On May 25, 2026, Stefano Piccioni sat among seven fellow housemates after a high-pressure, against-the-clock nomination round on La Casa de los Famosos 6.
The result left eight people on the chopping block: Stefano, Fabio, Yoridán, Horacio, Kenny, Verónica, Caeli and Sandra. The nominations came from a timed dynamic that producers introduced that night, a format that turned routine strategy into a sprint and reshaped alliances in real time.
That same day the house’s tension had another focal point: the confrontation between Josh Martínez and Stefano Piccioni, which continued to grow and showed no signs of easing. The pair’s clash has been a recurring fault line in the season, and on May 25 it threaded through the nominations, forcing other contestants to pick sides under pressure.
Social media amplified the chaos. Many viewers accused Celinee of cheating during the challenge, and those accusations trended across platforms as the votes were tallied. The allegation has become a parallel storyline to the nominations themselves, with online debate intensifying scrutiny on how the timed dynamic was executed and judged.
The numbers from the night matter because they compress risk. Eight nominees in a single round is a heavy load in any week; it magnifies the stakes for every alliance and every mistake. For Stefano, being named among the eight compounds an already volatile position: he is simultaneously facing public nomination and an ongoing personal feud with Josh Martínez that has not relented.
Context is simple and immediate: La Casa de los Famosos 6 has been running under heightened tensions for weeks, and the producers’ decision to stage a nomination that doubled as a race against the clock changed the mechanics of who gets exposed. The timed element accelerated decisions, created visible errors, and handed ammunition to those already looking for openings.
The tension is not only between contenders inside the house and viewers online. It sits in a contradiction: a format designed to reward speed and instinct produced results some call unfair. Many on social networks say Celinee cheated, yet the nomination list still reflects the house’s votes and the game’s formal outcome. That gap—between the way fans see fairness and the way the show records results—keeps the conflict alive and unresolved.
What happens next is straightforward but consequential. The eight nominated contestants must now navigate the fallout: public opinion shaped in part by the cheating claims, shifting alliances after a marathon nomination, and the personal fallout of a feud that refuses to cool. For Stefano Piccioni, the night’s double hit—nomination and an escalating confrontation with Josh Martínez—puts him in the clearest jeopardy. His position is uncertain; the house has taxed his defenses and the audience has been given reasons to judge.
The clearest verdict the facts support is this: May 25 reset the bar for risk inside the house. The timed nomination did more than name eight targets. It sharpened divisions, handed social media a new grievance to amplify, and left Stefano, already embroiled in a visible conflict with Josh Martínez, even more exposed. Coming out of this round, survival will fall to whoever can turn the noise to their favor, and right now that window looks smallest for the most visibly embattled housemate.





