Nearly 2.7 million votes already cast, and the picture is unambiguous
Dentro da casa do Big Brother Brasil 26, três participantes aguardam o veredicto do público — e os números já esboçam um destino. Brígido carrega o peso da rejeição mais ampla, com quase 58% da média proporcional apontando para sua saída, numa consistência que atravessa plataformas e demografias. Leandro cresce nas últimas horas, e Ana Paula Renault permanece à margem do perigo. O ritual coletivo do voto popular, com seus milhões de cliques, aproxima-se de seu momento de revelação na noite de terça-feira.
- Brígido enfrenta rejeição esmagadora — 72% no Instagram, mais de 70% no Twitter — numa consistência que raramente deixa margem para reviravolta.
- Com quase 2,7 milhões de votos consolidados pelo Votalhada, a pressão sobre o paredão nunca foi tão mensurável e tão pública.
- Leandro ganha terreno nas últimas horas, tornando-se o principal rival de Brígido e acendendo a esperança de quem ainda acredita numa virada.
- Ana Paula Renault permanece protegida com apenas 15,95% de rejeição, distribuída de forma equilibrada entre as plataformas, longe da zona de risco.
- As horas que restam até a transmissão ao vivo de terça-feira são o último campo de batalha — onde fãs se organizam, campanhas se intensificam e o resultado ainda pode ser reescrito.
Três participantes do BBB 26 estão no paredão: Ana Paula Renault, Brígido e Leandro. Na manhã de segunda-feira, 2 de fevereiro, os dados consolidados do Votalhada — que agrega votos de Instagram, Twitter, YouTube e sites diversos — revelavam um cenário pouco ambíguo. Brígido liderava a rejeição com 57,98% da média proporcional, uma margem que, numa disputa de três pessoas, separa a incerteza da provável eliminação.
A rejeição a Brígido não era fenômeno de uma única plataforma. No Instagram, chegou a 72%; no Twitter, a 70,76%; no YouTube, a 53,32%. Apenas nos sites a porcentagem ficou abaixo da metade, em 40,13% — ainda assim, uma pluralidade expressiva. A uniformidade entre os canais indicava algo além de um bolsão isolado de descontentamento: era uma rejeição ampla e distribuída.
Leandro ocupava o segundo lugar com 26,06%, distante de Brígido, mas com momentum — seus números vinham crescendo nas horas anteriores ao levantamento. Era ele o único com capacidade real de mudar o quadro, caso sua torcida se mobilizasse com força antes da apuração. Ana Paula Renault, com 15,95%, estava fora da zona de perigo, seus índices distribuídos de forma estável entre as plataformas.
A eliminação seria anunciada ao vivo na noite de terça-feira, 3 de fevereiro. As horas entre a pesquisa e a transmissão são sempre as mais intensas — quando indecisos se decidem e grupos organizados fazem sua última pressão. Os dados apontavam para Brígido, mas o resultado final ainda dependia do que acontecesse nesse intervalo.
Three people are waiting in the Big Brother Brasil house to learn who goes home. Ana Paula Renault, Brígido, and Leandro are on the block for the third eviction, and the numbers tell a stark story: one of them is in serious trouble.
As of Monday morning, February 2nd, the consolidated polling data from Votalhada—which aggregates votes across multiple platforms—showed Brígido facing overwhelming rejection. Nearly 2.7 million votes had been cast across Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and various websites. The picture they painted was unambiguous. Brígido was leading the elimination odds by a commanding margin, with 57.98% of the proportional average voting him out. That kind of gap, in a three-person race, is the difference between a close call and a likely exit.
The rejection was not confined to a single platform. On Instagram, where much of the show's younger audience congregates, Brígido reached 72% of the vote. Twitter showed him at 70.76%. Even on YouTube, where voting patterns sometimes diverge from social media, he held 53.32%. Only on the websites themselves did his rejection dip below half, landing at 40.13%—still a commanding plurality. The consistency across channels suggested this was not a quirk of one demographic or one corner of the internet. It was broad.
Leandro occupied the middle ground. He was pulling 26.06% of the proportional average, a distant second but not negligible. More importantly, his numbers had been climbing in the hours before the Monday morning snapshot. He was the main threat to Brígido's position, the one with momentum, the one whose supporters might still shift the outcome if they mobilized hard enough before Tuesday night's live announcement.
Ana Paula Renault was safest. At 15.95% of the proportional average, she was the least rejected of the three. Her support was more evenly distributed across platforms—no single channel showed her in crisis territory. She appeared, for now, outside the danger zone entirely.
The elimination would be announced live on Tuesday evening, February 3rd. Between the Monday morning poll and that broadcast, anything could happen. Fan bases could organize. Campaigns could shift. The final hours before an eviction vote are often when the most intense mobilization occurs, when people who had been on the fence make their choice, when organized groups of supporters make their push. The data suggested Brígido was vulnerable, but it did not guarantee his exit. The story would be written in the votes cast between now and then.
Citações Notáveis
Brígido consolidates as the most threatened name on the block at this moment— Votalhada polling analysis
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why does a poll matter if the voting is still open? Can't everything change?
It can, but rarely does. What you're seeing is the accumulated weight of millions of decisions already made. Brígido's at 72% on Instagram—that's not a whisper, that's a roar. The momentum would have to reverse dramatically.
So what makes someone get that kind of rejection? Is it something he did in the house?
The poll doesn't tell you why. It just tells you that across every platform—Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, the websites—people are voting the same way. That consistency is what matters. It's not one group. It's everyone.
Leandro's at 26%. That's a real number. Could he actually win this?
He could, but he'd need Brígido's voters to abandon him and consolidate behind Leandro instead. His numbers are growing, which is the only encouraging sign for him. But he's still more than 30 points behind.
And Ana Paula Renault is basically safe?
Based on this data, yes. She's the least rejected, and her support is spread across platforms. Unless something dramatic happens in the next 24 hours, she's likely staying.
What could change things?
Organized fan campaigns, last-minute revelations from the house, a shift in public sentiment. But you're fighting against 2.6 million votes already cast. The inertia is real.
So we're just waiting to see if the trend holds?
Exactly. The poll is a snapshot. Tuesday night is the answer.