Some things go beyond the game
Em toda competição popular, há um momento em que os números começam a falar antes do veredicto oficial — e no Casa do Patrão, esse momento chegou para Alexandre Vinicius. Três plataformas distintas de pesquisa apontam Vini como o participante com menor apoio do público na quinta berlinda do reality, enquanto Matheus Barros lidera com folga e Jackson Fonseca ocupa posição intermediária. Esta noite, o apresentador Leandro Hassum revelará ao vivo no R7 o resultado real, lembrando que enquetes são retratos do sentimento coletivo, não sentenças definitivas.
- Vini aparece em último lugar em todas as três pesquisas consultadas, com índices que variam entre 17,6% e 30,6% de apoio à sua permanência.
- Matheus Barros domina as intenções de voto com entre 36% e 50% de suporte, consolidando uma vantagem difícil de ignorar.
- A formação da berlinda carrega tensão estratégica: Vini mesmo usou seu poder de voto para indicar Jackson, e acabou puxado pelo público para a disputa.
- O Boss da semana, João Victor Cassoli, justificou sua indicação com palavras que revelam o quanto o jogo e as relações pessoais se embaralham dentro da casa.
- O resultado oficial só existirá quando Hassum anunciar ao vivo — até lá, as pesquisas são bússolas, não mapas.
Os números convergem. Três pesquisas independentes sobre o Casa do Patrão apontam Alexandre Vinicius — o Vini — como o participante com menor chance de sobreviver à quinta eliminação do reality. Na enquete do Notícias da TV, com mais de vinte mil votos, ele marca apenas 17,6%, contra 34% de Jackson Fonseca e 48,3% de Matheus Barros. O UOL registra proporções semelhantes, e o agregador Votalhada confirma o padrão: Vini com 22,7%, Jackson com 27,5%, e Matheus na liderança com quase 50%.
Mas as pesquisas têm seus limites. Elas capturam a voz de quem escolheu participar — um termômetro, não um termostato. A votação oficial acontece na plataforma da R7, e só o apresentador Leandro Hassum, durante o programa ao vivo desta noite, terá a palavra final.
A história de como os três chegaram à berlinda diz muito sobre a semana. Vini venceu a competição Poder do Voto e usou esse privilégio para indicar Jackson, declarando querer entender como o público enxergava o jogo dele. O Boss João Victor Cassoli fez sua própria indicação, citando atitudes de Matheus durante sua passagem pela liderança — especialmente envolvendo a participante Nataly Silva. 'Quando chegamos aqui, todo mundo sabia que era um jogo', disse Cassoli. 'Mas algumas coisas vão além do jogo.' O próprio Vini foi arrastado para a berlinda pelo voto aberto do público.
Assim, os três homens que aguardam o veredicto chegaram até ali por caminhos distintos: um indicado pela autoridade da semana, outro pelo poder estratégico de um rival, e o terceiro pela vontade direta da audiência. Esta noite, um deles sairá. As pesquisas sugerem quem — mas a conta só fecha quando Hassum falar.
The numbers are pointing in one direction. Across three separate polls tracking viewer sentiment for Casa do Patrão, Alexandre Vinicius—known to the show's audience simply as Vini—is trailing badly in the race to stay. Tonight, when host Leandro Hassum announces the results of the fifth elimination round, the surveys suggest Vini will be the one leaving.
The voting picture is consistent across platforms, if not identical. In the Notícias da TV poll, which has drawn more than twenty thousand responses, Vini holds just 17.6 percent support to remain in the game. Jackson Fonseca sits at 34.07 percent, while Matheus Barros leads with 48.33 percent. Over at UOL's tracking, the pattern repeats: Vini at 30.64 percent, Jackson at 32.38 percent, and Matheus ahead at 36.98 percent. The Votalhada aggregator, which compiles voting data from entertainment sites and social media, tells a similar story. Vini registers 22.69 percent, Jackson 27.52 percent, and Matheus commanding 49.8 percent.
It's worth noting what these polls actually are and are not. They reflect the preferences of viewers who chose to participate—a snapshot of sentiment, not a scientific measurement. The real vote that matters is the one happening on R7, the official platform, and that result will be revealed only when Hassum makes his announcement during tonight's live broadcast. The surveys are useful as indicators of where public opinion is trending, but they are not predictions written in stone.
How the three contestants ended up facing elimination tells its own story about the week's dynamics. The formation of this particular trio came through a series of decisions made by players with different kinds of power. Vini won the Vote Power competition, earning the right to nominate someone to the danger zone. João Victor Cassoli, serving as this week's Boss, made his own nomination. He explained his choice by referencing moments that had bothered him—specific actions taken by Matheus during his time in the leadership position, particularly interactions with fellow contestant Nataly Silva. "When we arrived here, everyone knew this was a game," Cassoli said. "I allowed myself to get to know everyone, but some things go beyond the game."
Vini used his Vote Power to nominate Jackson, framing it as a way to understand how the audience was reading Jackson's gameplay. Then came the open voting, which pulled Vini himself into the elimination round. So the three men now waiting for tonight's result arrived there through a mix of strategic choices and the mechanics of the show itself—one nominated by the week's authority figure, one put forward by a player with specific voting power, and one drawn in by the audience's direct participation.
The show will resolve this tonight. Hassum will read the numbers, and one of these three will walk out. The polls have been consistent enough that most viewers probably have a sense of which way the wind is blowing, but the official tally is the only one that counts. Until then, the surveys remain what they are: a measure of how people watching from home are thinking about the game, nothing more.
Citações Notáveis
When we arrived here, everyone knew this was a game. I allowed myself to get to know everyone, but some things go beyond the game.— João Victor Cassoli, explaining his nomination as Boss
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why do we care what the polls say if they're not the official vote?
Because they tell you what the audience is actually thinking in real time. The official result comes later tonight, but these numbers show you the momentum—who's winning the narrative, who's losing it.
So Vini is in real trouble?
By every measure, yes. He's lowest across all three platforms. But the gap between him and Jackson isn't huge on some of them—just a few percentage points. Matheus is the clear favorite, though.
How did Vini end up in this position if he had the Vote Power?
That's the interesting part. He used his power to nominate Jackson, but then the open voting pulled Vini himself into the elimination round. So his strategic move didn't protect him.
What did João Victor say about why he nominated Matheus?
He said Matheus did things as Boss that bothered him—specifically how he treated Nataly Silva. He framed it as the game going beyond just gameplay into something personal.
Does that kind of reasoning usually stick with viewers?
Sometimes. But Matheus is still leading the polls, so whatever João Victor said, it didn't turn the audience against him. The audience seems to be voting differently than the Boss was thinking.