The Province

Ex-White House aide adds fear factor

TELEVISION: Omarosa could win Celebrity Big Brother by terrifying the other contestant­s into submission

- HELENA ANDREWS-DYER

After it was announced that Omarosa Manigault would star on the upcoming season of Celebrity Big Brother, punchlines began flying about the former White House staffer’s ability to bounce from one reality show to the next.

But with those jokes out of the way, one critical question remains: Can Omarosa actually win the CBS show?

It’s a definite possibilit­y. Hear us out.

The made-for-reality-TV villain stepped into the pop-culture zeitgeist in 2004 as a contestant on the first season of The Apprentice. That appearance kicked off more than a decade of bankable B-list fame for the political-consultant-turned-pastor, who would eventually follow her former boss, Donald Trump, all the way to the White House.

Omarosa likes a clever angle and can milk the drama. Throughout her reality tenure — including stints on Fear Factor, The Surreal Life and two more seasons of Apprentice — she’s always had a stiletto in the game, but has never won any of the big prizes.

Omarosa came in eighth, sixth and 10th place in each of her Apprentice appearance­s, respective­ly, and yet her name is the one most readily associated with the show. The woman knows how to leave a lasting impression which, in the Big Brother universe, is a necessary skill.

The premise of Big Brother is sort of simple. A group of strangers move into a house, completely cut off from the outside world, but paranoia sets in quick, as house guests nominate who to boot each week. The “house guest” left standing wins $500,000 for their stress and anguish.

The key to winning, says our Washington Post colleague and resident Big Brother expert Emily Yahr, is forming alliances. The trick is to be friendly enough to earn the trust of your fellow contestant­s but ruthless enough to vote those same folks out of the house. But no bridge can be completely burned: With just two people left in the end, all those who’ve been evicted get to vote on who wins the prize money.

Omarosa’s outsized reputation obviously precedes her — a boon and a curse in this case. She’ll have a target on her back, Yahr explained,

but she can also strike fear in the hearts of her fellow contestant­s who might be too afraid of Omarosa’s signature wrath to nominate the reality

vet for eviction. That’s how some of the show’s biggest bullies end up lasting the longest : their ability to make the rest of the people trapped in the

house with them miserable. So that villain label Omarosa hasn’t been able to shake for the past 14 years? It could finally pay off.

 ??  ?? Brandi Glanville, one of the cast members on the television series The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, is no slouch when it comes to being a reality-show terror. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Brandi Glanville, one of the cast members on the television series The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, is no slouch when it comes to being a reality-show terror. — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? — CBS ?? Omarosa, famous for being infamous, trades the White House for the Big Brother House and its celebrity edition. Her reputation for villainy may intimidate the competitio­n.
— CBS Omarosa, famous for being infamous, trades the White House for the Big Brother House and its celebrity edition. Her reputation for villainy may intimidate the competitio­n.

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