Big Brother

Big Brother

.
2000

A British reality television game show in which a number of contestants live in an isolated house for several weeks, trying to avoid being evicted by the public with the aim of winning a large cash prize at the end of the run.

Storyline

A British reality television game show in which a number of contestants live in an isolated house for several weeks, trying to avoid being evicted by the public with the aim of winning a large cash prize at the end of the run.
Released
2000-07-18
Episode Runtime
60 min
Language
English
Status
Ended
Genre
Production
Unknown
Directors

CASTS

Marcus Bentley

Marcus Bentley

Narrator
Davina McCall

Davina McCall

Self - Host
Emma Willis

Emma Willis

Self - Host
Brian Dowling

Brian Dowling

Himself - Host
Nikki Grahame

Nikki Grahame

Self
Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace

Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace

Self
Rachel Rice

Rachel Rice

Self
Darnell Earl Swallow

Darnell Earl Swallow

Self
Kathreya Kasisopa

Kathreya Kasisopa

Self
Lisa Appleton

Lisa Appleton

Self
Rebecca Shiner

Rebecca Shiner

Self
Sophie Reade

Sophie Reade

Self
Siavash Sabbaghpour

Siavash Sabbaghpour

Self
David Ramsden

David Ramsden

Self
Charlie Drummond

Charlie Drummond

Self
Lisa Wallace

Lisa Wallace

Self
Marcus Akin

Marcus Akin

Self
Rebecca  Hamill

Rebecca Hamill

Self
Freddie Fisher

Freddie Fisher

Self
Hira Habibshah

Hira Habibshah

Self
Isaac Stout

Isaac Stout

Self
Nóirín Kelly

Nóirín Kelly

Self
Tom Oliver

Tom Oliver

Self
Kenneth Tong

Kenneth Tong

Self
Karly Ashworth

Karly Ashworth

Self
Kris  Donnelly

Kris Donnelly

Self
Sree Dasari

Sree Dasari

Self
Angel McKenzie

Angel McKenzie

Self
Cairon Austin-Hill

Cairon Austin-Hill

Self
Sophia Brown

Sophia Brown

Self
Saffia Corden

Saffia Corden

Self
Beinazir Lasharie

Beinazir Lasharie

Self
Mario Mugan

Mario Mugan

Self
Ben Duncan

Ben Duncan

Self
Brian Belo

Brian Belo

Self
Pete Bennett

Pete Bennett

Self
Glyn Wise

Glyn Wise

Self
Grace Adams-Short

Grace Adams-Short

Self
Michael Hughes

Michael Hughes

Self
Sara Folino

Sara Folino

Self
Rex Newmark

Rex Newmark

Self
Mohamed Mohamed

Mohamed Mohamed

Self
Nicole Cammack

Nicole Cammack

Self
Stuart Pilkington

Stuart Pilkington

Self
Dale Howard

Dale Howard

Self
Luke Marsden

Luke Marsden

Self
Maysoon Shaladi

Maysoon Shaladi

Self
Belinda Harris-Reid

Belinda Harris-Reid

Self
Mario Marconi

Mario Marconi

Self
Jennifer Clark

Jennifer Clark

Self
Sylvia Barrie

Sylvia Barrie

Self
Dennis McHugh

Dennis McHugh

Self
Alexandra De-Gale

Alexandra De-Gale

Self
Stephanie McMichael

Stephanie McMichael

Self
Josie Gibson

Josie Gibson

Self
David (Dave) Vaughan

David (Dave) Vaughan

Self
JJ Bird

JJ Bird

Self
Andrew Edmonds

Andrew Edmonds

Self
John James Parton

John James Parton

Self
Sam Pepper

Sam Pepper

Self
Corin Forshaw

Corin Forshaw

Self
Steve Gill

Steve Gill

Self
Jo Butler

Jo Butler

Self
Rachel Ifon

Rachel Ifon

Self
Laura McAdam

Laura McAdam

Self
Keeley Johnson

Keeley Johnson

Self
Caoimhe Guilfoyle

Caoimhe Guilfoyle

Self
Ife Kuku

Ife Kuku

Self
Nathan Dunn

Nathan Dunn

Self
Shabby Katchadourian

Shabby Katchadourian

Self
Sunshine Martyn

Sunshine Martyn

Self
Govan Hinds

Govan Hinds

Self
Rachael White

Rachael White

Self
Richard Newman

Richard Newman

Self
Jennie Corner

Jennie Corner

Self
Imogen Thomas

Imogen Thomas

Self
Susie Verrico

Susie Verrico

Self
Mikey Dalton

Mikey Dalton

Self
Glen Coroner

Glen Coroner

Self
Michael Cheshire

Michael Cheshire

Self
Jayne Kitt

Jayne Kitt

Self
Lea Walker

Lea Walker

Self
Jonathan Leonard

Jonathan Leonard

Self
Lisa Huo

Lisa Huo

Self
Sam Brodie

Sam Brodie

Self
Sezer Yurtseven

Sezer Yurtseven

Self
George Askew

George Askew

Self
Bonnie Holt

Bonnie Holt

Self
Dawn Blake

Dawn Blake

Self
Shahbaz Chauhdry

Shahbaz Chauhdry

Self
Charley Kazim Uchea

Charley Kazim Uchea

Self
Makosi Musambasi

Makosi Musambasi

Self
Amanda Louise Marchant

Amanda Louise Marchant

Self
Samantha  Marchant

Samantha Marchant

Self
Liam McGough

Liam McGough

Self
Ziggy Lichman

Ziggy Lichman

Self
Carole Vincent

Carole Vincent

Self
Jonty Stern

Jonty Stern

Self
Kara-Louise Horne

Kara-Louise Horne

Self
Tracey Barnard

Tracey Barnard

Self
Gerry Stergiopoulos

Gerry Stergiopoulos

Self
Amy Alexander

Amy Alexander

Self
David Parnaby

David Parnaby

Self
Shanessa Reilly

Shanessa Reilly

Self
Chanelle Hayes

Chanelle Hayes

Self
Nicky Maxwell

Nicky Maxwell

Self
Laura Williams

Laura Williams

Self
Jonathan Durden

Jonathan Durden

Self
Billi Bhatti

Billi Bhatti

Self
Seany O'Kane

Seany O'Kane

Self
Shabnam Paryani

Shabnam Paryani

Self
Lesley Brain

Lesley Brain

Self
Emily Parr

Emily Parr

Self
Derek Laud

Derek Laud

Self
Anthony Hutton

Anthony Hutton

Self
Eugene Sully

Eugene Sully

Self
Kinga Karolczak

Kinga Karolczak

Self
Craig Coates

Craig Coates

Self
Orlaith McAllister

Orlaith McAllister

Self
Kemal Shahin

Kemal Shahin

Self
Kieron Harvey

Kieron Harvey

Self
Vanessa Layton-McIntosh

Vanessa Layton-McIntosh

Self
Maxwell Ward

Maxwell Ward

Self
Roberto Conte

Roberto Conte

Self
Sam Heuston

Sam Heuston

Self
Lesley Sanderson

Lesley Sanderson

Self
Mary O'Leary

Mary O'Leary

Self
Helen Wood

Helen Wood

Self
Victor Ebuwa

Victor Ebuwa

Self
Nadia Almada

Nadia Almada

Self
Jason Cowan

Jason Cowan

Self
Daniel Bryan

Daniel Bryan

Self
Shell Jubin

Shell Jubin

Self
Stuart Wilson

Stuart Wilson

Self
Michelle Bass

Michelle Bass

Self
Ahmed Aghil

Ahmed Aghil

Self
Becki Seddiki

Becki Seddiki

Self
Marco Sabba

Marco Sabba

Self
Vanessa Nimmo

Vanessa Nimmo

Self
Emma Greenwood

Emma Greenwood

Self
Kitten Pinder

Kitten Pinder

Self
Cameron Stout

Cameron Stout

Self
Ray Shah

Ray Shah

Self
Scott Turner

Scott Turner

Self
Stephanie  Coldicott

Stephanie Coldicott

Self
Annuszka  Nowak

Annuszka Nowak

Self
Lisa Jeynes

Lisa Jeynes

Self
Herjender Gosal

Herjender Gosal

Self
Tânia do Nascimento

Tânia do Nascimento

Self
Jonathan Tickle

Jonathan Tickle

Self
Federico Martone

Federico Martone

Self
Joanne  Rooney

Joanne Rooney

Self
Justine Sellman

Justine Sellman

Self
Anouska Golebiewski

Anouska Golebiewski

Self
Alex Sibley

Alex Sibley

Self
Kate Lawler

Kate Lawler

Self
Jonathan Regan

Jonathan Regan

Self
Jade Goody

Jade Goody

Self
Tim Culley

Tim Culley

Self
Peter James Ellis

Peter James Ellis

Self
Adele Roberts

Adele Roberts

Self
Sophie Pritchard

Sophie Pritchard

Self
Spencer Smith

Spencer Smith

Self
Sandy Cumming

Sandy Cumming

Self
Alison Hammond

Alison Hammond

Self
Lynne Moncrieff

Lynne Moncrieff

Self
Sunita Sharma

Sunita Sharma

Self
Caroline Wharram

Caroline Wharram

Self
Luke Anderson

Luke Anderson

Self
Adam Kelly

Adam Kelly

Self
Deana Uppal

Deana Uppal

Self
Sara McLean

Sara McLean

Self
Luke Scrase

Luke Scrase

Self
Ashleigh Hughes

Ashleigh Hughes

Self
Scott Mason

Scott Mason

Self
Conor McIntyre

Conor McIntyre

Self
Becky Hannon

Becky Hannon

Self
Lauren Carre

Lauren Carre

Self
Shievonne Robinson

Shievonne Robinson

Self
Arron Lowe

Arron Lowe

Self
Lydia Louisa

Lydia Louisa

Self
Benedict Garrett

Benedict Garrett

Self
Victoria Eisermann

Victoria Eisermann

Self
Chris James

Chris James

Self
Mark Byron

Mark Byron

Self
Matthew Davies

Matthew Davies

Self
Ashleigh Coyle

Ashleigh Coyle

Self
Christopher Hall

Christopher Hall

Self
Ash Harrison

Ash Harrison

Self
Chris Wright

Chris Wright

Self
Pavandeep  Paul

Pavandeep Paul

Self
Winston Showan

Winston Showan

Self
Zoë Birkett

Zoë Birkett

Self
Steven Goode

Steven Goode

Self
Kimberly Kisselovich

Kimberly Kisselovich

Self
Danielle McMahon

Danielle McMahon

Self
Biannca Lake

Biannca Lake

Self
Marlon Wallen

Marlon Wallen

Self
Jale Karaturp

Jale Karaturp

Self
Toya Washington

Toya Washington

Self
Pauline Bennett

Pauline Bennett

Self
Tamara Stewart-Wood

Tamara Stewart-Wood

Self
Aaron Allard-Morgan

Aaron Allard-Morgan

Self
Jay McKray

Jay McKray

Self
Alex Lee

Alex Lee

Self
Louise Cliffe

Louise Cliffe

Self
Tom O'Connell

Tom O'Connell

Self
Faye Palmer

Faye Palmer

Self
Harry Blake

Harry Blake

Self
Jemma Palmer

Jemma Palmer

Self
Anton Murphy

Anton Murphy

Self
Aden Theobald

Aden Theobald

Self
Maisy James

Maisy James

Self
Mark Henderson

Mark Henderson

Self
Heaven Afrika

Heaven Afrika

Self
Rebeckah Vaughan

Rebeckah Vaughan

Self
Tashie Jackson

Tashie Jackson

Self
Dexter Koh

Dexter Koh

Self
Joe Glenny

Joe Glenny

Self
Jack Glenny

Jack Glenny

Self
Sam Evans

Sam Evans

Self
Gina Rio

Gina Rio

Self
Charlie Travers

Charlie Travers

Self
Sophie Lawrence

Sophie Lawrence

Self
Hazel O'Sullivan

Hazel O'Sullivan

Self
Callum Knell

Callum Knell

Self
Dan Neal

Dan Neal

Self
Jackie Travers

Jackie Travers

Self
Daley Ojuederie

Daley Ojuederie

Self
Ainsley  Millington

Ainsley Millington

Self
Jemima Slade

Jemima Slade

Self
Michael Dylan

Michael Dylan

Self
Sallie Axl

Sallie Axl

Self
Stuart Hosking

Stuart Hosking

Self
Helen Adams

Helen Adams

Self
Elizabeth Woodcock

Elizabeth Woodcock

Self
Paul Clarke

Paul Clarke

Self
Josh Rafter

Josh Rafter

Self
Amma Antwi-Agyei

Amma Antwi-Agyei

Self
Paul Ferguson

Paul Ferguson

Self
Narinder Kaur

Narinder Kaur

Self
Penny Ellis

Penny Ellis

Self
Chloe Wilburn

Chloe Wilburn

Self
Joel Williams

Joel Williams

Self
Danny Wisker

Danny Wisker

Self
Jack McDermott

Jack McDermott

Self
Nick Henderson

Nick Henderson

Self
Cristian MJC

Cristian MJC

Self
Sam Kay

Sam Kay

Self
Harry Amelia Martin

Harry Amelia Martin

Self
Marc O'Neill

Marc O'Neill

Self
Simon Gross

Simon Gross

Self
Jade-Martina Lynch

Jade-Martina Lynch

Self
Eileen Daly

Eileen Daly

Self
Sarah Greenwood

Sarah Greenwood

Self
Kieran McLeod

Kieran McLeod

Self
Harriet Jackson

Harriet Jackson

Self
Sally Broadbent

Sally Broadbent

Self
Amy Broadbent

Amy Broadbent

Self
Aaron Frew

Aaron Frew

Self
Adjoa Mensah

Adjoa Mensah

Self
Craig Phillips

Craig Phillips

Self
Nichola Holt

Nichola Holt

Self
Nick Bateman

Nick Bateman

Self
Isabelle Warburton

Isabelle Warburton

Self
Raph Korine

Raph Korine

Self
Deborah Agboola

Deborah Agboola

Self
Tom Barber

Tom Barber

Self
Andrew Cruickshanks

Andrew Cruickshanks

Self
Hannah Agboola

Hannah Agboola

Self
Charlotte Keys

Charlotte Keys

Self
Ellie Young

Ellie Young

Self
Chanelle McCleary

Chanelle McCleary

Self
Sam Chaloner

Sam Chaloner

Self
Sue Evans

Sue Evans

Self
Joe Quaranta

Joe Quaranta

Self
Savannah O'Reilly

Savannah O'Reilly

Self
Lotan Carter

Lotan Carter

Self
Rebecca Jane

Rebecca Jane

Self
Kayleigh Morris

Kayleigh Morris

Self
Sukhvinder Javeed

Sukhvinder Javeed

Self
Imran Javeed

Imran Javeed

Self
Arthur Fulford

Arthur Fulford

Self
Mandy Longworth

Mandy Longworth

Self
Kieran Lee

Kieran Lee

Self
Anna Nolan

Anna Nolan

Self
Darren Ramsay

Darren Ramsay

Self
Melanie Hill

Melanie Hill

Self
Claire Strutton

Claire Strutton

Self
Tom McDermott

Tom McDermott

Self
Caroline O'Shea

Caroline O'Shea

Self
Andrew Davidson

Andrew Davidson

Self
Sada Walkington

Sada Walkington

Self
Jason Burrill

Jason Burrill

Self
Hughie Maughan

Hughie Maughan

Self
Jackson Blyton

Jackson Blyton

Self
Andy West

Andy West

Self
Evelin Elle

Evelin Elle

Self
Jayne Connery

Jayne Connery

Self
Sam Giffen

Sam Giffen

Self
Alex Cannon

Alex Cannon

Self
Laura Carter

Laura Carter

Self
Ryan Ruckledge

Ryan Ruckledge

Self
Lateysha Grace

Lateysha Grace

Self
Chelsea Singh

Chelsea Singh

Self
Charlie Doherty

Charlie Doherty

Self
Emma Jensen

Emma Jensen

Self
Georgina Cantwell

Georgina Cantwell

Self
Natalie Rowe

Natalie Rowe

Self
Marco Pierre White Jr.

Marco Pierre White Jr.

Self
Victoria Jensen

Victoria Jensen

Self
Cameron Cole

Cameron Cole

Self
Akeem Griffiths

Akeem Griffiths

Self
Zoe Jones

Zoe Jones

Self
Cian Carrigan

Cian Carrigan

Self
Sîan Hamshaw

Sîan Hamshaw

Self
Brooke Berry

Brooke Berry

Self
Tomasz Wania

Tomasz Wania

Self
Lewis Flanagan

Lewis Flanagan

Self
Isabella Farnese

Isabella Farnese

Self
Hussain Ahmed

Hussain Ahmed

Self
Kenaley Amos-Sissons

Kenaley Amos-Sissons

Self
Isaac Jagroop

Isaac Jagroop

Self
Kay Lovelle

Kay Lovelle

Self
Lewis Gregory

Lewis Gregory

Self
Anamélia Silva

Anamélia Silva

Self
Ellis Hillon

Ellis Hillon

Self
Andrew Tate

Andrew Tate

Self
Pamela Anderson

Pamela Anderson

Self - Houseguest
John McCririck

John McCririck

Self
Jasmine Lennard

Jasmine Lennard

Self
Thaila Zucchi

Thaila Zucchi

Tara Palmer-Tomkinson

Tara Palmer-Tomkinson

Rylan Clark

Rylan Clark

Self
James Jordan

James Jordan

Self
Saskia Howard-Clarke

Saskia Howard-Clarke

Self - Guest Panelist
Geoffrey Beattie

Geoffrey Beattie

Will Mellor

Will Mellor

Melanie Blatt

Melanie Blatt

Anthea Turner

Anthea Turner

Graham Norton

Graham Norton

Atul Kochhar

Atul Kochhar

Self - Chef
Coolio

Coolio

Ulrika Jonsson

Ulrika Jonsson

Preston

Preston

Chantelle Houghton

Chantelle Houghton

Levi Roots

Levi Roots

Self
Jon Tickle

Jon Tickle

Self
Shane Filan

Shane Filan

Self

Seasons

Specials
Specials
2000
.
44 Episodes

Season 0 of Big Brother premiered on 2000-09-16.

Series 1
Series 1
.
2000
.
53 Episodes

Big Brother 2000, also known as Big Brother 1, was the first series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It is based upon the Dutch series of the same name, which gained notoriety in 1999 and 2000. The series debuted on Channel 4 on 18 July 2000, running for nine weeks until 15 September 2000. Early in its run, the series was met with controversy for numerous reasons, including its use of professional psychiatrists who analyzed the personalities and actions of the contestants. Despite the large amount of controversy, the series was a major success. Forty thousand people applied to participate in the first series. The first week of the series had over 400,000 voters call in to choose to evict someone, while the final week had 7.8 million voters. The series averaged 4.5 million viewers, with a series high of 10 million viewers on the final night. This series featured a total of eleven housemates competing to win the grand prize. The show lasted for a total of 64 days, culminating in housemate Craig Phillips winning the grand prize, and Anna Nolan coming in second place. The series revolves around ten strangers living in a house together with no communication with the outside world. They are filmed constantly during their time in the House, and can have no communication with those filming them. Each week, each contestant, referred to as "housemates", chooses two people to be up for eviction. The two or more people with the most votes will be nominated to leave the House. The viewers then decide which of the nominees should leave, with the selected person leaving during a live show. This process continued until only three housemates remained, in which the viewers would decide which of the housemates would win the £70,000 grand prize. A housemate can be ejected from the show for breaking rules, such as discussing nominations when not permitted. If a housemate were to be ejected from the game - as in the fifth week - then a replacement housemate would enter the House in a matter of days.

Series 2
Series 2
.
2001
.
66 Episodes

Big Brother 2001, also known as Big Brother 2, was the second series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It is based upon the Netherlands series of the same name, which gained notoriety in 1999 and 2000. The series premiered on Channel 4 on 25 May 2001 and lasted nine weeks until the live finale on 27 July 2001. The second series continued the success of the original, being a ratings success for the company. There was a total of 7.3 million votes in the final week. In terms of ratings, it matched the success of the first with a series average of 4.6 million viewers. The premise of the series remained largely unchanged from the previous installment in the series. The series revolves around ten strangers living in a house together with no communication with the outside world. They are filmed constantly during their time in the house, and can have no communication with those filming them. Each week, each contestant, referred to as "housemates", choose two people to be up for nomination. The two or more people with the most votes will be nominated to leave the house. The viewers then decide which of the nominees should leave, with the selected person leaving during a live show. This process continued until only three housemates remained, in which the viewers would decide which of the housemates would win the £70,000 grand prize. A housemate can be ejected from the show for breaking rules, such as discussing nominations when not permitted. Later in the season, an intruder entered the game, the first in Big Brother history, bringing the total number of housemates to 11. The series ended after 64 days, in which housemate Brian Dowling was crowned the Winner, and Helen Adams the Runner-Up.

Series 3
Series 3
.
2002
.
75 Episodes

Big Brother 2002, also known as Big Brother 3, was the third series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It is based upon the Netherlands series of the same name, which gained notoriety in 1999 and 2000. The series premiered on Channel 4 on 24 May 2002 and lasted nine weeks until the live finale on 26 July 2002. The third edition saw a ratings increase for the series. The finale had a total of 10 million viewers which is not only the most watched episode of Big Brother to date but, based on Live +7 data supplied by BARB, is Channel 4's most watched broadcast since the channel's inception in 1982. In total, over 8.6 million votes were cast to determine the winner of the series. In terms of average viewers, Big Brother 3 is the highest rated series of the show to date, averaging 5.9 million viewers throughout the whole season. It is one of only two seasons of the main series to have over five million average viewers. More than 150,000 viewers applied to be on this season, more than double the amount of applicants from the previous edition. Davina McCall returned as host. This series saw a number of changes and a number of firsts which would continue in future series: it was the first series to be filmed at Elstree Studios, where it still operates as of 2013, interviews with the housemates took place inside the George Lucas Stage and remained here until Ultimate Big Brother in 2010. It was the first and only series to issue a 'three strikes and you're out' form of disciplinary, all succeeding series have simply issued formal warnings to a housemate who breaks the rules. Big Brother 3 also started the eviction process not being limited to housemate nominations, in Week 1, the public made the nominations and the housemates made the final decision on who would go, in Week 7, two housemates faced eviction simply for being given video messages from home, future series also began experimenting with the eviction process. The first eviction took place a week earlier than the previous two series', rather than wait two weeks to evict a housemate, the first eviction took place just one week after the housemates entered, evictions in the first week have since become common in subsequent seasons. It was the first non-celebrity series to feature a Live Launch Show - although the previous celebrity series featured one. Previously, 10 housemates would enter the house on Day 1, usually with one other housemate arriving later on in the series, Big Brother 3, saw the arrival of 12 housemates on launch night, two housemates left the house voluntarily - this was the first time this happened, but quitting has become more common over the years - both were replaced by standby contestants, making it the first time to feature more than one non-original housemate, again late entry housemates have become more common in subsequent series. Big Brother 3 saw the house divided into 'Rich/Poor' for four weeks, a live task broadcast on Saturday nights would determine which side the housemates would end up living for the week. The Rich/Poor divide was not used again until the ninth series in 2008, where it was renamed Heaven/Hell.

Series 4
Series 4
.
2003
.
78 Episodes

Big Brother 2003, also known as Big Brother 4, was the fourth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It was based upon the Netherlands series of the same name, which gained notoriety in 1999 and 2000. The series premiered on Channel 4 on 23 May 2003 and lasted nine weeks, ending on 25 July 2003. The housemates were competing for a grand prize of £70,000, with Cameron being crowned the winner of the series on Day 64.

Series 5
Series 5
.
2004
.
82 Episodes

Big Brother 2004, also known as Big Brother 5, was the fifth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, which premiered on Channel 4 on 28 May 2004 and lasted 71 days until the live finale on 6 August 2004. Following the poor reception and ratings for Big Brother 4, producers decided to cast a more controversial set of housemates and introduced an 'evil' Big Brother. This saw an increase in ratings when compared to the previous edition. In total, the series averaged 5.1 million viewers, thus making it the second highest rated so far, only behind Big Brother 3. The premise of the series remained largely unchanged from the previous instalment in the series, in which a certain number of strangers lived in a house together with no communication with the outside world, filmed constantly during their time in the house, trying to stay in the house for as long as possible in hopes of being voted the winner by the viewing public. It was the first series to feature a prize fund of up to £100,000. Certain elements of the show which had been there present since Big Brother's inception in 2000 were removed, such as the hot water only being present for one hour in the morning, the vegetable patch and the chickens.

Series 6
Series 6
.
2005
.
97 Episodes

Big Brother 2005, also known as Big Brother 6, was the sixth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, in which a number of contestants live in an isolated house trying to avoid being evicted by the public with the aim of winning a large cash prize at the end of the run. The series launched on Channel 4 on 27 May 2005 and ended on 12 August 2005, lasting eleven weeks, at the time the longest the programme had lasted, Davina McCall returned as host for her sixth consecutive year. Thirteen housemates entered on launch night with an additional three being introduced in Week 4, this was the first series where late entry housemates survived public votes and made it to the final. Anthony Hutton was chosen as the winner on Day 78, receiving £50,000, Eugene Sully who finished second received the other half of the prize money due to a task on Day 76. Makosi and Craig returned in 2009 to compete in a task for a few hours, in 2010 Makosi was a contestant in Ultimate Big Brother. She entered on Day 1 and became the second Ultimate housemate to be evicted on Day 11. Anthony also returned as a guest to have a picnic date with Makosi. The Big Brother eye for this series was also used for the Serbian Big Brother series, Veliki brat.

Series 7
Series 7
.
2006
.
108 Episodes

Big Brother 2006, also known as Big Brother 7, was the seventh series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It aired on Channel 4 from 18 May 2006 to 18 August 2006, hosted by Davina McCall. The series lasted for 93 days; fifteen days longer than the previous series. At the time it was the longest running series and the next three series would also run for 13 weeks. It was the first series to be broadcast in 16:9. This was the first series to feature more than 20 housemates. Prior to the launch of the series, a Golden Ticket competition was promoted to find a housemate who would enter in Week 3. Adjacent to the house was the House Next Door, which was used three times throughout the series. The major controversy of this series was the return of four ex-housemates in the penultimate week, with one of them being eligible to remain in the house for the final week. Although this had been practiced in Big Brother 4 in 2003, the main controversy was that the returning housemate was eligible to win, despite being evicted via public vote. Nominations remained a fundamental part of the process, however Big Brother often changed or cancelled nominations some weeks in favour of twists. Double evictions - which had only ever been used on Big Brother 4 and celebrity series' - returned this year and have since become a permanent fixture in all subsequent series - usually near the end of each series. This series proved to be popular, having a series average of 4.7 million viewers. In 2010, Big Brother 7 was voted the public's favourite series of Big Brother, as revealed during Big Brother's Big Awards Show.

Series 8
Series 8
.
2007
.
98 Episodes

Big Brother 2007, also known as Big Brother 8, was the eighth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, airing on Channel 4, with a number of closely associated programmes also airing on E4. The series launched on 30 May 2007 hosted by Davina McCall and ended 94 days later on 31 August 2007, making it the longest running series of Big Brother in the UK. Ratings for this series were at their lowest at the time, with the series averaging 3.8 million viewers. The launch night was unique in that all the housemates who entered where female, with the male housemates arriving sparingly over the first two weeks. An additional five housemates entered the house in Day 59. They went to a new house next door called "The Halfway House". A number of changes had been made to the show, including the omission of text message voting, and a reduction in the cost of calls to vote for evictions from 50p to 25p. At least 10p from each vote was going to charity. This was the first Big Brother series to air in the UK since the highly controversial Celebrity Big Brother 5, as a result, a number of strict rules were applied to avoid a further controversy. Controversy hit the show on Day 8, when Emily Parr was removed from the house in the early hours of the morning after calling Charley Uchea a nigger; although she did not use it in an argument and the two appeared to be friends, a decision was made to remove her immediately.

Series 9
Series 9
.
2008
.
109 Episodes

Big Brother 2008, also known as Big Brother 9, was the ninth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, that aired on Channel 4 and E4. The series launched on 5 June 2008, and ran for 13 weeks until 5 September 2008. The winner of was Rachel Rice, who beat bookies' favourite Michael Hughes in the final vote with 51.3%. At the time of the series, Big Brother 9 was the least watched summer series in Big Brother's history, until the following series, with an average of only 3.6 million, down on Big Brother 8's by 0.3m. No housemates in this series were represented in Ultimate Big Brother, a mini-series to mark the end of Big Brother on Channel 4. However Rex, Kathreya and Stuart entered to take part in tasks.

Series 10
Series 10
.
2009
.
110 Episodes

Big Brother 2009, also known as Big Brother 10, was the tenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother. It began on 4 June 2009 and was aired on Channel 4 and E4 for 93 days, concluding on 4 September 2009 when Sophie "Dogface" Reade was crowned the winner with 74.4% of the viewer's vote. The format of the programme remained largely unchanged from previous series; a group of people, referred to as housemates, are enclosed in the Big Brother House under the surveillance of cameras and microphones. Each week, the viewers decide which of a selection of housemates is evicted and, in the final week, one housemate is voted as the winner. The daily highlights programme was narrated by Marcus Bentley, Davina McCall fronted the launch programme, evictions, special episodes, the final and Big Brother's Big Mouth and George Lamb presented Big Brother's Little Brother. The programme included 22 participants, four of whom left the programme voluntarily whilst the fate of the others was decided by the public vote. The housemates were originally competing to win a £100,000 prize but, due to rule-breaking by the participants, this was reduced to £71,320. The series, which was sponsored by Lucozade, achieved significantly less media coverage and viewing figures, resulting in it becoming the least-watched series in Big Brother UK history until Big Brother 12 in 2011. This series also attracted controversy, with accusations of bullying between contestants drawing complaints and criticisms levelled at the welfare of housemates after they left the programme.

Series 11
Series 11
.
2010
.
109 Episodes

Big Brother 2010, also known as Big Brother 11, was the eleventh series of the British reality television series Big Brother, and the last series to be broadcast on Channel 4. The series launched on 9 June 2010, and was aired on Channel 4 and E4 for 77 days with the finale on 24 August 2010, where Josie Gibson was crowned the winner with 77.5% of the public vote. Big Brother 11 was produced by Remarkable Pictures, a division of Endemol. This series was confirmed since 2006 as part of a £180million contract between Endemol UK and Channel 4. The series was sponsored by skincare brand Freederm. The 24-hour live streaming had been reinstated for this series and was available via the website as a fee-based service. Immediately following the final of this series, an additional series, Ultimate Big Brother began with memorable Celebrity Big Brother and Big Brother housemates from across the show's history, Gibson re-entered the house just moments after she won Big Brother 11, however she quit the show after less than 48 hours.

Series 12
Series 12
.
2011
.
71 Episodes

Big Brother 2011, also known as Big Brother 12, was the twelfth series of the British reality television series Big Brother and the first not to be broadcast on Channel 4. It was broadcast on Channel 5 for the first time since the show's transfer from Channel 4. It launched on 9 September 2011 with an hour and a half-long special launch show, the day after the final of Celebrity Big Brother 8. It was hosted by Brian Dowling, the winner of Big Brother 2 and Ultimate Big Brother. The series ran for 64 days, ending on 11 November 2011 when the winner, Aaron Allard-Morgan, won half of the £100,000 prize fund, with the remainder split between the five finalists. The runner up was Jay McKray. The series differed from the Channel 4 version in having the celebrity edition before the main series, with the latter running in the autumn rather than the traditional summer-long run. The series reverted to its traditional pattern a year later when Big Brother 13 aired in the summer of 2012. There were 14 original housemates, seven men and seven women all aged between 18 and 30. The series featured a high content of bedtime romances and included much male nudity during pranks and shower scenes during its nine weeks on air. Instances of lewd talk, intimate body shaving, and other salacious behaviour were also prominent in the post-watershed evening highlights programmes. Much of the series concentrated on the romantic relationships that developed between the housemates during their time in the house.

Series 13
Series 13
.
2012
.
74 Episodes

Big Brother 2012, also known as Big Brother 13, was the thirteenth series of the British reality television series Big Brother, and the second series to broadcast on Channel 5. The series premiered with a live launch on 5 June 2012 and ran for 70 days, concluding on 13 August 2012. The series was originally planned to run for thirteen weeks, but was cut back to ten weeks in order to accommodate Celebrity Big Brother 10. The series was won by Luke Anderson, who won half of the £100,000 prize fund, with the remainder taken by Conor McIntyre as part of the White Room twist. Anderson is the second transsexual contestant to win the show, the first being Nadia Almada who won the show back in 2004. The runner-up was Adam Kelly. The series was announced in April 2011 when Channel 5 signed a two-year contract to air the show. With Big Brother 12 having been broadcast in autumn 2011, this is the first series to air in the show's regular summer period on Channel 5 since it acquired the show from Channel 4 in 2011. There were 16 original housemates, eight men and eight women, who all entered the house on Day 1. Shortly after the first eviction of the series, Becky Hannon, one of three wildcard housemates, was chosen by the public to enter the house on Day 4. For the first time since Big Brother 5, no housemate left the House voluntarily. The only housemate not to be evicted by a public vote was Conor, who left with half of the £100,000 prize fund as part of the White Room twist.

Series 14: Secrets & Lies
Series 14: Secrets & Lies
.
2013
.
68 Episodes

Season 14 of Big Brother premiered on 2013-06-13.

Series 15: Power Trip
Series 15: Power Trip
.
2014
.
72 Episodes

Season 15 of Big Brother premiered on 2014-06-05.

Series 16: Timebomb
Series 16: Timebomb
.
2015
.
66 Episodes

Season 16 of Big Brother premiered on 2015-05-12.

Season 17
Season 17
.
2016
.
51 Episodes

Season 17 of Big Brother premiered on 2016-06-07.

Series 18
Series 18
.
2017
.
54 Episodes

New series. Emma Willis ushers in another diverse group of fame-seeking individuals who have been chosen to spend their summer invading the nation's living rooms. This year, the theme is `the United Kingdom of Big Brother - and everyone is welcome'. The housemates have been chosen from a range of backgrounds for what Channel 5 is describing as the ultimate social experiment - presumably to coincide with the headline events occurring this week in the real world.

Series 19
Series 19
.
2018
.
45 Episodes

Season 19 of Big Brother premiered on 2018-09-14.

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