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7:16pm Friday 5th September 2008
The winner of the ninth series of Big Brother will be crowned on Friday.
Rachel, Sara, Rex, Darnell and Mikey have survived 93 days in the house, but on Friday night one will walk away with the £100,000 prize.
Bookies' favourite Mikey Hughes, 33, is a radio producer from Ayrshire, Scotland. At 23 Mikey lost his sight while undergoing an operation and is now a radio producer for the blind station Radio Insight.
The outsider is albino Darnell Swallow, 26, a songwriter from London. He was deported to the UK after getting involved with gang culture in the United States.
He was born in Ipswich and raised in St Louis in the US and focuses much of his time mentoring community groups.
Australian Sara Folino, 27, was a late comer to the Big Brother house. She had a rural upbringing in Melbourne but moved to London five years ago. She now works as a personal assistant.
The housemates had a special supper on Thursday to mark the end of their time in the house.
Big Brother marked their last supper by playing music into the house, including My Way by Frank Sinatra and I Will Always Love You by Whitney Houston.
Darnell, Mikey and Rachel huddled into the Diary Room to thank Big Brother for the party.
"Whitney Houston, man. That was it, right there. That was the tune to put on at that moment, that did it right there," Darnell said.
Q. I am looking for a small table that can be mounted on the wall and folds down when not in use.
DRUNKENNESS seems to be the main driving force behind Harold Pinter’s classic 1974 play No Man’s Land.
He may have made the successful transition from Slough to Hollywood, but you won't catch Ricky Gervais losing his head over fame and fortune. As he makes his first lead debut in Ghost Town, the British funnyman reveals why he plans to stay grounded.
Henry Hobson runs a successful bootmaker's shop in nineteenth-century Salford.
questions@thehousedirectory.com HTML color chart Halloween falls in half term this year and it promises to be one of the biggest scarefests yet. JAMES MURPHY finds the best places to go
Walthamstow’s photographic society, founded in 1894, isn’t just one of the oldest in the country, it’s also one of the most successful. Its free annual exhibition is on this week at St Mary's Welcome Centre in Walthamstow village: weekday evenings and all day Saturday 1 November.
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