Originally Posted by _NiallDEE_:
“Well I've only seen two pictures so I'm not exactly going to be assuming she's a supermodel famous all around the world leading numerous campaigns, am I? Fair enough Vogue is a pretty big deal, but can you really say (or anyone else for that matter) that you'd heard about her before she was revealed as a housemate?”
It's not necessary that anyone's heard of her. If she's enough of a model to appear in Vogue, she should not be in BB.
Quote:
“I don't think there's a grey area of people who shouldn't be allowed on either show, sure they blur the boundaries a lot between CBB and BB nowadays, but I would say there would definitely be more cause to complain had she been put on CBB - and I'm pretty sure there hasn't been a model on CBB who's been less prominent or had a lower social media presence than Adjoa, despite many of them not being considered famous enough for the show. Anyway, since when were models not considered 'normal' and when has it ever been stated or when was it ever a part of the original concept of BB that models were not allowed on the show?
”
If Adjoa shouldn't be in CBB, that proves there IS "a grey area of people who shouldn't be allowed on either show", because she definitely shouldn't be in the non-celeb version.
Originally Posted by Heatherbell:
“I'm OK with someone like her being in the civilian show because I don't recognise her . Nor does my switched on daughter or my girl mad son. So she is hardly mainstream or a 'face' . Same with two bit entertainers like that Simon guy . I think confident people like that are good foils for the less savvy contestants and I like watching the confident ones get overtaken by little 'nobodies'. Well, when it happens that is .”
As if being a Vogue model is equivalent to being a "two bit entertainer".
(Not that Simon should be in BB either.)