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Big Brother 14 (American season): Difference between revisions

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| style="background:#ccc;"| ''Not<br />eligible'' || style="background:#ccc;"| ''Not<br />eligible'' || style="background:#ccc;"| ''Not<br />eligible''|| style="background:#87cefa;"| ''Declined<br />offer'' || || || || || || || || ||
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Revision as of 01:33, 10 August 2012


Template:Big Brother housemates Big Brother 14 is the 14th season of the American reality television series Big Brother that premiered on July 12, 2012 on CBS.[1] The show is produced by Endemol USA and Fly on the Wall Entertainment. The show is shown in standard definition.

Production

Big Brother 14 is produced by Endemol USA and Fly on the Wall Entertainment with Allison Grodner and Rich Meehan returning as executive producers. This season was announced on the same day as the finale of Big Brother 13 in a press release issued from CBS.[2][3] Casting for Big Brother 14 began during the finale of Big Brother 13. This is the first season to use an online application process and to have a dedicated casting website like Big Brother UK.[4][5] Applicants are required to make a three-minute video then use a form to submit it to the producers with a current picture.[6] Applications and video submissions were due on May 11, 2012. Applicants chosen to be a finalist went go to Los Angeles, where they were narrowed down to a pool of 40 finalists.[7] Open casting calls were held by the producers where they visited New Orleans, Los Angeles, New York City, Charleston, Odessa, Dallas, Miami, Cincinnati, Boise, Chicago, Atlanta, Denver, Louisville, Boston, Champaign and Phoenix.[7] On June 4, 2012, Robyn Kass, casting director for Big Brother, revealed on her Twitter that all semi-finalists were contacted.[8]

The first television advertisements hinting this season's twist first aired June 17, 2012 on CBS. This season is being slated to promote a "super sized" season, indicating the most HouseGuests entering to date and four huge surprises to be revealed on the premiere, being the four ex-HouseGuests competing as mentors.[9] By July 2, 2012, several media outlets such as CBS.com and Yahoo! TV[10] officially released house photos. The season's main House theme is the 80's and "Tokyo Pop". The overall layout of the house remained the same as to recent previous seasons, in addition to various refurbishments to the appliances and a new paint job in the backyard. Pandora's Box this season was replaced with a dual-HoH bedroom that is shared with the winning HoH's coach. The HouseGuests moved into the House on July 7, 2012.[11][12]

Format

The format remained largely unchanged from previous seasons with a few exceptions. HouseGuests were sequestered in the Big Brother House with no contact to or from the outside world. Each week, the HouseGuests took part in several compulsory challenges that determine who will win food, luxuries, and power in the House. The winner of the weekly Head of Household competition was immune from nominations and nominated two fellow HouseGuests for eviction. After a HouseGuest became Head of Household, he or she was ineligible to take part in the next Head of Household competition. The winner of the Power of Veto competition won the right to save one of the nominated HouseGuests from eviction. If the Veto winner exercised the power, the Head of Household then nominated another HouseGuest for eviction.

On eviction night, all HouseGuests except for the Head of Household and the two nominees vote to evict one of the two nominees.[13] This compulsory vote was conducted in the privacy of the Diary Room by the host Julie Chen. In the event of a tie, the Head of Household cast the deciding vote, announcing it in front of the other HouseGuests.[14] Unlike other versions of Big Brother, the HouseGuests may discuss the nomination and eviction process openly and freely.[13] The nominee with the greater number of votes will be evicted from the House on the live Thursday broadcast, exiting to an adjacent studio to be interviewed by Chen.[14] HouseGuests may voluntarily leave the House at any time and those who break the rules may be expelled from the house by Big Brother.[15][16] The final seven HouseGuests evicted during the season will vote for the winner on the season finale. These "Jury Members" will be sequestered in a separate house and will not be allowed to watch the show except for competitions and ceremonies that include all of the remaining HouseGuests. The jury members will not be shown any Diary Room interviews or any footage that may include strategy or details regarding nominations.[17]

In a change from past seasons, four former HouseGuests from past seasons of Big Brother returned to coach the new HouseGuests during their time in the House. Each coach had to pick three of the new HouseGuests that they will guide throughout the entire game. When a HouseGuests wins Head of Household the coach of that Housemate will also gain their own private room adjacent to the Head of Household bedroom. The coaches compete in a new competition that replaces Have vs. Have-Not competition for the season. The winning coach is granted the power to give one of their players immunity for the week or to trade one of their players for a player from another team. Depending on the rules of the coach's competition, each coach then has to chose one of their own players to become a "Have Not" for the week or the winning coach has the opportunity of choosing all of the "Have Nots". HouseGuests that are chosen to be "Have Nots" for the week had to eat "Big Brother slop" and a weekly food restriction (chosen by the viewing public), take cold showers, and sleep on hard beds. The coaches were ineligible to win the $500,000 grand prize and the $50,000 runner-up prize but instead were to be awarded a separate $100,000 prize if one of their chosen HouseGuests had won Big Brother. However, on Week 3, America sealed the fate of the coaches' status in the game, and the coaches voted whether to keep coaching or reset their status. Three of four votes were to reset the game, and all coaches earned HouseGuest status, now eligible to win the $500,000 grand prize.

HouseGuests

File:Big Brother 14 Houseguests.jpg
The cast of the fourteenth season of Big Brother.

Far Left: Wil, Ashley, Chef Joe, Janelle (on the chair)
Middle Left: Danielle, Jodi, Kara, Dan (on the chair)
Middle Right: Shane, JoJo, Willie, Britney (on the chair)
Far Right: Jenn, Ian, Frank, Mike (on the chair)Template:Pufc

A total of sixteen HouseGuests will compete, the same number of HouseGuests competing in Big Brother 9. On July 4, 2012, four television advertisements were released throughout the day, revealing eleven names of the HouseGuests to be competing in this season of Big Brother.[18] The full cast of twelve HouseGuests were revealed on July 5,[19] with four returning HouseGuests being revealed during the season premiere on July 12. An original twelfth HouseGuest revealed in the ads, Mike, was pulled off the final casting list for unknown reasons and was replaced by Joe.

Name Age on entry Occupation Hometown [19]
Ashley Iocco 26 Entrepreneur West Hollywood, California
Danielle Murphree 23 Nurse Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Frank Eudy 28 Unemployed Naples, Florida
Ian Terry 21 Engineering Student New Orleans, Louisiana
Jenn Arroyo 37 Musician Brooklyn, New York
Jodi Rollins 42 Restaurant Server Calipatria, California
Chef Joe Arvin 41 Chef Schererville, Indiana
JoJo Spatafora 26 Bartender Staten Island, New York
Kara Monaco 29 Model Los Angeles, California
Shane Meaney 26 House Flipper Bennington, Vermont
Wil Heuser 24 Marketing Consultant Louisville, Kentucky
Willie Hantz 34 Tankerman Dayton, Texas

Coaches

This is the fourth season, after seasons 7, 11 and 13, to feature former HouseGuests returning to the game. However, unlike previous seasons where the returning players competed as regular HouseGuests, the veterans were tasked with coaching three of the new players. Upon entering the house, the coaches were ineligible to win the $500,000 grand prize, and were instead competing to win a separate prize of $100,000, which would be awarded to the coach of the winning HouseGuest. However, after the July 26 live eviction episode, viewers were allowed to vote on whether or not to give the coaches the option of entering the game as regular players for the $500,000 prize. On August 2, America's Vote was revealed. The result was to offer the coaches the option of entering the game. Julie Chen revealed that each coach would be called into the Diary Room individually to cast their vote to keep coaching or not. Inside the diary room was a reset button, signifying the game's reset for the coaches. If at least one coach decides to reset, all coaches would earn HouseGuest status and a 3-1 vote brought them back into the game.


Name Age on entry Occupation Hometown Big Brother History
Season(s) Status
Britney Haynes 24 Pharmaceutical Sales Rep Huntington, Arkansas Big Brother 12 Evicted - 4th Place
Dan Gheesling 28 High School Teacher Dearborn, Michigan Big Brother 10 Winner - 1st Place
Janelle Pierzina 32 Housewife Grand Rapids, Minnesota Big Brother 6 Evicted - 3rd Place
Big Brother: All Stars Evicted - 3rd Place
Mike "Boogie" Malin 41 Restaurateur Los Angeles, California Big Brother 2 Evicted - 8th Place
Big Brother: All Stars Winner - 1st Place

Summary

On the first night, twelve new HouseGuests entered the Big Brother House to two new twists of the season. The first twist was that four successful ex-HouseGuests would re-enter the House not to compete against one another, but to coach the new HouseGuests. Their job is to guide the HouseGuests for as long as they can, hoping to keep coaching a possible winner. The winner's coach would win a special $100,000 prize at the end of the season. Soon after the announcement, Dan Gheesling from Big Brother 10, Britney Haynes from Big Brother 12, Mike "Boogie" Malin from Big Brother 2 and Big Brother: All Stars, and Janelle Pierzina from Big Brother 6 and Big Brother: All Stars entered the House. On the second twist of the night, HouseGuests were informed that their status in the game were at risk. Because Big Brother sent the HouseGuests "invitations" to enter the House instead of a key, the HouseGuests had to earn their status in the first Head of Household competition as there were only eleven keys to be earned. Therefore, for the first time in Big Brother history, one HouseGuest would be evicted by the end of the first night. That night, Janelle and Britney forged an alliance after Dan and Boogie agreed to working together.

Before the HouseGuests competed in their first Head of Household competition, the coaches assigned their teammates. The coaches chose one by one and in order, Britney chose Shane, Willie, and JoJo; Mike chose Frank, Ian, and Jenn; Janelle chose Wil, Ashley, and Joe; and Dan chose Kara, Danielle, and Jodi. The HouseGuests other than the coaches competed in the first Head of Household competition. Each teammate had to jump across large moving mattresses to retrieve life-sized teddy bears. After twenty minutes, teams were allowed to substitute one teammate. Team Britney won the Head of Household competition, and Team Dan came in last place, giving Dan the responsibility to evict one of his players. On Day 1, Dan cast the sole vote to evict Jodi. Mike won the first coaches competition of the season called "Big Brother Derby" and won the power to grant one of his teammates immunity for the week: He chose Ian. The four coaches each had to choose one of their teammates to be a Have-Not for the week, with Ashley, Ian, Shane, and Danielle getting picked. Frank and Kara were nominated for eviction on Day 5. On Day 7, Shane won the Power of Veto competition, "Loose Change", which involved HouseGuests running around and trying to find coin props (one dollar coin, quarter and five cent coins). Once they find them they had to throw the coin props from a distance to a machine. Once they threw a total of $1.30 in coin props, they would win the Power of Veto. Shane decided to leave Willie's nominations the same. On Day 13, Kara was evicted in a 5 to 3 vote, leaving Danielle as Dan's only team member left. It was also revealed the winner of the next Coaches Competition would have the option of either saving one of his or her players or trading them with another player.

Frank won the Head of Household competition, "Big Brother Break-In". The HouseGuests had to determine whether a burglar that entered the house was guilty or not guilty of a certain crime. HouseGuests were eliminated by answering incorrectly. Janelle won the second coaches competition, "Phat Stacks", and chose to give Ashley immunity from the nominations. She also single-handedly chose the four Have-Nots for the week: Willie, Shane, JoJo, and Ian. On Day 14, Willie was expelled from the house, after going on a rampage in which he threw pork rinds at Janelle, swore at the female HouseGuests, and headbutted Joe. Minutes later, JoJo and Shane were nominated for eviction. On Day 15, Shane won the Memory Chip Power of Veto competition, in which HouseGuests had to run around dressed as salsa chips and dive into different pools of salsa and find different menu items names and then they had to bring the names and put them in correct order in their menu as it is on a menu at which they could look at. The HouseGuest that got most of the names in the correct order in the fastest time won the Power of Veto. Shane removed himself from the block, and Frank then nominated Danielle for eviction. On Day 20, JoJo was evicted by a vote of 5 to 1, only receiving the vote of Shane.

Following JoJo's eviction, Shane won the "On Thin Ice" HoH competiton. The HouseGuests shot balls into a slotted end of an ice rink that had scores for each slot. Host Julie Chen then revealed to the viewers they could vote on whether or not the mentors should be allowed to enter the game. On Day 21, the HouseGuests went to the Big Brother Gym for their coaches competition. Their goal was to do as many exercises of a certain type. The coach who would do the least would be eliminated. When they were eliminated they had the chance to open a locker and possibly win something. Britney chose Ian and Joe as Have-Nots, Mike Boogie won $10,000 that he shared with Ian whom he gave $3,000 and Jenn who received $1,000. Dan had the opportunity to invite five people to a private sushi & cocktail party. He chose Boogie, Britney, Janelle, Shane & Danielle. Janelle won the Coaches Competition and saved Wil. Later that day, Shane nominated Ashley and Joe for eviction. Also on Day 21; Shane, Ashley, Joe, Wil, Danielle, and Frank had been chosen to compete in the Veto Competition. On Day 22, all had competed in the Big Brother Circus Veto Competition, where each Houseguest had to roll back and forth two balls at the same time on two different ramps. If even one of the balls would fall, that person would be out. Shane won the Power of Veto for the third week in a row. On Day 24, Shane used the Power of Veto on Ashley, nominating Frank in her place. Before the live eviction took place on Day 27, Julie Chen announced that America has chosen to give the coaches the opportunity to play the game and stop coaching. If the coaches voted to become players, the eviction would be canceled and everyone would play in the HoH, including Shane. However, if the coaches chose to keep the game the same, the eviction would continue, but one evicted HouseGuest would return the following week. Julie Chen also announced that only one vote was required to reset the entire game. One by one, the coaches were called into the Diary Room whether to hit the "Reset Button" or not. Britney, Dan and Janelle chose to hit the button, while Mike Boogie did not. With the vote of 3-1, the coaches were reverted to HouseGuest status and Joe and Frank were spared eviction.

All twelve HouseGuests then began to participate in the "Walk the Plank" HoH endurance competition, in which the HouseGuests had to hold on to a bar. If they fell from the plank, they would be eliminated. After a three hour battle, Danielle became the new HoH, outlasting Britney and Ian. On Day 28, Danielle nominated Frank and Wil for eviction. Danielle won the Power of Veto from the "Field of Veto" competition on Day 29. On Day 30, Britney, Dan, Danielle, Frank, Mike Boogie and Shane created the "Silent Six" alliance and conspired to backdoor Janelle. On Day 31, Danielle went through with the plan and used the Power of Veto on Wil and put up Janelle.

Voting history

Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 Week 5 Week 6 Week 7 Week 8 Week 9 Week 10 Eviction
votes
received
Day 1 Day 5 Finale
Head of
Household
(none) Willie Frank Shane Danielle (none)
Nominations
(pre-veto)
Frank
Kara
JoJo
Shane
Ashley
Joe
Frank
Wil
Veto Winner Shane Shane Shane Danielle (none)
Nominations
(post-veto)
Frank
Kara
Danielle
JoJo
Frank
Joe
Frank
Janelle
Ashley Not
eligible
Kara JoJo Nominations
void
Britney Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Accepted
offer
Dan Jodi Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Accepted
offer
Danielle Nominated Frank Nominated Nominations
void
Head of
Household
1
Frank Not
eligible
Nominated Head of
Household
Nominated Nominated 3
Ian Not
eligible
Kara JoJo Nominations
void
Janelle Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Accepted
offer
Nominated
Jenn Not
eligible
Kara JoJo Nominations
void
Joe Not
eligible
Kara JoJo Nominated
Mike Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Not
eligible
Declined
offer
Shane Not
eligible
Frank Danielle Head of
Household
Wil Not
eligible
Kara JoJo Nominations
void
JoJo Not
eligible
Frank Nominated Evicted
(Day 20)
5
Willie Not
eligible
Head of
Household
Expelled
(Day 14)
0
Kara Nominated Nominated Evicted
(Day 13)
5
Jodi Nominated Evicted
(Day 1)
1
Coach's
Competition
Britney Mike Janelle Janelle (none)
Coach's
Power
Willie
for HoH
Ian
To save
Ashley
To save
Wil
To save
Notes 1 2, 3 2, 4, 5 2, 6, 7
Have Nots (none) Ashley,
Danielle,
Ian,
Shane
Ian,
JoJo,
Shane,
Willie
Ian,
Joe
none
Expelled none Willie none
Evicted Jodi
Dan's choice
to evict
Kara
5 of 8 votes
to evict
JoJo
5 of 6 votes
to evict
Eviction
canceled




Notes

^Note 1 : As coach of the first place team, Britney had to choose which one of her players would be the first Head of Household. While the coach of the last-place team in the first Head of Household competition, Dan had to evict one member of his team on Day 1.
^Note 2 :   During the first three weeks, the coaches participated in a competition that gave them the power to save or trade one of their players.
^Note 3 : Each coach had to choose one of their own players to be a Have Not for the week.
^Note 4 : As the winner of the Coach's Competition, Janelle picked four players to be the Have Nots for the week.
^Note 5 : After a violent outburst, Willie was expelled from the game by Big Brother on Day 14. Big Brother decided to allow nominations to continue on as normal.
^Note 6 : After being eliminated first in the coach's competition, Britney had to chose Have Nots for the week.
^Note 7 :   Prior to the planned live eviction on Day 27, the viewing public voted to offer the coaches the opportunity to become HouseGuests. Each coach individually entered the Diary Room and was presented with a reset button. By pressing the reset button the coach accepted the offer to return, if a coach did not press the reset button that meant the coach declined the offer. By accepting the offer the planned eviction would be canceled, the coaches would become full HouseGuests and Shane would be eligible to compete for the next Head of Household competition. If all the coaches declined the offer, previously evicted HouseGuests would be given the opportunity to re-enter the House and the eviction would continue as planned. Only one vote was required by one coach to reset the game and allow the coaches to enter the game.

Television ratings

# Air Date United States Source
Households
(rating/share)
18-49
(rating/share)
Viewers
(millions)
Rank
(timeslot)
Rank
(night)
1 Thursday, July 12 4.4/8 2.6/8 7.18 1 1 [20][21]
2 Sunday, July 15 3.7/7 2.3/7 6.21 1 1 [22][23]
3 Wednesday, July 18 3.5/6 2.0/7 5.78 1 1 (Tie) [24][25]
4 Thursday, July 19 3.8/6 2.2/7 6.27 1 2 [26][27]
5 Sunday, July 22 3.3/6 2.0/6 5.37 2 4 [28][29]
6 Wednesday, July 25 3.6/6 2.0/7 5.77 1 2 [30][31]
7 Thursday, July 26 3.7/6 2.2/7 6.00 2 3 [32][33]
8 Sunday, July 29 3.1/5 1.9/5 5.11 2 3 [34][35]
9 Wednesday, August 1 3.4/6 2.0/6 5.40 2 2 [36][37]
10 Thursday, August 2 3.3/5 2.0/5 5.46 2 3 [38][39]
11 Sunday, August 5 3.5/6 2.1/6 5.72 2 3 [40][41]
12 Wednesday, August 8 4.4

Controversy

Willie Hantz was expelled from the Big Brother house on Day 14 after head butting fellow HouseGuest Joe, who had made comments in retaliation to comments made by Willie. Moments before the incident with Joe, Willie told everyone that he would do anything to get himself removed before the actual live eviction that week. Willie proceeded to throw food at HouseGuest Janelle and call other female HouseGuests explicit names, before ending his rampage with the headbutt incident. He was immediately called into the Diary Room and expelled from the game. Minutes later the remaining HouseGuests were informed by producer Allison Grodner that Willie had been permanently removed from the game and the game would continue as normal.

References

  1. ^ "'Big Brother 14' premiere date and more CBS summer programming - Zap2it". Blog.zap2it.com. April 24, 2012. Retrieved August 8, 2012.
  2. ^ Sperling, Daniel (September 14, 2011). "Big Brother renewed by CBS". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  3. ^ "Big Brother Season 14 Is A Go".
  4. ^ "Big Brother 14 Casting". CBS. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  5. ^ "Big Brother UK Auditions". Endemol UK. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  6. ^ "How To Apply To Big Brother". CBS. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  7. ^ a b "Big Brother 14 Eligibility Requirements". CBS. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  8. ^ Scheffler, Brian. "Big Brother 14 Semi-Finalists Have Been Notified". Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  9. ^ Scheffler, Brian. "Big Brother "Super Sized" Commercial Touts 'Most HouseGuests Ever'". Retrieved June 18, 2012.
  10. ^ Whitfield, Matt. "'Big Brother': An Exclusive Look Inside the Season 14 House". Yahoo! TV. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
  11. ^ Sperling, Daniel (September 14, 2011). "Big Brother renewed by CBS". Digital Spy. Archived from the original on March 27, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  12. ^ "Big Brother Season 14 Is A Go".
  13. ^ a b Pickard, Ann (August 19, 2009). "Why is Big Brother so big in the US?". Guardian.co.uk. London. Retrieved May 25, 2010. {{cite news}}: Check |authorlink= value (help); External link in |authorlink= (help)
  14. ^ a b "Episode Four". Big Brother 11. Season 11. Episode 1. July 16, 2009. 33:20 minutes in. CBS. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ Dehnart, Andy (February 12, 2008). "Cast member leaves Big Brother 9 house". Reality Blurred. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  16. ^ "'Big Brother 11' Addresses Chima's Expulsion". CBS News. Associated Press. August 19, 2009. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  17. ^ Powell, John (August 23, 2003). "'Big Brother' twist unveiled". JAM! Showbiz. Retrieved May 25, 2010.
  18. ^ "CBS Big Brother 14 Cast First Look! (VIDEO)". Retrieved July 4, 2012.
  19. ^ a b "Cast Bios for the CBS Primetime Reality Show "Big Brother"". CBS. Retrieved 05 July 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  20. ^ Bibel, Sara (July 13 2012). "Thursday Final Ratings: 'Wipeout' Adjusted Up; 'Rookie Blue' Adjusted Down". TV By the Numbers. Retrieved July 13 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  21. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Big Brother' premiere carries CBS to victory Thursday". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 13 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  22. ^ Bibel, Sara (July 17 2012). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up". TV By the Numbers. Retrieved July 17 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  23. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Big Brother' tops Sunday for CBS as ABC and FOX split demo title". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 16 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  24. ^ Bibel, Sara (19 July 2012). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'America's Got Talent' and 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up". TV By the Numbers. Retrieved July 19 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  25. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Big Brother' and 'America's Got Talent' the best of a slow Wednesday". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 19 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  26. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (20 July 2012). "Thursday Final Ratings: 'Wipeout' and 'Duets' Adjusted Up". TV By the Numbers. Retrieved July 20 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  27. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Big Bang Theory' and 'Big Brother' give CBS a Thursday win". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 20 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  28. ^ Bibel, Sara (July 24, 2012). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'The Bachelorette', 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up; 'After The Final Rose', 'Teen Choice Awards' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved July 24, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  29. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Bachelorette' finale gives ABC a Sunday win, Teen Choice Awards not big with grownups". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 23 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  30. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (July 26, 2012). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up; 'The CLIOS: World's Best Commercials' Adjusted Down". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved July 26, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  31. ^ Harper, Jen. "TV ratings: 'Big Brother' holds steady and 'America's Got Talent' up for Wednesday". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 26 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  32. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (July 27, 2012). "TV Ratings Thursday: 'Wipeout' Hits Summer High, 'Saving Hope' Up, 'Take Me Out' & 'Big Brother' Stagnant + '3' Preview". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved July 27, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  33. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: 'Wipeout' tops 'Big Brother' Thursday and '3' has a weak debut". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 27 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  34. ^ Bibel, Sara (July 30, 2012). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up, Plus Final Olympics Numbers". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved July 30, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  35. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: Olympics pull more huge numbers Sunday". Zap 2 It. Retrieved July 30 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  36. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (August 2, 2012). "Wednesday Final Ratings: 'Big Brother' Adjusted Up + Final Olympics Ratings". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved August 2, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  37. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: Olympics dominate Wednesday, running ahead of 2008". Zap 2 It. Retrieved August 2 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  38. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (August 3, 2012). "Thursday Final Ratings: 'Big Brother' & 'Wipeout' Adjusted Up + Final Olympics Ratings". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved August 3, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  39. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: Michael Phelps and Gabby Douglas power another Olympics win for NBC". Zap 2 It. Retrieved August 3 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  40. ^ Bibel, Sara (August 7, 2012). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'Extreme Makeover: Weight Loss Edition' Adjusted Up Plus Final Olympics Numbers". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved August 7, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  41. ^ Porter, Rick. "TV ratings: Olympics still dominant Sunday but down from last week". Zap 2 It. Retrieved August 6 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)

External links

34°8′40.12″N 118°23′20.71″W / 34.1444778°N 118.3890861°W / 34.1444778; -118.3890861