Big Brother 28 Angela Murray, Rick Devens And A Mystery Survivor Player Turn The 14-Newbie Cast Into Another #PIFE Test

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Big Brother 28 Angela? Big Brother 28 had enough on the board already.

CBS announced 14 new houseguests, a “Time Trip” theme, a 90-minute premiere, a house built around the past, present and future of the game, and a season being sold on the idea that time itself can mess with the rules. That was already plenty. The announced cast has a bartender, a rocket scientist, an MMA fighter, an attorney, a pickleball coach, a corporate game show host, a drag queen and reality-TV alum, and enough different personalities to let a real season breathe on its own.

CBS also made it clear that those 14 names are not the full cast, teasing additional surprise houseguests and a summer where every twist could rewrite the rules.

That should be exciting.

Instead, it already feels like a warning.

Entertainment Weekly reported that Survivor fan favorite Rick Devens is set to compete on Big Brother 28, and that he will not be the only former Survivor player entering the house. Men’s Journal reported that Big Brother 26’s now Big Brother 28Angela Murray is also returning, with CBS declining comment. So before the 14 newbies even get a real chance to define their own season, the board is already being tilted toward familiar names, familiar narratives, and the same production-heavy mess fans complain about every summer.

That is where this season immediately starts feeling like Production In Full Effect.

This is not about pretending Angela Murray or Rick Devens are boring choices. They are not. Angela is chaos in human form when you put her inside the Big Brother house. Rick knows how to turn a reality-TV moment into a headline. The mystery Survivor player, whoever it ends up being, brings another layer of outside-game experience into a house where most of the announced cast has never played anything like this before.

The issue is not whether they can make good television.

They probably can.

The issue is Big Brother once again acting like the game needs a gimmick more than it needs a cast.

The 14 newbies should be the season. Instead, they are already in danger of becoming the people reacting to the season. A normal first-time houseguest has to walk in, build trust, make mistakes, get paranoid, find their footing, and create a story from scratch. Angela does not. Rick does not. A former Survivor player does not. They enter with reputations, footage, fanbases, backlash, narratives, and production value already attached to them.

Angela is not just “a returning houseguest.”

She is Angela from BB26 — the woman who won the first Head of Household, blew up the house early, survived the block over and over again, had the veto used on her multiple times, and somehow made it all the way to sixth place in a game where she probably should have been gone long before jury. She was not a quiet strategist slipping through the cracks. She was the crack in the wall that the whole season kept staring at.

That is exactly why her return is both entertaining and unnecessary.

Angela can give CBS the footage it wants. She can cry, fight, spiral, laugh, survive, overreact, get underestimated, and turn a random Tuesday into a full episode. That is valuable for television. It is not automatically valuable for the game.

If Angela walks into Big Brother 28 and the house immediately has to work around her, target her, protect her, tolerate her, or use her as the shield everyone swears they will cut later, then the newbies are no longer playing a natural opening game. They are playing the Angela Murray Experience with 13 other moving parts.

Rick Devens is a different situation, but the same concern applies.

Rick is technically a Big Brother newbie. He has never played this format. He has never had to live under the 24/7 live-feed microscope. He has never had to campaign after a veto ceremony, survive a Thursday eviction vote, deal with HoHitis, or sit in a house for weeks with people who know exactly what he said three rooms ago.

But Rick is not new to reality competition.

He played Survivor: Edge of Extinction, got voted out early, returned through the Edge, and made it all the way to fourth place. He came back for Survivor 50 and finished seventh after another loud, high-visibility run. Entertainment Weekly described him as a player known for challenges, idols, fake-idol chaos, “breaking news” bits, and big TV moments.

That does not make him a Big Brother expert.

It does make him different from a true first-time player.

Big Brother is not Survivor, but reality-TV instincts travel.

Rick knows cameras. Rick knows confessionals. Rick knows how to play from the bottom. Rick knows how to sell a moment. Rick knows how to become useful to the show. A true newbie does not always understand that. A recruit definitely does not. Rick may have to learn Big Brother’s mechanics, but he does not have to learn how reality television works.

That is a real advantage, even if CBS never calls it one.

The same goes for the mystery Survivor player. Until CBS reveals the name, there is no reason to slap a rumor on the article and pretend it is confirmed. Julie Chen Moonves has already warned that some BB28 casting rumors are accurate and some are dead wrong, so the smart move is to keep that spot unnamed until the show or a legitimate top source makes it official.

But even without the name, the concept is enough to change the season.

A Survivor player entering Big Brother is still a crossover player. They may be new to this house, but they are not new to votes, alliances, paranoia, confessionals, public reaction, pressure, and production-driven storytelling. They know what it means to be watched, edited, discussed, praised, dragged, and turned into content.

That is not the same starting line as a regular newbie walking into the house for the first time.

That is the part nobody should dance around.

The newbies have to learn Big Brother. Angela has already lived it. Rick and the other Survivor player have to learn Big Brother’s rhythm, but they already understand reality competition. They know how to give producers something to use. They know how to perform without looking like they are performing. They know how to read when a moment matters.

That does not mean they are guaranteed to play well.

It does mean the board is not clean.

This is where #PIFE becomes the story.

Production does not have to openly rig anything for the game to feel slanted. They do not have to fake votes. They do not have to tell people exactly what to do in the Diary Room. They can simply design the opening weeks in a way that makes the known names harder to remove than they should be.

That is how Big Brother usually gets away with it.

A returnee enters and suddenly there is early safety. A big character is in danger and suddenly there is a twist. A fan favorite needs help and suddenly America gets power. A famous reality-TV name would be an obvious first target and suddenly the house is split into teams, eras, time periods, safety groups, mystery rooms, or some theme-based nonsense that conveniently slows down the cleanest strategic move.

Then everyone is supposed to act like it is just part of the game.

That is why fans do not trust this show.

Big Brother keeps saying “expect the unexpected,” but sometimes the unexpected is just production finding a new way to keep the people it wants on television longer. Fans watched Paul enter BB19 with friendship bracelets and the Pendant of Protection. Fans watched Tyler get the Cloud App in BB20. Fans watched Angela keep surviving BB26 when the house had multiple chances to cut her. Fans watched Tucker play loud, reckless, and sloppy, become one of the main production characters of the season, leave before jury, and still win America’s Favorite Houseguest.

Whether someone agrees with every example or not, the larger pattern is the point.

Big Brother has spent years training fans to question the timing of twists, powers, protections, and fan votes. The audience did not invent that skepticism out of nowhere. The show earned it.

Now Big Brother 28 is walking directly into that same conversation before the feeds even open.

The Time Trip theme gives production the perfect excuse. Angela represents the recent past of Big Brother. Rick represents Survivor crossing into Big Brother’s present. The mystery Survivor player represents the future of CBS treating its reality competition shows like one big connected universe. Big Brother, Survivor, The Amazing Race, The Challenge, Drag Race — everyone can float from one show to another now.

That may be good business.

It does not automatically make for a better Big Brother season.

The 14 newbies are the ones who have to pay for it. They now have to decide whether Angela is too unstable to keep or too useful to cut. They have to decide whether Rick is just a fun Survivor guy or someone who can become the narrator of the season if nobody checks him. They have to decide whether the second Survivor player is a shield, a threat, a number, or a production centerpiece. And they have to make those decisions while trying to figure out what the Time Trip twist is actually going to do to the game.

That is not a normal opening week.

That is a fog machine.

The best move for the newbies is obvious, but dangerous. They need to compare notes quietly. They need to make sure Angela, Rick, and the mystery Survivor player do not become the center of every conversation. They need to use the known names as shields without letting them become leaders. They need to avoid the BB19 mistake, where a returning player walks in and the newbies start acting like extras in somebody else’s sequel.

But that is easier said than done.

Angela can derail a room without even trying. Rick can become the guy everybody likes having around until they realize he is narrating the season. The mystery Survivor player could sit back and let everyone else panic first. None of them are unbeatable. None of them are automatically great Big Brother players. But all of them bring something the newbies do not have.

They have experience being produced.

That is the advantage nobody wants to say out loud.

The future-of-the-show question is where this gets worse. If Big Brother 28 works as a CBS reality crossover season, production will learn the wrong lesson. They will not learn, “Cast better newbies.” They will learn, “Bring in more familiar faces.” They will not learn, “Let the house breathe.” They will learn, “Theme the season harder.” They will not learn, “Fans want the core game protected.” They will learn, “Fans complain but still watch when we bring back people they know.”

That is the danger of #PIFE.

It is not just about one week, one power, or one returnee. It is about the show slowly training viewers to accept a version of Big Brother where the cast is not the main ingredient anymore. The theme is. The twist is. The returnee is. The crossover is. The fan vote is. The panel show is. The brand synergy is.

The actual houseguests become pieces on a board production keeps repainting.

Angela Murray returning could be good television. Rick Devens entering the house could be fun. A second Survivor player crossing over could be interesting. All of that can be true.

It can also be unnecessary.

Big Brother did not need Angela. It did not need Rick. It did not need another Survivor player. It needed the confidence to cast strong new players and let them play. Instead, BB28 is already giving off the feeling that the newbies are not enough by themselves.

That is a bad message to send before the season even starts.

If Angela, Rick, and the mystery Survivor player enter with no special protection and have to survive the same block, veto, vote, and social consequences as everyone else, then fine. Let them play. Let the newbies take their shot. Let the house decide.

But if the Time Trip theme turns into another convenient production device where the biggest names are shielded just long enough to become central characters, then fans do not need to wait until finale night to know what kind of season this is.

That would not be Big Brother at its best.

That would be Production In Full Effect.

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Comments

One response to “Big Brother 28 Angela Murray, Rick Devens And A Mystery Survivor Player Turn The 14-Newbie Cast Into Another #PIFE Test”

  1. Martino Williams Avatar
    Martino Williams

    Why doesn’t BB trust their product. They keep shoving this stunt casting down our throats each season. Also why don’t they cast real people anymore. So with hundreds of black men applying, they have started giving us only 1 black man each season, and likely more zesty men overall. Bringing back CBS plant Angela Murray is shameful. Angela was cast to cause chaos on feeds. These type of gimmicks are unnecessary.

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