A fact file on Trish from Big Brother: Everything you need to know


Big Brother is bringing all the drama this season, one housemate who has had fans talking is Trish. She's found herself in the centre of a lot of drama, thanks to arguments with Paul and Dylan, who were evicted last week, and also in a misunderstanding with Matty, which saw Trish and Chanelle choose a visit from Yinrun's boyfriend over a video message from Matty's. But who actually is Trish?

She is one of 10 contestants who are currently locked in the house and in with the chance of winning a huge cash prize. From her age to her children and more, here is everything you need to know about Big Brother’s Trish.

How old is Big Brother's Trish?

Trish is one of the older contestants in the Big Brother house this year, and she is 33-years-old.

Where is Big Brother's Trish from?

Trish lives in Luton but is from Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

"I came to England when I was nine-years-old, my father came to get me," she shared. "When we first got to Europe, I was so shocked to see a lot of white people. Oh, it was cold."

Does Big Brother's Trish have children?

Trish is a full-time mum and she has one young child. On what she would do with the prize money, she said: "My first priority is to sort out my housing situation. The housing crisis is just ridiculous and my housing situation has been unstable. It brings me a lot of mum guilt because I've got a young child. It’s my biggest incentive and motivation to win."

She is also being supported by her sister, who almost visited Trish in the Big Brother house during the Intruder task but unfortunately didn't get picked, with Tom and Henry instead choosing Olivia's sister to visit.

What has Trish said about Big Brother?

On why she wanted to apply for the show, Trish said: "I always wanted to apply back in the day, my friends would always be like ‘I think you'd be good in there, you're quite mouthy’!

"When I saw it was coming back I thought it was the universe telling me something so I just went for it. Also because I want to humanise refugees and immigrants, especially in this political climate.

"I want people to see that behind the stats and figures, there are real humans. We are important simply because we exist, not only when we participate in capitalism. We matter because we are alive and breathing - no human is illegal!"

Big Brother continues on ITV2.

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