoever with the outside world.
The show has banned TV, telephone, cell phone, radio, newspaper, computer, watches and any other means of communication with the contestants' loved ones.
The participants will be given daily tasks, weekly assignments and challenges that will display their true feelings and test their abilities to win over an allowance to buy anything they wish such as cigarettes and chocolates.
Their every move will be monitored by 27 cameras in every nook and cranny of the "Pinoy Big Brother" house.
"Pinoy Big Brother" will be adapted to local culture. There will be no nudity allowed like in the international versions where some housemates are even shown making love. And since we’re Catholic, the local house will be the only one with an altar in it.
Viewers can text in which of the 12 housemates should be "voted out" and "text to stay." The housemates will also "vote out" a fellow housemate every week and the two housemates who will get the most number of votes will be the final nominees for eviction.
Viewers will have to send "text to stay" to save the housemate they wish to remain in the show.
The grand winner will walk away from the show with P1 million, a house and lot, and a brand new Nissan Frontier Titanium 3.
Toni Gonzaga will be the primetime host of the show from Monday to Friday; Saturday live eviction airing will be with Gonzaga and Reviilame. Daily updates and late night shows will be hosted by Mariel Rodriguez.
Studio 23 will air "Pinoy Big Brother" every Monday to Thursday and Saturdays, with Asia Agcaoili as host.
The show will have a 24-hour webcast on the website www. pinoybigbrother.com.
The official launch for "Pinoy Big Brother" starts on August 20 and 21, which will feature a live street fiesta in front of the "Pinoy Big Brother" house. Kapamilya stars will welcome the 12 housemates before they begin their 100-day stay inside the house.
The "big brother" concept is based on George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty- Four, published in 1948 and taken to be a warning against totalitarianism, in which the state spies on the activity of every individual.
The Philippines is the 31st country to have its own edition of the "Big Brother" show, but is only the second country to buy a franchise of the show after Thailand.