John de Mol Jr. Participants were
John de Mol Jr., Patrick Scholtze, Bart Römer and his brother, Paul Römer. The idea called for a luxurious house with six contestants, closed for a year. The winner would receive 1,000,000
guilders. The working title was
De Gouden Kooi (
The Golden Cage) and the original concept was eventually realized as a reality show on Dutch television at the end of 2006. The format of
Big Brother was also influenced by
MTV's
The Real World, which began in 1992 and created the concept of putting strangers together for an extended period and recording the drama that ensued.
The Real World had introduced "confessions" by housemates. Another pioneering reality format, the
Swedish TV show
Expedition Robinson, which first aired in 1997 (and was produced in many other countries as was
Survivor) added to the
Real Worlds template the idea of competition, in which contestants battled to remain in the series, fighting and defeating each other (in the context of the show, not
physically) until only one remained. The idea of introducing
24/7 streaming video was influenced by websites like Jennicam.org from
Jennifer Ringley, a
Washington resident who created it in 1997 to share her activities with
Webwatchers. In development, occupancy of the house was reduced to 100 days. An existing house was abandoned in favor of a
prefabricated house. This made it possible to install "camera-cross", which allowed cameramen inside the house without being seen by the inhabitants. Originally, the idea was to produce a heavily edited weekly program, but after some experiments with the employees of the production house, the allure of
slow television was discovered and the potential for a daily program was realized.
Direction Among the series' initial directors was the future filmmaker
Tom Six, who would become renowned for his
body horror film The Human Centipede and its sequels.
Orwell lawsuit George Orwell's book
Nineteen Eighty-Four, in which
Big Brother is the all-seeing leader of a
dystopian nation, has never been acknowledged by the producers. However, the heirs of Orwell settled an agreement with
Endemol and the American TV network
CBS after
legal proceedings against the
concept in the
American version. The settlement for the lawsuit has never been publicly revealed.
Voyeurdorm lawsuit According to a
lawsuit in 2000 in a
New York federal district court,
Big Brother was homegrown in the United States. The idea, said the suit, came out of meetings in summer 1999 between
CBS executives and Voyeurdorm.com, a
Tampa,
Florida adult website of eight college-aged women. These women lived, ate, slept, studied and "sunbathed naked" under 55 cameras.
Castaway lawsuit Also in 2000, the production company
Castaway, part-owned by
Bob Geldof, sued
Endemol for theft of format in a court in
Amsterdam, saying the program was a rip-off of its
Survivor-show
(Expedition Robinson). A
lawyer listed 12 similarities to
Survivor. Endemol rejected the allegations, saying: "The genre may be the same, but the programmes are completely different, and they evolved separately. There are 20 or 30 game shows on TV and many different talk shows, but they are in the same genre, not the same programme."
Logo The
logo for
Big Brother was designed to fit the
housestyle of Dutch television station
Veronica. The wave under both names harkens back to the time that Veronica was a
pirate station, broadcasting from
international waters of
the Netherlands. The wave remained when Veronica left the
Holland Media Groep and
Big Brother was taken over by
Yorin. It showed up in the logos of
Big Brother all over the world. However, later versions of
Dutch Big Brother at
Talpa abandoned the logo and are using the eye-logo introduced with
the second series of Big Brother UK. ==Ethics and debate==