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 Post subject: BB Australia 2006
PostPosted: 06 Apr 06, 17:57 
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Single Big Brother housemates

07apr06

IT'S that time of the year again -- Big Brother is about to start.

The show's Gold Coast launch is on April 22, so it will most likely start the next night.
One rumour is that all but two of the housemates are single, similar to last year.

So that begs the question, just who is in the house?

If you know any relatives or friends of work colleagues that have been selected, email The Eye at eye@heraldsun.com.au

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 Post subject: BigBrother Australia BB6 Adverts
PostPosted: 08 Apr 06, 16:38 
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 Post subject: Nun may join Big Bro house
PostPosted: 16 Apr 06, 18:45 
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heraldsun
17apr06

IT'S less than a week before the next series of Big Brother starts on Channel 10, like it or loathe it.

On the show's official website there are several rumours about exactly what is going to happen in the house this year.

Two of the more interesting ones are that a nun will enter the house and the Australian Big Brother will have an exchange with the British Big Brother house.


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 Post subject: Australian BB has a new family member in 2006...
PostPosted: 16 Apr 06, 18:50 
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With the doors about to throw open once again to a whole new group of housemates, in 2006 we introduce one of Big Brothers younger siblings to queerplanet!
By Little Brother

The countdown to the sixth season of Big Brother has finally begun. The final chosen applicants are awaiting their lockdown call, the finishing touches are being made on the house and camera runs, plus Network Ten are teasing us with mysterious preseason adds. We also introduce ‘Little Brother’ to the team at queerplanet as this years Big Brother correspondent to take us through the new series.

We managed to track him down for a quick interview about everything Big Brother – and also to suss him out!

queerplanet: So give us some stats about you Little Brother!

Little Brother: Well I'm 24, I live with my boyfriend in Sydney, grew up in North Queensland, have a pet fish called 'Chuck' & I enjoy kickboxing... oh and did I mention I have a small obsession with Big Brother?

queerplanet: So tell us, what makes Big Brother so popular year after year?

Little Brother: It invented reality television, what started as a live psychological television experiment turned into the phenomenon of 2001. I think we’ve all seen some dodgy reality programs come and go over the years, shows like Popstars, The Hothouse & The Block disappear pretty fast. Even a program like Idol is getting tired now, how many Idols can Australia vote to the top only to be outsold by 2nd & 3rd place contestants? Big Brother has lasted so long because it still intrigues people, it is still interesting to watch. It also has a very loyal legion of fans. Each year the rules of Big Brother change, they cast very different personalities to the last and the whole theme changes. It’s also the surprise element, of not knowing what will happen next. With Big Brother not only is there just the twists, the secret rooms and secret passage ways, but also the not-so-planned elements that develop and shock us.

Queerplanet for full story


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 17 Apr 06, 15:47 
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The BBOZ Website is now live in the run up to the new series.
Offering two options for watching the coverage with a standard package and a premium package see below.
AU$40 gets you the full coverage.

Quote:
Image
Back better than ever
Welcome back to the BB website for series 06. With less than a week to go until the series kicks off (this Sunday at 7.30pm on TEN) we are gearing up for what promises to be the best BB series ever!
The website team is ready to once again give you 24/7 coverage of the House and everything BB related. While you can expect daily news stories and the same up-to-the-minute reporting from the new and improved BB diary, this year we are taking a giant leap forward with our live streaming and video-on-demand coverage.

The new Big Brother Premium section will give website members the option to pay for the ultimate BB website experience including:


unlimited streaming from the House

loads of daily highlight packages of all the best action in the House

exclusive web access the to the Adults Only area of the website

behind-the-scenes footage, TV out-takes and other exclusive video

an exclusive Premium forum and exclusive Premium member competitions

For those not wanting to pay the extra cash for Premium (or not able to due to the age restrictions) you will still be able to access limited free streaming from the House as well as regular video highlights. You'll also be able to access all your old favourites such as the forums, trivia and housemate profiles.

We've got plenty of other surprises up our sleeves which will be revealed in the coming weeks, but you'll just have to sit tight to see what they are.

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 Post subject: The rumours of Big Brother 2006... truth or lie?
PostPosted: 18 Apr 06, 20:47 
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MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS
Been out of the loop this year in the build-up to Big Brother? Need to get updated on all the BB gossip before it starts? Big Brother's Little Brother has done the dirty work for you!

So you’re hungry for Big Brother gossip, aren’t you? Well I’ve done the dirty work for you and gathered together all the wild rumours circulating about the sixth series, which premieres on Network TEN this week. It’s the perfect way to catch up on all the BB goss before the big launch. Be warned, if you'd like to keep it a suprise for launch night - DO NOT READ ON!However, take these rumours with a grain of salt… they are after all, just rumours…

queerplanet


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 Post subject: A few house rules
PostPosted: 19 Apr 06, 15:24 
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SundayTimes.AU
Comment by The Big Blogger
19apr06

THERE'S nothing so catastrophic to the Australian social psyche than when a new series of Big Brother is announced.

Ever since the twins walked away with the big cheque in what must surely seem only six months ago, the viewing public has been threatened with another series. Well, folks, it's back and it all kicks off again this Sunday.
Only this time, Big Brother promises to be tougher. He also vows to be cleaner, but this has only succeeded in casting off the majority of its core audience who simply enjoys coming home from school (or work, in the case of the tragics) for a right royal perv into the lives of an ever-increasing bevy of drop-kicks and social misfits looking for their (and not a second more) fifteen minutes of fame.

Old war horse Gretel Killeen is back in the hosting saddle in a vain attempt to win the Most Creative Use Of Sticky Tape award for the second year running.

There will be the inevitable 'meeting of the minds' as the housemates are trotted out to a baying public, desperate to cop a feel as the contestants launch themselves down the walkway. All of Australia will be watching, Ten tells us, hoping we don't recognise one of the desperates about to offer themselves up to the reality gods and give away their family and friends' secrets on national television.

The shallow among us will do their obligatory ‘hot-or-not’ scoring of the housemates in the way a speed dater might cut off the less attractive and hone in on the ultra-tanned, buff-bodied housemate who quite clearly must have something wrong with them to be blessed with such killer looks.

The old lexicon will return - the 'noms', the staple diets, the not-so-witty double entendres that dance provocatively with the show's totally inappropriate timeslot.

Bets will be made across the country: who will be the first to get drunk, dance naked through the compound, chat up a fellow inmate or just take that game with the shower hose a little too far.

What will the secret be? Does Big Brother need to have one? And how much humiliation will the contestants be prepared to suffer as the $1 million carrot is dangled before their star-struck eyes, only to be spirited away by a dwindling sponsorship base? All these questions - and more - will reach fever pitch after Sunday's launch party.

It's a train-wreck waiting to happen as hundreds, perhaps thousands, tell their friends they have no intention of watching this year in the same way a drug addict deludes a family member into believing they've kicked the habit. No, as surely as a dog returns to its own vomit, the masses will return like moths to a flame, mesmerised by the show's uncanny ability to trivialise, yet so very clearly typify, the human condition.

This year, Big Brother promises to be tougher, so we've come up with a list of ways he might turn the screws.

TOP 10 WAYS BIG BROTHER WILL GET TOUGH:

1. All contestants' heads will be shaved before entering the compound, a la Natalie Portman in V For Vendetta. This will make the housemates less likely to sport ridiculous hairstyles (listening, Tim?) and negate the need for a Vesna-esque wannabe to spend copious amounts of time in front of the mirror.

2. All housemates will be frisked personally on the way in by Up Late host and former BB inmate Hotdogs. Should they survive the groping, they will be subject to random torture from ex-inmate Michael and his truncheon of pain.

3. The housemates' sensitive parts will be wired to electrodes this series so that should they at ANY point say to another housemate - particularly within the first five minutes of entering the house - they they love them, they will be zapped to within an inch of their lives.

4. It's not enough this year for housemates to give very clear reasons as to why they've chosen to nominate another for eviction. This worked well for previous series where the diary room confessionals were dragged out in a painful manner that would rival any Who Wants To Be A Millionaire dawdler. No, this year housemates have to fill out statutory declarations detailing their feelings for housemates and be prepared for a duel with pistols at dawn.

5. BB06 will be tougher this year as there will be no food. Buoyed by the success of the staple diet, Big Brother wants contestants to instead hunt for food. Frogs, a delicacy in some countries, abound around the compound and the dramatic weight loss experienced by inmates would be an inspired tie-in to Ten's other 'reality' series The Biggest Loser.

6. All relationships and any hint of hanky-panky within the house must this year be completely simulated to meet the strict guidelines imposed on last year's Uncut show. Expect plenty of simulated love-making to compensate as housemates rig up elaborate pulley systems to creatively recreate the 'dancing doona' phenomenon of their forbearers. Eye contact is tolerated, but anyone caught actually kissing or using foul language will be evicted.

7. Evictions will take on a new spin, as voting will be via Russian roulette. Viewers get to SMS in directly to have a say on who gets the bullet. Only the toughest will survive.

8. Friday Night Games shows will be conducted like the movie Running Man. There promises to be plenty of violence (wacky mishaps the networks will call them) and hi-jinks as the flimsy safety elements are removed and those fit enough to return to the house will still be in the running for the big money.

9. This year, contestants will house swap with those on the UK series. They will stop over in Bali and spend some time in a prison chosen by the network. Special celebrity guest will be Schapelle Corby who will try to become one of the intruders.

10. There will be a mole. This person will be there to stir up the housemates with their annoyingly upbeat take on life. He or she will spread scurrilous rumours, toy with their fellow inmates' affections and generally drive them insane to the point of violence (all within the bounds of the television guidelines, of course). This will make for great viewing, but will be the toughest test for any potential Big Brother winner.

I wait with bated breath - purely from an anthropological perspective, you understand - for the start of BB06.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 20 Apr 06, 17:37 
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Big Brother quest hots up

21apr06
TheAdvertiser

SEEMS we may be getting warmer with our quest to find Adelaide's representative in the Big Brother house.

Another (Confidential) spy has told us a girl named Tilli is currently in lock down ahead of entering the house this weekend.

Apparently, Tilli went to Seymour College and finished Year 12 in 2004.

"She's a very lively girl and I'm sure she would cope very well in the house," our spy, via email, says.

So come on all you Seymour College gals, email us.


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 Post subject: Hostworks picks up Big Brother 6 ad-serving deal
PostPosted: 20 Apr 06, 21:15 
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ITWire
By Stan Beer
Thursday, 20 April 2006

Internet hosting specialist, Hostworks, has won a major ad-serving deal with top-rating reality TV show, Big Brother, to deliver millions of online advertisements during its 2006 season. The latest success came just weeks after Hostworks announced a separate deal to host Big Brother’s interactive website and video streaming for its 2006 series, which runs on Network Ten.

The Big Brother site http://bigbrother.3mobile.com.au/ claims to offer one of Australia’s richest online media experiences, with live video streaming from the Big Brother house 24 hours a day, hundreds of “video on demand” segments and a vast range of images from “the House”. In 2005, Hostworks successfully met a doubling of online demand for the Big Brother website, with page impressions jumping from 94 million in 2004 to more than 170 million.


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 Post subject: The Big Brother world first twist
PostPosted: 20 Apr 06, 21:18 
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- MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS
After months of speculation about the Big Brother world first twist of 2006, Little Brother reveals his theory based on what he already knows. Please be warned, if you wish to keep it as a surprise for Launch Night, DO NOT continue.

queerplanet


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 21 Apr 06, 19:57 
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There are some self-portraits of the housemates HERE.

Housemates pics and details here ;3mobile

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"Why should we blaze a trail when the well worn path seems safe and so inviting?"


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 Post subject: Big brother
PostPosted: 22 Apr 06, 16:53 
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It's back. Graeme Blundell sorts the rumours to find out what to expect from the latest series of TV's most famous reality format--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
theAustralian
April 22, 2006

AFTER the heterosexual thuggery in last year's Big Brother, will all this year's housemates be gay? Or will the AWB inquiry be an influence, with contestants, in a tough-nut approach to propriety, tell Big Brother, "I can't remember" at every opportunity when reprimanded? These are some of the hot rumours that have run virus-like through websites over the past week, several of which are still circling the sixth show, which starts tomorrow.
Will a raunchy former nun be a contestant, a bride of Christ with a difference? Is there a new upstairs "his and hers" penthouse suite for the inevitable "Battle of the Sexes" games, or a glasshouse sin-bin under a heavy tarpaulin in the Dreamworld house's garden?

One thing seems likely. As the local show runs parallel to the British version, there will be exchanges between housemates crossing the globe to live in both houses. Valid passports are prerequisites for contestants, along with potty mouths, poor manners, a lack of shame and a willingness to flash their arrangements.

Some gossip has the new show featuring a housemate giving birth live on TV, as occurred in The Netherlands on Big Brother last year; unlike the Dutch version, both parents of the Australian baby will be in the house. How the father will be unknown to either the other contestants or the viewers is unknown to everyone but BB's manipulative psychologists.

I used to be hooked on Big Brother. Or maybe the idea that one show could so brilliantly illustrate the notion of television as a shotgun marriage of commerce, sociology, art and bad manners.

I still love watching the hybridising of genres and formats that the show has come to represent -- part soapie, confessional, fly-on-the-wall documentary, scripted drama and game show.

As a concept, Big Brother wittily crosses the grey precincts between public and private, consumer and producer, viewer and participant. A precursor to the truly Orwellian brave new world of fully interactive TV, Big Brother also represents an astonishing convergence of information and communications technologies: broadcasting, internet, telephony, print, radio. Serious stuff.

I'm still fascinated by the way deeply comfortable myths about community, friendship and individuality are wrapped up with fictional conventions such as conflict, multiple narrative, plot and happy endings in a package of seeming spontaneous truthfulness.

Big Brother works so well because it comes with a tantalising promise of contact with reality but at a secure distance: it's a virtual compensatory actuality, combining entertainment with comfort and security.

"Bogan Brother", as some websites call it, offers a kind of safe environment where, for an hour or so each night for 12 weeks, we don't have to share physical space with the kinds of people we avoid in public. You know, strung-out, thin-faced blondes with show-off arses and loud-talking, air-headed, farting blokes who call everyone "mate".

There is a continuous, coast-to-coast, suspension of disbelief in the three months Big Brother is on the screen, as we watch these rather ordinary people struggle to play themselves without a script.

The voyeuristic "slowing down at an accident" anticipation glues it together, along with our fascination with the human zoo, a kind of manipulated psychological experiment.

Daily viewing becomes an established ritual - even if we only dip in and out to see what the stylists have done to 43-year-old presenter Gretel Killeen's hair. No matter what pact you might make to ignore Big Brother, you find yourself using your SMS vote to get rid of some stupid, sexist and tattooed person you have really begun to hate. But the reality is, after almost 15 months of Big Brother screen time, the sociology has begun to wear thin and the characters are becoming less interesting, even as Ten has upped the controversy stakes.

Last year breasts and testicles were groped, semi-erect penises were waved around, girls pashed girls, contestants strutted nude and Glenn and Michelle allegedly became the first people to have sex on local TV. The failure of the young female contestants to fully complain, or even notice the level of harassment, was seen by some commentators as another example of the death of feminism.

Ten has pledged to improve codes of conduct and, according to straight-faced press statements, threatened to incorporate psychological training to increase awareness of sexual harassment, assault and bullying after last year's show earned the name "Big Brothel".

This is unlikely to happen, despite warnings from the so-called regulator, the Australian Media and Communications Authority - a contradiction in terms as obvious as the Robert Menzies Humanities Building or the Harold Holt Swimming Pool.

Most of us are ready for the removal of games, the banal conversations and the pseudo-scientific structures of Big Brother just to see the contestants nude up and pair off.

Australia would vote for who does what to whom, in what combination with whomever else, in whatever position, in real time. Points would be lost for talking and there would be instant expulsion for anyone contributing anything resembling an idea. Brilliant host Killeen would just sigh at all this speculation. One of those long, decolletage-shaking Gorgeous Gretel (as fan sites call her) sighs. Nothing fazes this woman. She powers through hairdos, eyelashes, hem lengths and Wonderbra uplifts of such audaciousness that the tears we see in her eyes must be real.

Over the months of each show, our admiration for her ability to keep fronting something of such unabashed banality - without ever blushing - turns into the subtler nuances of cohabitation and we begin to become irritated at her constant irony.

"Can't you take anything seriously?" we snap at the screen, the way we do at partners we love but who don't take us sincerely enough.

But I can't wait to see how she handles it this year. Once, her welcoming hugs and motherly pats to calm the nerves of evictees seemed genuine. By last year they appeared to say, "Thank God, another loser I'll never have to talk to again."

Her innate sense of showmanship made her audience feel they were part of the TV game, their quick-quipping big sister not afraid to rubbish her owners, slag off at the contestants on their behalf or snap her fingers at the electronic monster itself.

But last year a sterner Gretel confused them and they wanted her to lighten up. But for this viewer, her way with words, her teasing, wanton style, has created a self that she has relaxed into as the shows have accumulated. She makes fun about being as much in the dark as the Big Brother contestants and creates theatre about her ignorance in the same way that Graham Kennedy did when he presided over the live box. (Why is it impossible to imagine a man fronting Big Brother?)

A clever woman who is sometimes seemingly encased in backstage chaos through her hidden earphones during the live segments she can't show the viewer, Killeen lets her quick mind pantomime an incapacity for accepting simple conclusions.

"Let's look at this then, shall we?" she'll say with a yawn. Or, "They have to be joking. Let's take the commercial break early."

She has the great TV talker's gift for seeming to completely endorse her show and completely undermine it at the same time. Where will the Big Brother ride take Gorgeous Gretel this time?

Maybe she'll compere the show from inside the house. Now there's a rumour.

Big Brother starts tomorrow at 7.30pm on Ten and will air weeknights at 7pm.


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 Post subject: Rove Reveals Punishment Plan
PostPosted: 22 Apr 06, 21:44 
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In between Rove's usual banter and witty repartee on Tuesday night, Gretel Killeen managed to steal the show and let slip two major Big Brother 2006 secrets.

As BB fans, you've probably been itching to have more control over the housemates' fate, so in a rare and generous gesture, BB has answered your prayers. As revealed by Gretel, this year you will not only be able to vote for who you'd like to evict from the BB house, you'll also be able to vote for who you'd like to stay. This news is bound to have a massive impact on the 'sleepers' as Gretel calls them - the quiet housemates who stay under the radar by avoiding being the centre of attention. Sleeping might get the HMS through the night, but it won't get them through evictions!

------------------------------ Image

Gretel's second revelation is news that this year's House will have a 'Punishment Room'. The room is no doubt designed for reprimanding the misbehaving HMs, but it's hard to say what cruel and unusual punishments BB has in store. The small, soundproof room, located behind the living area, has glass walls which allow HMs and viewers to see in, but leave the unfortunate inmate unable to see out.

With the HMs needing to fight for your love, attention, and votes more than ever before - it's inevitable that some of them are going to step on BB's toes this year and end up doing some time in the Punishment Room.

Bring it on.


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 Post subject: Big Brother: what a shocker!
PostPosted: 22 Apr 06, 22:06 
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HeraldSun
ANOOSKA TUCKER-EVANS
23apr06

Housemates to face pain

Big Brother housemates are in for a nasty shock when the new series starts tonight.

Five Victorians are among the 15 housemates who will be subjected to tasks including being given electric shocks as they try to win the $1 million first prize.
There will also be a punishment room where housemates will be sent for solitary confinement if they break house rules.

Medical authorities and family groups have expressed concerns about what the contestants will be subjected to when the sixth series of the Channel 10 show starts tonight.

A true-or-false game will see the housemates zapped with a 12-volt electrical shock if they answer questions incorrectly.

Australian Medical Association Queensland president Dr Steve Hambleton said the punishment was unnecessarily dangerous.

"Electricity is something we don't know that much about, so why take a risk?" he said.

Dr Hambleton said the show's producers should think of better ways to amuse their viewers.

"These sorts of things are ridiculous and pranks can turn out very badly," he said.

Australian Family Association spokeswoman Angelique Barr said the concept was "sick".

"It shows children that it's OK to treat people this way and inflict pain on others," she said. "It gives the message that it's all right to abuse some people and it's all right to be amused by the pain and suffering of others."

A spokesman for Endemol Southern Star, the producers of Big Brother, said the task was designed to be fun, not as a punishment, and was not meant to cause the housemates harm.

"We tested the game to ascertain how it worked and it's great fun," he said. "It delivers the same sort of punch as a number of commercially available games."

Five Victorians, including a former Foster's grid girl and a part-time male model, are among the BB housemates.


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: 23 Apr 06, 12:31 
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Meet the BB Australia housemates HERE and see a plan of their house HERE.

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