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Statement

Channel 5 has received inquiries from viewers about the most recent series of Big Brother. In order to assist viewers, the following information is provided:

 

1. All voting during Big Brother is independently verified as the voting occurs and when it ends. Only those results which are independently verified are used in determining results which are broadcast as part of Big Brother.

 

2. Votes cast are regularly monitored to detect any unusual voting patterns or to determine whether, for instance, computer programmes have been used to implement automatic voting for particular housemates. Where there are discrepancies in voting patterns, in consultation with the independent verifier, consideration is given as to whether the votes should be included.

 

3. No votes were discarded because of voting irregularities in the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed, when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists. No voting irregularities were detected during that period.

 

4. When voting lines are open, they are regularly monitored, including by independent verifiers, to ensure that votes can be cast on behalf of any housemate up for voting. At all times during the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists, all relevant lines were open and callers were able to cast votes for whichever housemate they chose. All voting lines for housemates were open for exactly the same period; the voting line for each individual housemate opened and closed at exactly the same time as the line for any other housemate facing a public vote at the same time.

 

5. At 9.20am on August 15, the morning of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 8,018 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 9,789 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 4,945 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 8,730 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 11,237 votes ahead of Pav
        
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

 

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

 

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time. 

 

9. All of the votes and results mentioned in paragraphs 5, 6 and 7 were independently verified.

 

10. During the launch of Big Brother 2014, the viewers voted for Pauline to be given "the power" in the House. Pauline knew nothing about what reward would be given to Helen when she selected Helen for a reward. The first either Helen or Pauline or any other housemate knew about there being a "pass to the final" was when Big Brother announced to the House exactly what the reward was that Pauline had chosen Helen to receive.

 

11. Helen auditioned for Big Brother in the same way as all other applicants for a place in the Big Brother House. When she entered the House, Helen did not have an agent, a manager or any connection with either Northern & Shell or Richard Desmond.

 

12. The behaviour of all housemates is regularly monitored by Big Brother and interventions are made whenever Big Brother considers it necessary. Some interventions are informal, some are formal; some result in serious warnings. Not all of these interventions are included in the material broadcast.

 

13. In Helen’s case, the broadcasts twice showed her being reprimanded by Big Brother for her conduct (in relation to Danielle and Matthew). There were a number of further informal interventions with Helen about her conduct and during the course of the material broadcast Helen herself made reference to some of these, although these informal interventions were not themselves included in any broadcast. Informal interventions with other housemates, similarly, were not included in the material broadcast.

 

14. The Big Brother voting system remains independently verified and Big Brother is satisfied that the outcome of Big Brother 2014 was an accurate reflection of the public's decisions.

 

http://bigbrother.channel5.com/statement

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Originally Posted by MrsH:

 

 

Statement

Channel 5 has received inquiries from viewers about the most recent series of Big Brother. In order to assist viewers, the following information is provided:

 

1. All voting during Big Brother is independently verified as the voting occurs and when it ends. Only those results which are independently verified are used in determining results which are broadcast as part of Big Brother.

 

2. Votes cast are regularly monitored to detect any unusual voting patterns or to determine whether, for instance, computer programmes have been used to implement automatic voting for particular housemates. Where there are discrepancies in voting patterns, in consultation with the independent verifier, consideration is given as to whether the votes should be included.

 

3. No votes were discarded because of voting irregularities in the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed, when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists. No voting irregularities were detected during that period.

 

4. When voting lines are open, they are regularly monitored, including by independent verifiers, to ensure that votes can be cast on behalf of any housemate up for voting. At all times during the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists, all relevant lines were open and callers were able to cast votes for whichever housemate they chose. All voting lines for housemates were open for exactly the same period; the voting line for each individual housemate opened and closed at exactly the same time as the line for any other housemate facing a public vote at the same time.

 

5. At 9.20am on August 15, the morning of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 8,018 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 9,789 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 4,945 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 8,730 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 11,237 votes ahead of Pav
        
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

 

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

 

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time. 

 

9. All of the votes and results mentioned in paragraphs 5, 6 and 7 were independently verified.

 

10. During the launch of Big Brother 2014, the viewers voted for Pauline to be given "the power" in the House. Pauline knew nothing about what reward would be given to Helen when she selected Helen for a reward. The first either Helen or Pauline or any other housemate knew about there being a "pass to the final" was when Big Brother announced to the House exactly what the reward was that Pauline had chosen Helen to receive.

 

11. Helen auditioned for Big Brother in the same way as all other applicants for a place in the Big Brother House. When she entered the House, Helen did not have an agent, a manager or any connection with either Northern & Shell or Richard Desmond.

 

12. The behaviour of all housemates is regularly monitored by Big Brother and interventions are made whenever Big Brother considers it necessary. Some interventions are informal, some are formal; some result in serious warnings. Not all of these interventions are included in the material broadcast.

 

13. In Helen’s case, the broadcasts twice showed her being reprimanded by Big Brother for her conduct (in relation to Danielle and Matthew). There were a number of further informal interventions with Helen about her conduct and during the course of the material broadcast Helen herself made reference to some of these, although these informal interventions were not themselves included in any broadcast. Informal interventions with other housemates, similarly, were not included in the material broadcast.

 

14. The Big Brother voting system remains independently verified and Big Brother is satisfied that the outcome of Big Brother 2014 was an accurate reflection of the public's decisions.

 

http://bigbrother.channel5.com/statement

so in the space of 1 hour 8mins over 12,000 votes were cast in favour of Hellen?

machel
Originally Posted by machel:
Originally Posted by MrsH:

 

         
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

 

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

 

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time. 

 

so in the space of 1 hour 8mins over 12,000 votes were cast in favour of Hellen?

No: it would have been considerably more than that.

It's impossible to give exact figures based on the information given here (we'd need to know the actual numbers of votes cast, not the differences between HMs, and also the "split" figures when voting was frozen.

However, here's my attempt at a "back of an envelope" calculation:

 

In that 1hr 8mins, Ashleigh gained 55,303 votes with respect to Christopher's position, while Helen gained 67,821 votes wrt Christopher's position. However to take these figures as a measurement of the votes cast means assuming that Christopher didn't gain any votes at all during that time, which obviously wouldn't be the case. The total number of votes cast for both girls in that time would therefore be considerably more.

 

What I would like to know is what the splits were: i.e. at what point Helen overtook Ashleigh: my guess is after voting was restarted after Ash's eviction, but before Christopher's. Ash voters would have had considerable time to switch to Helen, but there wouldn't have been much time for Christopher fans to switch to Ashleigh. (Again, I'm making a big assumption that those fan bases would have switched anyway, but I think it's a reasonable ballpark assumption...)

Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Baz:

I think that's a fair assumption Eugene ....it's what people on FB were saying they were going to do .....although I still don't think they've answered all the favouritism shown to HeLen from day 1

Exactly Baz, especially the final week shenanigans 

Turns out you can make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. 

FM
Originally Posted by MrsH:

 

10. During the launch of Big Brother 2014, the viewers voted for Pauline to be given "the power" in the House. Pauline knew nothing about what reward would be given to Helen when she selected Helen for a reward. The first either Helen or Pauline or any other housemate knew about there being a "pass to the final" was when Big Brother announced to the House exactly what the reward was that Pauline had chosen Helen to receive.

 

This is quite simply BS. Pauline was told by Iris that she was granting a HM a pass to the final before she made her selection:

Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by MrsH:

 

10. During the launch of Big Brother 2014, the viewers voted for Pauline to be given "the power" in the House. Pauline knew nothing about what reward would be given to Helen when she selected Helen for a reward. The first either Helen or Pauline or any other housemate knew about there being a "pass to the final" was when Big Brother announced to the House exactly what the reward was that Pauline had chosen Helen to receive.

 

This is quite simply BS. Pauline was told by Iris that she was granting a HM a pass to the final before she made her selection:

Exactly ....

Baz
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

jacksonb
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

Me too. Although my description of C5 would be a little more laden with invective than yours. 

Xochi
Originally Posted by Xochi:
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

Me too. Although my description of C5 would be a little more laden with invective than yours. 

 

Baz
Originally Posted by Xochi:
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

Me too. Although my description of C5 would be a little more laden with invective than yours. 

That's the poshest insult I've ever heard Xochi   

 

FM
Originally Posted by Roger the Alien:
Originally Posted by Xochi:
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

Me too. Although my description of C5 would be a little more laden with invective than yours. 

That's the poshest insult I've ever heard Xochi   

 

Why, thank you. 

Xochi
Originally Posted by Xochi:
Originally Posted by Roger the Alien:
Originally Posted by Xochi:
Originally Posted by jacksonb:
Originally Posted by Extremely Fluffy Fluffy Thing:

Yup! The only HMs that she didn't know EXACTLY what they were. Getting were M ark and Matthew. A reward and a punishment was all she was told for them, but was told to pick someone for a pass to the final.

That is my memory of events too, you would have thought C5  would have made notes...incompetent twits.

Me too. Although my description of C5 would be a little more laden with invective than yours. 

That's the poshest insult I've ever heard Xochi   

 

Why, thank you. 

 

FM
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

That's a lot of info to suddenly reveal.

 

Hmmm

It's a lot of information, and in particular it's a lot of information to reveal apparently unsolicited...


However, what is most noticable about it is how much of that information is incomplete or actually wrong, and how many of the most important questions are still not properly addressed...

Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by MrsH:

   
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

 

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

 

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time. 

I doubt anyone's all that bothered about this, but I was sitting in a cafe this evening with time to kill so I tried to improve on my previous "back of an envelope" calculation:

 

As I said previously, there isn't enough information here to get exact figures, but we can get at least some idea of the HMs' respective vote counts with respect to last-placed Pav ("wrt Pav").

Let's start by assuming Pav didn't gain any votes at all during the 68 minutes the polls were open for during the live broadcast. The number of votes that the other HMs gained wrt Pav during that time would then be:

Chris: 1,229

Ash: 14,041

Christopher: 21,025

Ashleigh: 76,328

Helen: 88,846

(Remember that the lines for Chris, Ash and Christopher didn't remain open for the full 68 minutes.)

To get the exact number of votes cast for each HM, we'd have to know how many votes Pav got in that time, and add that figure to each of the values above. So if, for example, Pav gained 1000 votes during the live show, Helen's total during the same period would have been 89,846.

 

We can also say that the total number of votes cast for each HM (over the whole Final vote) for each HM wrt Pav are as follows:

Chris: 14,594

Ash: 37, 702

Christopher: 51,005

Ashleigh: 126,823

Helen: 131,454

Again, to know the exact figures we'd have to know Pav's final total. So if, for example, Pav finished with 10,000 votes then Helen's total would have been 141,454.

These figures may sound very low, but Helen apparently said she was told afterwards that her voting figures were in the order of a few hundred thousand, so this appears to be in the right ballpark.

 

It is however perhaps worth remembering that when Brian Dowling won BB2, he reputedly polled a total of 4,231,660 votes. How times have changed...

Eugene's Lair
Last edited by Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

So the figure given by Emma on the night of 1000 between them wasn't accurate.

Although I've heard the "1000 votes" figure bandied around, I don't remember Emma saying it: I do remember her saying there was a 1.2% difference, though.

 

I suspect the "1000" figure came from some misreporting/bad maths: consider this Telemix article, which I meant to comment on at the time but forgot to do so:

http://tellymix.co.uk/reality-...-ashleigh-coyle.html

"In her exit press interviews yesterday, Helen Wood revealed that she had been told around 100,000 votes had been cast for her to win the show and the Β£100,000 prize money.

Her and Ashleigh will split by just 1.2% of the vote, which suggests that the pair were separated by just around 1,000 or so actual votes."

If you stop and think about it for a moment. the maths here literally doesn't add up. If Helen got 100,000 votes, then a 1.2% split would mean Ashleigh got around 97,600 votes (2400 votes difference): or puting it another way a 100,000/99,000 vote split would mean a 0.5% difference.

Eugene's Lair

OK:

CS's post has just reminded me that it was claimed on BOTS that there was a 1.2% difference between the final vote counts for Helen and Ashleigh.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...014_(UK)#cite_note-4

https://uk.celebrity.yahoo.com...8861.html?.tsrc=lgwn

 

If we take that as being correct, we've therefore got enough info to work out the total number of votes for each HM in the Final:

Helen: 195,265

Ashleigh: 190,634

Christopher: 114,816

Ash: 101,513

Chris: 78,405

Pav: 63,811

(744,444 votes in total)

 

In practise, of course, that 1.2% will be an approximation, so there will be a fair margin of error in the above figures.

Eugene's Lair

C5 have reworded their statement...

http://bigbrother.channel5.com/statement

Statement

Channel 5 has received inquiries from viewers about the most recent series of Big Brother. In order to assist viewers, the following information is provided:
 
1. All voting during Big Brother is independently verified as the voting occurs
and when it ends. Only those results which are independently verified are used in determining results which are broadcast as part of Big Brother.

2. Votes cast are regularly monitored to detect any unusual voting patterns or to determine whether, for instance, computer programmes have been used to implement automatic voting for particular housemates. Where there are discrepancies in voting patterns, in consultation with the independent verifier, consideration is given as to whether the votes should be included.

3. No votes were discarded because of voting irregularities in the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed, when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists. No voting irregularities were detected during that period.

4. When voting lines are open, they are regularly monitored, including by independent verifiers, to ensure that votes can be cast on behalf of any housemate up for voting. At all times during the period after lines were open for voting in the final week of the last series up until the lines were finally closed when Helen and Ashleigh were the two remaining finalists, all relevant lines were open and callers were able to cast votes for whichever housemate they chose. All voting lines for housemates were open for exactly the same period; the voting line for each individual housemate opened and closed at exactly the same time as the line for any other housemate facing a public vote at the same time.

5. At 9.20am on August 15, the morning of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:
Ashleigh was 8,018 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 9,789 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 4,945 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 8,730 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 11,237 votes ahead of Pav
       
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:
Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:
Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time.

9. After the voting lines re-opened for the final time, following Christopher's eviction from the House, in the space of eight minutes and forty seconds, 47,344 votes were cast for Helen to win and 43,907 votes were cast for Ashleigh to win.

10. All of the votes and results mentioned in paragraphs 5, 6, 7 and 9 were independently verified.

11. During the launch of Big Brother 2014, the viewers voted for Pauline to be given "the power" in the House. When she was selected as Power Housemate, Pauline knew nothing about what reward would be given to Helen. Big Brother did not know who Pauline would choose until she nominated Helen. The first Helen and the other housemates knew about there being a "pass to the final" was when Big Brother announced to the House exactly what the reward was that Pauline had chosen Helen to receive.

12. Helen auditioned for Big Brother in the same way as all other applicants for a place in the Big Brother House. When she entered the House, Helen did not have an agent, a manager or any connection with either Northern & Shell or Richard Desmond.

13. The behaviour of all housemates is regularly monitored by Big Brother and interventions are made whenever Big Brother considers it necessary. Some interventions are informal, some are formal; some result in serious warnings. Not all of these interventions are included in the material broadcast.

14. In Helen's case, the broadcasts twice showed her being reprimanded by Big Brother for her conduct (in relation to Danielle and Matthew). There were a number of further informal interventions with Helen about her conduct and during the course of the material broadcast Helen herself made reference to some of these, although these informal interventions were not themselves included in any broadcast. Informal interventions with other housemates, similarly, were not included in the material broadcast.

15. The Big Brother voting system remains independently verified and Big Brother is satisfied that the outcome of Big Brother 2014 was an accurate reflection of the public's decisions.
Eugene's Lair

I haven't gone through the new wording of the statement with a fine tooth comb, but there are two main changes.

Firstly, they've added a new section 9 detailing the voting after Christopher's eviction. I'll make a separate post covering this.

Secondly, they've reworded section 10 (now section 11). The new wording removes the previous incorrect implication that Pauline did not know she was selecting Helen for a free pass.

Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by MrsH:

   
6. At 8.55pm on August 15, immediately prior to the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Ashleigh was 7,887 votes ahead of Helen.
Helen was 12,628 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 6,319 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 10,296 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 13,365 votes ahead of Pav

 

7. At 10.03pm on August 15, when voting lines closed for the final time during the live broadcast of the Final of Big Brother 2014, the voting stood as follows:

Helen was 4,631 votes ahead of Ashleigh.
Ashleigh was 75,818 votes ahead of Christopher.
Christopher was 13,303 votes ahead of Ash
Ash was 23,108 votes ahead of Chris
Chris was 14,594 votes ahead of Pav

 

8. The voting lines for Pav, Chris, Ash and Christopher finally closed at different times, as each lost their place in the House. The voting lines for Helen and Ashleigh finally closed at the same time. 

I doubt anyone's all that bothered about this, but I was sitting in a cafe this evening with time to kill so I tried to improve on my previous "back of an envelope" calculation:

 

As I said previously, there isn't enough information here to get exact figures, but we can get at least some idea of the HMs' respective vote counts with respect to last-placed Pav ("wrt Pav").

Let's start by assuming Pav didn't gain any votes at all during the 68 minutes the polls were open for during the live broadcast. The number of votes that the other HMs gained wrt Pav during that time would then be:

Chris: 1,229

Ash: 14,041

Christopher: 21,025

Ashleigh: 76,328

Helen: 88,846

(Remember that the lines for Chris, Ash and Christopher didn't remain open for the full 68 minutes.)

To get the exact number of votes cast for each HM, we'd have to know how many votes Pav got in that time, and add that figure to each of the values above. So if, for example, Pav gained 1000 votes during the live show, Helen's total during the same period would have been 89,846.

 

We can also say that the total number of votes cast for each HM (over the whole Final vote) for each HM wrt Pav are as follows:

Chris: 14,594

Ash: 37, 702

Christopher: 51,005

Ashleigh: 126,823

Helen: 131,454

Again, to know the exact figures we'd have to know Pav's final total. So if, for example, Pav finished with 10,000 votes then Helen's total would have been 141,454.

These figures may sound very low, but Helen apparently said she was told afterwards that her voting figures were in the order of a few hundred thousand, so this appears to be in the right ballpark.

 

It is however perhaps worth remembering that when Brian Dowling won BB2, he reputedly polled a total of 4,231,660 votes. How times have changed...

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Cold Sweat
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
9. After the voting lines re-opened for the final time, following Christopher's eviction from the House, in the space of eight minutes and forty seconds, 47,344 votes were cast for Helen to win and 43,907 votes were cast for Ashleigh to win.

So: Helen gained 3437 votes on Ashleigh after Christopher was evicted.
Working back, we can now say that the position when voting closed for the final 3 was:
Helen: 147,921 (36.13%)
Asleigh: 146,727 (35.83%)
Christopher: 114,816 (28.04%)

 

A few things come out of this:
(1) Christopher was doing a lot better at the final split than the previous C5 statement implied.


(2) Helen was ahead at the final split, but only just. Referring back to my previous posts about the claimed "1000 vote difference", this may be where it comes from: Helen was only 1194 votes ahead with less than 9 minutes to go...

 

(3) There were 91,251 votes cast in that last 8 mins 40 secs. That's huge in the context of the final voting this year: it's almost as many as Ash received in total, and represents nearly a quarter of the total number of votes cast for Helen and Ashleigh in total...

Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Eugene's Lair
Last edited by Eugene's Lair
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:

I haven't gone through the new wording of the statement with a fine tooth comb, but there are two main changes.

Firstly, they've added a new section 9 detailing the voting after Christopher's eviction. I'll make a separate post covering this.

Secondly, they've reworded section 10 (now section 11). The new wording removes the previous incorrect implication that Pauline did not know she was selecting Helen for a free pass.

Now there's a surprise 

Baz
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Just read the updates. Almost 100.000 votes cast in the final 8 minutes of voting!

Cold Sweat
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Just read the updates. Almost 100.000 votes cast in the final 8 minutes of voting!

That's some voting  

Baz
Originally Posted by Baz:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Just read the updates. Almost 100.000 votes cast in the final 8 minutes of voting!

That's some voting

If we are to take 100.000 votes for Helen as an accurate overall figure it means 47% were cast during that short final voting window.Although a much lower % if using Eugene's calculation.

Cold Sweat

The last series of Big Brother UK was the least watched series to date.

 

The run, which lasted for 72 days and ended last Friday night, averaged a total of 1.58 million viewers every night on Channel 5.

It was down almost 300,000 viewers on the average for the 2013 series, the current most watched series on Channel 5.

And the run was down 60,000 viewers on the previous low in 2012, which went up against the London Olympics, although this year’s show did have to contend with the World Cup at some points.

Big Brother was blighted from the get go with complaints and controversies, with telly watchdog Ofcom receiving nearly 3,000 across the 3 month long show.400 complaints alone have been made about the final earlier this month, which saw Helen Wood controversially beat Ashleigh Coyle to victory.

The β€˜fix’ claims even forced Channel 5 to release voting stats to prove that Helen had really won.

In an 800 word statement released yesterday, the channel also responded to criticisms over keeping Helen in the house despite her warnings and for giving her a pass to the final on Day One.

C5 concluded: β€œThe Big Brother voting system remains independently verified and Big Brother is satisfied that the outcome of Big Brother 2014 was an accurate reflection of the public’s decisions.”


Read more: http://tellymix.co.uk/ratings/...r.html#ixzz3BEPdtXzW Follow us: @tellymix on Twitter | tellymix on Facebook

FM
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Baz:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Just read the updates. Almost 100.000 votes cast in the final 8 minutes of voting!

That's some voting

If we are to take 100.000 votes for Helen as an accurate overall figure it means 47% were cast during that short final voting window.Although a much lower % if using Eugene's calculation.

There is a post on DS and they have broke down the numbers, and I think CH5 have put themselves in more trouble  .I will go and find the post.

 

 

Westbrew post

As far as the maths go based on channel 5 figures.

Helen apparently won by 1.2% on the final vote count.
According to the channel 5 statement this 1.2% is equal to 4631 votes.
Based on this the combined total of Helen and Ashleigh votes was 385915.
You get this figure by dividing 4631 by 1.2 and then multiplying by 100.

You can then figure out the total votes for Helen and Ashleigh.
Ashleigh's total votes would be (385915-4631) divided by 2 which is 190642.
Helen's total votes would be 190642 + 4631 which is 195373.

This gives Ashleigh 49.4% of the total vote. 190642 divided by 385915 and multiplied by 100.

And it gives Helen 50.6% of the total vote. 195373 divided by 385915 and multiplied by 100.

And finally 50.6 minus 49.4 gives you the 1.2% that channel 5 say was the winning margin.

But having done all that I still am perplexed as to how or why the voting pattern changed so dramatically during the final.

FM
Last edited by Former Member
Originally Posted by erinp:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Baz:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:
Originally Posted by Eugene's Lair:
Originally Posted by Cold Sweat:

It would be fascinating to see exactly how voting panned out during the finale show including the exact figures at each β€œfreeze”.

 

It does look to have been an absolute voting frenzy for both girls – at the start of the broadcast Ashleigh was 20.000 votes ahead of Christopher – by the time vote lines closed for the last time the gap was 75,000 (albeit with a final short voting window).

 

The theory that Ash fans had potentially longer to vote for Helen than Christopher fans had to vote for Ashleigh, following their respective evictions, makes sense and β€œcould” have made the difference. Personally, i spent around 30% on voting of what my return on a bet for Ashleigh winning would have been. For those that had taken long prices on Helen, and generous prices right into the final week; once she’s made the final 3, I think you would be voting non stop…

Way ahead of you: please see my previous post regarding the final split.

 

It would be difficult to calculate the other splits accurately without more information, though. In the past I've used a sort of "count back" system where you take the %age votes for the HMs at a particular split and assume they were relatively the same at the previous split. That's risky in this case, however, because it doesn't look like the voting %ages remained consistent: Helen appears to have had increasing support throughout the evening...

 

Your last comment is very siginificant. The voting after Christopher's eviction does indeed appear to have been a frenzy. I'm trying to remain impartial about this, but I still think this C5 statement has (for them) potentially opened a huge can of worms. It doesn't prove - or even imply - an actual betting scam, but it does encourage the notion that the final flurry of voting was betting-led...

Just read the updates. Almost 100.000 votes cast in the final 8 minutes of voting!

That's some voting

If we are to take 100.000 votes for Helen as an accurate overall figure it means 47% were cast during that short final voting window.Although a much lower % if using Eugene's calculation.

There is a post on DS and they have broke down the numbers, and I think CH5 have put themselves in more trouble  .I will go and find the post.

 

 

Westbrew post

As far as the maths go based on channel 5 figures.

Helen apparently won by 1.2% on the final vote count.
According to the channel 5 statement this 1.2% is equal to 4631 votes.
Based on this the combined total of Helen and Ashleigh votes was 385915.
You get this figure by dividing 4631 by 1.2 and then multiplying by 100.

You can then figure out the total votes for Helen and Ashleigh.
Ashleigh's total votes would be (385915-4631) divided by 2 which is 190642.
Helen's total votes would be 190642 + 4631 which is 195373.

This gives Ashleigh 49.4% of the total vote. 190642 divided by 385915 and multiplied by 100.

And it gives Helen 50.6% of the total vote. 195373 divided by 385915 and multiplied by 100.

And finally 50.6 minus 49.4 gives you the 1.2% that channel 5 say was the winning margin.

But having done all that I still am perplexed as to how or why the voting pattern changed so dramatically during the final.

Erin: Westbrew's methodology is the same as I used further up. Furthermore, once you know the total votes for Asleigh and Helen, you can work backwards and calculate the voting figures for the other 4 HMs.

Eugene's Lair

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