Big Brother Canada 5 Live Feed Moments
Big Brother Canada | |
---|---|
Season 10 | |
Presented by | Arisa Cox |
No. of days | 69[a] |
No. of houseguests | 16 |
Winner | Kevin Jacobs |
Runner-up | Josh Nash |
Canada's Favourite HouseGuest | Martin "Marty" Frenette |
Country of origin | Canada |
No. of episodes | 29 |
Release | |
Original network | Global |
Original release | March 2 (2022-03-02) – May 5, 2022 (2022-05-05) |
Additional information | |
Filming dates | February 26 (2022-02-26) – May 5, 2022 (2022-05-05) |
Season chronology | |
Big Brother Canada 10 is the tenth season of the Canadian reality television series Big Brother Canada. The series began filming on February 26, 2022 and premiered on March 2, 2022, on Global.[1] Hosted by Arisa Cox, the show revolved around sixteen contestants (known as HouseGuests), who volunteered to reside in a house under constant surveillance and without any communication with the outside world as they compete to win a grand prize of CA$100,000.[2]
The season concluded on May 5, 2022 after running for 69 days. It was won by Kevin Jacobs, who defeated Josh Nash in a final 8-1 jury vote. Meanwhile, Marty Frenette won an online vote to become this season's Canada's Favourite HouseGuest.[3] The finale of the season was watched by 835 thousand viewers.[4]
Production [edit]
Development [edit]
The tenth season was produced by Insight Productions, in association with Corus Entertainment and Banijay. The season was first announced on July 6, 2021, at the Corus upfronts for the 2021–22 Canadian network television schedule. Arisa Cox continued as the host and as an executive producer for this season. Casting began on July 14, 2021, with Kassting Inc. returning to cast for the season. Due to restrictions stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic, no in-person casting calls were held.[5] [6] Casting closed on November 19, 2021, with the final cast being revealed on February 23, 2022.[7]
Expedia, Wendy's and Muskoka Spirits returned to sponsor the season. Additionally, the show has three new sponsors: Winners, Belairdirect insurance and Philips Sonicare Oral Care.[8] [9]
Prizes [edit]
The winner of the series, determined by the previously evicted HouseGuests, wins CA$100,000, while the runner-up receives CA$20,000.[2] The HouseGuest selected as Canada's Favourite HouseGuest receives $50,000.[10] Several other prizes were given out throughout the season.
Production design [edit]
On February 22, 2022, Global released images of the new kitchen, dining area and a then-unknown room which featured a gold phone. More images of the house were released on March 1, 2022, with a full house tour being released the following day.[11] [12]
In the house tour, it was revealed this season's house was built to simulate the theme of game shows and to give way for twists and tasks as seen in the numerous mystery doors that line the house. According to host Arisa Cox, it took 22,000 man hours to design and assemble the season's house.[10]
The lounge area features a wheel used to select players for the PoV competition, with the archway to the backyard displaying an eye with a dollar symbol ($) on its pupil. The house's pantry features a showcase of several items called the "Sloppers Showcase", which was used as the subject for the Week 4 HoH competition. The pantry also houses a Wendy's delivery window, in which the HoH receives advice from past winners, along with their a for themselves, and a HouseGuest of their choice. The HoH room features designs inspired by the trends of the 70s with the two regular bedrooms being decorated with dollar symbols and question marks (?).[10]
International broadcast [edit]
Big Brother Canada was made available to stream in Australia on 7Plus. The first 8 episodes were made available on March 31, with further episodes airing weekly.[13]
HouseGuests [edit]
The HouseGuests' images and profiles were released on Wednesday, February 23, 2022.[7] [14] Prior to the full reveal, the images of the HouseGuests were revealed in a series of adverts for the season. The HouseGuests moved into the house on February 26, more than a week before the premiere.
Name | Age on entry | Occupation | Residence | Day entered | Day exited | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kevin Jacobs | 28 | Sales engineer | Toronto, Ontario | 1 | 69 | Winner |
Joshua "Josh" Nash | 28 | Pediatric resident | Vancouver, British Columbia | 1 | 69 | Runner-up |
Bethlehem "Betty" Yirsaw | 31 | Human Resources manager | Edmonton, Alberta | 1 | 69 | Evicted |
Haleena Gill | 27 | Master's student | Surrey, British Columbia | 1 | 64 | Evicted |
Jacey-Lynne Graham | 24 | Social media manager | Thunder Bay, Ontario | 1 | 62 | Evicted |
Martin "Marty" Frenette | 43 | Fraud investigator | Petit-Rocher, New Brunswick | 1 | 55 | Evicted |
Summer Sayles | 25 | Unemployed[b] | St. Catharines, Ontario | 1 | 55 | Evicted |
Steven "Gino" Giannopoulos | 28 | Firefighter | Laval, Quebec | 1 | 55 | Evicted |
Moose Bendago | 24 | Content creator | Toronto, Ontario | 1 | 48 | Evicted |
Hermon Nizghi | 29 | Auto sales general manager | Nanaimo, British Columbia | 1 | 41 | Evicted |
Jessica "Jess" Gowling | 35 | Visual artist | Cranbrook, British Columbia | 1 | 34 | Evicted |
Tynesha White | 32 | Model | Montreal, Quebec | 1 | 34 | Evicted |
Kyle Moore | 23 | Podcaster | Halifax, Nova Scotia | 1 | 27 | Evicted |
Stephanie Paterson | 26 | Child & youth worker | Toronto, Ontario | 1 | 20 | Evicted |
Jay Northcott | 28 | Theater director | Toronto, Ontario | 1 | 13 | Evicted |
Melina Mansing | 29 | Artist | Toronto, Ontario | 1 | 6 | Evicted |
Guests [edit]
As the show's "milestone" tenth season, an unprecedented number of HouseGuests (including all past winners) from previous seasons made an appearance on the season.
Name | Previous Season | Week | Method | Reason | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season | Status | ||||
Jillian MacLaughlin | Big Brother Canada 1 | Winner | 2 | Virtually | To give advice to that week's Head of Household |
Jon Pardy | Big Brother Canada 2 | Winner | 3 | ||
Sarah Hanlon | Big Brother Canada 3 | Winner | 4 | ||
Nick Paquette | Big Brother Canada 4 | Winners | 5 | ||
Phil Paquette | |||||
Sindy Nguyen | Big Brother Canada 3 | Evicted | In Person | To pose for the "Legends of the Doors" HoH Competition | |
Big Brother Canada 5 | Evicted | ||||
Anthony Douglas | Big Brother Canada 7 | Runner-up | |||
Godfrey Mangwiza | Big Brother Canada 3 | Runner-up | |||
Jedson Tavernier | Big Brother Canada 9 | Evicted | |||
Victoria Woghiren | Big Brother Canada 9 | Evicted | |||
Kevin Martin | Big Brother Canada 3 | Evicted | 6 | Virtually | To give advice to that week's Head of Household |
Big Brother Canada 5 | Winner | ||||
Paras Atashnak | Big Brother Canada 6 | Winner | 7 | ||
Dane Rupert | Big Brother Canada 7 | Winner | 8 | ||
Ika Wong | Big Brother Canada 2 | Evicted | 9 | In Person | To host the "Shred That Letter" HoH Competition |
Big Brother Canada 5 | Evicted | ||||
Tychon Carter-Newman | Big Brother Canada 9 | Winner | Virtually | To give advice to that week's Head of Household |
Format [edit]
Big Brother Canada follows a group of contestants, known as HouseGuests who move into a custom-built house outfitted with cameras and microphones, recording their every move 24 hours a day.[16] The HouseGuests are sequestered in the Big Brother Canada House with no contact with the outside world.[17] During their stay, the HouseGuests share their thoughts on events and other HouseGuests inside a private room referred to as the Diary Room.[18] [19] At the start of each week in the house, the HouseGuests compete for the title of Head of Household, often shortened to simply HoH.[20] The winner of the HoH competition is immune from eviction and will name two HouseGuests to be nominated for eviction.[21] After the nominees are determined, the Power of Veto competition is played. Five players will compete in the competition: the two nominees and three random players, with the winner receiving the Power of Veto. If a HouseGuest chooses to exercise the Power of Veto, the Head of Household is obligated to name a replacement nominee.[22] The holder of the Power of Veto is safe from being nominated as the replacement nominee.[23] On eviction night, all HouseGuests must vote to evict one of the nominees, with the exception of the nominees and the Head of Household. The eviction vote is by secret ballot, with HouseGuests casting their votes orally in the Diary Room. In the event of a tied vote, the Head of Household will cast a tie-breaking vote publicly. The nominee with the majority of the votes is evicted from the house. Midway through the season, the evicted HouseGuests go on to become members of the "jury"; the jury is responsible for choosing who wins the series. The final Head of Household competition is split into three parts; the winners of the first two rounds compete in the third and final round. Once only two HouseGuests remain, the members of the jury cast their votes for who should win the series.[24] [25]
Twists [edit]
Phone Room [edit]
Room 5 features a gold phone that rang occasionally throughout the season.
- On Day 1, Jay was the first to answer the phone and as a result they received immunity for the week.
- On Day 26, the number to the phone was "leaked" and was subject to calls that would challenge the HouseGuests to complete various tasks. As a reward for answering the calls, the HouseGuests received a stocked pantry and the Household was relieved of their slop punishment.
- On Day 44, Jacey-Lynne found a clue to call a number through the phone, leading her on a hunt throughout the House, and ultimately finding a Secret Power of Veto.
Belairdirect Eviction Protection Insurance [edit]
Occasionally throughout the season, Immunity would be awarded to HouseGuest by various means. This immunity was sponsored by BelAirDirect
- On Day 1, in the Final Round of the First HoH competition, 2 of the 3 doors would award the door's holder immunity (the third had the HoH title). Moose and Josh each won immunity for the week.
- On Day 13, it was announced that the viewers would be voting to decide which HouseGuest would receive immunity from nominations for Week 3. The voter may vote for multiple HouseGuests with no vote limits being imposed. Marty received the most votes and received the immunity.
- On Day 48, it was announced that the viewers would be voting to decide which HouseGuest would receive immunity from nominations for Week 8. The voter may vote for multiple HouseGuests with no vote limits being imposed. As a result of winning the last Belairdirect Eviction Protection Insurance, Marty was ineligible to be voted for the immunity. Summer received the most votes and was made immune.
Chain of Safety Double Eviction [edit]
Week 5 featured a Double Eviction, in which two HouseGuests were evicted on the same night. Unlike a typical Double Eviction (in which the regular game format is played over the course of the night), the second eviction was determined by a "Chain of Safety" selection process. Beginning with Moose, who won that night's first challenge, each HouseGuest would select another HouseGuest to save until three are left unselected, who would then compete for safety in a second challenge to determine that night's second set of nominees.
Below is the full selection order for the safety chain selection.
Safety Chain | |
---|---|
1st Challenge | Moose |
1 | Hermon |
2 | Josh |
3 | Betty |
4 | Summer |
5 | Kevin |
6 | Marty |
7 | Haleena |
2nd Challenge | Jacey-Lynne |
Nominated | Gino Jess |
Canada's Jury Vote [edit]
In the penultimate episode for the season, it was announced that Canada would join the jury as its ninth and final member. The recipient of the vote was determined by an online vote held prior to the finale which was exclusive to Canadian residents unlike in previous online votes. Arisa would cast the vote on Canada's behalf, and it was revealed to be cast for Kevin.
Summary [edit]
Week 1 |
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On Day 1, the sixteen new HouseGuests entered the game show themed Big Brother Canada House. As the first four to enter the House, Gino, Jacey-Lynne, Josh, and Summer opted to immediately form the "Honey Bunch" alliance. Upon the entry of all HouseGuests, the phone behind Door 5 rang. Jay answered the phone, granting them immunity for the week, but making them ineligible to compete for Head of Household. The HouseGuests then competed in the HoH competition.
After the three winners were named, they were presented with three mystery doors, each choosing one door each. Behind two of the doors were safety for the week, while the other door held the title of Head of Household. Josh and Moose earned safety for the week, and Hermon became the first Head of Household of the season. On Day 2, Hermon nominated Jess and Melina for eviction, with Jess as his target and Melina as the backup target. Hermon saw Jess as a threat after a private conversation, seeing them as very smart and dangerous down the line. The following day, Gino, Haleena and Jay were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 4, Jess elected to use the Power of Veto on themself, making Hermon name Kevin as a replacement nominee with the intent to send Melina home. On Day 6, Melina was evicted by a 11-2 vote, with Jay and Jess voting to evict Kevin. Arisa then revealed that throughout the season, the surviving nominee will earn the opportunity to open a mystery door in the House. As the surviving nominee, Kevin had the choice of opening Door 14, Door 3, or Door 19. One contained $500, another contained $2,500, and the last one contained $5,000. Kevin opened Door 19 and earned $500.[26] |
Week 2 |
Following Melina's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
Following the competition, Marty made a deal with Stephanie to keep her safe. Meanwhile, Gino, Hermon, Josh, Kyle, Moose, Summer, and Tynesha formed the "Savage 7" alliance. Summer, Betty, Tynesha, and Haleena also formed the "Mandems" alliance. Jess was a common target among the HouseGuests. On Day 7, Marty nominated Jacey-Lynne and Jay for eviction, with the latter being the target. Haleena, Josh and Betty were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 10, Jacey-Lynne used the Power of Veto on herself, with Betty being named by Marty as the replacement nominee.[27] On Day 13, Jay was evicted by a 10-2 vote, with Hermon and Kyle voting to evict Betty. |
Week 3 |
Following Jay's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
As a member of several alliances, clear targets for Kyle were Jess and Betty, but Jess convinced Kyle not to target them and Kyle felt Betty was not worth targeting. After input from the other members of the Savage 7 alliance, Kyle convinced himself that Stephanie would be the best option to be evicted outside of Jess and Betty. Recently, Moose had been trying to play people against each other and many players had grown suspicious of him. Despite Gino, Hermon, Jacey-Lynne, Kyle, and Stephanie being in "The Retreat" alliance, Moose told Kyle that Stephanie could not be trusted. When Kyle told Stephanie, Stephanie accused Moose of playing the middle, and Moose lied to cover up the fact that he and Kyle had been working together. Due to this, Kyle lost trust with Moose and wanted to betray their "Savage 7" alliance and blew it up. Kyle also floated targeting Hermon due to his own paranoia about the Savage 7 alliance. During the disorder, Moose suggested nominating members of the Savage 7 to Kyle, and he told the rest of the Savage 7. The HouseGuests learned that the public voted for Marty to receive the "BelAirDirect Eviction Insurance", giving him safety for the week. On Day 14, Kyle nominated Moose and Stephanie for eviction, with Moose as the target. Gino, Josh and Betty were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 17, Moose chose to use the Power of Veto on himself, making Kyle name his new target, Josh as his replacement nominee. Many HouseGuests considered going against Kyle's wishes for his behaviour and nominations. Most HouseGuests also felt a bond with Josh and lacked a similar connection with Stephanie as she was expendable. Late in the week Kevin falsely convinced Marty that Kyle was considering targeting Marty and that's why he was awarded safety. This caused Marty to turn on Kyle, despite formerly being a close ally of Kyle while most of Kyle's other allies had turned on him. On Day 20, Stephanie was evicted in a 9-2 vote, with Gino and Jacey-Lynne voting to evict Josh. |
Week 4 |
Following Stephanie's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
Gino considered nominating Marty as his target after feeling betrayed after the last eviction vote. Meanwhile, Haleena and Kevin noticed Hermon was playing a strong game and was a threat to win and over the course of the week. As a result, Haleena began painting Hermon, Tynesha, and Moose as a dangerous trio to Jess, Marty, Kevin, Gino, and Jacey-Lynne in an effort to convince them to turn on all three of them which most bought in to as these efforts were generally successful. On Day 21, Gino nominated Jess and Marty for eviction. Haleena, Summer, and Tynesha were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
Despite being Kyle his closest ally, Gino debated either betraying him to appease the rest of the HouseGuests and show that he was not tied to Kyle, or nominating Betty as the new target. Summer pushed for Kyle to be nominated and evicted, despite the move not being good for Gino. On Day 24, Marty used the Power of Veto on himself, making Gino name Kyle as the replacement nominee. On Day 27, Kyle was evicted by an unanimous vote. |
Week 5 |
Following Kyle's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
In the week before, Jess, Betty, Summer, and Tynesha formed "The Siblings" alliance. On Day 28, Jess nominated Hermon and Moose for eviction, believing that the two had made it harder for them to establish themselves in the game. Jacey-Lynne, Josh and Marty were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 31, Hermon used the Power of Veto on himself, making Jess nominate Tynesha as a pawn in his place after Kevin convinced them that it was best for their game. While Moose had been lying low ever since his strategy was exposed during Kyle's HoH reign, Tynesha had built multiple alliances, making many HouseGuests feel she that was a strong social player and would end up being a bigger threat than Moose. Marty pushed for Jess to change the target from Moose to Tynesha, which they did. Haleena considered betraying the Mandems under the suspicion of being in the bottom of the alliance. She would ultimately betray the alliance after finding our that she was touted as a replacement nominee by the members of the alliance. Kevin worked to convince Gino and Jacey-Lynne to join the effort to flip the vote. Meanwhile, Kevin, Haleena, and Josh formed the "Crash Test Dummies" alliance, with Josh voting Moose out knowing Tynesha would go home in order to stay in good with Betty, Hermon, and Summer. On Day 34, Tynesha was evicted in a 5-4 vote, with Betty, Hermon, Josh, and Summer voting to evict Moose. The HouseGuests were then informed of the Chain of Safety Double Eviction. The HouseGuests would compete in two Safety competitions. The winner of the first would be safe, and select another HouseGuest to be safe for the night. Their selection would then save the next person, until three HouseGuests remained, putting them at risk for eviction. The three HouseGuests would compete in the second competition, with the winner removing themselves from the block, and the other two facing the eviction vote. Immediately, the three HouseGuests competed in the first competition.
Moose started the safety chain as the winner of the competition. He chose to save Hermon, who saved Josh followed by, Betty, Summer, Kevin, Marty and Haleena. Gino, Jacey-Lynne, and Jess were left to compete in the second competition.
Betty, Josh, Marty, Kevin, and Haleena decided as a group to flip and vote out Gino, noting that him staying would only be good for Hermon and Moose, who were becoming a duo. However, while observing Marty's demeanor immediately leading up to the vote, Betty thought that he had suddenly decided to not to flip. Worried they would lack the votes, Betty tried to keep the group from flipping, but was only able to tell Kevin and Josh, leaving Haleena and Marty on the opposite side of the vote. At the end of the night, Jess was evicted by a 7-2 vote, with Haleena and Marty voting to evict Gino. The Jury Phase started thereafter, meaning every evictee from this point will become part of the jury that will decide the winner. |
Week 6 |
The following day, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
Marty falsely believed that Betty and Josh had intentionally tricked him into voting to evict Gino during the Double Eviction. This belief was strengthened when Kevin and Haleena blamed them as well in a conversation. On Day 35, Marty nominated Betty and Josh for eviction, believing that the former could have a secret power from the phone room which could pose a risk in his plan to backdoor Josh. Gino, Kevin and Summer were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
Haleena and Kevin pushed for Marty to backdoor Hermon, commenting that he was more of a threat than Josh or Betty. On Day 38, Kevin elected to use the Power of Veto on Josh. Marty named Hermon as the replacement nominee. On Day 41 Hermon was evicted by an unanimous vote, becoming the first member of the jury. Prior to the vote, Arisa announced that the viewing public voted for their favorite moment of the season so far. The winner of the vote was Moose, awarding him with a CA$1000 gift certificate from WINNERS. |
Week 7 |
Following Hermon's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the HoH competition.
As a result of a number of malfunctions observed during the competition, the competition was scrapped and replaced with a new competition.[28]
For not claiming the Have cards, Betty, Haleena, Josh, Kevin, and Moose were named the Have-Nots for the week. Gino looked to backdoor Marty in retaliation for betraying him during Kyle's HoH reign and for his vote against him in the Double Eviction. Gino informed everyone but Marty, Kevin, and Haleena about the plan. On Day 42, Gino nominated Moose and Summer for eviction, with the plan to backdoor Marty. Haleena, Jacey-Lynne, and Josh were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 44, Jacey-Lynne found a clue to discover a secret room. After using the phone in the House and finding keys behind various doors, she discovered a secret Expedia room. Arisa then gave her a challenge to win a secret power. She had five minutes to unlock the boxes containing puzzle pieces and complete the puzzle. Jacey-Lynne accomplished her mission, earning her a Secret Power of Veto that may only be used for this week. Should she reveal the power prematurely, she would immediately be evicted.[29] Despite Gino initially planning to backdoor Marty, Haleena felt he was still useful for her game. Therefore she, along with Kevin pushed for the backdoor plan to be abandoned. They cited the final five deal between them, Gino, Jacey-Lynne and Marty. Afterwards, Gino and Jacey-Lynne opted to keep Marty in the game. On Day 45, Haleena decided not to use the Power of Veto; Jacey-Lynne also decided not to use her Secret Power of Veto.[30] On Day 48, Moose was evicted by a 6-0 vote, becoming the second member of the jury.[31] |
Week 8 |
Following Moose's eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the Head of Household competition.
After Marty was named as the Head of Household, it was announced that Summer won a public vote to receive the "BelAirDirect Eviction Insurance", granting her immunity for the week. On Day 49, Marty nominated Betty and Josh for eviction. Kevin, Summer and Gino were drawn to compete for the Power of Veto.
On Day 51, Kevin was given a secret mission to find which of the mystery doors was unlocked to reveal a secret room. He discovered the secret Expedia room and found Marsha the Moose. Marsha then gave him a secret mission; he must convince the others he will self-evict. He passed his mission, and the HouseGuests earned a sleepover party. As Summer was safe, Marty had to nominate someone from his Final Five deal. After having them swear to evict Josh with Kevin swearing to Marty he will evict Josh on his untrue marriage, Marty had Haleena, Jacey-Lynne, and Kevin draw gummy bears to determine the replacement nominee. Marty did not want to nominate Gino due to having previously betrayed him, but allowed Gino to opt into this decision if he wanted. Gino chose to be in consideration for the replacement nominee, and when the four drew their gummy bears, Gino drew the one corresponding to nomination. On Day 52, Betty took herself off the block, and Marty named Gino as the replacement nominee. Kevin and Haleena decided to flip on the Five, joining Betty and Summer in saving Josh, their Crash Test Dummies alliance member who they felt was more loyal to them than Gino. On Day 55, Gino was evicted in a 4-1 vote, becoming the third member of the jury, with Jacey-Lynne voting to evict Josh. Arisa then informed the HouseGuests of the Triple Eviction, directing the HouseGuests to compete in the Head of Household competition.
Josh nominated Jacey-Lynne, Marty, and Summer for eviction. The nominations angered Summer, as Josh had previously promised her safety. Haleena's vote to evict Gino angered Jacey-Lynne, after believing that she was Haleena's closest ally. All remaining HouseGuests competed for the Power of Veto, with the exception of Josh.
Due to his Crash Test Dummies alliance with Kevin and Haleena, Josh told Betty she would be nominated, severing their trust and blindsiding her. At the Veto Meeting, Jacey-Lynne took herself off the block, and Josh named Betty as the replacement nominee. On Day 55, Betty was saved by an unanimous vote, evicting Marty and Summer. The two became the fourth and fifth members of the jury. |
Week 9 |
Following the events of the Triple Eviction, the HouseGuests competed in the Head of Household competition.
On Day 56, Betty nominated Jacey-Lynne and Josh for eviction. Betty felt that she couldn't trust Jacey-Lynne because she withheld the information of her winning the Secret Power of Veto. She also felt betrayed by Josh for nominating her during the Triple Eviction. Afterwards, Betty realized Kevin had been pulling strings behind the scenes and manipulating people throughout the game. She rebuilt her bond with Josh and informed him of how his ally Kevin had been manipulating him. On Day 57, the HouseGuests competed for the Power of Veto.
On Day 59, Haleena decided not to use the Power of Veto keeping her and Kevin as the votes to evict. On Day 61, each of the HouseGuests got to spend time with their loved ones in the Phone Room for five minutes. With much indecisiveness, Haleena and Kevin debated whether to stay loyal to their Crash Test Dummies alliance with Josh or to blindside him and keep Jacey-Lynne. On Day 62, Jacey-Lynne was evicted by a 2-0 vote, becoming the sixth member of the jury. |
Week 10: Finale |
In the morning following Jacey-Lynne's eviction, the red countdown door went off. Inside, the HouseGuests were surprised with a Wendy's breakfast, as well as a practice station for the upcoming Head of Household competition.
The HouseGuests were styled for the "Big Brother Canada Awards" where the HouseGuests watched several memorable moments from the season. On Day 63, Josh nominated Betty and Kevin for eviction.
Josh was conflicted on whether to honor his close friendship with Betty or to stay loyal to the "Crash Test Dummies". On Day 64, Josh used the Power of Veto on Betty, and Haleena was the default replacement nominee. On Day 64, Betty cast the sole vote to evict Haleena with her and Josh feeling Haleena was the bigger jury and competition threat.[32] [33] She became the seventh member of the jury. Arisa then announced that Canada would become the eighth member of the jury, and they would also cast a vote for the winner. The HouseGuests then competed in the final Head of Household competitions.
During the week Kevin had convinced Josh that Betty would beat him in the end with her underdog story while also telling Josh he would lose to him due to his lack of competition wins, so he considered betraying Betty despite being her best friend. On Day 69, Josh cast the sole vote to evict Betty, blindsiding her. She became the ninth and final member of the jury. On Day 69, Kevin was named the winner of Big Brother Canada 10 after receiving the votes of Hermon, Moose, Gino, Summer, Marty, Jacey-Lynne, Haleena, and Canada. He won $100,000, a $10,000 "Winners" makeover, a travel package courtesy of Expedia. Josh was voted runner-up to Kevin, only receiving Betty's vote. He won $20,000. Marty was named Canada's Favourite HouseGuest and won $10,000.[3] |
Episodes [edit]
Have-Nots [edit]
Occasionally, a group of HouseGuests are selected to be Have-Nots for a certain week. Those selected to be a Have-Not would be restricted to a slop diet and cold showers. There was no official Have-Not room for this season. There were no official Have-Nots for the entire pre-jury phase of the season. Although the entire house was put on slop for weeks 4 and 5, no official Have-Nots were named. In week 7, those who failed to obtain a "Have" card in the HoH competition were automatically made Have-nots, with the exception of Gino, who was granted "have" rights by virtue of being the HoH.
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Have-Nots | none | Betty, Haleena, Kevin, Moose | none |
Voting history [edit]
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Week 7 | Week 8 | Week 9 | Week 10 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day 28 | Day 34 | Day 49 | Day 55 | Day 63 | Day 69 | Finale | ||||||||
Head of Household | Hermon | Marty | Kyle | Gino | Jess | (none) | Marty | Gino | Marty | Josh | Betty | Josh | Josh | (none) |
Nominations (pre-veto) | Jess Melina | Jacey-Lynne Jay | Moose Stephanie | Jess Marty | Hermon Moose | Gino Jess | Betty Josh | Moose Summer | Betty Josh | Jacey-Lynne Marty Summer | Jacey-Lynne Josh | Betty Kevin | Betty Kevin | |
Veto Winner(s) | Jess | Jacey-Lynne | Moose | Marty | Hermon | (none) | Kevin | Haleena | Betty | Jacey-Lynne | Haleena | Josh | (none) | |
Jacey-Lynne | ||||||||||||||
Nominations (post-veto) | Kevin Melina | Betty Jay | Josh Stephanie | Jess Kyle | Moose Tynesha | Betty Hermon | Moose Summer | Gino Josh | Betty Marty Summer | Jacey-Lynne Josh | Haleena Kevin | |||
Kevin | Nominated | Jay | Stephanie | Kyle | Tynesha | Jess | Hermon | Moose | Gino | Betty | Jacey-Lynne | Nominated | Nominated | Winner (Day 69) |
Josh | Melina | Jay | Nominated | Kyle | Moose | Jess | Hermon | Moose | Nominated | Head of Household | Nominated | Head of Household | Betty | Runner-up (Day 69) |
Betty | Melina | Nominated | Stephanie | Kyle | Moose | Jess | Nominated | Moose | Gino | Nominated | Head of Household | Haleena | Evicted (Day 69) | Josh |
Haleena | Melina | Jay | Stephanie | Kyle | Tynesha | Gino | Hermon | Moose | Gino | Betty | Jacey-Lynne | Nominated | Evicted (Day 64) | Kevin |
Jacey-Lynne | Melina | Jay | Josh | Kyle | Tynesha | Jess | Hermon | Moose | Josh | Betty | Nominated | Evicted (Day 62) | Kevin | |
Marty | Melina | Head of Household | Stephanie | Kyle | Tynesha | Gino | Head of Household | Moose | Head of Household | Nominated | Evicted (Day 55) | Kevin | ||
Summer | Melina | Jay | Stephanie | Kyle | Moose | Jess | Hermon | Nominated | Gino | Nominated | Evicted (Day 55) | Kevin | ||
Gino | Melina | Jay | Josh | Head of Household | Tynesha | Nominated | Hermon | Head of Household | Nominated | Evicted (Day 55) | Kevin | |||
Moose | Melina | Jay | Stephanie | Kyle | Nominated | Jess | Hermon | Nominated | Evicted (Day 48) | Kevin | ||||
Hermon | Head of Household | Betty | Stephanie | Kyle | Moose | Jess | Nominated | Evicted (Day 41) | Kevin | |||||
Jess | Kevin | Jay | Stephanie | Nominated | Head of Household | Nominated | Evicted (Day 34) | |||||||
Tynesha | Melina | Jay | Stephanie | Kyle | Nominated | Evicted (Day 34) | ||||||||
Kyle | Melina | Betty | Head of Household | Nominated | Evicted (Day 27) | |||||||||
Stephanie | Melina | Jay | Nominated | Evicted (Day 20) | ||||||||||
Jay | Kevin | Nominated | Evicted (Day 13) | |||||||||||
Melina | Nominated | Evicted (Day 6) | ||||||||||||
Canada | Kevin | |||||||||||||
Notes | 1, 2 | none | 3 | none | 4 | none | 5 | 3 | 6 | none | 7, 8 | |||
Evicted | Melina 11 of 13 votes to evict | Jay 10 of 12 votes to evict | Stephanie 9 of 11 votes to evict | Kyle 10 of 10 votes to evict | Tynesha 5 of 9 votes to evict | Jess 7 of 9 votes to evict | Hermon 7 of 7 votes to evict | Moose 6 of 6 votes to evict | Gino 4 of 5 votes to evict | Marty 0 of 3 votes to save | Jacey-Lynne 2 of 2 votes to evict | Haleena Betty's choice to evict | Betty Josh's choice to evict | Josh 1 vote to win |
Summer 0 of 3 votes to save | Kevin 8 votes to win |
Notes [edit]
- ^Note 1 : On Night 1, Jay answered Big Brother's Phone, awarding them immunity for the week. As a result, they did not compete in that night's HOH competition.
- ^Note 2 : For winning each of the 3 heats in the first HOH competition, Hermon, Moose, and Josh each earned the chance to win HOH through a random choice of 3 doors. Hermon won HOH, while Moose and Josh each won immunity for the week.
- ^Note 3 : Following the Week 2 and Week 7 evictions, Canada voted for a Houseguest to receive immunity for the following week. Any previous winners were not eligible a second time. Marty was voted to be immune for Week 3 and Summer was voted to be immune for Week 8.
- ^Note 4 : This week featured a Chain of Safety Double Eviction. Following the regular eviction, the remaining HouseGuests participated in a Competition followed by the Chain of Safety Ceremony to determine the night's nominees. At the Chain of Safety Ceremony, the Housemates participated in a selection process to determine the nominees. Beginning with the Competition winner, (indicated by ), each HouseGuest would select another HouseGuest to be safe until three remained. The three HouseGuests left unselected competed in the second challenge, with the winner (indicated by ) being safe. The two remaining HouseGuests were the final nominees, and faced the House's Vote.
- ^Note 5 : During Week 7, a Secret PoV was hidden in the house. The winner could remove a nominee only at the Week 7 Veto Ceremony. Jacey-Lynne found the Secret POV, and chose not to use it.
- ^Note 6 : This week featured a Triple Eviction. Following the regular eviction, the remaining HouseGuests played a modified week's worth of games, including HoH and Veto competitions and their respective ceremonies during the remainder of the live show, culminating in a second eviction that evicted two HouseGuests. The Head of Household was obliged to nominate three HouseGuests for eviction and the voting HouseGuests would vote to save (indicated by ) rather than to evict, with the HouseGuest with the most votes to save being the sole nominee surviving the vote for that cycle.
- ^Note 7 : Near the end of the finale, the Jury voted to crown the winner of Big Brother Canada 10.
- ^Note 8 : As part of a twist, Canada would join the jury as its ninth jury member. The recipient of the vote would be determined by an online vote, with the vote itself being cast and revealed by Arisa on behalf of Canada.
Reception [edit]
Critical reception [edit]
The season was generally well received by critics and viewers, with many praising the cast and the gameplay of the eventual winner Kevin Jacobs. Justin Carrerio of The Young Folks praised the season, commenting that Big Brother Canada 10 delivered an exciting and fun season that kept us on our toes, and its finale ended the season on a high.[34] In a review published prior to the season finale, Lee Whitten of ScreenRant commented that the season has been near-perfect.[35]
Viewing figures [edit]
No. | Episode | Air Date | Timeslot (ET) | Viewers (AMA[c] in millions) | Rank (week) | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "Episode 1" | Wednesday, March 2, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 1.015 | 24 | [36] |
2 | "Episode 2" | Thursday, March 3, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | <0.963 | — | |
3 | "Episode 3" | Monday, March 7, 2022 | <0.943 | — | [37] | |
4 | "Episode 4" | Wednesday, March 9, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | <0.943 | — | |
5 | "Episode 5" | Thursday, March 10, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | <0.943 | — | |
6 | "Episode 6" | Monday, March 14, 2022 | 0.913 | 21 | [38] | |
7 | "Episode 7" | Wednesday, March 16, 2022 | 0.941 | 17 | ||
8 | "Episode 8" | Thursday, March 17, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.855 | 27 | |
9 | "Episode 9" | Monday, March 21, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | 0.878 | 26 | [39] |
10 | "Episode 10" | Wednesday, March 23, 2022 | <0.796 | — | ||
11 | "Episode 11" | Thursday, March 24, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.873 | 27 | |
12 | "Episode 12" | Monday, March 28, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | <0.887 | — | [40] |
13 | "Episode 13" | Wednesday, March 30, 2022 | 0.914 | 28 | ||
14 | "Episode 14" | Thursday, March 31, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | <0.887 | — | |
15 | "Episode 15" | Monday, April 4, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | 0.848 | 27 | [41] |
16 | "Episode 16" | Wednesday, April 6, 2022 | 0.889 | 26 | ||
17 | "Episode 17" | Thursday, April 7, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | <0.821 | — | |
18 | "Episode 18" | Monday, April 11, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | 0.920 | 22 | [42] |
19 | "Episode 19" | Wednesday, April 13, 2022 | 0.880 | 25 | ||
20 | "Episode 20" | Thursday, April 14, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.881 | 24 | |
21 | "Episode 21" | Monday, April 18, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | 0.879 | 26 | [43] |
22 | "Episode 22" | Wednesday, April 20, 2022 | 0.874 | 28 | ||
23 | "Episode 23" | Thursday, April 21, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.875 | 27 | |
24 | "Episode 24" | Monday, April 25, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | 0.833 | 29 | [44] |
25 | "Episode 25" | Wednesday, April 27, 2022 | <0.825 | — | ||
26 | "Episode 26" | Thursday, April 28, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.877 | 23 | |
27 | "Episode 27" | Monday, May 2, 2022 | 7:00 p.m. | <0.782 | — | [4] |
28 | "Episode 28" | Wednesday, May 4, 2022 | <0.782 | — | ||
29 | "Episode 29" | Thursday, May 5, 2022 | 8:00 p.m. | 0.835 | 25 |
References [edit]
- ^ @BigBrotherCA (February 14, 2022). "And we're back! See you March 2 👁️. #BBCAN10" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ a b "Big Brother Canada Is Back On March 2 & Here's Why It Pays To Be 'A Schemer' On The Show". Narcity. 2022-03-01. Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ a b "Torontonian wins big on Big Brother Canada". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The Canadian Press. May 6, 2022.
- ^ a b "Hot Sheet: Big Brother Canada finale makes top 30 TV chart". playbackonline.ca. May 18, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ Mahjouri, Shakiel (July 14, 2021). "You Can Audition For 'Big Brother Canada' Season 10". etcanada.com. ET Canada. Archived from the original on 2022-02-23. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
- ^ Mahjouri, Shakiel (2021-07-14). "You Can Audition For 'Big Brother Canada' Season 10". ET Canada . Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ a b Furdyk, Brent (February 23, 2022). "'Big Brother Canada' Season 10: Meet the houseguests". etcanada.com. ET Canada. Archived from the original on February 23, 2022. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
- ^ "Global Announces Six Lead Sponsors Joining Season 10 of Big Brother Canada". Big Brother Canada Season 10. 2022-02-22. Retrieved 2022-02-27 .
- ^ Marcus, Stephanie (February 23, 2022). "Three new sponsors join Big Brother Canada". Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ a b c 'Big Brother Canada' Season 10 House Tour | BBCAN10 , retrieved 2022-03-04
- ^ "First Look: Sneak Peek Inside the New BBCAN10 House!". Big Brother Canada Season 10 . Retrieved 2022-02-24 .
- ^ "Take A Tour Of The BBCAN 10 House". Big Brother Canada Season 10 . Retrieved 2022-03-02 .
- ^ "7Plus: Big Brother Canada | TV Tonight".
- ^ "Arisa Cox talks Big Brother Canada return: Host praises Cookout alliance and previews 10th season". torontosun . Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "What Is Funemployment?". Investopedia . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ Braxton, Greg (September 11, 2000). "'Big Brother' Guests Threaten Walkout". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on May 6, 2019. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
- ^ Piwowarski, Allison (August 13, 2014). "How Much Does Cody Calafiore Make Outside of the 'Big Brother' House? It's More Than You'd Expect". Bustle. Archived from the original on April 2, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
- ^ Bianco, Julia (February 2, 2018). "The untold truth of Big Brother". Nicki Swift. Archived from the original on June 8, 2020. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
- ^ Jacobs, Matthew (August 13, 2015). "But First: An Oral History Of 'Big Brother'". HuffPost. Archived from the original on June 8, 2020. Retrieved October 5, 2019.
- ^ "Episode One". Big Brother 12. Season 12. Episode 1. July 8, 2010. 00:25 minutes in. CBS.
- ^ Pickard, Ann (August 19, 2009). "Why is Big Brother so big in the US?". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on April 13, 2020. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
- ^ "Big Brother USA and Canada format: The ultimate guide".
- ^ "_Big Brother_: The 11 Dumbest Moves Ever".
- ^ "'Big Brother' 14 Finale Episode Breakdown: Ian Quacks To 500K « CBS Detroit". 20 September 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
- ^ "Episode Four". Big Brother 11. Season 11. Episode 1. July 16, 2009. 33:20 minutes in. CBS.
- ^ "'Big Brother Canada 10' Week 1 Review | The Young Folks". 2022-03-06. Retrieved 2022-07-16 .
- ^ "'Big Brother Canada 10' week 2 & 3 review: Messy HOHs keep the houseguests at the edge of their seats | The Young Folks". 2022-03-20. Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ Carter, Matt (2022-04-08). "Big Brother Canada 10 spoilers: HoH Competition stopped after glitches". CarterMatt . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ "Big Brother Canada 10: How Jacey-Lynne's Secret Veto worked". CarterMatt. 2022-04-14. Retrieved 2022-04-16 .
- ^ Tisdale, Jerrica (2022-04-14). "Big Brother Canada 10 Episode 20 Recap: Who Went Home Tonight?". Big Brother Network Canada . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ "Big Brother Canada 10: Was Moose Bendago evicted, sent to jury?". CarterMatt. 2022-04-15. Retrieved 2022-04-16 .
- ^ "Last jury member of 'Big Brother Canada' recaps exit and predicts winner | Watch News Videos Online". Global News . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ Carter, Matt (2022-05-05). "Big Brother Canada 10 interview: Haleena Gill on fourth-place finish". CarterMatt . Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ "'Big Brother Canada 10' Season Finale Review | The Young Folks". 2022-05-08. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Why BBCAN10 Is An Iconic Season". ScreenRant. 2022-05-01. Retrieved 2022-07-17 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for Feb. 28 to March 6, 2022". playbackonline.ca. March 16, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for March 14 to 20, 2022". playbackonline.ca. March 30, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for March 14 to 20, 2022". playbackonline.ca. March 30, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for March 21 to 27, 2022". playbackonline.ca. April 6, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for March 28 to April 3, 2022". playbackonline.ca. April 13, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for April 4 to 10, 2022". playbackonline.ca. April 21, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for April 11 to 17, 2022". playbackonline.ca. April 27, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for April 18 to 24, 2022". playbackonline.ca. May 4, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
- ^ "Hot Sheet: Top 30 TV programs for April 25 to May 1, 2022". playbackonline.ca. May 11, 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-24 .
Notes [edit]
- ^ 70 days long according to the show.
- ^ According to the show, Summer's occupation at the time of the show was "Funemployed". Funemployed is a term used to describe the period of time wherein individuals enjoy the free time brought by unemployment before acquiring a new job.[15]
- ^ Average Minute Audience (AMA) is the average number of individuals or (homes or target group) viewing a TV channel, which is calculated per minute during a specified period of time over the program duration.
External links [edit]
- Global official site
jefferiescanch1939.blogspot.com
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Brother_Canada_(season_10)
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