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Old 27-03-2005, 10:59 PM #1
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Default \'Billion Dollar Game\' - Extracts from Peter Bazalgette\'s book

Peter Bazalgette, the man who brought Big Brother to the UK, has written a book called 'Billion Dollar Game'.

There are extracts in The Times.

Quote:
Peter Bazalgette

The man who brought reality television to Britain tells of the struggle to get the biggest and brashest show of them all screened in the face of scepticism — and outrage

“YOU can’t do that. You can’t do it, no you can’t. This is awful.” That was the response Big Brother’s creator got when he first mentioned the television format to his closest colleague.

“Whose was the sick mind which infected all the others? Because this does seem to be an infectious disease — worse than BSE.” That was how Germans responded to Big Brother when it appeared in their country. The man behind this outrage, warned off by his peers and condemned as sick, was John de Mol. One moment he was a successful television producer in Dutch television, the next he was internationally demonised. His idea earned charges of Nazism in one country, caused a constitutional crisis in another and a confrontation between Islam and the CIA in a third.

John de Mol had created Big Brother merely as an entertainment show to make money. As it happens it did that too, in prodigious quantities. In 1999, after the first series of Big Brother had only been on air for two weeks, John de Mol was made an offer that rated his production company at more than £1 billion. He was visiting the world television market at Cannes, in the south of France. The publishing and television combine Pearson came on the line. They offered to merge their TV company with de Mol’s. They were even agreeing to de Mol’s own valuation of his business. This would create a vast, multibillion-dollar, international company of which he would own a full 25 per cent. A rich deal by any standards.

At this moment de Mol looked up. At the front of his company’s sales stand he could see a queue of television executives forming. At 10am it was a strangely early hour for a species that rarely emerged before noon. They were all desperate to secure the rights to Big Brother for their territories, even though it had yet to prove itself in its first country of transmission, Holland.
Rest of extract 1- http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFr...542063,00.html

Second Extract
Quote:
'Now Holland had to decide which of the two housemates would be evicted, splitting Dutch television's Romeo and Juliet'

Concluding: extracts from Billion Dollar Game track the rise of Big Brother Peter Bazalgette tells how the concept, initially received with scepticism, finally won over audiences and became a television phenomenon

THERE are three crucial factors in the production of Big Brother: casting, casting and casting. While buyers queued up to buy the format in Cannes and lawyers’ letters clogged up Endemol’s fax machines, in Holland the very first Big Brother housemates were getting to know each other.

Paul Romer and Hummie van der Tonnekreek, the producers, had taken care to recruit several young, single participants. Among them were Bart Spring in ’t Veld, blond, muscular and newly discharged from the army. So was the hairdresser Sabine Wendel an attractive “girl next door”. There was also Martin Jonkman, an air-conditioning salesman also in his early twenties.

From the second week it became clear that both Martin and Bart were interested in Sabine. Bart was happy to take his time, but Martin went in for the kill. He led Sabine into the garden where he felt insulated from the cameras. In a whisper that he imagined the personal microphones would not pick up he told her a “secret”.

Sabine recalls it now with a smile: “He said, I have to tell you something. I think Bart is gay because he touched my feet.” The housemates soon became irritated by Martin’s puppy love and nominated him for eviction at the first opportunity. Now matters were in the hands of the viewers, who had seen Martin’s perfidy. Martin had been exposed as Big Brother’s first villain and was voted out. This was real-life soap, where the viewer could participate in the unfolding drama. And the audience’s compulsion to vote was developing a valuable new revenue stream — Endemol shared part of the revenue from each call.

With Martin out of the house, the field was clear for Bart: “After two weeks we discovered each other. We figured you need someone you can do things with.” Sabine was agreeable: “At first we were friendly. It grew to something like love. You have no idea what’s going on outside. We said to ourselves — we think nobody’s watching this.”

Bart and Sabine’s romance became a front-page story in the popular newspapers. The ratings, after three weeks, began to rise. In the two key age groups — 13 to 19 and 20 to 34 — Veronica (the television channel) was often getting shares of between 30 per cent and 40 per cent. These were extraordinary figures, matched by an unprecedented seven million hits on the Big Brother website. Advertisers, seeing the growing interest, started to book slots. And from this point, Endemol finally knew that they not only had a hit on their hands, but also a profitable one.

(John) De Mol’s (the Big Brother creator) intuition and capacity to take huge risks had once again paid off: “When the romance between Bart and Sabine happened it really exploded. All of a sudden you saw interviews with people who said this is brilliant. Professors were on TV praising it. The most critical newspapers changed their tune. As with Elvis Presley in the 1950s, we were moving from being the devil himself to being establishment.”

De Telegraaf, which had greedily followed the Big Brother controversy, devoted eight breathless pages of its Saturday colour magazine to the phenomenon. Soon afterwards Holland’s Minister for Culture declared that Big Brother was the best thing that had happened to Dutch TV in decades.

Once a relationship develops in the Big Brother house there is a narrative. Viewers turn the programme on day after day to find out what will happen next. In Holland everyone was waiting for Bart and Sabine’s first kiss. But the other housemates began to resent the intimacy of these two lovers.

After five weeks they took their revenge, inadvertently setting up an extraordinary denouement. They each went into the isolated “diary room” to make their confidential nominations for eviction. One by one they voted for Bart and Sabine. Now Holland had to decide which of the two would be evicted, splitting Dutch television’s Romeo and Juliet.

Bart or Sabine? All week Dutch viewers voted, on an unprecedented scale. More than a million phone calls were made. The choice they had to make was described, in retrospect, by Sabine with absolute frankness: “People had to choose between a nice boy and a bitchy girl. It’s not a difficult choice.”

As the week progressed Bart and Sabine had no idea how the vote was going. On their final night together the other housemates, as much out of guilt as sympathy, offered them the chance to be alone. The house had two bedrooms. They transferred mattresses from one to the other and congregated there.

Late in the evening they were kissing on the sofa in the main room. Bart suggested they go to bed. Sabine hesitated. They seemed to be making their way to separate bedrooms. They embraced again. She then succumbed and followed Bart to the empty bedroom. They took off their clothes in the dark. The images were picked up clearly by Big Brother’s infrared cameras: two very attractive twenty somethings, each with good bodies. They climbed into bed. More than three million people were watching — one in five of the population Dutch newspapers had been simultaneously condemning and encouraging the prospect of sex in the Big Brother house. Privately, they were now disappointed by how real the scene was. Bart and Sabine never revealed what actually happened. But the production team were in little doubt. Most people were swept along by the story and charmed by the tenderness between the couple. “People were more worked up about the condition of the chickens in the garden!” said the director.
Rest of second extract - http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFr...542063,00.html
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Old 09-04-2005, 10:02 AM #2
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Here's pictures of Nick, Jade, Craig, Nadia, Marco and Victor at the launch party for this book.

http://www.wireimage.com/GalleryList...=109834&nbc1=1

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Old 09-04-2005, 10:24 AM #3
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Thanks James may be worth a read!
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Old 10-04-2005, 08:07 AM #4
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Another article here from Scotland On Sunday
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