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"Big Brother": What to do when there is no proper winner? | Israel today

2020-04-05T12:19:16.849Z


While the network is raving in complaints about the Tikva win, Big Brother is wondering which of the finals really deserved TV


While the network is raging with complaints and complaints about Tikva's win in the tenth season of reality, Big Brother is wondering which of the finals really deserved to win and comes to bleak conclusions

  • Big Brother Finals // Screenshot

Jubilees seem to have passed since the first episode of The Big Brother, where all the participants in the program, confident of their victory, marched toward what would be their home for the next hundred days. It seems as if it's only been two weeks since it happened. Time runs when isolated.

The grand finale, the "most surprising" they promised us, included a crowd that was present for a few minutes on screens when they needed it, then disappeared into a black wasteland. Maybe it's better that way. When applause is needed - we will return it, but in the middle, when the facilitators speak, it is preferable without intermediate readings.

A look at the finals - Asif, Odelia, Tikva, Jordan and Capricorns - left a lot of deliberation about the choice of the preferred winner. None of them really made me want to vote for him, no one attracted my attention in a particularly positive way. If it were possible to vote for this country, I would vote for him. The kind and kind guy, who remains a comforting and cheerful light beam even during a hard corona attack, who knows how to compare a sad, sympathetic and yet hopeful future (and told Bar-Zohar, who interviewed him after the finale, "Yaeli, you are so beautiful" , And made me feel puddled on the floor). If a war breaks out, I'd better watch this country accelerate me to drink a glass of water, than any other Nachman Shai in the world.

Fifth place: Odelia

Although she did the unbelievable and came as new to the finals, we didn't really expect her to win. What to do, the world belongs to veterans. Good heart and hatred of contention is a positive thing (though, less so in "Big Brother"), but singing, the screaming vocals that made us bleed our fingers when we clicked "Mayotte," with no ability or willingness to consider the other tenants, probably did its thing anyway. And of course: screen time. She didn't do too many dramas, so she was last forgotten in the quintet.

Fourth place: Capricorn

It is true that he has learned to take tools off the table, which is very cute and no one will refuse to admit that he "has a good heart," but it is so hard for us to vote for someone so tactless (in good faith, and still does) that repeats the same perplexing intrusive questions even though it makes clear To me, that's enough, and let's face it - who really knows nothing about anything. How did he even get to the quintet? This is definitely a good question, which I still ponder.

Third place: Asif

If there was a reasonable candidate for winning anyway, this is it. It's true that he had a few moments "Where's the camera now?" And "let's try to kindle this quarrel," but he quickly realized where the wind was blowing and seemed to have stabilized where he was presenting his true, nice, supportive and lonely self. Yes, even the fact that he didn't really have any good friends and that he was a little pushed to be around people made us like him more. If he was a little less fur, he might have won.

Second place: Jordan

As I wrote before, Jordan was the one who made the biggest change (some might say the most fake, but that can be debated). She came in as a stingy, stingy bully, but her relationship with Lior did her no good and brought her down socially, causing her to converge within herself and undergo a process from which she emerged calm, positive and supportive. Apparently, though, we don't like to vote for such types, do we?

First place: Hope

Hope was one of the candidates I bet they would win, in the first column of the season. She entered the fireplace full of humor, particularly amusing and poignant, but unlike Jordan, her relationship with Lior greatly enhanced her self-confidence, which made us also see her less nice sides, such as theft of food and cigarettes, self-testimony of "I don't clean and still love me "And more blatant behavior that we didn't see at first. Still, you can't say that she wasn't the most prominent character of the season. We experienced every possible emotion with her: we loved her, laughed at her, got angry with her and yelled at the television "don't go there" as she opened the door to the basement where the killer is. And just for that alone, for all the emotions she managed to get out of us, while other tenants got a maximum of "haha" or "okay", she deserved it forever. In the end, contrary to the phrase she said, "always kill the black," this time she won, and the giant.

Disappointments

Who really should have won, for me, was Ruth. She was simply wrong when speaking in words that were more than two syllables, causing some tenants to think she was patronizing them, and representing feminism in the face of those who believed they didn't need it today, "because there is complete equality."

The panic

Watch the "Corona Horror" video that aired on the finals and think "It really looks like Pike." Imagine what happened to the occupants in those moments. Too bad they didn't make it longer, huh?

Hope

Next season we expect Arab, gay and ultra-Orthodox, because there are some clichés that this season didn't answer, and it's a shame. And without a magic mirror, please. In your life, without a mirror.

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Source: israelhayom

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