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"Big Brother": Honestly? It was a disturbing episode, not to mention a creepy one Israel today

2021-08-26T22:13:33.992Z


The ability to let tenants talk to photos of themselves as children, using Deep Pike technology, was supposed to produce tear-jerking scenes - but in practice it was difficult to watch


The sentimentalists in "Big Brother" viewers will tell you that last night (Wednesday) we witnessed one of the most exciting moments in the show's history.

Hell, they would say, we watched no less than four of them!

This happened when Oren, Titi, Tamir and Sarit got to meet the young people, and have an intimate closing circle conversation with them (compared to 12.4 percent rating).

These were tear-jerking moments, they will tell you, in which four of the remaining six occupants of the house got to talk to themselves in the boy and girl version, tell them what they have been through since, what they should beware of and who the person they have become. Tamir, for example, told the boy that he was striving for a relationship with a man. "Walla?" Tamir, the one-digit age, asked. "Walla," the older Tamir replied. Wait, little Tamir, because what the great Tamir really hides from you is that today he contains within him all the total anxieties and neuroticism that a person can develop.

But since we are opaque and hard-hearted cynics, and even though some of the moments there were indeed challenging to watch (where are you, Leah Griner, when you really need to be lightened up?), We chose to look at it from a more sober angle, and see in front of us what was there big: adults talking to a picture Stills of themselves as children, accompanied by Deep-Pike technology.

The crux of the technological developments of recent years.

Why the hell would anyone really want to talk face to face with the kid who was?

Isn't that the stuff that makes up nightmares that later turn into Korean horror movies?

And why is the first thing that Titi chose to tell the girl's version that she was that today she has, that is, she, that is, they - more eyebrows?

Titi and the tears,

So yes, there were moments here that felt like a marble in the throat, even if the way they were squeezed out of the tenants involved the use of disturbing means of technology.

Putting aside the pain of loss and illness that some have told about it (what to do, it's a satirical column here), we've also discovered some surprising things from their virtually moving mouths of the childhood photos of the fireplace house occupants.

Sarit and Static, for example, have known each other since they were little, but the real discovery of her psychological encounter with herself was the fact that Sarit is able to talk and carry more than a minute of screen time, which is about the cumulative time she’s had all this season.

Too bad, we actually seem to have missed someone interesting there.

Tamir in front of his portrait as a child,

"I had horses, I had dogs, I had Naka, a soul," Oren revealed to us in this episode, and somehow made the incredible transition from the man who forced the leader of the free world to take a selfie, to a man who was very easy to like in the fireplace. Seriously now, six days before the final it is almost inconceivable to think that A. Hazan is one of the most empathetic characters, in a house that on the nerves of its occupants he played with such skill. He also sums up the experience that is about to end for him with the exact phrase "everyone I fought with this season is gone." The secret, as Oren revealed to us, is to drive almost everyone who lives with you crazy, and win the hearts of the viewers in the end. Oren, if you were a successful tactician in politics as you are in reality, we would let you manage the corona crisis.

Source: israelhayom

All news articles on 2021-08-26

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