Ana Paula, Brígido e Boneco no paredão do BBB 26; vote quem sai

Three contestants already facing the block again in week three
Ana Paula, Brigido, and Boneco have become recurring names in the nomination cycle early in the season.

No terceiro paredão do Big Brother Brasil 26, três participantes — Ana Paula, Brigido e Boneco — se encontram à mercê do julgamento público, após uma semana marcada por reviravoltas mecânicas e estratégias coletivas. O jogo, fiel à sua natureza, transformou alianças e poderes especiais em instrumentos de vulnerabilidade, lembrando que, nesse microcosmo social, nenhuma posição é permanente. O voto popular, exercido no Gshow, decidirá quem deixa a casa — e, com isso, redesenhará as dinâmicas que ainda estão por vir.

  • Três participantes acumulam indicações desde o início do jogo, tornando-se alvos recorrentes numa temporada que mal começou.
  • Um poder incomum retirou Brigido de todas as provas da semana, incluindo a que poderia tê-lo salvo — uma desvantagem estrutural sem saída.
  • Jonas, o quarto indicado, venceu a prova Bate e Volta e escapou do paredão, deixando os outros três sem escudo.
  • O voto aberto no Gshow já mobiliza o público, enquanto enquetes informais revelam as primeiras tendências de rejeição.
  • A eliminação desta semana promete reorganizar alianças e hierarquias numa casa onde os alvos mais visados já estão claramente marcados.

O terceiro paredão do BBB 26 tem três rostos conhecidos: Ana Paula, Brigido e Leandro, o Boneco. Todos chegaram a essa posição após uma semana de dinâmicas que combinaram estratégia coletiva e reviravoltas impostas pelo próprio formato do programa.

A formação seguiu o caminho habitual. Jonas foi o primeiro indicado, via telefone do líder, com chamadas atendidas por Babu, Marcelo e Juliano. A líder da semana, Maxiane, indicou Ana Paula diretamente. No confessionário, os demais escolheram Boneco e Brigido, completando um quarteto inicial. Na prova Bate e Volta, Jonas se destacou e garantiu sua permanência — deixando os outros três expostos ao voto do público.

O caso de Brigido tem um contorno particular: quando um novo telefone tocou na casa, Breno atendeu e recebeu o poder de afastá-lo de todas as provas da semana. Isso incluiu o Bate e Volta, a única chance de autossalvamento. Sem competir, Brigido não teve como reverter sua situação por mérito próprio.

O que chama atenção neste paredão é que os três indicados já estiveram em situações de risco antes. Eles se consolidam como alvos precoces, seja por escolhas estratégicas dos colegas ou pelos caprichos dos poderes que o programa distribui ao longo do jogo.

A votação oficial acontece no Gshow, mediante cadastro com conta Globo e CPF. O público já começou a votar desde a manhã do anúncio, e enquetes paralelas acompanham o humor das torcidas. Quem sair desta semana deixará uma casa em reconfiguração — e os que ficam saberão, com mais clareza, onde estão pisando.

Three contestants are facing elimination in the third eviction cycle of Big Brother Brasil 26, and the public vote will determine who leaves the house. Ana Paula, Brigido, and Leandro—known inside the house as Boneco—have all stumbled through the week's competitions and dynamics, landing them in the precarious position of depending on viewer support to continue in the game.

The path to this nomination block followed a familiar pattern for the show. Jonas was the first to land on the chopping block, nominated by consensus through a series of big phone calls answered by Babu, Marcelo, and Juliano. The week's leader, Maxiane, then placed Ana Paula directly on the block. The remaining housemates voted in the confessional, selecting both Boneco and Brigido to complete the initial four-person lineup. But the week included a save-and-return competition—a chance for one of the four to fight their way back into safety. The veteran competitor Jonas won that crucial test, securing his place and leaving the other three to face the public's judgment.

The circumstances surrounding Brigido's vulnerability reveal the unpredictable nature of the game's mechanics. When another big phone call came through, Breno answered it and received an unusual power: the ability to remove Brigido from all of the week's competitions, including the very save-and-return challenge that might have saved him. This meant only Jonas and Boneco competed in that final test, a structural disadvantage that left Brigido with no path to self-rescue. Once the save-and-return concluded, the final three-person nomination block crystallized.

What stands out about this particular eviction round is that all three nominees have already faced the chopping block multiple times since the season began. They appear to be emerging as central targets in the early game dynamics, whether through strategic voting or the random elements that the show's various twists introduce. Ana Paula, Brigido, and Boneco are not newcomers to the pressure of facing elimination—they are becoming familiar faces in the danger zone.

The official voting takes place on Gshow's website, where viewers with registered Globo accounts can cast their ballots. The publication also opened its own poll to gauge public sentiment and track which contestant faces the strongest rejection. These informal surveys do not affect the actual game outcome, but they offer a window into how different fan communities are leaning as the week unfolds. On the morning the nominations were announced, the voting began immediately, giving viewers their first hours to weigh in on who should go.

For those wanting to participate in the official vote, creating a Globo account is straightforward. The process requires visiting minhaconta.globo.com and providing basic information including date of birth and CPF number. Voters can register using their Google or Facebook credentials as shortcuts. Once registered, a phone number must be added to the account, with confirmation arriving via SMS or WhatsApp. Minors between thirteen and sixteen years old need parental authorization to proceed, a requirement tied to Brazil's data protection laws. Once all steps are complete, voting access opens immediately.

The three contestants now wait to see whether the public will keep them in the game or send one of them home. In a competition where early eliminations often reshape the entire social landscape of the house, this third eviction round carries weight beyond the single vote it represents.

These three appear to be emerging as central targets in the early game dynamics
— Pattern observed in the competition structure
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Inventor

Why does it matter that these three have already faced the block before? Doesn't everyone get nominated eventually?

Model

Not like this. Being nominated three times in the first three weeks suggests you're either a strategic target or you're losing the competitions that keep you safe. It changes how other players see you—you start to look vulnerable, and vulnerable players get voted out.

Inventor

So the big phone mechanic that removed Brigido from the save-and-return—that seems almost cruel. He had no chance to save himself.

Model

It's designed that way. The show builds in these random powers specifically to create situations where someone's fate is completely out of their hands. It's part of what makes it unpredictable, but it also means some people get genuinely unlucky.

Inventor

These three seem to be the ones the house has decided are expendable. Is that reading the room correctly?

Model

It's more complicated than that. Ana Paula was put up by the leader, which is direct strategy. Boneco and Brigido came from house votes, which suggests consensus. But consensus can mean different things—maybe they're actually disliked, or maybe they're just easy targets because they haven't built strong alliances yet.

Inventor

What happens to the survivor of this vote? Do they get a reprieve, or are they marked for the next round?

Model

They get a week of safety, usually. But being nominated this many times early means you're already on people's radar. You've shown you're not winning competitions consistently, and in Big Brother, that's a vulnerability everyone remembers.

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