A beauty queen has lost her libel action over two broadcasts from the Big Brother House.

Model and actress Deana Uppal, a former Miss India UK, had complained about comments made by two male housemates when she was on the reality show in June and July 2012.

But her damages claim against Big Brother producer Endemol UK Ltd and Channel 5 Broadcasting Ltd was dismissed by Mr Justice Dingemans at London's High Court today.

The judge said that neither of the broadcasts was capable of bearing the meanings alleged by 26-year-old Ms Uppal or any other meanings defamatory of her.

Her lawyers had argued they meant that she had below average intelligence or was in some way socially or intellectually inferior, was sexually promiscuous, and in some way inferior because she was of Indian origin.

The judge said that the words in the June broadcast did not reflect on Ms Uppal's social or intellectual status but were "vile abuse" while the housemate's rap about what he wanted to do to her was not capable of meaning she was promiscuous.

No reasonable viewer could have thought that she would have been a willing participant in any such activity and the remarks were condemned in the diary room by Big Brother.

"Any reasonable viewer would have understood that the person whose reputation might have been adversely affected by this was the person who made up the rap, and not Ms Uppal."

The words in the July broadcast were pointed out as being offensive racial stereotyping by Big Brother in the diary room immediately after the incident, and were a reflection on the speaker and not Ms Uppal.