[Jade Goody]
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2007-06-26
Jade Goody
Jade Goody (born 5 June 1981) is a British reality television celebrity who gained notoriety after appearing on Big Brother in 2002. As a participant in the 2007 series of Celebrity Big Brother she was at the centre of an international furore arising from bullying and racism directed towards one of her fellow housemates,the Indian actress Shilpa Shetty.
Big Brother 2002
Goody made her first television appearance on Big Brother in 2002. During her time in the house, Goody threatened to "deck" (knock out) fellow contestant Adele Roberts who claimed that Goody had a verruca on her foot.She also displayed a high level of ignorance regarding general knowledge. Goody thought that the British city of Cambridge was in London. On being told that Cambridge is in East Anglia, or rather Goody's "East Angular", she assumed that this was abroad.Goody also believed that Saddam Hussein was a boxer, and that Sherlock Holmes was the inventor of the toilet. Sophie Pritchard, one of Jade's fellow housemates on the series, has claimed that she was a victim of bullying from Jade during her time in the house.On Day 30, Goody told Alex Sibley that he needed to "open eyes" when it came to Sophie's behaviour.In one discussion with her fellow housemates, Goody commented on Sophie's genitalia: "It's gross, it's really, really minging. It sticks out more than her belly."Goody also tried to convince Kate Lawler about Sophie's "falseness".At the time, Sophie admitted that she felt "uncomfortable" in the house due to the way she was being treated.Tabloid newspapers took an instant dislike to Jade. Within the first 10 days of the start of the series, The Sun had nicknamed her Miss Piggy, installed her as favourite for eviction and branded her a "big mouth".TV presenter Graham Norton was an early driving force in the campaign against Jade with monologues in his chat show focused on her rather porcine features ("Jade is afraid to eat fruit. She thinks if the others see her with an apple in her mouth, they'll roast her").The hate campaign launched against Jade had so much momentum that The Sun branded her Public Enemy No 1.Jade was hot favourite to be evicted and yet on July 8th, The Sun published an article in which it accused Big Brother makers of toning down its coverage to show a quieter Jade — and a bitchy Adele Roberts 'amid fears Jade may crack up or try to sue when she leaves the show and learns how viewers see her.Channel 4 denied that they manipulated the coverage of Jade to keep her in the house.Nevertheless, that week many opinion forming Channel 4 TV shows (RI:SE, SO Graham Norton) made a U-turn and campaigned to keep Jade in the house and evict Adele.Graham Norton began to champion Jade saying "Jade may be a stupid pig but she’s by far the most entertaining person in the house - and at least she’s not evil like Adele."
As a result of the media's change in attitude towards Jade, public opinion changed towards Goody. Graham Norton, who just a month before had campaigned against Jade, now backed her to win the show.He told The Sun "I’d love it if Jade Goody won. She’s really put the work in while the other three have played the game to a certain extent. She has cried and screamed her way through and she’s been by far the most entertaining person in there."Jade eventually stayed in the Big Brother house until the final weekend and finished in 4th place. As she left the BB House she was greeted by Graham Norton in a climax to his pro-Jade campaign. Goody either failed to recognise Norton or wasn't too bothered to see him as she walked past him into the arms of her mother.
The Lessons of 'Big Brother'
By Dr.Rakesh, PhD(OXFORD UNIVERSITY)
Chairs, tables, walls, everything is blue -- except the purple neon light shining from the ceiling. Otherwise, the pub "The Sea Rock" in the north of London looks like a big aquarium. And for the patrons -- mostly those with an Indian background -- it is the perfect escape from frigid England to the warmth of Bollywood, that Indian dream factory where the clothes sparkle but the romances remain pure and kisses are forbidden.
But at 8 p.m. sharp on this day, Bollywood disappears from the gigantic flat screens. It's time for "Big Brother." "Shilpa, let's go," calls 26-year-old Nish Bhadressa into the half empty bar. Next to him sits Ravi Vaid, his family also comes from India and he too is 26 years old; they are both drinking beer. And they both want to see whether Shilpa Shetty, an Indian actress whose name just a few weeks ago was only known to a few Bollywood fanatics inside Europe, will leave the show tonight as the winner.
The results should tell the two men something about the reality of Great Britain -- tonight "Big Brother" will be something like a societal barometer. The show plays with Orwell's vision of fear, this angst of a controlling authority that makes a nation transparent against its will. In reality, though, the opposite is true. The show -- successfully running for over seven years in a total of 41 countries -- has reversed this principal. The individual becomes transparent, and the audience sees up close how a country really looks beneath the surface.
This season's "Big Brother" finale offers a prime example -- the two men in the "Sea Rock" are about to learn whether they truly live in a country full of racists. Whether British television viewers find it entertaining when a foreigner with brown skin is verbally abused before the eyes of millions of television viewers.
The incident in question has probably become the scene most often replayed in the history of British television. And it hits directly at the heart of the country's identity.
It is now well over two weeks ago that the inhabitants of the container roasted a chicken. Some thought the chicken had been undercooked; a fight erupted. Three women -- white and with little education -- ganged up on the smarter one from India.
"Indians are thin because they don't cook food properly," baited Jo O'Meara, an unsuccessful pop singer. Danielle Lloyd, a former "Miss Britain" who was stripped of her crown after it was discovered that she had slept with one of the judges, one-upped her. She accused Shilpa of not being able to speak English properly and said: "She wants to be white. She's a dog." Lloyd then suggested that Shilpa should "fuck off home."
It wasn't over. Enter Jade Goody. Already oversized, she swelled even further as she dug into the petite actress, calling her a poppadom and saying that Shilpa "makes her skin crawl," among other -- worse -- insults. Shilpa Shetty overheard the incensed tirade with wide eyes. Then she said, "If this is the modern Britain, then it is terrifying" -- and left the container kitchen.
On the following morning, a great many embarrassed faces could be seen on the island. The coalition of outraged viewers ranged from the very bottom to the top. From below, England's most dissolute tabloid The Sun demanded: "Throw out this face of hate" referring to Goody. From above, Gordon Brown, the possible successor to Prime Minster Tony Blair, demanded that the British television audience ought to vote for "tolerance."
These were the official reactions, and the politically correct ones. What is not known is whether these reactions correspond to the views of the nation -- to those of the "Big Brother" viewers.
"The strange thing about this is that some English apparently no longer recognize those values that they once brought to the people in India," Bhadressa said at "Sea Rock." "Above all," Bhadressa's friend Vaid, added "the certainty that one has to work hard in life in order to be successful." Vaid unzipped his jacket; underneath, he was wearing an English national football team shirt.
Neither of the men trust Great Britain. Not the newspapers, not the politicians. They are waiting for the results, for the truth. On "Big Brother" the nation can vote anonymously by telephone, no one has to justify what he believes, thinks, or says.
The pub is now completely packed; the cooks push their way out of the kitchen. Then the result fades in. Visible on the screen is the winner, Shilpa, the Indian. She cries a little, humbly folds her hands together in front of her chest, expresses her thanks and charitably says that Jade Goody is not a racist.
The two men finish their beers and head home. Great Britain voted correctly, Shilpa Shetty is the winner. But one doesn't know what this actually means: does it mean that a nation is ashamed of itself or does it mean that a clash of cultures does not in fact exist. Or does it simply mean that those belonging to the one culture simply called more often than those belonging to the other culture.
Shilpa Shetty, 31 years old, had not been in such great demand in Bollywood of late, and it's hard to say what would have become of her. Now, though, she's got a future -- offers from advertising agents, cosmetic companies and filmmakers have poured in. Now she even has a manager -- Max Clifford, who manages O.J. Simpson. She will become rich in Great Britain. That much is certain.
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