Tag: Not A Trio

  • Big Brother 28 Day 9 Midday Live Feeds Update: Dee Quietly Pulls the House Around Ashley as Yash Faces Eviction and Taylor Becomes the Backup Target

    Big Brother 28 Day 9 Midday Live Feeds Update: Dee Quietly Pulls the House Around Ashley as Yash Faces Eviction and Taylor Becomes the Backup Target

    Big Brother 28 Day 9

    The first eviction of Big Brother 28 looked straightforward when Dee nominated Mallory Taylor and Yash. Mallory then won the Power of Veto, removed herself from the block and forced Dee to name Ashley Trail as the replacement nominee. Yash remained the obvious target, Ashley appeared to be the easy backup and Taylor seemed positioned to cruise into Week 2.

    That is no longer the complete picture.

    Yash is still the Houseguest most likely to be evicted Thursday if he does not save himself in the BB Blockbuster. However, Ashley’s aggressive campaigning and the realization that she is one of the only genuinely unattached players in the house have given Dee and her overlapping alliances a reason to reconsider the backup plan. Taylor, not Ashley, is now the person Dee’s group increasingly sees as the more valuable eviction if Yash wins safety.

    The shift is not based on Taylor doing anything catastrophic. It is about numbers. Taylor is visibly attached to LaTrice and is also believed to sit near the Jason, Rome and Lyric side of the house. Ashley has no named alliance, no established trio and no group that can legitimately claim her. In a house already being organized into duos and trios, Ashley’s isolation has suddenly become her greatest selling point.

    Dee’s Week 1 HOH has quietly evolved from a simple attempt to eliminate Yash into a test of whether the Icons, the Crossovers and the Red Corner can function as one voting machine without the rest of the house realizing they are connected. Thursday’s BB Blockbuster—or what I like to call BB Lackluster, depending on how much suspense the competition actually creates—will determine whether that machine ever has to reveal itself.

    Big Brother 28 Week 1 House Status

    Big Brother 28 Day 9

    Have-Nots: Chuk Anyanwu, Rick Devens, Drew Campbell, Haley Thogmartin and Taylor Brown

    Established showmance: Rome Seymour and Lyric Medeiros

    Primary eviction target: Yash Patel

    Developing backup target: Taylor Brown

    Houseguest whose position has improved the most: Ashley Trail

    Tuesday Morning: Ashley Begins Finding an Argument to Stay

    The groundwork for the changing vote began well before the house formally started talking about saving Ashley.

    Tuesday morning opened with the Houseguests celebrating LaTrice’s birthday. She received a crown, and the house later gathered for cupcakes and a short birthday speech. It was one of the few moments when nearly everyone stopped gaming long enough to resemble a normal group of people living together.

    The strategy resumed almost immediately.

    Chuk told Yash that he preferred keeping him over Taylor. That did not mean Chuk had secured the votes to save Yash, but it was important because it demonstrated that the eviction target was never universally agreed upon. Chuk and Kamu have consistently discussed the value of preserving male numbers, and Yash’s athletic ability can be pitched either as a reason to eliminate him or as a weapon the other men could use.

    Yash also helped Ashley with her makeup while both were nominated. It was a small social moment, but one that captured the strange position of the Week 1 nominees. They are simultaneously campaigning against one another, preparing to compete for safety and continuing to live together as though one of them is not about to become the season’s first evictee.

    The first meaningful push against Taylor came from Haley. She floated the possibility of keeping Ashley and evicting Taylor to separate Taylor from LaTrice. That argument would later become the foundation of the larger flip attempt.

    Ashley had not suddenly become more trusted than Taylor. Taylor had simply become more connected.

    Ashley checked in with Lyric and Mallory and received assurances that they wanted her to stay. Those reassurances were socially helpful, but they did not automatically translate into locked votes. Lyric and Mallory are tied to Melody through Not a Trio, while Lyric is also connected to Rome through both their showmance and the Love Triangle alliance. Every promise made to Ashley has to be measured against those existing relationships.

    At approximately the same time, Drew learned that Rome had proposed a possible final four involving Rome, Lyric, Melody and Drew. Drew carried that information back toward Dee’s side, adding to the perception that Rome was attempting to build a network through Lyric, Melody, Jason and LaTrice.

    Rome does not necessarily control everyone connected to him, but that distinction matters less once the rest of the house starts treating those connections as one organized side.

    Melody and Yash continued discussing their distrust of Chuk and their belief that Haley had influence over the group containing Chuk, Kamu, Dee and Devens. They also floated the possibility of working with Lyric, Mallory and another strong male competitor.

    That discussion showed why Melody is important to the vote. She has genuine trust in Yash and Drew, a close relationship with Lyric and membership in overlapping structures with Mallory. She is not simply standing on one side of the house. She is positioned between several people who could eventually force her to choose.

    Ashley separately told Drew that she believed Taylor was connected to Jason, LaTrice and Rome. That was exactly the type of argument Ashley needed to make. Instead of merely asking people to save her, she gave them a reason to believe evicting Taylor would damage an opposing structure.

    Barrett and Dee Agree on Yash, but Angela Wants Taylor

    By midday, Barrett Pfeiffer and Dee had reached the same conclusion about the primary target: Yash should leave.

    Their reasoning was practical. Yash was viewed as physically capable, less predictable than Taylor and more likely to nominate Dee if he won the next HOH. Taylor, despite being connected to LaTrice, had given Dee less reason to believe she would take an immediate shot at her.

    Angela did not see the week the same way.

    Angela preferred Taylor’s eviction. She was already uncomfortable with Taylor’s connection to LaTrice and had become increasingly suspicious of the people surrounding Jason and Rome. That created an early disagreement inside Dee’s core, but it also gave Ashley an opening. If Yash won the Blockbuster, Angela was already prepared to argue that Taylor was the more useful person to remove.

    Barrett warned Dee that Haley, Chuk and Kamu appeared prepared to evict Ashley under most circumstances. That meant Dee could not simply announce a new plan and expect everyone to fall in line. She had to give the Red Corner a reason to see Ashley as one of their numbers rather than an outsider they could remove without consequences.

    Tuesday Afternoon: Taylor Asks Angela Where She Stands

    Taylor later approached Angela and directly asked whether Angela liked her. Taylor worried that her quiet and reserved personality might make people uncomfortable or cause them to believe she was hiding something.

    Angela reassured her and said she had not personally heard anything negative.

    The conversation was socially kind but strategically misleading. Angela had already expressed an interest in Taylor leaving. Taylor received emotional reassurance from someone who was quietly considering voting her out if Yash won safety.

    Taylor then told LaTrice that she believed she only needed to survive Week 1 because Haley would become the next target. That comment exposed how Taylor currently understands the house. She sees herself and LaTrice together and views Haley as someone positioned against them.

    The problem is that everyone else can also see Taylor and LaTrice together. Haley’s argument for evicting Taylor was specifically built around breaking up that connection. Taylor’s most visible relationship is helping her emotionally while simultaneously making her more disposable strategically.

    Rome Tries to Redirect Devens Toward Jason

    Rome approached Rick Devens and encouraged him to create distance from Haley, Chuk and Kamu. Rome also told Devens that Jason liked him and wanted to work with him.

    Rome believed he was helping reconnect Devens with another potential ally. What he did not understand was that Devens and Dee already viewed the Red Corner differently from Chuk, Kamu and Haley.

    To the three newer players, the Red Corner appears to be a legitimate five-person alliance. To Dee and Devens, it has also functioned as a place to gather information and secure protection outside their tighter structure with Angela, Barrett and Drew.

    Rome’s attempt to pull Devens away therefore exposed how little the different sections of the house understand Dee’s complete position. He saw Devens as someone drifting between groups. Dee saw Devens as one of the people allowing her to sit inside multiple groups at once.

    Dee Initially Tells Ashley She Must Save Herself

    When Ashley spoke with Dee Tuesday afternoon, Dee gave her the bleakest version of the situation. She told Ashley that she needed to win the BB Blockbuster to remain in the house.

    At that moment, Dee had not completely committed to saving her. Yash remained the main target, but Ashley was still the convenient backup. Dee could tell Ashley to fight for herself while continuing to collect information from every alliance.

    That is a recurring feature of Dee’s HOH. She rarely gives two people the same complete version of what she is doing.

    To Ashley, the message was that she had to win.

    To Barrett and Angela, the conversation was about which nominee best protected their structure.

    To the Red Corner, Dee continued acting less informed and less committed than she actually was.

    To Drew, she discussed how the house was beginning to divide.

    That compartmentalization has allowed Dee to remain in the center, but it has also created numerous promises and conflicting expectations that can eventually be compared.

    Jason and LaTrice Identify Haley as a Week 2 Threat

    Jason and LaTrice agreed that Haley could not be allowed to win the next HOH.

    That concern makes sense from their perspective. Haley was already pushing Taylor’s name and had begun moving closer to Ashley. A Haley HOH could place pressure on LaTrice, Taylor, Jason or the people surrounding Rome.

    It also helps explain why removing Taylor appeals to Dee’s side. Taylor is not being evaluated only as an individual nominee. She represents one piece of the Jason-LaTrice-Rome side of the house.

    If Taylor leaves, LaTrice loses her clearest duo.

    Jason loses another potential number.

    Rome’s surrounding network becomes smaller.

    Ashley, meanwhile, could theoretically become indebted to the people who saved her.

    Dee Finally Reveals the Red Corner to Angela and Barrett

    The most important strategic conversation of the night came when Dee told Angela and Barrett about the Red Corner.

    The alliance consists of Dee, Devens, Kamu, Chuk and Haley. However, Dee explained that she and Devens had accepted it partly to collect information from that group.

    That disclosure clarified the actual hierarchy of Dee’s alliances.

    The Red Corner is valuable, but it is not Dee’s most trusted structure.

    The Crossovers—Dee, Angela, Devens, Barrett and Drew—appears to be the more protected group.

    The Icons—Dee, Angela and Devens—gives the three returning reality competitors a smaller core within it.

    Dee and Devens are therefore not simply members of several equal alliances. They are the bridge connecting groups that do not fully understand how much information is flowing back toward Dee.

    Drew then joined Dee, Angela and Barrett and argued for Yash’s eviction. He pointed to Yash’s competition ability and the possibility that Yash would nominate Dee.

    Once Drew left, Dee, Angela and Barrett discussed the alternative scenario. If Yash won the Blockbuster, they preferred evicting Taylor over Ashley.

    That was the moment Ashley’s position genuinely changed.

    The group was no longer asking whether Ashley could save herself. It was beginning to ask whether Ashley could be saved and recruited.

    The Crossovers later helped Ashley prepare for the BB Blockbuster. Angela used her experience from Big Brother 26 to explain the types of competitions Ashley might encounter. The coaching session was more than encouragement. It showed Ashley who was actively investing in her survival.

    The Court Jesters Are Already a Fake Alliance

    Jason later told LaTrice and Rome that the Court Jesters alliance with Drew and Melody was not real to him. He planned to collect whatever information he could and report it back to Mama’s Angels.

    What Jason does not fully appreciate is that Drew is doing almost the same thing from the other side.

    Drew has accepted conversations and potential structures with Jason, Rome and Melody while repeatedly carrying the relevant information back to Dee, Angela, Barrett and Devens.

    The Court Jesters are therefore not a functioning alliance in any traditional sense. It is a compromised information exchange in which multiple members believe they are the person exploiting everyone else.

    That can still be useful temporarily, but it is not a group that should be expected to protect all three members once nominations become difficult.

    Angela Begins Selling Ashley to Kamu

    Kamu initially remained one of the strongest voices for evicting Ashley. When Angela asked what he wanted, he said Ashley should leave.

    Angela responded by discussing the possibility of solidifying numbers with Dee, Kamu, Chuk and Haley. She was effectively helping connect the Crossovers with the Red Corner without telling Kamu that those relationships already overlapped through Dee and Devens.

    The Ashley argument then became simple: Ashley was available.

    She was not part of Mama’s Angels.

    She was not part of Not a Trio.

    She did not have a final two like Chuk had with both Kamu and Haley.

    She was not protected by an established showmance.

    If the group kept her, it could become the first structure to give her a legitimate home.

    Dee, Barrett and Drew also discussed the possibility of creating confusion during the short period between the BB Blockbuster result and the eviction vote. If Ashley remained nominated, they wanted to prevent the other side from settling into one clean plan.

    That idea is risky. A last-minute scramble can produce panic, misunderstandings or a tie that forces Dee to expose herself. However, it also proved how dramatically Ashley’s position had improved. Dee went from telling her she needed to win to discussing how to keep her even if she lost.

    Taylor and Ashley Bond Over Their Frustration With “Voting With the House”

    Taylor and Ashley eventually had a nominee-to-nominee conversation about the developing structure of the game. They recognized that numerous trios were forming and criticized the idea of blindly following a unanimous house vote.

    Both argued that Houseguests should vote according to their own games instead of hiding behind whatever the majority wanted.

    It was one of the most ironic conversations of the day.

    Ashley and Taylor were speaking honestly about independent voting while the rest of the house was quietly organizing the exact voting blocs that could decide which one left.

    Their conversation also showed why neither should be treated as passive. Ashley was actively trying to identify and enter a structure. Taylor was aware enough to recognize the number of trios surrounding her. What Taylor did not yet appear to understand was that her own connection to LaTrice had already placed her inside everyone else’s alliance math.

    Dee Plays Dumb While Kamu Talks Himself Into Keeping Ashley

    Dee’s late-night conversation with Kamu was one of the clearest examples of how she has managed her Week 1 HOH.

    Kamu questioned whether Dee was changing plans and breaking earlier promises. Dee responded by emphasizing that circumstances change and continued allowing Kamu to believe he was helping shape the decision.

    The conversation gradually moved toward merging the numbers around the Red Corner with Angela, Barrett and Drew.

    Kamu presented the idea as though he was helping build something larger.

    Those three people were already in the Crossovers with Dee and Devens.

    Dee later spoke to the cameras and indicated that she had intentionally played less informed, allowed Kamu to think the expansion was his idea and used the conversation to move him toward saving Ashley.

    That is Dee’s best strategic work so far. She did not order Kamu to reverse his position. She gave him enough room to arrive at the conclusion himself.

    By the end of those conversations, Kamu had moved from wanting Ashley out to seriously considering Taylor as the better eviction. He also described Rome and Lyric as an official showmance that would eventually need to be separated.

    That changed the Ashley argument again. Keeping her was no longer only about acquiring a free agent. Evicting Taylor or Yash could weaken the cluster of relationships surrounding Rome before that cluster became more organized.

    Overnight: Mallory’s Trust in Jason Continues to Collapse

    Mallory told Lyric that she was becoming less trusting of Jason and increasingly comfortable with Barrett. Lyric encouraged her to keep more information to herself, prompting Mallory to joke that she was not sure she had any cards left to hide.

    Mallory’s growing distrust of Jason matters because she is one of the possible swing votes if the eviction becomes Ashley versus Taylor.

    Mallory is connected to Lyric and Melody through Not a Trio. Lyric is connected to Rome, and Rome is connected to Jason. If Mallory begins pulling away from Jason’s broader network, Barrett and Dee have a better chance of convincing her that saving Ashley is not simply helping the opposing side.

    Mallory also said she would consider nominating Dee and Haley if she won the next HOH. That makes her one of the few Houseguests already discussing a direct strike at two people within Dee’s overlapping structure.

    Yash Thinks He Has More Votes Than He Probably Does

    Yash remained confident that he had enough support to survive. Lyric was considerably less certain.

    That difference captures the central problem with Yash’s campaign.

    He has legitimate relationships. Melody trusts him. Rome has spoken with him. Chuk previously said he preferred keeping Yash over Taylor. The men’s-number argument can appeal to Chuk and Kamu.

    However, a collection of positive conversations is not the same as a secured voting bloc.

    Several people reassuring Yash were also participating in conversations about evicting him. Devens offered encouraging words without necessarily intending to vote in Yash’s favor. Barrett and Dee had already settled on him as the primary target. Drew had directly argued that Yash could win competitions and nominate Dee.

    Yash is not isolated socially, but he has been unable to turn his relationships into an alliance strong enough to dictate the vote.

    Dee and Drew Agree the House Is Dividing

    Around 1 a.m., Dee and Drew met near the hammock and discussed the increasingly visible sides of the house.

    Dee said it was time to pull Ashley into their group.

    That statement explains the entire attempted flip better than any complicated vote chart. Ashley campaigned hard enough for Dee to recognize that she had nowhere else to go. A Houseguest without a home can either become an easy eviction or a recruit.

    Dee chose recruitment.

    The Crossovers already have five members. The Red Corner gives Dee and Devens access to three additional players. Ashley could become another number attached primarily to the people who rescued her.

    There is no officially named mega-alliance combining all of those people. Functionally, however, Dee is trying to make the Crossovers and the Red Corner vote together while adding Ashley to the edge of the structure.

    Haley Changes Her Mind About Ashley

    Haley later told Angela that she had started liking Ashley more and was open to keeping her.

    Haley also shared information about Jason discussing the removal of the men. That gave Chuk and Kamu another reason to distrust Jason’s side and another reason to preserve a nominee who could become their number.

    Haley’s movement was critical because she is one of the three newer players inside the Red Corner. Dee and Devens could not claim to have united that alliance if Haley, Chuk and Kamu continued voting against the Crossovers.

    Once Haley and Kamu began seeing the value in Ashley, the possibility of the two structures voting together became real.

    Rome and Lyric Make the Showmance Impossible to Ignore

    Lyric and Rome continued cuddling and spending the night together. Lyric asked Mallory not to tell anyone she had been sleeping in Rome’s bed, but the showmance was already becoming too visible to conceal.

    Kamu openly identified them as a pair that would eventually need to be broken apart.

    The showmance affects far more than Rome and Lyric.

    Lyric has Harmony Hotties with Melody.

    Lyric, Melody and Mallory have Not a Trio.

    Rome has Mama’s Angels with Jason and LaTrice.

    Rome, Lyric and Jason have the named Love Triangle alliance.

    Rome also approached Drew about a possible four involving Drew, Melody, Lyric and himself.

    Even if those arrangements are not all equally real, the perception is that Rome and Lyric sit in the middle of a growing web. That perception is enough to make every player near them more vulnerable.

    Day 9 Morning: Melody Hits a Wall From Sleep Deprivation

    Day 9 began with Melody exhausted and emotional after another difficult night of sleeping in a crowded house.

    She described Angela and Chuk snoring back-to-back and said the lack of sleep left her so frustrated that she cried. She eventually showered and tried to reset for the day.

    There is no reason to turn that moment into a larger personal crisis. She was tired, overstimulated and trapped in a house where there is almost no genuine privacy. The problem is that she may also be one of the most important votes of the week.

    Melody likes Ashley.

    She trusts Yash.

    She is close to Lyric.

    She works with Mallory.

    She has an information-based alliance with Drew and Jason.

    Every possible Blockbuster result puts one of her relationships against another. She has to navigate that while barely sleeping.

    The end of the Have-Not period also rearranged the sleeping situation. Taylor moved into Lyric’s bed while Lyric slept with Rome. Devens and Barrett shared a bed, Chuk moved toward Kamu’s space, Haley stayed in the HOH room with Dee and Drew initially remained in the Have-Not room.

    None of those sleeping arrangements automatically creates an alliance, but Big Brother relationships are often strengthened through the people who consistently end their nights in the same rooms. The showmance, the Red Corner connections and Dee’s bond with Haley are all being reinforced outside formal strategy conversations.

    Angela’s Drew Paranoia Returns

    Angela continued questioning whether Drew was withholding information or quietly shifting toward another side.

    Dee, Barrett and others tried to calm her, and Angela eventually said she felt better about Drew. The concern did not completely disappear.

    Drew gives Angela legitimate reasons to be nervous. He has accepted conversations with numerous groups, entered the Court Jesters and listened to Rome’s proposed final four. The difference is that Drew has repeatedly reported much of that information back to the Crossovers.

    Angela sees the external conversations.

    Dee sees the information Drew brings home.

    That creates a recurring disagreement over whether Drew is infiltrating the other side or preparing to abandon them.

    Dee has also begun subtly allowing Angela’s paranoia to become part of the information circulating through the house. That gives Dee another layer of protection. If the Crossovers are exposed, Angela’s unpredictability can become the public story while Dee remains the person privately managing the relationships.

    Mallory Questions Barrett About Drew

    Mallory continued probing Barrett about Drew and the relationships surrounding him.

    That conversation showed how much attention Drew is receiving from both sides. Rome has approached him. Jason includes him in the Court Jesters. Melody trusts him. Dee and Barrett consider him part of the Crossovers. Angela periodically questions whether he is loyal.

    Drew is one of the best-positioned Houseguests in the short term because everyone believes they have access to him.

    He could also become one of the fastest people exposed if those groups compare notes.

    For now, Drew and Dee appear comfortable allowing the house to believe he is still deciding where to land. They have discussed targeting Rome’s side and believe Kamu can be moved. Drew has also recognized that a larger merger of numbers is beginning to form around Dee.

    Devens Reassures Both Ashley and Yash

    Devens separately offered reassurance to Ashley and Yash.

    The two conversations should not be interpreted as equal commitments.

    Devens is part of the Icons, Crossovers and Red Corner. His position requires him to maintain relationships with nominees who could survive. Telling both Ashley and Yash that they have a chance protects him regardless of the Blockbuster result.

    The more reliable indicator is not what Devens says to each nominee individually. It is which alliance conversations he ultimately follows.

    Devens knows about the developing Ashley plan, but his individual messaging has remained broad enough to preserve deniability.

    Yash Makes the Male-Numbers Pitch

    Yash continued campaigning by emphasizing that he was athletic and that the men could control the game if they kept one another.

    It is the strongest strategic argument available to him.

    Chuk and Kamu have already discussed male numbers. Chuk previously preferred keeping Yash over Taylor. Rome has a relationship with Yash. Drew is viewed as a capable competitor, and Barrett could theoretically benefit from another male shield.

    The problem is that Yash’s argument also confirms Dee’s reason for targeting him. He is openly presenting himself as an athletic number who could help form a powerful group of men.

    To Chuk and Kamu, that can sound useful.

    To Dee, Angela and Barrett, it can sound like a future problem.

    Melody’s Read on Chuk: He Agrees With Everyone

    Melody told Mallory that Chuk appears to agree with whoever is speaking to him.

    That assessment reflects the difficulty of determining Chuk’s true vote.

    He told Yash he preferred keeping him over Taylor.

    He has a final-two arrangement with Kamu.

    He also has a separate final-two arrangement with Haley.

    He is part of the Red Corner with Dee and Devens.

    If the Red Corner and Crossovers formally align behind Ashley, Chuk may follow that group. If Yash remains beside Taylor, Chuk’s earlier preference for Yash could reappear.

    Chuk is not necessarily lying every time he agrees with someone. He may be trying to preserve options until the Blockbuster determines which vote actually matters. The result is that multiple nominees believe he could be available to them.

    The Feeds Cut During Another Angela and Dee Conversation

    Shortly after midday, Angela began explaining something to Dee at the table before the feeds cut away.

    That became a fitting ending to the morning window. The house had spent several hours circling the same questions without fully resolving them:

    Can Angela trust Drew?

    Can Dee unite the Crossovers and Red Corner?

    Can Ashley secure enough votes without winning the Blockbuster?

    Does Yash actually have the support he believes he has?

    Will Melody and Mallory vote with Lyric and Rome or follow their own individual relationships?

    Production cutting away did not create those uncertainties, but it prevented feed watchers from receiving another potentially useful piece of the conversation.

    Where the Votes Appear to Stand Before the BB Blockbuster

    The Blockbuster winner will come off the block and regain the right to vote. That leaves two nominees unable to vote, while Dee only votes in the event of a tie.

    With 17 Houseguests still in the game, there should be 14 regular eviction votes. Eight votes guarantee an eviction. A 7–7 split would force Dee to cast the deciding vote.

    The vote remains dependent on which nominee wins safety.

    Scenario One: Yash Remains on the Block

    Yash remains the most likely evictee in almost every combination where he does not win the Blockbuster.

    Dee, Barrett, Angela and Drew have all participated in conversations identifying him as the main target. Haley has moved toward Dee’s plan, and Kamu has at least become open to keeping Ashley. Devens is expected to remain near Dee’s structure even though he has reassured Yash individually.

    Yash does have potential support.

    Melody wants him to stay.

    Rome has a relationship with him.

    Chuk previously preferred him over Taylor.

    The male-number argument may appeal to Kamu.

    However, those relationships have not become one firm coalition. Unless the vote changes again Thursday, Yash is still the person in the most danger.

    Scenario Two: Ashley Wins the Blockbuster

    If Ashley wins, the final nominees become Taylor and Yash.

    Yash would remain the expected eviction.

    Ashley would regain her vote and would have a strong incentive to remain aligned with the people who helped her prepare and considered saving her. Taylor’s closest people would vote against Yash, and Dee’s side already sees Yash as the primary target.

    This is the cleanest result for Dee. Ashley survives without the alliance having to expose the full rescue plan, Taylor stays as a possible future target and Yash leaves without a major split.

    Scenario Three: Taylor Wins the Blockbuster

    If Taylor wins, the final nominees become Ashley and Yash.

    Yash would again be the likely eviction.

    Ashley’s position against Yash has improved because Dee’s side views her as recruitable. Taylor would also regain her vote, although her exact preference would matter less if the broader consensus remained focused on Yash.

    The only path for Yash would be convincing Chuk, Kamu, Melody, Rome and enough of Taylor’s side that keeping an athletic male number was more valuable than keeping Ashley. That coalition had not solidified by early Wednesday afternoon.

    Scenario Four: Yash Wins the Blockbuster

    This is the result that could blow the house open.

    The final nominees would become Ashley and Taylor, and Yash would regain his vote.

    The Crossovers voters would be Angela, Barrett, Devens and Drew.

    The Red Corner adds Chuk, Haley and Kamu, with Dee sitting out unless the vote ties.

    If all seven vote to evict Taylor, the Ashley side begins with seven votes.

    On the other side, LaTrice, Jason, Rome and Lyric have clear reasons to keep Taylor. Yash has previously expressed interest in both himself and Taylor surviving. Mallory is close to Lyric and Melody, while Melody has been pulled between Ashley, Yash, Lyric and Drew.

    That creates the possibility of a 7–7 split.

    To save Ashley without forcing Dee to expose herself, the Crossovers-Red Corner group needs at least one additional vote. Melody and Mallory are the most realistic places to look, although neither should be treated as locked.

    A tie is the outcome Dee should want to avoid.

    Breaking it against Taylor would publicly confirm that Dee valued Ashley and the Crossovers-Red Corner structure over the people surrounding LaTrice, Jason and Rome.

    Breaking it against Ashley would expose that much of the week’s rescue plan was never secure.

    Dee’s own preference between Ashley and Taylor has moved throughout the week, making it even more important for her allies to deliver eight votes without requiring her involvement.

    The Complete Big Brother 28 Alliance Map

    The current map is crowded, but not every named group is equally real.

    The Icons

    Members: Angela , Dee and Devens

    The Icons are the three returning reality-television players. They share the obvious problem of eventually being grouped together by the first-time Houseguests.

    The trio is real, but Dee and Devens also appear to have a particularly strong connection within it. Angela remains valuable, experienced and loyal, but her paranoia can create instability.

    The Crossovers

    Members: Angela , Barrett , Dee, Drew and Devens

    The Crossovers appear to be Dee’s most meaningful complete alliance.

    Barrett gives Dee a close strategic and increasingly flirtatious relationship.

    Drew gathers information from numerous parts of the house.

    Angela and Devens give Dee experienced allies who understand the danger of the returning players becoming targets.

    The group’s immediate project is protecting Ashley if Yash wins the Blockbuster.

    The Red Corner

    Members: Chuk, Dee, Devens, Haley and Kamu

    The Red Corner is real to Chuk, Haley and Kamu.

    Dee and Devens have also treated it as an information-gathering alliance and a protection layer around their tighter core.

    The group is now moving toward the same Ashley plan as the Crossovers, but that does not mean everyone understands the alliance in the same way.

    Café Con Leche

    Members: Dee and Jason

    Café Con Leche is a named Dee-Jason duo.

    It gives Dee a direct information line into Jason’s side of the house, but it does not appear to carry the same trust as the Icons or Crossovers.

    Jason is simultaneously discussing plans that could eventually threaten the returning players, making this more of an insurance policy than Dee’s true final structure.

    Mama’s Angels

    Members: Jason, LaTrice and Rome

    Mama’s Angels are one of the clearer trios outside Dee’s collection of alliances.

    Jason actively reports information back to LaTrice and Rome. Their concern about Haley winning HOH also shows that they are beginning to identify the people positioned against them.

    The Court Jesters

    Members: Drew, Jason and Melody

    The Court Jesters are already compromised.

    Jason has told LaTrice and Rome that the alliance is fake to him.

    Drew carries information back to the Crossovers.

    Melody is the member most likely to get caught between the two information pipelines.

    The Love Triangle

    Members: Jason, Lyric and Rome

    The Love Triangle is a named strategic alliance.

    It should not be confused with the social-media joke involving Barrett, Dee and Jason.

    Rome and Lyric are the actual showmance, while Jason gives the pair a third strategic number.

    Harmony Hotties

    Members: Lyric and Melody

    Harmony Hotties is the named Lyric-Melody duo shown on the updated alliance chart.

    They appear genuinely close, but Melody’s relationships with Yash and Drew occasionally pull her away from Lyric’s preferred voting side.

    Not a Trio

    Members: Lyric, Mallory and Melody

    The name is deliberately unserious, but the relationship is real enough to matter.

    Lyric wants to remain close to both women. Mallory has become increasingly suspicious of Jason, while Melody is trying to manage several relationships outside the trio.

    Taylor and LaTrice

    Taylor and LaTrice are one of the most visible unnumbered duos.

    Their closeness is a major reason Taylor has become the backup target. Evicting Taylor would weaken LaTrice and indirectly reduce the numbers available to Jason and Rome.

    Rome and Lyric

    Rome and Lyric are both a strategic duo and the season’s first established showmance.

    They are no longer successfully hiding it, regardless of Lyric asking Mallory to keep the sleeping arrangement quiet.

    Kamu and Chuk

    Kamu and Chuk have a close relationship and a final-two understanding.

    Their desire to protect male numbers gives Yash his best argument for remaining in the game.

    Chuk and Haley

    Chuk also has a separate final-two arrangement with Haley.

    That leaves Chuk protected on both sides of the smaller Kamu-Chuk-Haley structure and explains why Melody believes he tends to agree with everyone.

    Dee and Devens

    Dee and Devens operate as one of the strongest internal duos within the Icons, Crossovers and Red Corner.

    Their ability to move information between those three groups is the foundation of Dee’s current power.

    Who Is Not in a Named Alliance?

    Ashley Trail and Yash Patel remain the two Houseguests shown completely outside the named alliance chart.

    Ashley is actively being recruited by Dee, Angela, Barrett and Drew. Her lack of alliances has become the reason they want to keep her.

    Yash has personal relationships with Melody, Rome, Chuk and others, but he has not converted them into a stable named alliance capable of controlling the vote.

    That difference is critical. Ashley is being viewed as an empty seat someone can claim. Yash is being viewed as an athletic free agent who could become dangerous if the wrong side claims him.

    Rome and Lyric Are the Actual Showmance

    Rome and Lyric remain the only fully established showmance.

    They have kissed, cuddled, shared a bed and spent enough time together that the rest of the house openly discusses them as one strategic unit.

    Their showmance is not dangerous only because they protect each other. It connects several different structures:

    Lyric brings Melody and Mallory.

    Rome brings Jason and LaTrice.

    The Love Triangle gives Rome and Lyric a formal alliance with Jason.

    Rome’s proposed four with Drew and Melody would have added another layer.

    That entire network may be looser than Dee believes, but appearances control nominations. Once a showmance becomes the visible center of several relationships, everyone around it can become collateral damage.

    What Is Going on With Barrett, Dee and Jason?

    There are two completely different “love triangles” being discussed.

    The official named Love Triangle alliance is Jason, Rome and Lyric.

    The Barrett-Dee-Jason triangle is a feeder-created joke built from two separate dynamics.

    Barrett has a genuine and increasingly obvious crush on Dee. He called her his Survivor crush, while Dee has praised Barrett’s personality, described him as underestimated and referred to him as “my nerd.” They have touched knees, flirted, hugged and spent extended time physically close to each other.

    Jason’s part is more playful.

    Jason and Barrett have displayed comfortable, tactile joking energy, including hand-holding and cuddly interactions that social media immediately turned into a running bit. Barrett therefore became the center of a joking triangle: genuine flirtation with Dee on one side and exaggerated, campy chemistry with Jason on the other.

    There is no confirmed three-person romantic relationship.

    The strategic consequence is more interesting than the joke. Barrett has intimate access to Dee’s thoughts while also maintaining enough comfort with Jason to potentially receive information from the other side. If Barrett handles it correctly, the “love triangle” gives him social coverage across the house. If he becomes too visibly attached to Dee, Jason and the others may stop treating him as an independent connection.

    Why Is Angela Twerking So Much?

    Angela’s repeated twerking appears to be a running house joke rather than a complicated game move.

    She has danced with Jason, performed for groups of Houseguests and leaned into the attention whenever everyone starts encouraging her. It is also a continuation of the playful twerking jokes associated with her previous Big Brother season.

    The house encourages it because it is funny, ridiculous and temporarily breaks the tension of living inside a game where every conversation can become evidence against someone.

    There is an incidental strategic benefit. Angela dancing, joking and making herself the center of a harmless bit softens the image of an experienced returning player. People laugh with her instead of spending every moment viewing her as a threat.

    That does not mean every twerk is planned gameplay.

    Sometimes Angela is simply being Angela, the other Houseguests know she will commit to the bit and everyone needs something to do between strategy conversations.

    The contrast is what makes her fascinating this season. Angela can spend one moment entertaining the entire kitchen and the next questioning whether Drew has secretly betrayed an alliance that has existed for less than a week.

    Other Random Things Happening in the House

    LaTrice celebrated her birthday with a crown, cupcakes and a speech.

    Yash helped Ashley with her makeup despite both being nominated.

    The Houseguests held a pool party before the strategy intensified.

    Lyric asked Mallory not to reveal that she had been sleeping with Rome, even though the showmance was already obvious.

    Mallory said she would consider nominating Dee and Haley.

    Jason and LaTrice agreed that a Haley HOH would be dangerous for them.

    Melody has become increasingly suspicious of Jason and believes he is more connected to Taylor and LaTrice than he admits.

    Mallory has also started trusting Jason less while becoming more comfortable with Barrett.

    Devens has occasionally described feeling disconnected despite being included in three of the house’s most important alliances.

    The Have-Nots were finally allowed to eat again, but the kitchen was left messy afterward.

    Barrett and Devens shared a bed once the sleeping arrangements changed.

    Melody’s exhaustion was worsened by Angela and Chuk snoring.

    The Houseguests reached their first Waffle Wednesday, which is fitting because several of them are still changing their minds about the vote every few hours.

    The Real State of the House Heading Into Thursday

    Dee currently has the strongest position in Big Brother 28.

    She has the Icons with Angela and Devens.

    She has the Crossovers with Angela, Devens, Barrett and Drew.

    She has the Red Corner with Devens, Kamu, Chuk and Haley.

    She has Café Con Leche with Jason.

    She is developing a close personal and strategic relationship with Barrett.

    She is now attempting to recruit Ashley.

    That is an enormous amount of coverage for the first HOH.

    It is also dangerously complicated.

    Angela is suspicious of Drew.

    Drew is collecting deals from numerous people.

    Devens has told others he occasionally feels disconnected.

    Kamu questioned Dee’s changing promises.

    Jason is already discussing the eventual removal of powerful men and returning players.

    Mallory would consider nominating Dee.

    Rome is trying to redirect people away from the Red Corner.

    Dee’s position works only while every group believes its connection to her is special. Once two groups compare notes, her careful web could become the reason everyone targets her.

    Ashley has improved her position because she gave Dee something useful: availability. She is still nominated and could absolutely leave, but she is no longer the automatic backup boot.

    Taylor has fallen into danger because her relationships are visible. She has not played a disastrous game. She is simply attached to people Dee’s side wants to weaken.

    Yash remains in the worst position because he combines the wrong qualities for a Week 1 nominee: athletic ability, uncertain loyalty and enough confidence to make the majority believe he could become dangerous if he survives.

    The clean result for Dee is still Yash leaving.

    The revealing result is Yash winning the Blockbuster.

    If that happens, the house will have to decide whether Ashley’s potential value is worth exposing the alliance structure built to save her. Taylor and Ashley would become the final nominees, the votes could split down the center and Dee could be forced to show everyone exactly where she stands.

    That is the real story of Big Brother 28 Day 9.

    The first eviction is no longer only about which nominee played the worst Week 1 game. It is about which side can turn an isolated nominee into a number, which relationships the house considers dangerous and whether Dee can control the vote without revealing that nearly every road currently leads back to her.

    This Big Brother 28 Day 9 Update was brought to you by #LNC

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