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Record Views For Big Brother
LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) Over 8 million viewers tuned in to the climax of the latest Big Brother launch, equalling the show's record for an opening night, Channel 4 said.
Eleven contestants entered the house on Wednesday night for the eighth series, attracting an average 6.2 million viewers yesterday, a 26 per cent share of those watching TV at the time.
The 11, all females, included the first ever set of twins, a member of the Women's Institute (WI) and a bisexual political protester.
A single man is expected to enter the house at Elstree Studios in Hertfordshire today to join the contest for the 100,000 pound prize.
The first 11 housemates are: - twins Sam and Amanda Marchant, 18-year-old social work students from Newcastle. The bubbly duo describe themselves as ''twincredible'' and have their own ''twin song'' to introduce themselves to boys.
60-year-old Lesley Brain, a retired headhunter from Gloucestershire. ''I like to think that I'm intelligent, eccentric, perhaps a little unpredictable,'' says the WI member.
The mother-of-two, who also has two grandchildren, has been married twice, first at 16, and her second husband is 23 years her senior.
Charley Uchea, an unemployed 21-year-old from south London. She dropped out of art college and has been sacked from numerous jobs. Her cousin is Manchester United and England football player Kieran Richardson.
Tracey Barnard, 36, a cleaner by day and self-styled hippy raver by night from a small village in Cambridgeshire. She has never been on a plane.
Victoria Beckham-obsessed Chanelle Hayes, 19, a student from Wakefield.
Shabnam Paryani, 22, a temp receptionist from north London, who would like to be reincarnated as ''another enigma'', such as Michael Jackson or Johnny Depp.
19-year-old student Emily Parr. She says she could read from the age of two and rates her intelligence as 10 out of 10. She and her 17-year-old twin sisters are apparently known as ''the Hilton sisters of Bristol''.
Laura Williams, 23, a nanny from south Wales. Her ambition is to become an embalmer as she believes that when you are dead you should still look good.
Nicky Maxwell, a 27-year-old bank worker from Watford, who was adopted from Mother Teresa's orphanage in India when she was aged one. Her adoptive parents are Irish and Anglo-Indian. Love, she thinks, is ''for losers''.
Londoner Carole Vincent, 53, an unemployed sexual health worker. She is actively involved in politics and welfare issues, is staunchly anti-war and has spent most of her life protesting.
Newspaper reports said Big Brother producers were desperate to make the latest series of the show fun in a bid to bury the bitterness of the Celebrity version's race row earlier this year.
Regulator Ofcom said the broadcaster had made ''serious editorial misjudgements'' after the eventual winner, Indian actress Shilpa Shetty, was subjected to a tirade of abuse from fellow contestants.



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