According
to a statement from Mnet, the show is still under evaluation and thus not part
of the upcoming programming schedule.
"At
the moment, the team is busy re-evaluating the strategic direction of Big
Brother Africa. Be assured that when it returns, it will be bigger and
better," reads the statement.
When BBA
first premiered on Sunday May 25, 2003, it shook African airwaves. For the very
first time, reality TV about Africans for Africa, was broadcasting in more than
10 countries.
Unlike now, where Africa has been abbreviated to South Africa and
Nigeria, the reality show had participants from different countries where
MultiChoice has a presence, including Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Angola, Uganda,
South Africa, Zimbabwe, Ghana and Nigeria.
The show
introduced us to eventual winner Cherise Makubale (Zambia), Cameron Stout who
visited from the Big Brother UK house and of course our own Gaetano Juuko
Kaggwa, among others.
The longest
Big Brother Africa season, the first one lasted for 106 days, yet Ugandans
enjoyed each day until it wrapped on September 7, even inspiring hit songs for
people like Bebe Cool. The show's shower hour had many glued to their TVs in
the morning, and others lounged in bars as they waited for the 'uncut'
sessions.
The show
then took a break, returning in 2007 for a second season with Maureen Namatovu
representing Uganda. The days in the house had been clipped to 98; the show
host had changed from Mark Pilgrim to Kabelo Ngakane, and it was too
predictable.
And that
would write the script for subsequent seasons; with each edition, the show's
popularity dwindled. Not even the move to double the number of housemates or
triple the cash prize saved the show. It did not help matters that the popular
shower hour had been scrapped due to an outcry from the channel's sizeable
Nigerian subscribers that even then influenced what the rest of Africa watched.
The last
time BBA got Ugandans talking was in 2013; it was the eighth season and Uganda
was represented by Urban TV and XFM presenter Charlie 'Denzel' Mwiyeretsi.
His
sense of fashion and weird dance moves aside, he was the third consecutive
Vision Group employee representing Uganda after Ernest Wasike and Kyle Duncan
Kushaba, raising questions on whether contestants were handpicked, and not a result
of auditions.
Many
believe the show had lost its way before producers even thought of
re-evaluating it and was simply riding on the success of its premiere season.
"That
season was a hit for many reasons; it was fresh and almost all contestants had
no expectations," Hannah Nakuya, who was in S4 when BBA I was on air,
says, adding that there was a surprise factor for both the audience and
contestants.
"By
the time the show came back in 2007, many of the new contestants had watched
season one and thus wanted to replicate it," she says.
Maureen
Nakate, a fan that has watched at least three of the seasons, notes that the
reason the show is not coming back was because it lost itself.
"At
the beginning, they introduced us to 12 nobodies from Africa; by the time they
came back for the seasons that followed, they were introducing us to somehow
known Africans - models, beauty pageant contestants, artistes and media
personalities."
Look at
Uganda's contestants; after Gaetano who was a law student from Makerere, subsequent
season had Namatovu, a budding designer and pageant contestant; Maurice
Mugisha, a famous model; Ernest Wasike, a radio presenter and public relations
executive; before Kyle and Denzel, both TV personalities; and the last one in
2014: a serving Miss Uganda, Stella Nantumbwe.
But other
schools of thought say the show is not coming back because of financial issues.
It is said that with dwindling ratings, the show lost advertisers and it became
hard to run an expensive show.
Wasike told
The Observer, "I think the show has failed because it failed to have a
follow- up program that would have the previous contestants be looked upon as
people that society would aspire to be.
When you are out, it's back to being in
a jungle, yet you have been put up there in public."
In his
view, people did not see the value of actually being in the house, thus the
failure to get suitable candidates. Other contestants, however, have Big
Brother to thank for transforming their lives. Gaetano was catapulted to
continental TV fame thanks to BBA.
Denzel and
Sharon O say the show was a lifesaver because of the representation package
given to each contestant. At the moment, two things are certain: a full rebrand
and strategizing of the show; if not, then the station would have killed the
goose that laid the golden eggs. For now, South Africa has had national seasons
of its own Big Brother, as has Angola. (The Observer)
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