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'Celebrity Big Brother' USA 2019 Cast Rumors & Predictions | Heavy.com

Celebrity Big Brother starts its second season on Monday, January 21, and once again, a group of celebrities will live together under constant surveillance, completely stripped of their privacy and contact with the outside world.

With 94 HD cameras and 113 microphones recording their every move, the celebrities will fight, scratch and claw their way to the $250,000 grand prize and the title of Celebrity Big Brother winner.

Host Julie Chen is set to return (excuse me, Julie Chen Moonves), and while the Chenbot is locked and loaded, CBS has yet to announce the 10-12 celebrities who have signed up for the show's voluntary confinement and social backstabbing.

Here are the latest cast rumors and predictions floating around the internet ahead of the show's second season premiere.

What Celebrities Will Be Entering the Big Brother House?.

A possible cast list for the upcoming edition of Celebrity Big Brother has leaked, and while none of it has been confirmed (yet), some of the names are pretty intriguing.

The alleged list was released by Twitter user @BBSecretSusan and includes:.

Aubrey O'Day, Danity Kane musician.

Bobby Moynihan, Saturday Night Live comedian.

Caitlyn Jenner, former Olympian and reality star.

Calvin Johnson, NFL player.

Carson Kressley, Queer Eye Fashion expert and RuPaul's Drag Race judge.

Dina Lohan, manager of Lindsay Lohan and reality star.

Jonathan Bennett, actor.

Sean Spicer, former White House director of communications.

Stephen Baldwin, actor.

Tiffany Pollard, reality star.

Tonya Harding, former Olympian.

Susan is now calling this list "confirmed" on Twitter, but CBS has yet to comment or release anything official.

Aubrey O'Day issued formal warning after spitting in Celebrity Big Brother housemate's food https://t.

co/1hpYcK7Rc4 pic. twitter.

com/rvA1dsW0vC — People (@people) August 4, 2016    .

Aubrey O'Day is no stranger to the reality circuit.

She placed fifth in a UK season of Celebrity Big Brother where she didn't back down from arguments and may have spit in another houseguest's sandwich (JK, she totally did).

O'Day also made it to the final three in season five of The Celebrity Apprentice where she wasted zero time before stirring the pot.

That's right! Tiffany 'New York' Pollard is SAFE! RT if you love the fact @TiffanyPollard is still in the game! #CBB pic.

twitter.

com/FWd2OmA20X — Big Brother UK (@bbuk) January 29, 2016  .

Tiffany Pollard (aka "New York" from Flavor of Love, I Love New York) is also a former UK houseguest having finished in fourth place across the pond.

The former VH1 reality star is TV gold—do yourself a favor and fall down a YouTube rabbit hole to catch up on her Big Brother shenanigans.

She's over the top, out of control, and absolutely hysterical.

If she's confirmed for the upcoming U.S.

season, we're in for a treat, fellow BB fans.

SNL's Bobby Moynihan is a huge fan of the show, having already been inside the house during #BB19 to bang pots and pans and host a veto competition.

If this list is indeed true, it's surprising that Caitlyn Jenner would want to participate, though with the salary rumors that are also leaking (see below!), it could make sense financially for the retired Olympian.

     .

Sean Spicer fills the show's political checkbox, but reality star and former White House political aide Omarosa Manigault's shoes will be hard to fill.

(Manigault had no problem spilling tea about Trump while in the Big Brother house.) Let's just say Spicer gets my vote for the first potential evictee.

This Season, the Cast's Appearance Salaries are All Varied.

Although it was reported that Omarosa Manigault banked $1 million dollars for her appearance last season, the rest of her castmates all earned an equal appearance fee.

This year, that's out the window.

An inside source, Twitter user REALvegas4sure, tweeted that this year, the paychecks for Season 2 houseguests vary widely.

Unlike last year, not everyone will be receiving the same pay to be a celebrity HG.

Last year one made more, a sickening amount more, but this year the paychecks vary widely.

This is what happens when you don't demand equal pay or have a good negotiating team.

Shame.#cbbus2 — REALvegas4sure #cbbus2 (@REALvegasbackup) January 6, 2019  .

#CBBUS2 Predictions.

Pollard and O'Day may have Big Brother experience, but our stateside version of the show is incredibly different from the UK's.

Since American houseguests nominate and evict each other themselves, O'Day won't be able to spit in someone's dinner without immediately being put on the block.

As for Pollard, it's hard to predict what her fellow houseguests will think of her, and whether or not she'll be able to hack the competitions remains to be seen.

I'd guess her to be an early boot, but hope she stays as long as humanly possible.

Kressley is another former reality show contestant.

He competed on The New Celebrity Apprentice where he proved to be savvy, smart, and extremely well liked among his peers.

All of these traits could propel him to victory, unless a savvier player looks to eliminate a social threat.

That said, Kressley is definitely one to watch.

As for the rest of them, I wouldn't count out two former Olympians or Moynihan, for that matter.

Shannon Elizabeth, last year's superfan celeb, was a strategic pro in the game until she overplayed her hand and got herself evicted.

Her instincts, however, were on point.

Maybe Moynihan can replicate her strategy while playing a quieter game.

No matter what happens, I just hope no one has to self-evict to feed their baby.

Celebrity Big Brother's second season will air January 21 on CBS.

The show is scheduled for a limited run of three weeks.

For more infomation >> 'Celebrity Big Brother' USA 2019 Cast Rumors & Predictions | Heavy.com - Duration: 11:19.

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1/7/19 8:54 PM (Rowan @ Belt, Spokane, WA 99205, USA) - Duration: 4:57.

For more infomation >> 1/7/19 8:54 PM (Rowan @ Belt, Spokane, WA 99205, USA) - Duration: 4:57.

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Border patrol stops just ONE foreign terror suspect each month crossing into the U.S. from Mexico - Duration: 9:45.

Border patrol stops just ONE foreign terror suspect each month crossing into the U.S. from Mexico

New data from the Department of Homeland Security show that during the six months between October 2017 and March 2018, border guards intercepted just six people thought to be foreign terrorists crossing illegally from Mexico to the U.

The rate of one per month falls far short of what White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders claimed Sunday, when she said on 'Fox News Sunday' that 'nearly 4,000 known or suspected terrorists come into our country illegally, and we know that our most vulnerable point of entry is at our southern border.

The White House distributed material Friday from a congressional briefing, claiming that '3,775 known or suspected terrorists [were] prevented from traveling or entering the U.S. by DHS' during the government fiscal year that ended Sept.

Reporters pounced on that number Monday, demanding to know during a briefing with Vice President Mike Pence and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen whether it was an accurate measure of the level of terrorist incursions from the south.

The numbers 'are classified for a number of reasons,' Nielsen responded, 'including on going investigations.

Hours later, NBC News reported that during the first half of fiscal 2018, U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered just six immigrants on the U.S-Mexico border whose names were on a federal terror watch-list.

CBP had contact with 41 people on the southern border who matched entries in the Terrorist Screening Database. But 35 of them were U.S. citizens or people who were living in the U.S. legally.

The data describe a larger problem on the U.S.-Canada border: In the same period, CBP prevented 41 foreigners from entering the U.S. after their names were found in the database.

The State Department's Bureau Of Counterterrorism And Countering Violent Extremism reported in September 2018 that there was 'no credible evidence indicating that international terrorist groups have established bases in Mexico, worked with Mexican drug cartels, or sent operatives via Mexico into the United States.

southern border remains vulnerable to potential terrorist transit, although terrorist groups likely seek other means of trying to enter the United States,' the agency's annual country-by-country terrorism report stated.

The Trump administration is entering the high-stakes third week of a partial government shutdown caused by a stalemate over funding to build a wall between the U.S.

The White House is attempting to paint a dire picture to sway public opinion: President Trump will address the nation Tuesday night and visit the border on Thursday. Pence and Nielsen will brief Republican members of Congress on Wednesday.

It's possible Trump will declare a national state of emergency on Tuesday night, asserting his authority to re-allocate budget money Congress has already authorized.

That could allow, for instance, the repurposing of Pentagon funds to pay Army Corps of Engineers contractors to complete the border barrier.

Trump said aboard Air Force One in September that We have two options: We have military, and we have Homeland Security. I'd rather get it through politically -- politically speaking, I'd rather get it through Congress.

If we don't, I'm looking at that option very seriously.

New data from the Department of Homeland Security show that during the six months between October 2017 and March 2018, border guards intercepted just six people thought to be foreign terrorists crossing illegally from Mexico to the U.

The rate of one per month falls far short of what White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders claimed Sunday, when she said on 'Fox News Sunday' that 'nearly 4,000 known or suspected terrorists come into our country illegally, and we know that our most vulnerable point of entry is at our southern border.

The White House distributed material Friday from a congressional briefing, claiming that '3,775 known or suspected terrorists [were] prevented from traveling or entering the U.S. by DHS' during the government fiscal year that ended Sept.

Reporters pounced on that number Monday, demanding to know during a briefing with Vice President Mike Pence and Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen whether it was an accurate measure of the level of terrorist incursions from the south.

The numbers 'are classified for a number of reasons,' Nielsen responded, 'including on going investigations.

Hours later, NBC News reported that during the first half of fiscal 2018, U.S. Customs and Border Protection encountered just six immigrants on the U.S-Mexico border whose names were on a federal terror watch-list.

CBP had contact with 41 people on the southern border who matched entries in the Terrorist Screening Database. But 35 of them were U.S. citizens or people who were living in the U.S. legally.

The data describe a larger problem on the U.S.-Canada border: In the same period, CBP prevented 41 foreigners from entering the U.S. after their names were found in the database.

The State Department's Bureau Of Counterterrorism And Countering Violent Extremism reported in September 2018 that there was 'no credible evidence indicating that international terrorist groups have established bases in Mexico, worked with Mexican drug cartels, or sent operatives via Mexico into the United States.

southern border remains vulnerable to potential terrorist transit, although terrorist groups likely seek other means of trying to enter the United States,' the agency's annual country-by-country terrorism report stated.

The Trump administration is entering the high-stakes third week of a partial government shutdown caused by a stalemate over funding to build a wall between the U.S.

The White House is attempting to paint a dire picture to sway public opinion: President Trump will address the nation Tuesday night and visit the border on Thursday. Pence and Nielsen will brief Republican members of Congress on Wednesday.

It's possible Trump will declare a national state of emergency on Tuesday night, asserting his authority to re-allocate budget money Congress has already authorized.

That could allow, for instance, the repurposing of Pentagon funds to pay Army Corps of Engineers contractors to complete the border barrier.

Trump said aboard Air Force One in September that We have two options: We have military, and we have Homeland Security. I'd rather get it through politically -- politically speaking, I'd rather get it through Congress.

If we don't, I'm looking at that option very seriously.

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