The Bad Girls Club is the American reality television series created by Jonathan Murray for the Oxygen Network in America Union. The show focuses on the quarrels and physical confrontations of seven very aggressive, disagreeable, and unruly women. Every woman will tend to have psychological and behavioral problems. The cruel sexual and violent moments were also arrested among the women. The seven women usually have different backgrounds and personalities. They are introduced to performances based on their capacity to be "charismatic and violent girls". The cast, who are considered "bad girls", will enjoy the luxury lifestyle in luxury homes for three months, where they must obey certain rules. Their lives inside and outside the home were recorded and recorded by the production team.
Bad Girls Club aired in three countries other than United States; MTV Australia, RTL 5 in the Netherlands, and TV11 in Sweden. Bunim-Murray never licensed the event format to broadcasters in other countries for local versions of the series. The event format shifts in the next season. If a member of a player violates production rules, he is often excluded from the show and, if at the beginning of the season, will be replaced by a new player member. The fourth season is considered a "breakthrough" series in that it became the first Oxygen series to reach an average of more than one million viewers per episode.
There are four spin-offs including the Bad Girls Road Trip , Tiny Gomes Married , Love Games: Bad Girls Need Too Love - where previous members are members looking for true love, and Bad Girls All-Star Battle . Of all the contestants, Kerry Harvick (from season one) was a successful country singer before the show. Tanisha Thomas (second season) later became Oxygen's host OxygenLive! and the next season from Love Games: Bad Girls Need Love Too . Thomas, dubbed "godmother" for all the contestants, has his own series titled Tanisha Gomes Married .
At the end of 2016, the Bad Girls Club is updated for the seventeenth season titled Bad Girls Club: East Meets West . In February 2017, the future of this series is passed, with the announcement of a network that will be converted to a genuine crime programming format, instituted in July 2017. When discussing the future of the series, Frances Berwick, NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment Lifestyle Networks' President, it was revealed: Bad Girls Club , at this stage, I do not see it in linear Oxygen (referring that it can air in non-linear media).On the outside, we do not know yet. "
Video Bad Girls Club
Format
Lasting until the last day without ever being kicked out or away for other reasons is treated as an impressive achievement on the series due to the level of violence and hostility. If actors engage in violence against each other or violate other rules, they may or may not be evicted under the policy of the event, imposed by the manufacturer. The security guards seem to stay behind the scenes as they jump into camera shots to break the many violent clashes that have appeared in the series. Beyond the general incidents of violence and combat, another reason for the premature exit of cast members has been from bullying, alienation and alienation from the rest of the housemates, home problems, litigation, or their own narcissism. On several occasions, some "bad girls" may want to leave the show; this has happened in all seasons. If a "bad girl" leaves early in the season, a "Bad Girl replacement" is introduced in one or two episodes. Substitute housemates are generally blurred, hit, and treated with prejudice.
All or most girls usually form gangs with each other; creating disastrous and contradictory; booked a party at the nightclub; and engage in sexual antics and other delinquency, all while trying to maintain their personal lives. The suppression and exceeding the amount of abuse (in which some cast members intimidate one cast member or a number of other cast members) is among the regular occurrences of the program. The girls, who are considered "bad girls", come from different backgrounds and all walks of life are different. Earlier in the series, they often tried to cope with each other and change their rebellious behavior to be role models for young women. Some actors try to achieve certain goals.
Throughout the show, "Bad Girls" have to adapt to the mood swings and behaviors that often occur to their roommates. The girls have to undergo an interview on TV confessional reality. They are allowed to contact their family and friends using landline phones and computers connected to large screen televisions; however, players are forbidden to watch national and local television shows and use cell phones.
The Bad Girls Club belief, introduced in the third season, is:
Season 1 and 2
The format for the first season of Bad Girls Club is different from the next season. The age range for the first season is from 21 to 31. The use of nicknames was not introduced until the third season. The first season is the first in which some "Bad Girls substitutes" enter the show.
Although there is a difference in the first season, the current rules have been applied in all subsequent seasons. One feature that continues from the first season is how the show opens: viewers are shown the biggest and most intense physical squabbling of the season, and the program then goes back in time before it happens. This fight usually gives you an idea of ââwho will become a baddest, or one of the baddest, girls at home. This argument attracts many viewers and makes them wonder what will happen next.
In the second season, the event format changed drastically. Maximum age drops from 31 to 28. The second season players are given a compulsory nonprofit work to help them build work ethics and experience the interdependent stabilization effects of each other, for example in teamwork and commitment, to equip them for success in the future. Stopping from work or failure to attend results in the mandatory removal of the show. Girls are given planning, decision-making, and teamwork work. The second season is the first and only season of the Bad Girls Club to do this, and also the last one to show a 30 minute episode.
Live show
On August 3, 2010, during the OxygenLive TV recap episode, the event merged Facebook and Twitter with live events. Fans gave their opinions and comments about the show and the performers, which aired for 10 hours.
In January 2011, Oxygen released OxygenLive! , an online talk show hosted by Tanisha Thomas, one of the "bad girls" of the second season. It was aired after season six debuted at Oxygen, and focused on the sixth season, sometimes carrying "Bad Girls" from the previous season. Thomas asked some questions to the girls to encourage rumors and confessions.
Maps Bad Girls Club
Seasons
Reception
Many homophobic humiliations have attracted the attention of media outlets. Many teens have copied the The Bad Girls Club . Mary Mitchell of the Sun Times stated that the show was "dangerous for the female soul" and wrote, "Just as some teenagers try to imitate rappers in their dress and behavior, the same goes for 'bad girls." " He also commented that the show gave "a distorted picture" of how to live a good life, calling the "wannabes" performers "sleeping in a house they could not pay." Mitchell believes that most people know the cast is living "lifestyle fake ", and rate messages from Bad Girls Club as" annoying ".
In 2016, a New York Times study of 50 TV shows with Facebook Likes found that the Bad Girls Club was popular in the Black Belt, with the largest popularity in Orangeburg, South Carolina. The show received negative criticism from an African-American audience, believing that it was "not what became a black woman." Mary Chase Breedlove from Reflector objected that "there are some TV programs devoted to acting as junk and evil maybe ('Bad Girls' Club,'...)". The New York Daily News suggests that Bad Girls Club is equivalent to professional wrestling. Kris De Leon of BuddyTV described the show as "rude, abusive, and useless, but a kind of addiction for some people."
Brian Lowry of Variety thinks producers make "wrong decisions" when they create a show. She believes that the cast members of Bad Girls Club auditioned for the show "15 minutes of their fame". He said that the Bad Girls Club "arrived a little late in the game, on a channel lacking some sort of exposure or public footprint to qualify the event even as the guilty pleasures were made of". Lowry believes the event is "lost" and that Oxygen attracts audiences who are generally drunk in the bar and make a fuss. He also suggested that "it might be time for" BAG "girls who behave badly and repel rush back to the real world".
Anita Gates of The New York Times refers to the Bad Girls Club as "a great argument for bringing back programming with actors". He believes that the "average emotional age" appears to be 15, in contrast to the girls' actual age. He stated that "unpleasant criminals cancel each other and really make the evil unattractive", commenting that their behavior may not be "bad enough". Gates concluded by suggesting that the Bad Girls Club is a location equivalent to The Jerry Springer Show . Kelly West from Cinemablend stated that Bad Girls Club "is fun to watch".
Controversy
Season 4
During "Off The Wall", the first episode of the fourth season, Natalie Nunn told Annie Andersen that Chris Brown was at the night club she wanted to attend, and asked Anderson if she was a fan. Anderson said no, because of a domestic abuse case involving Brown. Nunn defended Brown, saying, "Who cares, Rihanna is a punk punk, and she's beaten for reasons". Nunn calls Rihanna a "crazy bitch" and confesses to know him, unlike Anderson. After the episode aired, Brown reportedly declared that he did not know who Nunn was. Nunn questioned this during the reunion event, claiming that Brown said it because the cast of the show has not been revealed. Perez Hilton, reunion host, asked Nunn if Rihanna had confronted her about her comments. Nunn replied yes, stating that the two had a fight during a dinner party in New York City. During the reunion, Nunn claimed to have "flown" with Brown before the show. Shortly before the end of the reunion, Nunn said that he did not justify domestic violence and apologized if his comments had angered fans and the people who were the victims.
Season 5
During the episode "The Wicked Witch Of Key West", strangers in a bar offer to buy drinks for Christian Guinane and Christina Marie Hopkins. She puts a drink with a PCP hallucinogenic pill, and Guinane gets drunk. She claimed to have had bruises on her body when he grabbed her and handled her roughly. Guinane reported that the show's producers did not want to identify the man on television for fear of a lawsuit. He blamed the drug because he hit a cast member, Lea Beaulieu, on his face, which caused a fight.
After season five wrapped, Catya Washington was sentenced to prison for possession of hidden weapons and the use of illegal drugs.
Season 6
During the six-year production season, the residents of Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, complained that the noise levels and oaths were unbearable and inappropriate for them and their children to listen to at night. Residents call local law enforcement agencies four or five times to deal with late night disruptions. Clarissa Keller, a resident of Sherman Oaks, complains that she has a six-year-old son and does not want her to listen to the oath. He made a petition calling for a ban on all production companies in the Sherman Oaks hills. The location manager and production crew refused to discuss the neighbors' complaints. The Bad Girls Club permission requires all production to comply with the rules of "outdoor activity and minimum noise", but locals claim that the show does not lower the noise level. Home for season six is âârented for $ 20,000 a month. The owner said that he would not allow this type of production to rent his house in the future.
Season 7
On April 12, 2011, cast member Tasha Malek complained to a police officer who was on duty outside the home of Bad Girls about the behavior of his fellow Nastasia Townsend player. He claims that Townsend has put his personal belongings into a garbage bag, telling him "he must leave home", and that the incident has escalated into a fight. Both issued a summons by the police for disturbing calm and disorderly behavior.
Malek released a statement saying "I do not think it's true to be gay", offensive to many fans of the show.
Season 12
The twelfth season of the Bad Girls Club sparked a debate with The Village Board of Trustees in Illinois about whether the show should be filmed in the Highland Park area of ââChicago after previous concerns were raised.
Cast
Spin-off
Bad Girls Road Trip
Bad Girls Road Trip aired on June 12, 2007. The show featured the first season of cast of Zara Sprankle, Aimee Landi and Leslie Ramsue touring their respective hometowns in search of casting opportunities for the second season Bad Girls Club . In the series, they also visit their former housemates.
Love Game: Bad Girl Needs Too
Love Games: Bad Girls Need Love Too aired on March 16, 2010. The show follows three "bad girls" in their quest for true love. The first from Bad Girls Club, Amber Meade and Sarah Michaels from third season and Kendra Jones from fourth season. This season ends on April 27, 2010.
Oxygen renewed the show for a second run, with Tanisha Thomas (from the second season of the Bad Girls Club ) as host. In this season, Natalie Nunn (season four), Amber Buell (season three) and Lea Beaulieu (season five) compete for true love. The second season consists of eight one hour episodes aired between April 18, 2011 and June 13, 2011.
The third season aired on December 5, 2011, with Thomas as the host once again, and Kori Koether, Sydney Steinfeldt, and Judi Jai as cast. Kori Koether and Sydney Steinfeldt are in season six of the Bad Girls Club ; while Jai is in Season 7.
Season 4 airs on November 5, 2012 with Tanisha Thomas as the host again. This marks the third time Tanisha has hosted the series. This season also features girls Season 8, Danielle "Danni" Victor, Amy Cieslowski, and Camilla Poindexter as cast members looking for love.
Bad Girls Club: Flo Got Married
Bad Girls Club: Flo Gets Married is a special hour centered on the fourth season cast member Florina "Flo" Kaja, who has a traditional Albanian marriage, and in her pregnancy. It aired on Oxygen on February 28, 2011 and watched by 859,000 viewers.
Tanisha Got Married
The documentary series titled Tanisha Gried Married airs on May 7, 2012. It follows the Bad Girls Club season 2 member of Tanisha Thomas as she prepares for her marriage. With preparations for marriage in order, problems arise between Tanisha and her husband who will soon become Clive. This event includes family drama going on. Former "Bad Girls" featured in the series include Natalie Nunn and Florina from season 4, as well as Amber M. from season 3; all appear as bridesmaids. The series also shows how the problems of Natalie and Florina with each other turned violent, and how this affected Tanisha. The series was produced by 495 Productions with SallyAnn Salsano as executive producer.
Battle of Bad Girl All-Star
Bad Girls All-Star Battle shows the features of "Bad Girls" that compete for $ 100,000 and the title "Baddest Bad Girl of All Time." The series features girls who are divided into two teams, tested every week in various physical and mental challenges. It is hosted by an R & B, Ray J.
Bad Girls All-Star Battle aired on May 21, 2013. Bad Girls Club 10th season alumni Jenniffer "Jenn" Hardwick won the competition, with 4th season alumni Florina "Flo" Kaja being runner-up. The second season premiered on January 7, 2014. The 11th season of Tiana Small alumnus won the competition, with the 11th season alumni Sarah Oliver being runner-up.
References
External links
- Official website
- Bad Girls Club on IMDb
- Bad Girls Club on TV.com
Source of the article : Wikipedia