Welsh Helen Adams starred in the second series of the British Big Brother TV reality show in 2001. She appealed to viewers as the traditional dumb blonde. A romance between Helen and Paul was one of the highlights, and broke viewing records for London's Channel 4. "Helen was one of the most lovable characters in the house," the Big Brother website recalls. "A hairdresser from Wales, her dream was to star in the comedy Friends. After Big Brother she starred on Lorraine for a while, and was reported to be opening a hair dressing salon in London." Later, the Big Brother 7 website said: "Helen Adams cashed in on her fame by signing up for a role on satellite TV as a beauty expert and released an aerobics video. Famous for her naïve 'Helenisms', many did not know she was actually dyslexic and since BB, she has also given her support to a Government literacy campaign." Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia, says "Her popularity was predominantly due to her dumb blonde persona. Famous quotes from Helen, known as 'Helenisms', have included 'Is there Chicken in Chick Peas?' and 'I like blinking, I do.' "Helen and Paul, after 5 years together, have since separated, citing a lack of time together as the reason for the break-up. Brian went on to become the first openly gay man to present a children's television show in the UK when he joined SMTV Live." And if you wonder about the meaning of SMTV Live, it's shorthand for Saturday Morning Television Live, a children's television program broadcast on Britain's independent ITV1 from1998 to 2003. "Every summer for the last seven years, the Channel 4 show [Big Brother] has both appalled and amused the nation in equal measure," said the London Daily Mirror last month, confirming reports that Helen (now 28) has left Paul and has opened her own hair salon, Nails One, in Clifton Village, Bristol. That western city knows a lot about Nails. Centuries ago, merchants used to conduct business in the street, says Bristol-Link.co.uk "Four flat topped pillars called the Nails are still in Corn Street today. Merchants would strike one of the Nails when a transaction was agreed, giving rise to the expression 'to pay on the Nail.'” Now Helen of Wales paints on the nails!
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