Big Brother viewers have called for Hallie to be automatically be put up for eviction or even ‘kicked out’ of the house after she broke show rules for a second time.
During Friday’s episode, the youth worker, 18, was forced to wear a ‘sandwich board of shame’ and a bright orange cone on her head for telling the other housemates she thought Matty had nominated her.
However, the punishment did not go down well with fans, with many noting she would have been put up for eviction or stopped from nominating in past series.
Taking to Twitter, one person wrote: ‘Big Brother’s gone soft, Hallie needs to be put up for nomination next week.’
Someone else posted: ‘It’s annoying me that Hallie keeps breaking the rules yet the punishments are so soft. Ban her from nominations or put her up for eviction!’
Get her out? Big Brother viewers have called for Hallie to be automatically be put up for eviction or even ‘kicked out’ of the house after she broke show rules for a second time
Punishment: During Friday’s episode, Hallie was forced to wear a sandwich board and an orange cone on her head for telling other housemates she thought Matty had nominated her
‘Big Brother really need to work on their punishments. If this was Channel 5, Hallie would be up for nomination by now,’ commented someone else.
While another viewer posted: ‘I honestly don’t care for Hallie having to wear a silly costume. Take away her nomination privileges ffs.’
Someone else remarked: ‘Like Hallie has learnt nothing she is literally having fun with this punishment, put the whole house up or something we want drama.’
And another show fan demanded: ‘The punishment is so dumb. Just kick Hallie out man.’
Someone else wrote: ‘I need old Big Brother back because he would never allow 2 nomination rule breaks in one week slide so easily! Hallie getting off easy af.’
‘Hallie should really face a harsher punishment for repeatedly breaking the rules,’ wrote another viewer.
Someone else shared: ‘Hallie breaking the rules two days in a row deserves more punishment sorry, that was watery.’
And someone else posted: ‘This punishment for Hallie is rubbish, she seems to be quite enjoying it.’
Controversial? Hallie said she thought Matty (pictured) had nominated her when housemates are banned from discussing nominations
Views: The punishment did not go down well with fans, with many noting she would have been put up for eviction or stopped from nominating in past series
It comes after Hallie and Olivia faced punishment for talking in code and rule-breaking.
It was confirmed on Wednesday’s Big Brother: Late & Live that one of the strict rules in the house had been broken.
The rebellious duo attempted to communicate with each other by drawing housemate’s names on each other’s backs – appearing to share their top-secret nominations with each other, with the scenes airing during Thursday’s episode.
Late & Live host AJ Odudu confirmed that the cheating had not affected the outcome of the nominations as Big Brother’s eye had caught everything.
As Hallie and Olivia, 23, were landed with a big punishment, stunned housemates tried to find out answers.
Rule break! Big Brother’s Hallie and Olivia faced punishment for talking in code
A source said: ‘Hallie and Olivia have been caught breaking Big Brother rules by trying to talk in code, drawing Housemate’s names on each other’s backs!
‘Big Brother sees it all and gathered Hallie, Olivia and all other Housemates around the sofa to reveal their rule break would not go unpunished.
‘Shocked Housemates were quick to demand answers about what the pair had been trying to say in secret.’
Big Brother returns on Sunday 22 October at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX.
BIG BROTHER 2023: MEET THE CONTESTANTS!
JENKIN
AGE: 25
PROFESSION: Barman
FROM: Bridgend
HOW WOULD YOUR FRIENDS DESCRIBE YOU? ‘Loud and messy, and irritating probably.’
TOM
AGE: 21
PROFESSION: Butcher
FROM: Somerset
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO GET NOMINATED FOR? ‘I think I might potentially offend some people. My mouth moves faster than my brain.’
TRISH
AGE: 33
PROFESSION: Stay-at-home mum
FROM: Luton
WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH THE PRIZE MONEY IF YOU WON? ‘I think my first priority is to sort out my housing situation. The housing crisis is just ridiculous and my housing situation has been unstable. It brings me a lot of mum guilt because I’ve got a young child. It’s my biggest incentive and motivation to win.’
JORDAN
AGE: 25
PROFESSION: Lawyer
FROM: Scunthorpe
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO GET NOMINATED FOR? ‘Being cantankerous and acting as if I don’t want to be there even if I do in my heart. They might nominate me for being disengaged perhaps or not paying everyone an equal amount of attention. They may feel left out but I can’t help that.’
DYLAN
AGE: 39
PROFESSION: DJ
FROM: Coventry
TELL US AN INTERESTING FACT ABOUT YOURSELF: ‘I appeared on a TV show called The Last Leg about amputees – two years before I lost my leg!’
NOKY
AGE: 26
PROFESSION: Banker
FROM: Derby
WHAT MADE YOU APPLY TO BECOME A BIG BROTHER HOUSEMATE? ‘I love challenges. I’ve had so many amazing times in my life, like going to Miss Universe as Miss Great Britain. I like to do something different and I think this is the next challenge I want to conquer. I want to show people what pageant girls are really like and disprove a lot of stereotypes around them. I also show what it’s like being a woman who’s worked in male- dominated fields. I want to show that women are capable of doing anything they want.’
PAUL
AGE: 23
PROFESSION: Security officer
FROM: Liverpool
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO GET NOMINATED FOR? ‘Being the biggest wind up, eating all the food and being the loudest housemate.’
OLIVIA
AGE: 23
PROFESSION: Dancer
FROM: Glasgow
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO GET NOMINATED FOR? ‘I think when people are in that hangry state, that’s when I’ll wind people up and grind their gears. I think they’ll nominate me for being full on, and for my brutal honesty and oversharing of opinions.’
HALLIE
AGE: 18
PROFESSION: Youth worker
FROM: London
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO GET NOMINATED FOR? ‘Being lazy and having an opinion. I’m quite opinionated, I like speaking my mind and not many people like that. I’m quite real.’
YINRUN
AGE: 25
PROFESSION: Customer support agent
FROM: Harrogate
WHAT PART OF THE EXPERIENCE ARE YOU MOST LOOKING FORWARD TO? ‘I’m most excited about being surrounded by so many people from different walks of life. I don’t think I will ever live in a house again with so many different kinds of people. I’m from China and I think it will help me be more immersed in British culture.’
CHANELLE
AGE: 29
PROFESSION: Dental therapist
FROM: Llanelli
WHAT ARE YOU MOST LIKELY TO BE NOMINATED FOR? ‘Probably just for being annoying. In Wales, we have this saying, “I’ll do it now in a minute.” So like, if I went to make food and I left a dish on the side, I have all good intentions of washing it but I’d be like, “I’ll do it now in a minute,” and it might be three hours later before I do it. So probably for silly stuff like that.’
ZAK
AGE: 28
PROFESSION: Model
FROM: Manchester
WHAT WOULD YOU DO WITH THE PRIZE MONEY IF YOU WON? ‘Pay off my debts and help my family out. I’ve also been saving up to build a park in my village back at home in Thailand because where I grew up, there’s no parks or playgrounds.’
MATTY
AGE: 24
PROFESSION: Doctor
FROM: Isle Of Man
HOW WOULD YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY DESCRIBE YOU? ‘They would say I’m quite like a lucky person or someone who really wants to experience life to its fullest and do everything that it has to offer. Someone who is kind and fun and doesn’t take life too seriously.’
HENRY
AGE: 25
PROFESSION: Food writer
FROM: Cotswolds
HOW WOULD YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY DESCRIBE YOU? ‘I think they would say I’m particularly sociable and very chatty. I mean, I’ll be honest, my parents would definitely say I’m a bit of a snob but I take it as a compliment. I think it means you’ve got high standards and good taste. They’d say I was quite a peculiar child.’
KERRY
AGE: 40
PROFESSION: NHS manager
FROM: Essex
WHAT MADE YOU APPLY TO BE A BIG BROTHER HOUSEMATE? ‘I love the programme. It is, for me, the ultimate reality TV show ever. I’ve got multiple sclerosis and so the reason why I never applied before is because I always saw those whacking great big stairs to get into the house. It just felt a little bit unachievable because for the first three years of my illness I was in a wheelchair. When I saw it was coming back and searching for real people from all walks of life, I thought, this is my year.’