Runtime: | 60 minutes |
Executive Producer: | Jay Bienstock Mike Fleiss |
Presenter: | Matt Rogers |
Opentheme: | There Goes the Neighborhood, performed by Eric Martin |
Company: | Next Entertainment Jay Bienstock Productions Warner Horizon Television |
Country: | United States |
Network: | CBS |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 7 |
There Goes the Neighborhood (originally to be titled Block Party) is an American prime-time reality television program on CBS. The show premiered on August 9, 2009, and features eight suburban families shut out from the outside world with no television, internet, phones, or contact with anybody outside of their neighborhood.[1] The families will compete in challenges against each other. Each week, one family will be banished from the neighborhood, thereby eliminating the family from contention for the show's $250,000 prize fund. The show's executive producers are Jay Bienstock and Mike Fleiss.[2] [3] The show's presenter is Matt Rogers, a finalist on American Idol 3.[4]
The show was recorded in Kennesaw, Georgia, a suburb of Atlanta, specifically on the 2500 block of Fairlawn Downs NW in the Legacy Park community's Annandale Main. For the program, producers built a 20adj=onNaNadj=on tall wall around the competitors' neighborhood to enforce their isolation from the outside world. Electricity and gas utilities for most household luxuries were cut off from each family's home.
Production for the show began in early June 2009. The families being placed into lockdown within the constructed barriers beginning on June 15.
Family Name | Family Members | Status | |
---|---|---|---|
DeGirolamo |
| bgcolor=tomato | Eliminated 1st on August 9, 2009 |
Southey |
| bgcolor=tomato | Eliminated 2nd on August 16, 2009 |
Bussiere |
| Eliminated 3rd on August 23, 2009 | |
Nelson |
| bgcolor=tomato | Eliminated 4th on August 30, 2009 |
Mullennix |
| bgcolor=tomato | Eliminated 5th on September 6, 2009 |
Upshaw |
| bgcolor=tomato | Eliminated 6th on September 13, 2009 |
Schindler |
| Runner-Up | |
Johnston |
| Winners |
The program's gameplay is extremely similar to that of the American version of Big Brother (specifically Big Brother 2). In each episode, families will compete in a challenge in order to win rewards and safety from elimination. The winner will name two families to face the neighbourhood vote. The families will then vote to force one family to leave the neighborhood for the remainder of the series. In the finale, it is presumed that the six eliminated families will return to the neighborhood to vote for the show's winner.
The voting table below records whom each family voted to stay during its time in the neighborhood. The nominated families are not allowed to vote.
Week 1 | Week 2 | Week 3 | Week 4 | Week 5 | Week 6 | Finale | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kings of the Neighborhood | Nelson | Mullennix | Upshaw | Upshaw | Upshaw | Johnston | |
Nominated | Mullennix DeGirolamo | Schindler Southey | Schindler Bussiere | Johnston Nelson | Schindler Mullenix | Schindler Upshaw | |
Johnston | Mullennix | Schindler | Schindler | Nominated | Schindler | Schindler | Winners $250,000 |
Schindler | Mullennix | Nominated | Nominated | Johnston | Nominated | Nominated | Runners-Up (Week 8) |
Upshaw | Mullennix | Schindler | Schindler | Johnston | Schindler | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 6) |
Mullennix | Nominated | Schindler | Schindler | Nelson | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 5) | |
Nelson | Mullennix | Schindler | Schindler | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 4) | ||
Bussiere | Mullennix | Schindler | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 3) | |||
Southey | DeGirolamo | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 2) | ||||
DeGirolamo | Nominated | Eliminated (Week 1) | |||||
Eliminated | DeGirolamo 1 of 6 votes to stay | Southey 0 of 5 votes to stay | Bussiere 0 of 4 votes to stay | Nelson 1 of 3 votes to stay | Mullennix 0 of 2 votes to stay | Upshaws chosen by Johnstons | Schindler3 of 24 votes (13%) to win |
Johnston 21 of 24 votes (87%) to win | |||||||
Source | [5] | [6] | [7] | [8] | |||