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Macie Lightfoot
19-04-2013, 06:54 PM
Making a thread for interviews, mainly because I found Peter and Alec's interviews with Murtz and they're asshats


It’s safe to say that I was not the biggest fan of Alec Beall. I thought that the Big Brother Canada contestant was not himself during the show and ruined his game by attempting to use too many of the strategies he had seen on the U.S. version of the show. I thought that Alec’s attempts to conjure up the showmance strategy that Chilltown employed on Big Brother All-Stars was appalling, as was his treatment of Topaz who had his back the whole way through. I believed that his confessionals were some of the most coerced in reality television history. I also thought that he gave himself far too much credit. Suffice to say that I also held a grudge because he was chiefly responsible for AJ’s exit (which I am sure he will now admit was the sole cause for his elimination from the game). I had the chance to catch up with Alec after he became the third jury member and asked him if he regretted not playing his own game rather than a mix of the ones he has seen on Big Brother previously. Check it out!

Murtz Jaffer: “The Shield” is an obvious wrestling reference and I am curious to know why you chose to go with it rather than going with something original, perhaps referencing Vancouver or something.

Alec Beall: Hey AJ’s friend! I’m super sorry about the vote and I wish I could take it back. I watched your show before I got in here and I love it. I’m a fan. AJ misses you.

I believe that I came up with the symbol, but at the time, I didn’t know it was a wresting thing. Peter told me it comes from a wrestler named CM Punk. I just threw it up. The name though came from Peter. He is an obsessive fan of Big Brother, so in his preparation to be on the show, Peter took notes on player’s strategies and plotted and planned out what all the greats had done. He then formulated a strategy which he called the Sheyld. He said we were shielding others from each other and those against us. It was all very confusing and I found it hilarious! We would shield ourselves from their attack. The name didn’t really make a whole lot of sense to me – in fact I always said I would never name my alliance.

Slight correction in the spelling of Shield It’s Sheyld. And “You may ask why: but we ask, Why not, bro?”

MJ: That also leads me to my next question. On the show, you kept trying to be someone else and it seemed to me like you wanted to be the Canadian version of other U.S. players. The Sheyld looked like your attempt at Chilltown. You wore a shirt that said that the only person who could judge you was Will. You quoted Boogie’s reference to Richard Hatch in the icebreaker competition. You even thought about hosting Alec’s Last Supper to save yourself (which I assume was a nod to Dan’s Funeral on Big Brother 14). That’s not to mention your alter-ego of Ricardo. My question is who is the real Alec and do you feel like you could have gotten farther if you had just played as yourself?

AB: I have a tattoo that says “Dwarves standing on the shoulders of giants see farther than the giants themselves.” My strategy in the game was to pay homage to all the former greats while adding my own strategic nuance. I grew up watching the show and the real Alec was shaped by watching these guys. My role model is Will Kirby and if you see a bit of him in me, that’s the greatest thing I could ever hope for and I thank you, Murtz, for the compliment.

MJ: AJ is a good friend of mine and I was hoping you could take me back to that instant eviction and why you chose to ignore Topaz’s wishes. If The Sheyld are two of the smartest players in the house, why would you keep one of the stronger physical threats in the house in Andrew (who went on to evict you even after you saved him) instead of a floater who would never put you up or win anything to ever even put you in danger. Do you regret the decision?

AB: Absolutely Murtz. It was the one decision that lost me the game. I knew sitting there that the decision would cost me the grand prize and, more importantly, the title of winner. I sat there and thought, this decision would cost me my game and I did it anyway. Not because I disliked AJ, I like him, but I had promised Andrew 4 days earlier that if it came to him and AJ on the block, I would keep him over AJ. It was a dumb promise. I should never have made it and I regretted it instantly however you know better than I do Murtz, this show is for the fans. I could have kept a floater around and skated to the final two, however I believe that Andrew had the potential to do something big in the house… either for me or against me, and I had to see what that was. His time had not yet come. And as I sit here, I wonder if Andrew will ever step up and fulfill this presumption.

MJ: Thanks Alec.

Macie Lightfoot
19-04-2013, 06:55 PM
I have made no secret of the fact that I was not a fan of The Sheyld on Big Brother Canada this season. I thought that both Alec Beall and Peter Brown thought that their strategies were better than they were and that instead of their confidence coming off as charm like it did for Dr. Will Kirby, it reeked of an unnecessary arrogance. With that being said, I cannot deny that both players definitely made the show infinitely more interesting and that part of the reason the Northern version of Big Brother has been so successful is because you just couldn’t tune away from seeing whether The Sheyld was successful or not. For the majority of this season, it seemed like Peter Brown had this game in the palm of his hand. He avoided the block every week and it was amazing to see how no one saw him as a threat at all. In fact, he was even one of my pre-season picks. After forming The Sheyld with Alec, he also was the brains behind the Quattro alliance with Emmett Blois and Tom Plant and had a secret pact with Liza Stinton going as well. Really, it was almost as if Peter had some kind of arrangement with everyone in the house. Slowly though, things began to unravel. It started with The Sheyld’s terrible idea to keep Andrew in the house over AJ, which alienated them from Topaz. This was followed by Peter listening to Emmett and not using the veto that he won last week to save Topaz which would have forced the break-up of the East Coast alliance. In the end, his loyalty to Emmett is almost certainly what cost him the win. I caught up with Peter the day after he was evicted to discuss what happened. Check it out!

Murtz Jaffer: While I have loved Big Brother Canada this season, I would have definitely preferred to see the contestants play their own game as I feel like using moves from the U.S. version actually was detrimental in terms of overthinking things. The whole notion of “oh Will or Dan wouldn’t have done that” and so on… With that being said there is certainly something to be said for having so many U.S. versions to draw from. I know you obviously prepared a lot for the show and in hindsight, if you could go back, would it be better to draw from previous versions or just play your own game and adapt to the players that playing against you since each Big Brother house is so different?

Peter Brown: I was THE most prepared person going into the house That comes from familiarizing myself with 14 US seasons. It didn’t matter who the other 14 people in the house were. The moment I walked in there they weren’t people, they became archetypes. Their personalities become irrelevant in terms of how I would approach the competition. There was not situation I was unprepared for and that comes from the preparation that I did for a whole year before going into the house.

MJ: Alec discussed your concept of “The Sheyld” strategy where you wanted to use the other players to guard you from eviction. Can you elaborate on this?

PB: Knowing how important controlling the vote is, it was critical that Alec and I aligned ourselves with other strong houseguests and because of the way Alec and I competed, we were goofballs, our aim was for people not to take us seriously, it didn’t seem that we were threats. So if we surrounded ourselves with other strong houseguests that were threatening, people would have targeted them instead of us.

MJ: Both you and Alec came off as quite cocky which is not a dig since all of the Big Brother greats have had a chip on their should which is what made them so compelling to watch. Do you think ego had anything to do with your respective eliminations?

PB: I can’t speak for Alec, but I don’t think I had an ego in the house in terms of how other houseguests perceived me, internally speaking, my confidence came from a place of knowledge so I felt very confident in the house. If that came across as ego maniacal, it’s just because I knew what I was doing.

MJ: Thanks Peter.

Petershaw1984
19-04-2013, 10:24 PM
How long did these take you?

Macie Lightfoot
19-04-2013, 10:59 PM
copy/paste isn't all that strenuous

LemonJam
19-04-2013, 11:04 PM
I can't help but love that the self-confessed "smartest players in the game" are the ones who've made the dumbest moves of the season. Shame they had to take some great houseguests down with them. :(

JTM45
19-04-2013, 11:55 PM
What a massive pair of TWATS!!!!!
I think they both have severe personality disorders and are both their own biggest fans. Assholes! :hugesmile: