View Full Version : CBS Announces "Big Brother: All-Stars" Cast Members


JamesG
08-06-2020, 02:22 AM
CBS Announces "Big Brother: All-Stars" Cast Members for Season 22 of Reality Game Show
by Alexandra Del Rosario
August 5, 2020


Sixteen "Big Brother" alumni returned to the house tonight for the show’s upcoming "All-Stars" season. CBS announced the cast of returning fan favorites, past winners and notable personalities Wednesday.

Season 22 premieres Wednesday at 9 p.m. on CBS. Following the season kick-off, the series will air Sunday, Wednesday and Thursday from 8 to 9 p.m.



Nicole Franzel (Winner Big Brother 18)
Ian Terry (Winner Big Brother 14)
Da’Vonne Rogers (Big Brother 17 and 18)
Kaysar Ridha (Big Brother 6 and 7)
Janelle Pierzina (Big Brother 6,7,14)
Dani Briones (Big Brother 8 and 13)
Bayleigh Dayton (Big Brother 20)
Enzo Palumbo (Big Brother 12)
Cody Calafiore (Big Brother 16)
Kevin Campbell (Big Brother 11)
Christmas Abbott (Big Brother 19)
David Alexander (Big Brother 21)
Keesha Smith (Big Brother 10)
Memphis Garrett (Big Brother 10)
Nicole Anthony (Big Brother 21)
Tyler Crispen (Big Brother 20)

https://deadline.com/2020/08/big-brother-all-stars-cast-members-1203005575/

TMC
08-07-2020, 12:28 AM
Big Brother: All-Stars is looking good so far, especially compared to recent "awful" seasons (https://www.realityblurred.com/realitytv/2020/08/bb22-all-stars-premiere-recap/)

"One reason I have returned to Big Brother over the years is with hope that it can improve, as a competition and as a television show, and become its best self," says Andy Dehnart. "The summer seasons the last few years have almost immediately been awful, from outbreaks of racism (including from producers, who designed a twist last year that just opened the door wide open to implicit bias), to the reliance on ludicrously imbalanced twists. But the live two-hour premiere of Big Brother 22 showed no signs of what I’ve grown accustomed to being disappointed by. It was a strong premiere, with indications that this may actually become a grown-up, enjoyable season of Big Brother. Sure, it had some of what we’ve come to love from the show—technical glitches, dead air, dumb twists—but there were no mentions of showmances, no cloying studio audience, and no eruptions of racism."

ALSO:


Big Brother: All-Stars premiere dominates Wednesday night with 3.7 million total viewers, down 23% from last year (https://variety.com/2020/tv/news/big-brother-season-22-premiere-tv-ratings-1234727577/)
Season 19 winner Josh Martinez may have been dropped from Big Brother: All-Stars over a false positive coronavirus test (https://www.tmz.com/2020/08/06/big-brother-josh-martinez-positive-covid-test-axed-from-all-star-season/)
Read an oral history of Big Brother Season 1 (https://ew.com/tv/big-brother-season-1-oral-history/): "The whole thing felt very Biosphere 2," says Julie Chen, who adds: "The reviews of me were not good. But the ratings were decent enough, and they thought if we changed some rules and have American producers take over, it's worth (renewing). I just had to tap my inner Chenbot and make it my brand. By season 3 I found my way and the body glitter aisle. The rest is history."
Big Brother: All-Stars kicks off with locked door snafu (https://toofab.com/2020/08/05/big-brother-all-stars-kicks-off-live-with-unfair-challenge-technical-problems/)
A second Big Brother: All-Stars season makes sense after recent seasons were marred by ugly incidents (https://ew.com/tv/big-brother-all-stars-julie-chen-cbs/)