A bit tense, hey? Bree was then told “there’s been a mistake with the voting, and you shouldn’t have been evicted.”
Due to human error, an extra phone line had been opened, and some stray votes had gone there, she was told.
“I didn’t really understand it,” recalled Bree, who said she had no interest in returning to the house. “I didn’t want to. At that point, I think I’d been in there for seven weeks and I was really enjoying catching up with people and drinking cocktails.”
However, Bree didn’t have much of a choice. “They were like, ‘No, we want you to go back in because otherwise you could potentially sue us, because you could have won a million dollars.'”
Bree told Mamamia she then hilariously demanded some Pantene and a Quarter Pounder from McDonald’s before she was removed from her party, sent into lockdown and then back into the house in a history-making Big Brother moment.
“In hindsight, I probably could have said I want $50,000,” Bree joked. “When they put me back in, I didn’t sleep all night.”
Bree had something else on her mind at the time. “When you come off the stage, you straight away get briefed by a psychologist. I’d found out that my nan had been relocated from Tasmania to Queensland because there was a stalker involved.”
After Bree’s nan’s face was plastered on the front page of a local newspaper in Tasmania as Big Brother aired, Bree said that her stalker had tracked her down.