Big Brother house infested after housemates hoard food in the bedroom
THE Brother Big house has become infested after the housemates started to hoard food in the bedroom.
The remaining contestants are living in a purposely built compound in Garden Studios in North West London – but they have been joined by some bugs.
The Big Brother house has been infested with fruit flies[/caption] Tom has been hoarding food under his bed[/caption]When the housemates entered the house last month, the house was plush with luxury features like a Love Island-style glam room.
But over the past weeks, the once pristine house has become a bit grotty, as the housemates continue to be cooped up.
In fact, one eagle-eyed fan has spotted fruit flies have started to infest the property.
Due to the lack of food sometimes, and not just being able to pop to the shops, some housemates have been hoarding food – namely Tom.
The young butcher has been stashing grub underneath is bed, causing fruit flies. together.
A fan spotted this on the Big Brother live feed, and tweeted: “They’ve just confirmed on the live stream that there are fruit flies in the bedroom, I blame Tom and his food hoarding!”
It comes after The Sun exclusively revealed how bosses were recently forced to secretly put the house on lockdown amid an explosive fight night.
Tension erupted in the TV spy house at the end of last week after a string of high-octane format twists including a surprise midweek eviction, public nominations and tricky challenges where the housemates have fallen into two bitterly rival camps.
Worried execs forced the two groups apart and locked one half into the bedroom to keep feisty Paul, who has since been evicted, and Trish away from each other.
Big Brother had security on standby as they tried to defuse the situation in case the row became physical.
After leaving the housemates in lockdown for over an hour, execs were able to calm down a raging Paul.
A source said: “Everyone talks about Fight Night in 2004 but no one expected this year’s sanitised cohort to be a contender for Fight Night 2.0.
“Big Brother acted fast to stop things becoming physical and pulled the rival groups apart, locking one half in the bedroom.
“Security were on standby but luckily a lock and key was enough to stop things becoming physical.
“It’s fair to say tensions in that house are reaching fever pitch.”
Meanwhile, latest figures suggest just under 4million viewers are now watching the reboot of Big Brother across their TVs and later via streaming.