AJ Odudu and Will Best hope Celebrity Big Brother contestants know nothing about the show
AJ Odudu and Will Best prefer it when contestants know little about the 'Celebrity Big Brother' format as it generally leads to more drama in the house.

AJ Odudu and Will Best want stars to be clueless about 'Celebrity Big Brother'.
The pair will host the launch of the latest series of the ITV reality show on Monday (07.04.25) night and would love for a repeat of last year – when Louis Walsh entered the house with no idea what was going to happen on the show – as it stirs up more drama.
Will, 40, told the Metro newspaper: "Ideally, you want someone like Louis Walsh who doesn't know the format, doesn't know what the hell is going on."
AJ added: "The concern can be getting a bunch of celebrities who are all media trained and know how to dodge questions, all of that jazz.
"What you truly want is somebody who isn't afraid to spill the tea, give some gossip and really draw back the curtain of their celebrity lifestyle."
However, the 37-year-old presenter stressed that the producers won't be engineering drama on the new series – which is set to feature Hollywood star Mickey Rourke, 'EastEnders' legend Patsy Palmer and TV presenter Trisha Goddard – after Ekin-Su Culculoglu claimed she was a victim of bad editing last year as she clashed with the pair during her exit interview.
AJ said: "I feel like there is a sincere fairness when myself and Will interview anybody. We are literally asking questions regarding the goings-on in the house as we have watched it. Those things haven't been edited into your body.
"Obviously, the show is a one-hour cut-down of a 24-hour filming cycle but the misconception people have about 'Big Brother' is the sound engineers and producers go in there and plant things, or they interact with housemates face to face."
Meanwhile, AJ previously called for TV bosses to hire more presenters with regional accents.
The star, who hails from Blackburn in Lancashire, has urged executives to make sure there are "more diverse faces and voices" on the small screen.
Odudu said: "One of my dreams is to see more diverse faces and voices on our screens.
"I think it's really important that TV isn't London-centric and people from all walks of life are given opportunities, no matter what their background is, and no matter what they sound like or look like."