Big Brother 8 (Australia)
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Big Brother Australia 2008 or Big Brother 8 was the eighth season of the Australian reality television series and was the final series to air on Network Ten.
The eighth season launched on 28 April 2008. A total 20 housemates competed in the series. Halfway through the series, the prize money was revealed to be $250,000, the amount originally given in the earlier season of the series.
Season 8 introduced Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O as the new hosts, replacing Gretel Killeen, who had previously hosted the show from Season 1. It also featured the return of an adult-themed weekly installment titled Big Mouth.[1]
Pre-season
Auditions
Auditions opened in late 2007. People wishing to audition were required to post a video audition of themselves on the official Big Brother website. Voting closed on 7 January 2008. The three people with the highest number of votes would be guaranteed a place in the House with the top 50 others to go through a second selection process.
The season featured a new audition process similar to the format used in the earlier seasons, where people wishing to audition sent in a tape rather than attending cattle call audition sessions. For the first time in Big Brother Australia history, the public could vote which housemates they wanted to see in the House before the start of the season.
Promotions
Promotional advertisements for the new series premiered on 6 April 2008 featuring a short video of former Australian Prime Minister John Howard criticising the show in 2006, stating that Channel Ten should "get this stupid show off the air", followed by the tagline "I Don't Think So" from the eponymous Kelis track.[2]
Series
The series began Monday 28 April 2008 at 7:00 pm. The opening episode had the lowest-ever ratings of any launch of Big Brother Australia. The episode mostly outrated its competitors in most timeslots—except its second half-hour when it lost out to Border Security. The audience for the launch peaked at 1.91 million.[3] The series lasted a total of 84 days. The 2008 finale aired on Monday 21 July 2008 at 7:00 pm on Network Ten. It was the first Big Brother Australia finale to feature three finalists and the first hosted by Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O.[4]
Changes from earlier seasons
Broadcasts
Starting this season, new hosts Kyle Sandilands and Jackie O replaced Gretel Killeen, who had hosted since the show's launch in 2001. The nomination and eviction processes were changed for this season and those elements were both covered in the same weekly episode of the program. In previous seasons nominations and evictions were conducted separately and each had a weekly special dedicated to them. A new panel discussion program titled Big Brother's Big Mouth was hosted by Tony Squires and Rebecca Wilson. This show was similar in format to the UK Big Brother panel show of the same name. It screened Monday nights, initially at 9:30 pm before being moved later due to low ratings. Big Brother: UpLate did not air this season due to Ten's late night programming schedule being used for Indian Premier League cricket telecasts in May and June. In comparison to 2007's broadcast, this season saw 11 hours less free-to-air telecasts a week, solely due to the absence of Mike Goldman's Big Brother: UpLate. Television broadcast episodes featured a slightly updated logo and graphics, and much shorter theme music intros to each show. The free internet streaming was also changed. The time allotted to free streaming was cut to three five-minute blocks per day. The full-membership subscriptions cost around A$33.00.
Nomination and eviction voting format
In the previous series of Big Brother, housemates nominated two other housemates for eviction and viewers then voted to actually evict. In this season the nominations were based on viewer votes collected through the week. The public were only able to vote for which housemate to save from eviction. The three housemates with the least amount of save votes were nominated for eviction on Sunday. The housemates then voted to evict one of these three. Housemates gave two points to one person they want evicted, and one point to another of the three. The winner of Friday Night Games had the power to remove one nominated housemate from the nomination lineup, after which the housemate(s) in fourth place moved into the nomination lineup. In awarding eviction points, the winner could award four points to one person, and two points to another. After five weeks, the nomination and eviction process reverted to the traditional format of all previous seasons: the housemates nominate, and viewers vote for the housemate to be evicted. Unlike the preceding few seasons, there was no save vote for nominated housemates; viewers could only vote to evict. At the start of the season, Big Brother announced to the housemates that "snap evictions" will be executed at various points during the season. Terri was evicted on the first night in what was described as a "snap eviction", but she was soon returned to the house. Two of the three viewer-voted housemates, Barney and Michael, were quickly removed in what was described by the show's makers as a "snap eviction". In the final week, housemates were asked to vote to evict two housemates in a surprise "snap eviction". Alice and Travis were "evicted" and moved to another section of the compound. Later, it was revealed to Alice and Travis, and then the other housemates, that this eviction was fake and Alice and Travis returned to the main House.
The House
The House was rebuilt with a new layout as has occurred with most seasons of Big Brother Australia. The bedroom contained just one big bed for all housemates to share. The garden featured a Volkswagen Type 2 in which one housemate had to sleep. There was also a vending machine in the garden. The housemates could buy various items such as snacks, and sunglasses. Coins for the vending machine were distributed to housemates as a reward for sustaining good behaviour.
House guests
There were several celebrity guests appearances featured during this series. Carson Kressley arrived and gave the housemates a makeover to promote his new show, How to Look Good Naked. He stayed for only several hours.[5][6] Former housemate Rima returned briefly late in the season. Rima was originally a housemate, but left after breaking her leg on the first Friday Night Live games. She returned on Day 63 with a special task of telling the housemates that there was a mole among them. She left on Day 66 after a four-day return.[7][8] Pamela Anderson entered as a guest on Day 73, then returned the following day for a special task.[9] She did not stay in the house overnight. When asked how much she was paid to do the show, she said, "Much more than I am worth" and "I don't want to say how much but it is a lot." The day after her first Big Brother appearance, Anderson took part in a campaign against alleged KFC cruelty outside Southport KFC Restaurant, Gold Coast, where she hand-delivered a letter to the manager opposing expressing her concerns.[10] Anderson's appearance generated the highest ratings of the entire season to that time.[11]
Housemates
It was initially confirmed that there would be 18 housemates this season.[12] One housemate quit before the show started and ultimately 14 housemates entered the House on the opening night, with an additional three entering in the first week.
Friday Night Live themes and winners
Week | Theme | Winner | Runner Up |
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1 | Out of This World | Nobbi | Brigitte |
2 | Hip-Hop | Nathan | Travis |
3 | Celebrities | Rebecca | Nathan |
4 | Scouts | Alice | Terri |
5 | A Day at the Races | Renee | Nobbi |
6 | Superheroes | Nobbi | Bianca |
7 | Friday the 13th | Nobbi | Travis |
8 | Heavy Metal | Brigitte | Travis |
9 | Spy Night | Cherry | Brigitte |
10 | I Love New York | Cherry | Bianca |
11 | Circus Night | Ben | Travis |
12 | Playing to Win | Rory | Travis |
Reception
After the telecast of the season's third eviction show, critic Andrew Mercado summarised the 2008 series eviction shows, which he described as in previous seasons being a viewing highlight of the series, as having descended into "just a boring, hateful shemozzle, where Kyle insults everybody around him (housemates are psychos, the crew are work experience and the audience is a 'pack of pigs')."[13] The 2008 season showed a marked downturn in ratings for the program. Both the Daily Show and the eviction shows rated significantly lower than previous seasons. Ratings for the first 2008 eviction were half those achieved by eviction shows during the program's peak. Academic Alan McKee singled-out the departure of previous host Gretel Killeen as having weakened the series. McKee judged that Killeen had successfully provided the show's "moral centre". Of the replacement hosts, McKee said that "Kyle and Jackie O just don't serve the same purpose. Jackie is quite limp and Kyle prides himself on just being wrong—he will always say the wrong, obnoxious thing and hurt people." [14]
By the eviction show on 1 June 2008, the program's ratings were said to have "almost flatlined on Sunday night, dropping below 500,000 in the key demographic along the East Coast." Host Kyle Sandilands called in sick for this program and his co-hosting duties were handled by usual series announcer and narrator Mike Goldman.[15] Sandilands missed his second eviction show the following week, 8 June 2008, after again calling in sick, with a severe chest infection. It was reported that hundreds of fans took to message boards calling for Mike Goldman, his stand-in for the 1 June and 8 June eviction episodes, to become a permanent eviction host. Some speculated Sandilands had already been sacked; others accused him of faking his illness. A spokeswoman for the series said Sandilands was expected to return for the following eviction show.[16] Another commentator, Peter Craven, described the 2008 season as being increasingly gimmicky. The visit by Carson Kressley to make over the housemates was seen as an obvious gimmick; when Kressley made a second appearance in another makeover episode screened several days later, Craven felt that it looked forced.
The visit by hypnotist Peter Powers (Craven erroneously named Derren Brown as the hypnotist visitor) was described as being "riveting", but also as turning Big Brother into more a variety show. The choice of eccentric housemates and an appearance by Corey Worthington was seen as an attempt "to highlight the superficially weird" while the absence of Uplate and Uncut for 2008 was judged by Craven as being a mistake. Craven suggested the worst mistake of the season was replacing Gretel Killeen, whom Craven praised for being "formidable and charismatic" and skilled at her role, with new hosts. Craven judged Kyle Sandilands the more intelligent of the new hosts, but noted he gave no impression of having kept up with the show, as Killeen always did. Craven believed Sandilands to be "sensationally ill-suited to the format, which requires a warm embrace of the Big Brother ethos. By contrast, Jackie O, as the good cop was seen all vapid smiles and gooey attentiveness."[17]
In a news report where the series was described as suffering a "ratings slump" and where the new hosts were said to have been unable to save the show, former host Killeen was quoted as saying she refused to watch the current season and refused to comment on its low ratings. "I haven't watched it because I don't want to be in the situation where I am not telling the truth and I know people will want to know my opinion of it and I think it is much better not to have seen it," Killeen said. "I don't think it's dignified for me to come back and say this should be done like this and this should be changed."[18]
Ratings
Viewers (millions) 5-City Metro | |||||||||||||
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Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | Week 11 | Week 12 | Week 13 | |
Sunday | 0.98 (Daily) | 0.87 (Daily) | 0.77 (Daily) | 0.80 (Daily) | 0.84 (Daily) | 0.78 (Daily) | 0.73 (Daily) | 0.69 (Daily) | 1.01 (Daily) | 0.92 (Daily) | 1.03 (Daily) | 1.04 (Daily) | |
1.12 (The Gatecrashers) | 1.00 (Eviction) | 0.96 (Eviction) | 1.02 (Eviction) | 0.98 (Eviction) | 0.89 (Eviction) | 0.84 (Eviction) | 0.80 (Eviction) | 1.38 (Pammy Busts In/Eviction) | 1.03 (Eviction) | 1.09 (Eviction) | 1.11 (Eviction) | ||
Monday | 1.53 (Launch) | 0.88 | 0.76 | 0.71 | 0.73 | 0.76 | 0.70 | 0.66 | 0.61 | 0.90 | 0.83 | 0.89 | 1.50 (Finale) |
0.68 (Big Mouth) | 0.51 (Big Mouth) | 0.44 (Big Mouth) | 0.40 (Big Mouth) | 0.41 (Big Mouth) | 0.37 (Big Mouth) | 0.33 (Big Mouth) | 0.29 (Big Mouth) | 0.36 (Big Mouth) | 0.33 (Big Mouth) | 0.39 (Big Mouth) | |||
Tuesday | 0.91 | 0.79 | 0.79 | 0.73 | 0.69 | 0.74 | 0.66 | 0.62 | 0.59 | 0.68 | 0.70 | 0.71 | |
Wednesday | 0.83 | 0.85 | 0.80 | 0.77 | 0.75 | 0.71 | 0.67 | 0.63 | 0.62 | 0.70 | 0.70 | 0.69 | |
Thursday | 0.80 | 0.90 | 0.88 | 0.88 | 0.83 | 0.80 | 0.74 | 0.70 | 0.68 | 0.77 | 0.80 | 0.87 | |
Friday | 0.94 | 0.94 | 0.97 | 0.94 | 0.90 | 0.90 | 0.84 | 0.79 | 0.74 | 0.80 | 0.83 | 0.91 | |
1.12 (FNL) | 1.01 (FNL) | 1.01 (FNL) | 0.99 (FNL) | 0.96 (FNL) | 0.98 (FNL) | 0.89 (FNL) | 0.85 (FNL) | 0.78 (FNL) | 0.91 (FNL) | 0.93 (FNL) | 1.15 (FNL) | ||
Weekly average | 1.02 | 0.93 | 0.89 | 0.84 | 0.84 | 0.84 | 0.77 | 0.73 | 0.69 | 0.89 | 0.73 | 0.92 | 1.12 |
Running average | 1.02 | 0.98 | 0.95 | 0.92 | 0.90 | 0.89 | 0.88 | 0.86 | 0.84 | 0.84 | 0.83 | 0.84 | 0.86 |
Series average | 0.86m |
Ratings are rounded to the nearest ten thousand. Big Mouth Shows are not included in official averages. Figures in bold include consolidated viewing figures.
Cancellation
The season rated poorly, leading to the cancellation of the series, announced 13 July 2008. Ten's chief programmer, David Mott, admitted the series had recently experienced "audience erosion" and widespread criticism of the new hosts. Mott reasoned that after so many seasons there were few new surprises in the format, leading to reduced viewing figures. Mott defended the new hosts saying that the ratings for eviction shows held up. The lowest-rating component of the season was the Big Mouth late night weekly panel show. Its audience slipped to the half-a-million mark and it was moved to a later time slot.[19] A new series of Big Brother was announced in 2011.
Weekly summary
Week 1 | Events |
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Entrances |
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Exits |
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Week 2 | Events |
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Tasks |
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Week 3 | Events |
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Tasks |
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Exits |
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Week 4 | Events |
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Tasks |
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Exits |
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Week 5 | Events |
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Task |
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Exits |
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Week 6 | Events |
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Task |
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Entrances |
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Exits |
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Week 7 | Events |
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Task |
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Exit |
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Week 8 | Events |
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Task |
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Exit |
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Week 9 | Events |
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Entrances |
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Task |
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Exit |
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Week 10 | Events |
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Task |
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Exit |
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Week 11 | Events |
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Task |
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Exits |
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Week 12 | Events |
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Task |
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Exits |
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Voting and nominations table
For the first half of the series, the public voted for whom to save from nomination. The bottom three Housemates with the lowest saves were up for eviction. The Housemates then voted for whom to evict, with the first vote receiving 2 points and the second, 1 point. The Housemate with the most points was then evicted. This year introduced a Head of Household, who has the power to save someone in the bottom three from eviction. The person with the 4th lowest saves is then up for eviction. The Head of Household also votes with double eviction points. In the second half of the series the voting format reverted to that of previous seasons. Housemates vote to nominate other housemates for eviction and the public then vote for whom to evict from those nominated. In this second eviction procedure the Head of Household still has the power to remove one nominated housemate from the original nomination lineup, but no longer has double voting points.
- – A feature that was not in use during at the time.
- ^1 Big Brother revealed to the Housemates that someone will be evicted the next day. Housemates had to decide who would leave the House on Day 1. Rima was removed from the house after breaking her leg.
- ^2 Terri returned to the House along with Corey as House Guests. Big Brother set Terri a mission to be Corey's guardian during his time in the House. If successful, she would be re-instated as a Housemate. However, she failed this mission.
- ^3 On Day 9, Big Brother announced another snap eviction. Corey was initially offered the task of deciding which two of the three housemates voted in by the Australian public would be evicted. Corey declined this task. It was then offered to Terri and she accepted the task after failing her original task given to her by Big Brother. After the eviction, Terri was re-instated as a Housemate.
- ^4 On Day 12, during FNL, Big Brother announced the winner of FNL would also become Head of Household, who would get to vote with double eviction points, and get a dinner for two in the Strategy Room, where they are allowed to talk about nominations and eviction. Nathan won FNL, but because he was exempt from eviction, runner-up Travis took his place.
- ^5 Although Nathan won FNL, since he was exempt and couldn't vote, Big Brother gave the eviction duties of Head of Household to the runner-up, Travis.
- ^6 As Rebecca was evicted, she had to give her rights as HOH to another housemates. During her goodbye message, she gave the rights as HOH to Alice.
- ^7 This week was a double eviction; the two Housemates with the highest points were evicted.
- ^8 Intruders Cherry, Rhianna and Terrence entered the House on Day 35.
- ^9 On Day 36, Brigitte (six points), Alice (six points) and Bianca (four points) were nominated for eviction. However, evicted Housemate Dixie used a Housemate Hand Grenade and saved Alice from eviction. Both Renee and Terri were then nominated in place of Alice. Both Terri and Renee had three nomination points total.
- ^10 On Day 77, Alice and Travis were evicted. Later, this eviction was revealed as fake.
- ^11 This year, the public voted for whom to evict, not win. The winner was the person with the fewest votes to evict.
Housemate Hand Grenades
This season, housemates evicted by the usual process are given the power to decide which housemate receives the penalty—or sometimes the benefit—which has been devised by Big Brother for that eviction. These are dubbed the 'Housemate Hand Grenade' by the makers of the show. Sometimes, the ruling is permanent. Rulings later removed are marked by (R).
Evicted Housemate | Hand Grenade | Recipient |
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Terri | Housemate must live in the Volkswagen Kombi for the rest of their time in the house. | Nobbi |
Saxon | Housemate will lose all of their possessions indefinitely. (R) | Brigitte |
Rebecca | Housemate is required to do everybody's laundry. | Dixie |
Nathan | Housemate must wake up before all other housemates and serve Big Brother breakfast. | Travis |
David | Housemate must be the last housemate to go to bed every night. (R) | Bianca |
Big Brother | Housemates will now nominate and the public will vote to evict. | All Housemates |
Dixie | Housemate could save one nominated Housemate from eviction. | Alice |
Renee | Housemate would not receive a message from home. | Brigitte |
Rhianna | Housemate required to all washing up and clean toilets everyday. (R) | Cherry |
Nobbi | Two housemates must live in the Volkswagen Kombi van until further notice. (R) | Terri and Terrence |
Terrence | Reversal of Nobbi's Grenade; removal of hair straightener from the house. | Terri; All housemates |
Rima | Housemates are told there is not a mole in the house. | All housemates |
Bianca | Housemate will become the house chef until further notice. (R) | Ben |
Brigitte | Housemate must eat only simple staple food prepared by Big Brother indefinitely. (R) | Rory |
Cherry | Cherry presented the announcement that Big Brother would be conducting a housemate-voted eviction that evening. | All housemates had to vote; Alice was fake evicted. |
Alice | Alice presented the announcement that Big Brother would be conducting another housemate-voted eviction that evening. | All housemates had to vote; Travis was fake evicted. |
Alice & Travis | Alice and Travis returned to the game. | All housemates |
References
- ↑ "New host Kyle Sandiland's bid to bring back Big Brother Uncut". Courier Mail. 6 November 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2007.
- ↑ First promos air, Behind Big Brother Australia, Retrieved 13 April 2008
- ↑ AAP (29 April 2008). "Big Brother posts worst ratings start ever". Melbourne: The Age. Retrieved 2 May 2008.
- ↑ Finale Details | Behindbigbrother.com - We're Watching
- ↑ Christian Taylor (12 May 2008). "Big Brother's New Sister". samesame. Archived from the original on 21 August 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
- ↑ Tim Brunero (10 May 2008). "Carson Kressley to camp in Big Brother". LIVENEWS. Archived from the original on 24 July 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
- ↑ "No Mole?!". Big Brother. "Day 66". Archived from the original on 6 July 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - ↑ "Rima Is Back!". Big Brother. "Day 63". Archived from the original on 7 July 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008. Check date values in:
|date=
(help) - ↑ Darren Devlyn and Joanne Nathan (9 July 2008). "Pamela Anderson invades Big Brother house". The Herald Sun. Archived from the original on 12 July 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
- ↑ Drew Cratchley (9 July 2008). "Pam to stay clothed on Big Brother". AAP. Archived from the original on 12 July 2008. Retrieved 12 July 2008.
- ↑ AAP (15 July 2008). "Ten confirms axe to fall on Big Brother". Melbourne: The Age. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
- ↑ 18 housemates to enter, Behind Big Brother Australia
- ↑ Mercado, Andrew (25 May 2008). "Repeats come for free". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 29 May 2008.
- ↑ Clune, Richard (18 May 2008). "Even budget beats Big Brother ratings". news.com.au. Archived from the original on 21 May 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2008.
- 1 2 "Big Brother viewers want Kyle Sandilands gone". news.com.au. 6 June 2008. Archived from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
- 1 2 "Kyle Sandilands' job is safe, says Ten". news.com.au. 6 June 2008. Retrieved 9 June 2008.
- ↑ "Pathos, in bathos". Melbourne: The Age. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 13 June 2008.
- ↑ Darren Cartwright (16 June 2008). "'I won't watch BB' - Gretel Killeen". news.com.au. Archived from the original on 16 September 2008. Retrieved 17 June 2008.
- ↑ Michael Idato (14 July 2008). "Channel Ten evicts Big Brother". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 July 2008.
- ↑ Trashy Task, TEN official site, Retrieved 7 May 2008