Grande Fratello | |
---|---|
Created by | John de Mol |
Directed by | Fosco Gasperi (2000–2001) Fabio Calvi (2003–2004, 2006–2009) Sergio Colabona (2009–2012, 2014–2015) Alessio Pollacci (2018–2019, 2023–present) Marco Fuortes (2018–2019, 2023–present) |
Presented by | Daria Bignardi (2000–2001) Barbara D'Urso (2003–2004, 2018–2019) Alessia Marcuzzi (2006–2012, 2014–2015) Alfonso Signorini (2023–present) |
Country of origin | Italy |
Original language | Italian |
No. of series | 17 |
No. of episodes | 282 (lives shows) |
Production | |
Running time | 190-220 min (approx.) |
Production company | Endemol Shine Italy |
Original release | |
Network | Canale 5 (main show, 2000–present) Italia 1 (daily recaps; 2014–present) Stream TV (live; 2000–2003) Sky (live; 2004, 2008–2009) Mediaset Premium (live; 2006–2015) Mediaset Extra (live; 2018–present) La5 (live; 2010–present) |
Release | 14 September 2000 – present |
Related | |
Grande Fratello VIP |
Grande Fratello is the Italian version of the reality television franchise Big Brother. Begun in September 2000, it has gone on to become a cultural phenomenon in Italy. There have been twenty-two completed seasons as of 2023, sixteen regular seasons and seven celebrity seasons.[1]
Format
Based on the original Dutch version created by Endemol, the show sees a number of "housemates", divided by gender, social backgrounds and geographical locations, locked up together in a house, where the viewing public can watch them twenty-four hours a day, and vote them out of the house as they choose.[2][3]
The housemates can visit the "confessional" at any time during the day, either to talk to psychologists if they need to, talk to "Big Brother", or to nominate.
The title is inspired by the George Orwell novel 1984. The novel tells of a Big Brother, head of the totalitarian state of Oceania that constantly monitors its inhabitants by the camera in an attempt to suppress their free will. The tag line of the novel is "Big Brother is watching you", which inspired the show, as it is Big Brother who now has total control over the situation in the house.
The housemates live in a house 24 hours a day, bugged by numerous cameras and microphones which capture their every move. Every week the housemates participate in tasks that determine their food budget for that week, or could even affect that week's nominations. The overall goal is to be the final surviving housemate and claim the prize fund. A PlayStation game based on this version was released in 2003.
Series details
Seasons | Launch date | Finale date | Days | Housemates | Winner | Presenter | Reporter | Opinionist | Direction | Study | Grand prize | Average viewers (in millions) | Average share | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
External | Social | Home | Study | |||||||||||||
1 | 14 September 2000 | 21 December 2000 | 99 | 10 | Cristina Plevani | Daria Bignardi | Marco Liorni | none | none | Alessio Pollacci | Fosco Gasperi | Theater 1 of Cinecittà, Rome | ₤250,000,000[N 1] | 9.82 | 37.00% | |
2 | 20 September 2001 | 20 December 2001 | 92 | 16 | Flavio Montrucchio | 8.00 | 32.74% | |||||||||
3 | 30 January 2003 | 8 May 2003 | 99 | Floriana Secondi | Barbara D'Urso | Fabio Calvi | Theater 5 of Cinecittà, Rome | €241,000[N 2] | 33.15% | |||||||
4 | 22 January 2004 | 6 May 2004 | 106 | 15 | Serena Garitta | €300,000 | 8.44 | 33.89% | ||||||||
5 | 23 September 2004 | 2 December 2004 | 71 | 17 | Jonathan Kashanian | €250,000 | 6.86 | 30.70% | ||||||||
6 | 19 January 2006 | 27 April 2006 | 99[N 3] | 18 | Augusto De Megni | Alessia Marcuzzi | Palastudio of Cinecittà, Rome | €900,000[N 4] | 6.51 | 31.68% | ||||||
7 | 18 January 2007 | 19 April 2007 | 92 | 19 | Milo Coretti | €500,000 | 5.57 | 25.80% | ||||||||
8 | 21 January 2008 | 21 April 2008 | 21 | Mario Ferretti | Alfonso Signorini | 5.46 | 25.19% | |||||||||
9 | 12 January 2009 | 20 April 2009 | 99 | 23 | Ferdi Berisa | none | €300,000 | 6.63 | 29.17% | |||||||
10 | 26 October 2009 | 8 March 2010 | 134 | 26 | Mauro Marin | Sergio Colabona | €250,000 | 6.16 | 27.83% | |||||||
11 | 18 October 2010 | 18 April 2011 | 183[N 5] | 35 | Andrea Cocco | €300,000[N 2] | 5.43 | 23.55% | ||||||||
12 | 24 October 2011 | 1 April 2012 | 161[N 6] | 36 | Sabrina Mbarek | €240,000[N 2] | 3.85 | 17.40% | ||||||||
13 | 3 March 2014 | 26 May 2014 | 85 | 17[N 7] | Mirco Petrilli | Manuela Arcuri[N 8] | Cesare Cunaccia[N 8] | €250,000 | 4.12 | 19.15% | ||||||
Vladimir Luxuria[N 9] | ||||||||||||||||
14 | 24 September 2015 | 10 December 2015 | 78 | 19 | Federica Lepanto | Chiara Tortorella | Cristiano Malgioglio | Claudio Amendola | €200,000[N 2] | 3.52 | 18.74% | |||||
15 | 17 April 2018 | 4 June 2018 | 49 | 17 | Alberto Mezzetti | Barbara D'Urso | none | Simona Izzo | Marco Fuortes | Alessio Pollacci | €100,000 | 3.88 | 23.25% | |||
16 | 8 April 2019 | 10 June 2019 | 64 | 19 | Martina Nasoni | Iva Zanicchi | 3.25 | 19.94% | ||||||||
17 | 11 September 2023 | present | 33 | Alfonso Signorini | Rebecca Staffelli | Cesara Buonamici | Voxson studies, Rome |
Popularity
The program has broken several records, including exceeding a 50% share of the ratings (with peaks of 60% during season one). The fifth season recorded a decline in ratings which was put down to both the competition from rival reality television shows and the season's poor and hasty production. By the ninth season, the show recorded increasing ratings which took the program back to its original popularity.
Despite a decline in viewing figures over the years (especially in the twelfth season), Grande Fratello is still one of the most successful reality shows in Italy.
References
- Annotations
- Sources
- ↑ "Grande Fratello VIP: trash, esperimento sociologico e politicamente (s)corretto". ilgiornaleditalia.it.
- ↑ "La scienza del Grande Fratello (e degli altri reality show)". Focus.it.
- ↑ "Se la realtà è peggiore del Grande Fratello". corriere.it.