Selection of certain housemates The programme attracted criticism on 31 May for putting several vulnerable people in the Big Brother House. Pete has
Tourette syndrome. Shahbaz threatened to
take his own life on live television. He was being monitored by production team psychologists after commenting on how he intended to take his own life whilst in the house. Many of the housemates were bullying Shahbaz. He left the house on Day 6. Shahbaz admitted after leaving the house that he downplayed his mental condition during the selection process. Lea suffers from
body dysmorphic disorder; Sam has admitted to being shunned by family members because of their homosexuality and gender identity; and Nikki has suffered from
anorexia and been
sectioned in the past due to the condition.
Welsh language criticism Further criticism arose when
Welsh contestant
Glyn Wise was reprimanded for communicating in his first language,
Welsh, with fellow Welsh housemate
Imogen Thomas. Big Brother deemed this a form of 'code' and issued a warning to Glyn, who retorted "But Welsh is a
British language". Following the incident, the
Welsh Language Society complained to Channel 4, the regulator
Ofcom and
S4C. Clearly, it was no longer a problem after this as Glyn and Imogen continued to converse in Welsh. Such discussions were broadcast with English-language subtitles.
Return of ex-housemates On Day 83, four previous evictees entered the 'House Next Door' following a public vote between ten previous Housemates. Nikki received 63% of the vote, whilst Grace got 8.4%, and Lea and Mikey 7.3% each. Their presence was revealed to the other housemates and Imogen and Richard, who were up for eviction that week, joined them. Nikki was chosen by the remaining housemates to return to the
Big Brother House and become eligible to win the £100,000 prize money and Grace, Mikey and Lea left the House Next Door. This decision to allow previous evictees to become eligible to win the show was criticised.
Channel 4 received 500 complaints from viewers about this matter and Media watchdog
Ofcom confirmed that it had received over 1,000 complaints, and referred viewers to
ICSTIS. Soon after the four ex-housemates entered the House Next Door, ICSTIS released a statement confirming that it was dealing with over 2,500 complaints and launched an official investigation. On 5 October 2006, they ruled that Channel 4 had breached its code and imposed £50,000 'administrative charges'. On the day prior to the voting results being announced, however, Channel 4 stated that it still considered the vote to be a success as they had already received 400,000 votes, making it the most successful of the series. 36p from each call and 26p from each text also went to charity, raising over £250,000 for charity on the vote alone. The money was split among three charities: Shelter, The Teenage Cancer Trust and the winning housemate's chosen charity, which Pete chose as the Tourette's Association. ==References==