PDA

View Full Version : Global TV: House Guest exhibits more troubling behavior


Calderyon
05-07-2019, 10:08 PM
https://www.globaltv.com/shows/big-brother/articles/live-feed-spoilers-houseguest-exhibits-more-troubling-behavior/

Matthew.
05-07-2019, 10:09 PM
Houseguests who have exhibited offensive behavior in other countries have received warnings or been ejected. For example, Emily Parr, who appeared on season eight of Big Brother UK was sent home for using a racial slur to describe Charley Uchea.

.

Marsh.
05-07-2019, 10:12 PM
Not Emily Parr being dragged in a foreign country 12 years on.

sleleen
05-07-2019, 10:13 PM
Once Jack saw David, he stood up and appeared to be walking across the room mimicking a monkey or an ape.

Vile

Greg!
05-07-2019, 10:14 PM
I don’t understand why BBUS seems to be the only big brother worldwide that doesn’t properly intervene when this sort of behaviour occurs? It’s shocking

Macie Lightfoot
05-07-2019, 10:21 PM
I don’t understand why BBUS seems to be the only big brother worldwide that doesn’t properly intervene when this sort of behaviour occurs? It’s shocking

I explained it in the other thread but this show is SO RIGID with its schedule and they're so afraid to deviate from the norm that the only way you can get ejected is through physical violence (holding a knife to someone's throat, headbutting someone and throwing cornflakes at people, throwing furniture and house fixtures in a STD-fueled rampage) or completely defying production (refusing to go to the DR, covering cameras, throwing your mic in the pool, etc.)

Also, I'm pretty sure Consuela is the nickname for Kat, not Jess. So Jack is just a ****ing moron, which we all knew.

Mitchell
05-07-2019, 10:28 PM
Quite clearly troubling behaviour, surely everyone can see that?

MB.
05-07-2019, 10:36 PM
Unfortunately, the United States is built on an ingrained system of troubling behaviour values, including legal, healthcare and criminal justice systems emblematic of troubling behaviour, dating back to the Troubling Behaviour laws of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries

Rob!
06-07-2019, 12:05 AM
I explained it in the other thread but this show is SO RIGID with its schedule and they're so afraid to deviate from the norm that the only way you can get ejected is through physical violence (holding a knife to someone's throat, headbutting someone and throwing cornflakes at people, throwing furniture and house fixtures in a STD-fueled rampage) or completely defying production (refusing to go to the DR, covering cameras, throwing your mic in the pool, etc.)

Also, I'm pretty sure Consuela is the nickname for Kat, not Jess. So Jack is just a ****ing moron, which we all knew.

A tad messy that blatant racial abuse is allowed to continue but throwing a mic in the pool is considered too bang out of order to be tolerated for a second longer.

Calderyon
06-07-2019, 12:11 AM
Unfortunately, the United States is built on an ingrained system of troubling behaviour values, including legal, healthcare and criminal justice systems emblematic of troubling behaviour, dating back to the Troubling Behaviour laws of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries

The whole World today is at least partly built via troubling behaviour. From humans.

MB.
06-07-2019, 12:17 AM
The whole World today is at least partly built via troubling behaviour.

I'm not a troubling behaviour person! I don't have a troubling behaviour bone in my body!