In its first Sunday episode, Big Brother 16 revealed several minor but smart changes that improved the show. Its players are freaking out over floaters, becoming paranoid, forming and abandoning alliances, which is bad for their games but decent entertainment, the kind we expect from this show but didnāt get much of last year.
The most significant change: The tedious key-draw ceremony, utilizing the tableās turntable, has been eliminated in favor of an immediate reveal of the HOHās decision. They turn a key; the nomineeās face appears on a screen. Besides cutting down on the time that the whole thing takes, this is far a more dramatic reveal, because there isnāt dwindling suspense as to who might be chosen.
Unfortunately, the first two HOHs used their power lamelyāor at least, their reasons were lame. Few HOHs have ever given good rationale for their decisions, but nominating the first four people to have fallen during the challenge is just weak. Itās not like that challenge affected the team, for example; in fact, it partially made it possible for the HOHs to win.
The new format means that, on the TV show at least, nominees last about a half hour, which isnāt a lot of time. (Since these events occurred before the feeds started, itās not exactly clear how much time elapsed between the challenges; once the show settles into a weekly pattern, Iām curious how much time the producers will give nominees to stew and the HOH to reign before the challenge undoes that.)
Perhaps the most unexpected consequence of the nominees was Caleb crying, literally, over his own nominationsā effect on the nominees. āIām a real sentimental guy,ā said the guy who beat a pig to death with a stick. āAt the end of the day, I still have a heart for people,ā said the guy who called the president a racist, Islamaphobic name and referred to all gay people with a slur.
Meanwhile, the opening sequence of flying squares has been replaced with a Real Housewives style introduction, though thankfully the editors have continued with the tradition of exiting the recap with a funny moment from the previous episode.
While I appreciate the change in music cues, Iām not a fan of the showās use of the exact same music that Syfyās Face Off has been using for what seems like every episode for six seasons. Even if there is a shortage of musical cues to license, why select one thatās so prominently (over-) used on a relatively popular series?
On to the game. The first Battle of the Block was played to give two nominees and their HOH immunity. A variant on a familiar Survivor challenge of throwing water from one player to another, the challenge featured what I think may have been the smartest prop decision in the showās history: a faux champagne glass with the vintage year of 1984.
Brittany and Victoria won immunity thanks to the fact that they actually, well, tried, which is far more than Paoloānow nicknamed Pow-Pow (I suppose thatās the correct spelling)ādid. She couldnāt even stay on a swing, destroying her block partner Donnyās chances at immunity.
Donny, by the way, is easily my favorite houseguest, and that was before he proved himself to be quite the funny guy, though, as he said when someone told him he was a comedian, āIām not, Iām really a groundskeeper.ā
In many ways, Devinās paranoia about Donny were justified; heās correct that Donnyās popularity, easy-going nature, and charm will get him far in the game. Donny could easily be ignored as more aggressive and visible players get nominated and voted out.
Players like Devin. Because although Devin (who has a daughter, apparently) isnāt stupid and has good instincts, his follow-through is atrociousāand hilarious.
Devin is making the classic mistake of standing out too early, and heās standing out as someoneās whoās paranoid (even justifiably) and will make decisions behind his allianceās back, which is utterly stupid. Also dumb: Devin basically decided to bail on his alliance with Donny in order to stay with the guys, they guys whose trust he betrayed. Having a two-person side alliance is super smart, and he could have used that to his and Donnyās advantage.
When he went āAWOL,ā as Cody said, and told Christine and Amber about the menās alliance, Devin then tried to retroactively get the guys to decide to bring women into the alliance. This became very bizarre when he started telling the other men that āeveryone needs to stay cool and calm.ā
Thatās kind of like going out to dinner with friends, setting the table on fire while theyāre in the bathroom, and then telling your friends that itās cold and youād like to warm up, maybe by gathering around a fire. Then, when everyone looks at you in horror and flees the restaurant, you yell after them, āHey, calm down. Sit down right now. I know how to put out fires. Also, I have a daughter.ā
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