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Tag: The Traitors

  • The Best TV Shows of 2025 (So Far)

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    Clockwise from top left: Gilded Age, Sirens, The Bear, The Rehearsal, and King of the Hill.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: HBO (Karolina Wojtasik, John P. Johnson), Netflix, Mike Judge/Disney, FX

    Great TV will not be confined or defined by genre. That’s true both for the medium generally and here at Vulture specifically, where we are proud to bestow the label on everything from grim-and-gritty prestige dramas to campy reality competitions to weirdo animation and all points in between. Even that dustiest of TV genres, the medical procedural, proved it can still deliver the goods in 2025. Each of this year’s early standout series are distinctive in their form, tone, and appeal and collectively showcase the breadth and depth of the best that television has to offer.

    All titles are listed by season premiere date with the most recent shows up top.

    Photo: Apple TV+

    Few settings are more soothing than the lives of white, upper-middle-class Angelenos, but that’s only one of Platonic’s many charms. Rose Byrne and Seth Rogen, reunited after playing a married couple at war with Greek Life in Neighbors and its sequel (both directed by Nicholas Stoller, who co-created this show with his wife, Francesca Delbanco), star as two estranged college friends who reconnect in the midst of their respective midlife crises. Zany yet surprisingly grounded, the first season offered plenty of delights, though it was weighed down somewhat by the conventional will-they-won’t-they expectations baked into its premise. The second season, freed from those constraints, takes a real leap, letting the show settle into being a splendid hangout comedy that gently layers in the quiet existential desperations of growing older. It also showcases some truly tremendous face acting by Byrne — among her generation’s most versatile performers — and equally tremendous choices by Rogen’s stylist, who dresses his character in outfits so comically loud it’s hard not to smirk at the sight of them. But even this feels like another expression of Platonic’s appeal: The show is assembled with such intentionality you can’t help but be pulled in.

     ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of Platonic season two .

    Photo: Mike Judge/Disney

    This could have been a disaster, because a lot of revivals are. Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, the fourth and fifth seasons of Arrested Development, And Just Like That … — none of them quite captured what made their originals so appealing. What a relief that King of the Hill is exactly what a revival should be, with one finger firmly on the pulse of the past (Hank being behind the times, his friends being a bit of a mess, Peggy having a mile-wide competitive streak) and another on the present day. These characters’ personalities are so hard-coded that King of the Hill has a blast updating them to the trends and phenomena of life in 2025, from a grown-up Bobby being a German-Japanese fusion chef struggling with claims of cultural appropriation to a retired Hank using his new free time to pick up odd jobs on a handyman app and realizing that what most of his employers really want is companionship. This ten-episode season has the same gentle openheartedness, Texan specificity, and satirical touches as the original run, and it’s nice to know that sometimes the more things change, the more they stay the same. — Roxana Hadadi 

     ➼  Read Nicholas Quah’s review of King of the Hill

    Photo: Apple TV+

    The easy way to sell you on Chief of War would be to emphasize that Jason Momoa runs around pantsless a lot. The thoughtful way would be to say that Chief of War is a bit like a Game of ThronesShōgun hybrid, in that it’s both an action-packed and fantastical epic and a reframe of Hawaiian history told by the descendants of people who lived through it. Whatever argument is more persuasive for you, go with it! Because Chief of War is a fascinating star vehicle for Momoa, who co-created it with his recurring collaborator Thomas Paʻa Sibbett and also writes and directs. Set in the late 18th century and loosely based on history, Chief of War follows feuding Hawaiian tribes as they attempt to unify against the threat of colonization; Momoa plays Kaʻiana, a general who ends up traveling outside of the Hawaiian islands and realizing that capitalism and international trade will eventually come for his home. The historical epic is bloody, brutal, and sentimental, with an absolutely bonkers final battle set against an exploding volcano. And although the dialogue can be a little corny and the series’ narrative threads a little too diffuse, it’s also an incredibly bold undertaking that challenges viewers’ assumptions about Hawaiian culture and asks challenging questions about whether outside influence on the islands ended up being beneficial. Plus, scene-stealer Cliff Curtis! My captain, my king! — R.H.

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of Chief of War.

    Photo: Kent Smith

    Although it won’t be a show for everyone, The Hunting Wives is the best possible version of this particular kind of show: soapy, violent, melodramatic, sexy, and just a touch deep, but only in ways you’re welcome to ignore if you prefer. It is also gay! These ladies are totally horny for each other, and while most shows of this genre coyly feint toward queer undertones, The Hunting Wives is full of sex scenes that are actually sexy while also being shaped by thoughtful, careful decisions about character development and mood and balances of power. Plus, Brittany Snow and Malin Akerman bring beautifully dialed-in performances — big and fun and messy, but always grounded enough that the stakes stay real. — Kathryn VanArendonk

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s take on The Hunting Wives’s double twist

    Photo: Patrick McElhenney/FX

    The longest-running live-action comedy on TV could have run out of gas — and to be fair, some of its prior seasons have felt like the gang was cycling through the same old beats and story lines. But in this season, It’s Always Sunny feels creatively rejuvenated by its longevity and by how that lifespan gives it the freedom to consider its own place in the TV landscape. The crossover episodes with Abbott Elementary were basically brand management for the gang’s awfulness, while spoofs of The Bear, Succession, Is It Cake?, and The Rehearsal show how adaptable Dennis, Dee, Mac, Charlie, and Frank are to different genres and formats. The indignities they’re put through during “The Gang Goes to a Dog Track” makes for the most upsetting episode of It’s Always Sunny in years, and the crossover with The Golden Bachelor is a wonderful showcase for Danny DeVito. The series got a season-18 order all the way back in 2020, and hopefully it can keep this playfulness going. (Although, on the record: Seeing the unnecessary “Rob Mac” name change in the series’ credits is a real vibe killer.) — R.H

     ➼ Read the backstory of how the It’s Always Sunny and Abbott Elementary crossover came to be; Roxana Hadadi’s chat with star Glenn Howerton; and Rachel Simon’s list of essential episodes

    Photo: Karolina Wojtasik/HBO

    In its third season, HBO’s big sumptuous American version of Downton Abbey has figured out how to turn the dial on actual drama just far enough without sacrificing the frivolity that makes it so delightful. We got actual stakes in the industrialist Russell family’s marriage of their daughter (Taissa Farmiga, getting to finally flex her acting talent) off to a British duke, alongside everyone’s favorite clock subplot, a random act of carriage-related violence, and more guest appearances from leading lights of the American theater than you can count (Phylicia Rashad! Andrea Martin!). In these mind-melting months, The Gilded Age’s unique alchemy of nonsense and total actorly commitment — thank God for Carrie Coon — has made it the must-watch show of the summer. — Jackson McHenry

     ➼  Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review of the season; Jackson McHenry’s behind-the-scenes set visit; Alice Burton’s recaps of the season; and the backstory of how the pivotal wedding episode was made.

    Photo: FX

    Though it still falls short of the cohesion (and heights) found in its first two seasons, The Bear’s fourth outing marks a clear improvement over last year’s batch of episodes. We rejoin the gang in the wake of a lukewarm Chicago Tribune review, which kicks off a ticking-clock scenario: Turn things around before Cicero runs out of money and pulls the plug. But before you start expecting a sports movie-style comeback tale — this is The Bear we’re talking about — what follows is a series of detours and departure episodes, as Carmy and company wrestle with questions of who they are and what they want. The season still indulges in the usual excesses (Faks, needle drops, more cameos), but it also has some truly standout set pieces, like a notably restrained episode, written by Ayo Edebiri and Lionel Boyce and directed by Janicza Bravo, that trails Sydney on an excursion to visit her cousin that turns into a babysitting gig where she gets the chance to work out her feelings about the restaurant. The Bear might have its rocky moments, but if you’ve grown attached to this world, there’s a lot to love here. —Nicholas Quah

     ➼ Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review, Nicholas Quah on the finale, Marah Eakin’s recaps of the season, and Eakin’s ranking of every episode.

    Photo: Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

    At this point, calling out Couples Therapy as one of the best shows on TV has begun to feel a little bit rote, but the truth is still the truth: Few docuseries operate on its level, because almost no one else is even trying. Season four continues to lean on the show’s biggest and most apparent strengths, which are selecting interesting couples to follow and creating a platform for the show’s breakout star, Dr. Orna Guralnik. But the sneaky secret to the show is and has always been in the edit — it crafts remarkably clear narratives out of hundreds of hours of footage without ever feeling reductive. —Kathryn VanArendonk

    Photo: Rafy/FX

    Hangout comedies have almost no premise, and that reality is both a gift and a curse. They’re shows about people who spend time with one another, and they sink or swim entirely on whether there’s chemistry, an established tone, and a strong sense of why these people are good company. Like so many shows in this space, Adults is an occasionally uneven first season with plenty of room to grow, but it begins with strong performances, plenty of confidence, and sufficient joke density to make a convincing argument that it deserves time to get even better. There will always be new comedies about what young people are like these days; Adults is the best of the current crop. —K.V.A.

    Photo: Netflix

    There are too many shows in the Sirens model (wealthy people in mysterious enclave led by charismatic woman), and too many of them also star Meghann Fahy, but the upside of that situation is that when one of them is actually fun and bizarre and well acted, it’s easy for it to stand out from the bunch. That is the case with Sirens, which rarely makes sense and often collapses under its own weight, and yet is so full of strong chemistry between its leads (Fahy, Milly Alcock, and Julianne Moore in what is traditionally the Nicole Kidman role) that it surpasses all the usual expectations. Kevin Bacon is occasionally there, too. —K.V.A.

    Roxana Hadadi’s review of Sirens and Caroline Framke’s recaps of the series.

    Photo: Philippe Antonello/Amazon MGM Studios

    Hot on the heels of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Amy Sherman-Palladino found an excuse to go en pointe. The Gilmore Girls creator cashed in her clout with Amazon to fund a deliriously niche and indulgent project: a transatlantic comedy about New York– and Paris-based ballet companies trading their star talent, led by Luke Kirby and Charlotte Gainsbourg, both excellent. The show’s both a satire of the world of ballet and a loving tribute to the art form, with extended sequences where you just get to watch dancers at work, all colored by Sherman-Palladino’s specific aesthetic, fondness for warp-speed dialogue, and the charming undercurrent of “Can you believe they actually let us make this?” —Jackson McHenry

     ➼ Read Jackson McHenry’s full review of Étoile and Oliver Sava’s recaps of the season

    Photo: Star Wars via YouTube

    The most creative Star Wars project since the original trilogy (and those films owed a significant debt to Frank Herbert’s Dune), Andor has somehow gotten even better in its second season — more thrilling, more complicated, more talky. While the first season of Tony Gilroy’s prequel to Rogue One: A Star Wars Story was about the arc of radicalization, the second is about the challenge of consensus-building and how to organize a rebellion when its myriad factions disagree on methodologies and means. That approach gives each of the four three-episode chapters an organizing construct, so that Cassian’s (Diego Luna) missions around the galaxy, Luthen’s (Stellan Skarsgård) lies and betrayals, and Mon Mothma’s (Genevieve O’Reilly) political maneuverings all feel like spokes on the wheel of Andor’s “What is freedom worth?” questioning. The answer, of course, is everything, and Andor never lets its viewers forget the weight of that sacrifice. Also, Luna’s cheekbones! —Roxana Hadadi 

    ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of the season, Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star Diego Luna, Jesse Hassenger’s recaps, our debate on the show’s Emmy chances, and James Grebey’s interview with star Genevieve O’Reilly

    Photo: HBO

    Nathan Fielder returns with his singular social experiment meets radical public therapy session meets performance-art piece meets comedy series. The second season is structured around Fielder’s (deeply researched) theory as to why a good number of plane crashes happen: communicative fissures between flight captains and their co-pilots owing to uneasy social dynamics. Naturally, he uses the extravagant means at his disposal, courtesy of HBO’s finance department, to construct Synecdoche, New York–style large-scale simulations meant to help him get closer to understanding human and pilot interactions. An array of Fielderean gags ensue — including constructing a simulacra of the Houston airport, staging a Canadian Idol–esque music competition, and a Captain Sully–related bit for the ages — that, ultimately and unexpectedly, builds up to an emotional payoff that’s quite beautiful. —N.Q.

    ➼ Read Scott Tobias’s recaps of the season, Jeff Wise’s interview with star and creator Nathan Fielder, and Wise on what real aviation experts think about the series.

    Photo: Ingvar Kenne/Curio/Sony Pictures Television

    Director Justin Kurzel’s cinematic filmography is like a kaleidoscope for various forms of masculinity. His interests run toward outlaws, mass murderers, doomed men like Macbeth, and white separatists trying to overthrow the American government. But instead of providing these figures with hagiographic portraits, Kurzel and his collaborator, writer Shaun Grant, prefer to interrogate what weaknesses and traumas lie at the heart of men and push them into aggression. Their ability to emphasize vulnerability without excusing monstrosity allows their films an always-impressive amount of depth. The pair bring all of that finesse to their first TV project, the miniseries The Narrow Road to the Deep North, an adaptation of Richard Flanagan’s Booker Prize–winning 2013 novel. Jacob Elordi and Ciarán Hinds star as the older and younger versions of surgeon Dorrigo Evans, whose time as a Japanese POW during World War II — forced to tend to his fellow soldiers as they toiled on the Burma Railway while starved, overworked, and tortured — transformed his entire life. The miniseries is brutal, gory, and bleak; there’s no romanticism here about the gratuitous cruelty of war, and the five episodes absolutely can’t be binged if you care about your emotional equilibrium. But what works so well in The Narrow Road to the Deep North is its elemental feeling, its suggestion that all these characters are motivated less by logic and more by primal instinct: the need to love, the need to ascend, the need to survive. The series refuses to overdo dialogue as narrative connective tissue, preferring to let its actors’ depictions of their characters’ lush internal lives drive the action. With a final devastatingly astute (and ominous) observation about how war annihilates us from the inside out, The Narrow Road to the Deep North is no less humane than any of Kurzel and Grant’s other works, but it might be the most heartbreaking. —R.H.

    Photo: Prime

    This animated series from Ramy Youssef and Pam Brady follows the Husseins, an Egyptian and Muslim family living in New Jersey, and how their conceptions of themselves change after September 11, 2001, thanks to increasingly racist neighbors, media, and politicians. It’s a dark subject, but one that #1 Happy Family USA lightens up with original songs (including a quite catchy one about “Spies in the Mosque”), absurd voice performances (including Youssef performing both the family patriarch Hussein Hussein and teen son Rumi Hussein), and a thrilling through-line of anger at how easily America slid into its current atmosphere of paranoia and bloodthirstiness. Maybe the season is too frenetically paced and too overstuffed with ideas. But there’s a devil-may-care quality to #1 Happy Family USA, like no one involved can believe they’re getting away with creating a series in which former president George W. Bush is portrayed as a lizardlike kidnapper, the FBI like a bunch of maladjusted adrenaline junkies, and a hijab-wearing male dentist as possessing beaverlike teeth that can gnaw through trees. (The level of absurdity, it varies.) The elasticity of the medium allows for the series to stretch to accommodate all its most provocative and insightful ideas, until it ends on a cliffhanger that will forever change the way you think about the term “spy kids.” Another season is already on the way, which means you have no excuse not to watch. —R.H.

     ➼ Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of #1 Happy Family USA.

    Photo: Jasper Savage/Netflix

    The equivalent of a warm bowl of soup on a cold day, North of North reminds you what a comedy can provide — laughs, obviously, but comfort, too. With Iqaluit, Canada’s northernmost city, standing in for the fictional Indigenous community of Ice Cove, North of North’s eight-episode first season focuses on 20-something Siaja (an extremely winning Anna Lambe). She’s outgoing, cheery, and determined to make something of herself after separating from her overbearing and emotionally abusive husband, Ting (Kelly William). There’s just one problem with her plan: Ting is beloved by the town for his athleticism and his hunting skills, and they all immediately turn on Siaja for leaving him. The plot pushes Siaja toward ambition both professional (can she hold down a new job at the community center; can she serve as a resource for a visiting polar research team?) and personal (can she take a chance on herself; can she avoid being pulled back under Ting’s sway?), and Lambe handles it with all relatable charm. The cast surrounding her has great comedic timing, and the subplot involving Siaja’s mother Neevee (Maika Harper) and a returning flame from her past (Jay Ryan) is one of the season’s most moving. An episode about a baseball-game rivalry between Ice Cove and its nemesis town that’s packed with Indigenous in-jokes suggests that North of North could have Parks and Recreation–style legs, too, if Netflix were to go ahead and renew it already. —R.H.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s review of North of North.

    Photo: Sarah Shatz/FX

    It feels incredibly reductive to call Dying for Sex a limited series about a woman with cancer, even though that is technically accurate. That’s because it’s about so much more than just cancer, including reclaiming one’s sexuality in midlife, facing childhood trauma, experiencing deep bonds of female friendship, and, yeah, staring down the barrel of mortality. Anchored by a gorgeously understated yet deeply felt performance by Michelle Williams, Dying for Sex is also darkly and consistently funny, flipping the bird at every trope in every maudlin cancer story we’ve seen before. This isn’t a show about dying at all; it’s a celebration of all the things that make life so worth living that we fight to keep doing that as long as we can. —Jen Chaney

     ➼ Read Rachel Handler’s talk with Michelle Williams about the making of the series, Handler’s interview with star Jenny Slate, and Erin Qualey’s recaps. 

    Photo: Apple TV+

    Pity the … studio chief? Seth Rogen anchors this Apple TV+ comedy that follows a newly elevated head of the fictional film studio as he tries (and fails) to realize his dream of making great movies in a modern showbiz era that sees an IP-fixated Hollywood in uneasy decline. Rogen does impressive work performing multiple duties: In addition to starring in the lead role, he writes, produces, and directs all episodes with frequent collaborator Evan Goldberg. The resulting series is both an electrifying farce about the insipidity of the movie business and a loving testament to its enduring magic. It also looks incredible and features an absurdly extensive list of high-wattage cameos from the likes of Martin Scorsese, Charlize Theron, Ron Howard, Olivia Wilde, Anthony Mackie, and, shockingly, Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos. —Nicholas Quah

     ➼ Read Nicholas Quah’s review of The Studio and Keith Phipp’s recaps of the season.

    Photo: Ben Blackall/Netflix

    If all that this British series did was technically succeed at pulling off four episodes that were each shot in a single take, that would have been impressive enough. But what makes Adolescence such vital television is the way it uses that continuous, unedited visual flow to underline the themes and character beats in this intense exploration of a preteen’s arrest on charges of murdering a fellow classmate. Director Philip Barantini, working alongside creators Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham, often shoots tight close-ups that make it difficult for the viewer to see, quite literally, what’s coming around the next corner. That approach mirrors the shock and uncertainty now embedded in every second for the accused, Jamie, and his family as they confront the possibility that Jamie could be a killer. The camera’s unflinching point of view also allows for the actors to unleash some remarkable performances, particularly Owen Cooper as an untethered, sometimes aggressive Jamie and Graham as his distraught dad Eddie. In the final episode, when Eddie and his wife, Manda (Christine Tremarco, also excellent), contemplate their role in enabling their son to become an incel, Adolescence does the most difficult and powerful thing it can do. It refuses to let us look away. — Jen Chaney

     ➼ Read Marah Eakin’s Adolescence recaps, Shannon Keating’s essay on how the series fails to bring Katie’s perspective to the story, Nicholas Quah’s close read of the ending, Fran Hoepfner on the show’s one-shot takes, and Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star and co-creator Stephen Graham

    Photo: Jake Giles Netter/HBO

    For four seasons, HBO let Danny McBride and his creative team cook with The Righteous Gemstones, and in the parlance of the God-obsessed titular family, bless the channel for doing so. McBride has a specific flair for honing in on American subcultures and unfurling the oddness at their cores, and as he chronicled the infighting and exploits of the famous Gemstones family, he charted a path to understanding what it is about American’s specifically abundance-based branch of Christianity that holds so many in its thrall. No matter what absurd things the Gemstones family did, from fighting ninja-trained orphans to building megasize time-shares, the series always offered them second chances — and opportunities for fantastic actors like Edi Patterson, Walton Goggins, and McBride himself to go absolutely berserk. Gemstones was never again as cutting and caustic as its excellent first season, but in every subsequent outing — especially the backward-looking, romance-focused fourth — it was reliably stupid as all get out and hilarious as hell. We’ll miss them misbehaving, and we’ll keep our fingers crossed for a Teenjus spinoff. —R.H.

     ➼ Read Scott Tobias’s recaps of the season; Brian Grubb’s Edi Patterson performance review; Roxana Hadadi’s essay on the series finale and Hadadi’s exit interview with stars Danny McBride, Edi Patterson, and Adam DeVine.

    Photo: Robert Viglasky/Disney

    Because sometimes you just want to watch someone get punched in the face. Those longing for Steven Knight’s Peaky Blinders movie will be well sated by this series, which has the same roiling energy, propulsive scoring, and heavily accented gangsters as the British filmmaker’s most popular work. Set in London’s East End in the 1880s, A Thousand Blows triangulates on three figures in the city’s shady underworld. There’s Mary Carr (Erin Doherty), queen of the female gang the Forty Elephants, who’s sick of stealing from the poor and starts hatching a scheme to yoink valuables from the Queen of England. Coveting her is bareknuckle-boxing legend Henry “Sugar” Goodson (the insanely ripped Stephen Graham, who enlisted Doherty to join him in his series Adolescence), a man who only knows how to use violence to solve his problems and whose natural state is “teetering on the edge of an emotional cliff.” And getting between Mary and Sugar is immigrant Hezekiah Moscow (Malachi Kirby), who fled a massacre in his Jamaican homeland for a job in London, only to learn that the zookeeper wanted to put him in a cage and advertise him as a “wild man of Africa.” Hezekiah pivots to boxing, and his strength in the ring and romantic chemistry with Mary get him the wrong kind of attention from Sugar — who’s just itching to swan-dive off that cliff into self-destruction. A Thousand Blows pulls off a casting hat trick with this trio, whose magnetism elevates some of the first season’s cornier dialogue and sells the characters’ rapidly developed feelings. The fights are brutal, the schemes are clever, the six-episode drop is concise, and the “to be continued” ending promises more drama down the line. If you felt particularly burnt by The Nevers, give A Thousand Blows a try. — Roxana Hadadi 

    Photo: Adult Swim

    In this Adult Swim cartoon created by Joseph Bennett and Steve Hely, a kindhearted and noble naturalist discovers a rare mushroom that can miraculously heal any ailment … even death, under some circumstances. The discovery shoves him into the center of a conspiracy involving the American government and a big-pharma corporation, which both attempt to stop his efforts to produce the mushroom at scale in order to free the world of illness. King of the Hill’s Mike Judge and Greg Daniels feature as executive producers (with Judge turning in a reliably doofy performance as a pharma CEO), and the result is a wry, delightful, and poignant series that simultaneously feels like a Gen-X throwback and deeply modern satirical take on a broken world. Bonus points for the show’s psychedelic sequences, typically populated by strange miniature humanoids who look like twisted, western versions of Hayao Miyazaki’s weird little guys. —N.Q.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s close read of the season finale and Hadadi’s interview with co-creators Steve Hely and Joe Bennett.

    Photo: Apple TV+

    The first season of Severance ended on a cliffhanger so intense it temporarily halted the flow of oxygen to most viewers’ brains. Then the show did the cruelest thing possible: It did not come back for three years. When season two of this dense and deeply weird workplace thriller finally dropped on Apple TV+, expectations were understandably high. These ten new episodes meet and often exceed them.

    Series creator Dan Erickson, director Ben Stiller (he handles half of the season’s episodes), and their colleagues have delivered a surreal, meticulously rendered odyssey that delves more deeply into the cultlike environment at Lumon, the shadowy biotech company that has a team of severed employees whose work and personal lives are fully divorced from each other. As the members of that team, Mark S. (Adam Scott, in a career-best performance), Helly R. (Britt Lower), Irving B. (John Turturro), and Dylan G. (Zach Cherry) continue to investigate what’s really going on at this freakishly controlling corporate enterprise. The craftsmanship on this show, from the idiosyncratic production design to the carefully composed cinematography, is sterling on every level. And while it may feel right to describe Severance as a drama, it’s got a really terrific, twisted sense of humor that feels especially suited to these dark times. If you didn’t guffaw during the office memorial service where employees were told to “each take nine seconds” to remember a former colleague, I’m sorry, but you may not be Lumon material. —J.C.

    Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s review of Severance, Erin Qualey’s recaps of the season, VanArendonk’s close read of the conversation between Mark’s innie and outie; Devon Ivie’s interview with star Britt Lower, and Roxana Hadadi’s interview with star Tramell Tillman .

    Photo: Matt Kennedy/Neflix

    No, Peter Berg and Mark L. Smith’s gritty-grimy-ugly depiction of the American West in American Primeval isn’t perfect. There are maybe too many moments that feel derivative of The Revenant, and Betty Gilpin could have had more to do. But there’s a pureness to how committed American Primeval is to its thesis of “American history bad, actually.” Our pop culture has been so stuck in a mode of romanticizing pioneers and settlers that American Primeval, with its insistence on diving into Mormon history and rejecting the idea that violence in the name of gaining power is justified, feels like a balancing of the scales. Taylor Kitsch gives one of the most textured performances of his career, Shea Whigham is having a ball going head-to-head with Kim Coates, and the series actually takes the time to depict the Shoshone with depth and context. All the beautiful shots of the sprawling American landscape are nice, but American Primeval never lets us forget that these lands are soaked in blood. —R.H.

    Read Roxana Hadadi’s full review of American Primeval and Keith Phipps’s recaps of the series.

    Photo: Netflix

    Once again, Netflix has unceremoniously dumped a miniseries from the wonderfully empathetic Japanese filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda on its streaming service with no fanfare, and once again, it’s phenomenal. In 2023, it was The Makanai: Cooking for the Maiko House, an adaptation of a manga series; in 2025, it’s Asura, an adaptation of a 1979 TV series and its preceding novel. One of Kore-eda’s many superpowers is finding the core of friendship, family, and community in these sources and blowing them up into immersive proportions, and Asura is riddled with these kinds of connections. The seven-episode miniseries follows four sisters who suspect that their father might be having an affair — and might also have fathered a child with the other woman. The daughters range in their reactions to the possibility, which in turn alters their relationships between each other and their partners. But their varying responses aren’t finite. The women change their minds throughout the course of the series as they gather for meals to gossip, reveal their own hidden secrets to each other, and wonder whether the men they love could also be cheating on them. Does anyone really know anyone at all? The cast and Kore-eda address that question with humor and nuance, a lot of meal scenes (for all The Makanai nostalgists), and a finale that suggests love is a choice to be made every day rather than a certainty to take for granted. It’s a cheeky ending to one of the most thoughtfully rendered series of the year. — R.H.

    Photo: Warrick Page/Max

    Some elements of The Pitt feel surprising and refreshing because they’re a return to a kind of TV that streaming has been uniquely bad at making: a long season, a strong sense of individual episodes, and a straightforward and unfussy drama premise. Those features alone are so well executed that The Pitt would be worth notice. But The Pitt is astonishing beyond that baseline. Executed with a real-time logic and a bare minimum of emotion-juicing musical score, two things can stand out: the immediacy of the medical crises and the show’s stellar performances, especially from Noah Wyle, Katherine LaNasa, and Taylor Dearden. The Pitt would be a standout at any point in TV history. After years of streaming bloat, it seems nearly miraculous. —Kathryn VanArendonk

    Read Kathryn VanArendonk’s full review of The Pitt, Maggie Fremont’s recaps of the series, and Roxana Hadadi’s profile of star Noah Wyle.

    Photo: Euan Cherry/Peacock

    Honestly, Lala’s outfits are enough to get this show in our best of the year. Those little tutus! But even setting aside the continued sartorial magnificence of Alan Cumming and his stylish sidekick, The Traitors’s entertainment value as a social experiment keeps on rising. Since the series has fully reoriented itself around reality-TV celebs, it’s become a fascinating analysis of how this genre’s stars perform themselves, lean into their infamy, and align based on the networks that gave them fame in the first place; The Traitors now has a layer of meta-tension that makes all of the bickering between factions feel weighted by how these people define themselves, too. Reality-TV competitions like this are all about assumptions, how we size up strangers and decide to align ourselves, and that tribalism has an even sharper edge now that we think we know these people from their appearances on other series. That’s fun! And it’s only a bonus that this season has had so much mess, from bickering Traitors who spend most of their time backstabbing each other to Tom Sandoval somehow winning us over with his transformation into a walking banana peel. —R.H.

    Read Tom Smyth’s recaps of the season.

    Photo: Gilles Mingasson/Disney

    After a third season dominated by the will-they-or-won’t-they relationship between Janine and Gregory and a flurry of high-profile guest stars, Quinta Brunson’s public-school sitcom put its head down and got back to basics for its fourth season. With Janine (Brunson) and Gregory (Tyler James Williams) openly together and the cameos kept to a minimum (well, okay, there was the Always Sunny crossover), Abbott did what it does best: explore real issues (gentrification, low teacher pay) through the prism of relatable comedy. Abbott is still the most consistently funny show on broadcast television, with a cast that understands their characters so deeply they’ve made them feel like old, dear friends. Even the kids on Abbott raised the bar this season. Please, somebody give an Emmy to the little girl who played Margaret, the student who dressed up as Barbara to celebrate the 100th day of school because she assumed Mrs. Howard was 100 years old. (“You’re even older than Ms. Teagues, and she’s, like, 50.”) — J.C.

    Read Ile-Ife Okantah’s recaps of the season, Roxana Hadadi on the backstory behind the Always Sunny in Philadelphia crossover episode, and Devon Ivie’s interview with star Janelle James.

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  • The Emmys Need a Reality Check

    The Emmys Need a Reality Check

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    Photo: Euan Cherry/Peacock

    When it comes to Emmy voters, they like what they like. The shows they picked last year are more often than not the shows they will pick this year. We all groaned at five consecutive years of Modern Family winning Outstanding Comedy and The Handmaid’s Tale raking in a dozen or more nominations long past its prime. But that kind of rut-digging reaches the point of parody when it comes to the reality-TV categories, where Emmy voters have been nominating the same shows for ten, 15, and even 20 years.

    This goes all the way back to 2003, when The Amazing Race won the very first Outstanding Reality Competition Emmy. Survivor and American Idol were the more popular shows, but The Amazing Race had a prestige sheen (world travel! Cinematography!), so it wasn’t a huge surprise when it won. What was a surprise was The Amazing Race going on to win the category for the first seven years of its existence, nine of the first ten, and ten in total. This continued long past the point where The Amazing Race was considered one of the premier reality-TV shows; past the early seasons of Project Runway (which has never won) and Top Chef (which won only once, in 2010). After The Amazing Race won all its Emmys, The Voice won three out of four years, followed by RuPaul’s Drag Race winning five out of the last six years.

    In the 21 years the Outstanding Reality Competition category has existed, only five shows have ever won, including a surprise victory for Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls in 2022. Moreover, only 17 shows have ever even been nominated. This category covers, per the Emmy rules, “programs that include a competitive element for a prize […] with produced contestant story elements and other reality-style competitive elements.” This excludes “unstructured reality” shows (basically anything on Bravo) as well as game shows like The Floor or “structured reality” shows like Shark Tank, which apparently doesn’t contain sufficient “story elements” to qualify. (Ask me to explain why Chopped is a Reality Competition while Shark Tank is a Structured Reality show, and I will curl up into a ball.) But even though Reality Competition only represents a fraction of the reality shows produced, five winners and 17 nominees in two decades is a shocking number. At least with Outstanding Variety Talk Series, the one where all the late-night shows get nominated, you understand there are only a handful of shows to choose from. Over the same span, there have been 52 shows nominated for Outstanding Drama and 54 nominated for Outstanding Comedy, and even with those categories eventually expanding to more nominees, that is a wild discrepancy.

    This kind of rubber-stamping shows up in a lot of the reality categories. Outstanding Host of a Reality Program has only had six winners since that category debuted in 2008 (RuPaul is currently on an eight-year streak). The Outstanding Structured Reality Program Emmy has gone to Netflix’s Queer Eye for the last six years in a row, and has nominated Antiques Road Show for 14 straight years, Shark Tank for 12 straight years, and Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives in seven of the last ten years. Meanwhile, the Emmys have wholesale ignored entire subgenres of reality; The Bachelor franchise has never been nominated for an Emmy in any of its iterations. The Challenge has been similarly blanked, and its parent series, no less groundbreaking a show as The Real World, was only ever nominated for one Emmy, back in 2000 for Outstanding Picture Editing in a Non-Fiction Program, which it lost to PBS’s American Experience documentary on New York City.

    Famously, just last year, Vanderpump Rules became the first show in the Real Housewives universe to receive Emmy nominations, for Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program and Outstanding Editing (Unstructured Reality). This category — which has existed since 2014, when the Outstanding Reality Program category (i.e. everything that wasn’t a competition) was split into Structured and Unstructured — has been a hodgepodge of shows from Discovery (Deadliest Catch), A&E (Intervention and Born This Way), and recently Netflix (Selling Sunset, Cheer, Love on the Spectrum). It’s the one reality category where voters cycle in new nominees (last year it was Vanderpump and the winner, Welcome to Wrexham).

    So, what explains this uncommonly rigid voting pattern in Reality Competition? Part of it is that reality shows just keep going. If Game of Thrones had lasted 20 years, the Emmys might still be voting for it. But I’ve always wondered how much industry intransigence has to do with this. In the years after Survivor debuted, there was a pervasive sense of unease in Hollywood, as cheaper-to-make reality shows took up more space on network lineups and left less room for shows with writers and actors. Adding a Reality category to the Emmys felt like capitulation to the Fear Factor–watching hordes. Perhaps block voting for the same five shows every year was a way to keep most reality shows from getting extra shine. Of course, conspiratorial thinking like that requires a kind of coordination that only ever happens when Andrea Riseborough is involved. But at the very least, we can say that Emmy voters haven’t shown much interest in seeking out worthy reality shows beyond a narrow few.

    The narrow few that are expected to be nominated this year are the same ones that were nominated last year: RuPaul’s Drag Race, Survivor, The Amazing Race, The Voice, and Top Chef. You could make the case for The Nailed It Baking Challenge, since the original was nominated four times from 2019-2022. But just one year removed from the strikes, it’s hard to imagine voting for a show that canceled a season mid-stream amid union talks from its workers.

    There is one possible hope for a category shakeup in the form of Peacock’s The Traitors. The all-reality-stars second season was enough of a cultural flashpoint that Emmy voters might just pay attention. While the show is still tinkering with how to perfect gameplay, the character editing in season two was incredible: the Peter Pals alliance, Parvati shooting inscrutable glances across the room, every single Phaedra interjection. The challenges may not have been any better at influencing game play, but at least they involved slamming coffin lids in eliminated players’ faces and snatching up reality stars in Ewok-style tree nets.

    Season one was only nominated for Outstanding Casting for a Reality Program, which it won, indicating that voters are at least aware of and in favor of the show, opening the door to even more nominations this year. The shows The Traitors beat in that category, including Drag Race, Top Chef, and Queer Eye, are all bona fide Emmy favorites; considering how much reality TV success lies in casting, it’s a good bellwether category. And vibes-wise, it does feel like Alan Cumming crashing the Emmys red carpet in a turquoise tartan sash is inevitable. That’s the optimistic view; the pessimistic view is that one low-level award is all voters are willing to give to this show, and Emmy voters seem to have lost their Peacock password, having previously slighted shows like Girls5Eva and Mrs. Davis (and even under-rewarding Poker Face last year).

    A Traitors nomination, while welcome, would only change the Reality Competition lineup by 20 percent. For a category that’s become fossilized, that’s not nearly enough, which is why I’m proposing a radical solution: Clear the decks. Bar voters from selecting any show that’s previously been nominated. There are plenty of other reality shows out there, and if the Emmys are supposed to be about the year’s best television, they’re overlooking much of what’s new and good in one of TV’s major genres. If voters have latched onto Drag Race in its celebration of queerness and gender transgression, then honor what’s queer and transgressive in a show like The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula. If the tried-and-true social strategy of Survivor has been worthy year-in and year-out, then The Traitors taking the paranoia of vote-out shows to maniacal new heights is worth supporting. If The Amazing Race is commendable for the production challenges inherent in a race around the world, wouldn’t the nervy innovations of a show like Alone be worth a nomination some time?

    If Emmy voters aren’t going to acknowledge the evolution of reality-TV competitions beyond their approved handful, then this is a broken category. But it doesn’t have to be. Realistically, we’re not going to see a complete overhaul of the reality TV categories, short of a rule that caps the number of consecutive years a show can get nominated. But I’m never going to quit hollering about it. And if the Academy wants to take some advice this year, we’ve got some suggestions at the ready.

    I’m sorry, is The Amazing Race delivering TV like Tom Hanks’s niece (by marriage! All the weirdness in the Hanks family tree falls under Rita’s branches) throwing an absolute hissyfit in the season premiere because she got eliminated? Is The Voice giving you Franklin (née Frankie) Jonas in sweater after enviable sweater? This has been the most cleverly conceived social-strategy show in many years, complicating classic alliance play with multiple threat levels (you want to get rid of the clever players who can guess your identity, but you might need them for help when you have no idea who the hell Donny Osmond’s kid is) and devising weekly games that allow both the players and the audience to put together clues. This is the best play-along-at-home show since we all decided to vote for Sanjaya that one year on American Idol.

    One good thing about the Emmys’ reality-TV stubbornness is that it never fell for the insincere “charms” of The Bachelor. But this spin-off of the show deserves to be the exception, if only for recognizing after two decades that love stories are more interesting among people who have actually lived life.

    Nobody thought this show was a good idea, and plenty of people remain chagrined that the original series’ anti-capitalist message got watered down with a spin-off. (Then there were all those reports of shivering, poorly cared-for contestants.) Caveats aside, though, Squid Game: The Challenge improbably edited a game that started with 456 players into a narrative that maintained compelling stakes, characters, and storylines, all while the original series’ sinisterly simplistic games weeded out the competition pitilessly.

    There’s room for more sweaty wilderness reality competitions beyond Survivor. The History Channel’s Alone, which continues to be the most genuinely perilous show on television, has been dropping survivalists in remote locations to forage, hunt, build shelters, starve, and outlast each other for almost a decade — and it’s only gotten better over time. Alone enters its eleventh season this summer, but the show’s grand innovations and contributions to the reality genre have been present from the very beginning: a storytelling framework that relies on competitors documenting themselves, a robust production infrastructure, and total commitment to the hardcore nature of its premise. Very few things in reality television are as unique as Alone; even fewer achieve its real highs.

    The reality-competition category has included shows that involve singing, dancing, cooking, and designing clothes. But not once has the Emmys recognized a program where people make shit out of glass. The time has come to change that with Blown Away, the only glass-blowing reality competition and also the only show that features terms like annealer and gloryhole on a regular basis. The artists on this series sweat — truly, literally — through every challenge, melting and manipulating glass until it looks like bubble gum, then molding it into magnificent sculptures. (Or watch it shatter in their grasp, an event that never gets less nerve-wracking despite the dozens of times it happens.) Blown Away is about the fragility and delicacy of creating art in a fast-paced, industrial environment that seems designed to break it before it can even be seen. Sounds pretty timely to me.

    The human body is capable of astonishing things, of effort and physicality and strength that is nearly incomprehensible. Such is the experience of watching Netflix’s Physical: 100, a South Korean reality competition that pits 100 extremely fit people against each other in a series of grueling individual and team challenges to determine whose body is the best. This premise seems a lot simpler than it is: As people of all kinds of backgrounds converge — professional athletes, military veterans, models, MMA fighters, firefighters — many competitors assume they’ll dominate based on how ripped they are or how sturdy or tall, and those expectations trickle down to viewers, too. Surely the most muscular will rise about the rest, given that so many cultures prize ab count over other aspects of fitness. But part of the delight of watching Physical: 100 is how often that assumption is undercut by the contestants’ varying degrees of success regardless of body type. Those subversions make the viewer wonder what, exactly, winning takes. Is it a particular kind of athletic ability? Willpower or determination or stubbornness? Physical: 100 is set up to make us obsess over finding that X-factor, and the cliffhanger-heavy episodic structure and clever editing amp up the drama. It’s a unique format that upends so much of what we’ve come to expect from physical-competition shows, and it deserves recognition for that.

    Jen Chaney, Roxana Hadadi, and Nicholas Quah contributed submissions.

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    Joe Reid

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  • ‘Traitors’ Star Peter Weber on an Unaired Alliance, the Truth Behind the Car Rides and Which ‘Bachelor’ Alum (and Host!) Should Compete Next

    ‘Traitors’ Star Peter Weber on an Unaired Alliance, the Truth Behind the Car Rides and Which ‘Bachelor’ Alum (and Host!) Should Compete Next

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    Peter Weber, known as Pilot Pete to Bachelor Nation, became the second person to trade in the “Bachelor” mansion for the Scottish castle of “The Traitors.”

    Weber joined Season 2 of Peacock’s competition series as a Faithful, someone who is covertly working to sniff out the three Traitors within the cast and banish them out to take home the cash prize. The “Bachelor” leading man follows in the footsteps of Arie Luyendyk Jr., who was a Faithful in Season 1 and nearly made it to the end of the game.

    Halfway through this season, Weber put a major target on his back by going after the Traitors (“Big Brother” star Dan Gheesling, “Survivor” queen Parvati Shallow and “Real Housewives of Atlanta” icon Phaedra Parks). Weber led a loyal group of Faithfuls and planted a trap that Gheesling fell for, which soon led to the downfall of the Traitors’ trio and their eventual banishments. After Gheesling’s departure, Shallow and Parks attempted to recruit Weber to the dark side, but he refused and vowed to finish out the game as a Faithful.

    As the game progressed, Weber took some heat from the cast members outside of his “most faithful of the Faithfuls” cliqué for his staunch strategy. His “Peter’s Pals” voted out Shallow, but in a dramatic vote, he was banished last week — luckily, though, his allies rallied in the wake of his exit and then voted out Parks.

    With Variety, Weber discusses his hard-fought Faithful strategy, teases Thursday’s finale and reveals which “Bachelor” alumni should go on Season 3.

    How did you first hear about “The Traitors”?

    I had heard about the first season from Arie. I remember when he got cast for it and saw the first time he had posted about it. I was super intrigued. It was this very ominous, mysterious picture with the whole cloak on. I watched a couple episodes, and I got the call for Season 2 very last minute, about a week before we started filming. Immediately it was a yes for me. I scrambled and binged the rest of the season.

    Were you much of a gamer before the show? Did you play any Mafia or strategize to prepare?

    No, I honestly didn’t have time. I was taking care of all the things you need to do before you head out. But growing up, I’ve always been such a competitive person in everything I’ve done, every sport I played all through high school — definitely a big fan of Clue through the years growing up. I just kind of relied on my competitive nature and instincts.

    What did you have to do before production started, and how many outfits did you pack?

    First and foremost, I had move my work schedule around. Obviously, being a pilot, that’s my number one priority. Then it was getting all the outfits. We needed 10 or 11 outfits, very castle-y, Traitor-type vibe. My mom flew out on a whim and helped me get everything coordinated and set up. You have to do all your medical testing and get everything in order to head out to Scotland. You didn’t know how long you’re going to be there, almost a month was the max. It was a lot condensed into about a week but we made it happen.

    Did you want to be a Traitor or Faithful at first? Did you have a strategy for either possibility?

    I wanted to be a Traitor so bad. When everyone’s having their one-on-one with [host Alan Cumming], pretty much everyone was like, “I want to be a Traitor. Please take me as a Traitor,” I was the same way. I would have loved to have taken that challenge on. I think I would have been really good at it. Obviously, I got the invite to do it later on, and unfortunately for me, it was just too late in the whole show to make that switch. I was telling Dan, if he would have recruited me when he recruited Parvati, it would have been a for sure yes. It was too bad when I got the recruit, at that point, I couldn’t turn.

    After your banishment, when did you find out Phaedra was a Traitor?

    I was dying to know about Phaedra. I think the viewers sometimes forget, we really aren’t privy to information. They don’t tell us even when we leave. It was a couple of weeks after the fact; that was the biggest thing I had to know. I was so gung-ho that Phaedra was a Traitor. We actually watched the end of the show at the reunion we just filmed live. We had gotten a teaser that stopped right before the very end to reveal who wins at all. It’s good. It’s shocking.

    Your banishment was one of the season’s biggest cliffhangers. What was your immediate reaction to getting voted out?

    Honestly, I got emotional. I was kind of worried how it was going to come across on the screen, but I was fighting back emotion because I had poured everything into my gameplay and my tactics. Whether it was too hard or not — for me, it wasn’t too hard and I probably could’ve gone harder — but I had poured everything into it. It’s a unique feeling when you have your group of Faithfuls turn on you. It was an emotional moment for me trying to hold back, keep my composure. Obviously, you reveal what you are and walk out, and that was emotional. But you get over that. It was exciting to finally get the answer. I kind of figured; Phaedra and I had gone at it so much in that last roundtable ceremony that I got banished. I figured it had to be her next, because obviously, it was revealed that I was Faithful. So I kind of figured that they were going to go for her next, no matter if she was a Faithful or a Traitor. So I had faith that the Faithful still had a potential chance to win it all.

    Have you talked to Phaedra or Parvati since the show ended?

    I will say this: Our relationships, especially one relationship, takes possibly a turn that no one’s expecting, and the reunion will reveal all.

    Have you kept in touch with anyone in your Faithful group, like Bergie, John or Trischelle?

    Hell yeah. We had a cast party at my parents’ house. It was a super cool way to end the whole experience. You go at it with each other and get really competitive, but ultimately it’s a game and we are all very fortunate and grateful to have had that experience with each other. It’s something I know none of us will ever forget. My Faithful group from the show, we’re very, very close. But for everyone, it was really cool to have a last parting moment where we were all together. I never in a million years would have thought my mom, my dad, my brother, my sister-in-law, my whole family would have gotten to meet everyone.

    How do you feel about the whole “most faithful of the faithful” label you got stuck with?

    I guess I take it as a compliment. All these terms that were thrown around were never given by myself; those are just people throwing these terms and labeling me that. I gave it my all, there was no doubt about that. I know a lot of people thought I gamed really hard, but that was all on purpose. It was cool to create a group that really bonded and had this trust with each other, and it just made it so much fun to play the game with a group that you were that close to.

    Did you have a nickname for your Faithful group?

    No. “Peter’s Pals” was all news to me. It’s so funny because after the fact, I actually kind of like that. I made some T-shirts and had fun with it. The only actual name that I was a part of, and this never got aired, was in the very beginning with Sandra, Sheree and Peppermint. We met each other first out of anyone in the group because we were in the car together going to the castle for the first day. We passed this sign that The Highland Council because we filmed in the Highlands in Scotland. We’re trying to figure out how to navigate this game and were like, “Let’s put some trust in each other right now. We’re gonna call ourselves THC for The Highland Council.” That was the first little group that I was a part of and actually, the only one that we really had a name for.

    I was always curious how it was decided who would ride in the cars together to challenges. You had some tense car rides with Traitors in there with you. Who decides that, the cast or the producers?

    The producers didn’t tell us anything about what to do. They didn’t give any instruction on any type of conversation, who to ride with. That was all free choice. It made it great to be able to use that to your advantage. We’d try to work it, like someone go in this car or that car. It’s funny, we were driving to the cast party at my house and I was in a van with Dan, Trischelle, Dan’s wife, Bergie and Ekin-Su. Dan was upfront and being really quiet and wasn’t talking. He’s like, “Guys, I’m so sorry. I just get really, really carsick. If I’m being quiet, it’s nothing against you guys.” Then Trischelle is like, “Yeah, you were always so quiet and reserved in the car.” He’s like, “I promise, I wasn’t trying to be sketchy. I just can’t talk when I’m in cars, because I get carsick.”

    Who would you like to see from “The Bachelor” on Season 3?

    I think Jason Tartick would be great for the show. He’s one of the smartest guys I know, very analytical. I think he could really pull off either role. Nick Viall would be great in that role as well. I think it’d be cool to see Chris Harrison take a shot at the castle. That’d be some really good TV. I’d be really curious to see how he would handle it.

    “The Traitors” Season 2 finale and reunion drop on Peacock on Thursday, March 9.

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    Jordan Moreau

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  • Monica Garcia Reveals Which RHOSLC Costars She Speaks to, Most “Frustrating” Part of Reunion

    Monica Garcia Reveals Which RHOSLC Costars She Speaks to, Most “Frustrating” Part of Reunion

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    Credit: Rich Polk/Bravo

    Monica Garcia is sharing her thoughts on being fired from the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City cast ahead of season five and looking back on the “frustrating” season four reunion.

    One week after it was confirmed that she would not be returning to the show for season five due to her involvement with a troll account against the cast on Instagram, Monica, 40, reflected on her “[captivating]” performance as she suggested she should be included in future episodes, revealed who she loves from the show, confirmed she speaks to Mary Cosby, 51, daily, and more.

    “I’m okay! The fan reaction is being seen and heard. You guys are fighting so hard. It’s making a huge difference. There has been an uproar in the series of events that have taken place. It’s not going unnoticed. I’m so grateful,” Monica said of her departure during a January 29 interview with Pride. “The fans were clearly captivated by the whole season and that’s all you can ask for.”

    While some have said Monica should’ve never been cast in the first place, let alone be invited back to the show, Monica feels that her return would lead to resolution among the group.

    “I think everyone should put on their big girl panties and deal with it,” she stated. “A lot of people, including myself, wanted resolution. Part three of the reunion was brutal and I was checked out. I know I let a lot of the fans down and I’m so sorry, but I was over it. I knew I was getting nowhere. We should have gone right into filming. Truly, that’s how I feel. We’re all there to do a job. Let’s do it and let’s resolve it and let’s move on. I don’t think anything was done that’s not fixable.”

    In fact, she still has love for many of her castmates.

    “I actually love [Meredith Marks]. I love Mary and I genuinely love [Whitney Rose]. They’re mad at me and that’s okay. Mary’s not! Mary is so sweet. We talk every day,” she shared.

    During the season four reunion, Monica showcased a “burn book.” However, when all was said and done, fans didn’t see much of its content. And after the third installment aired, Monica teased the potential publication of its content.

    “I feel like I could be the next New York Times bestseller. I think you can buy your way on that list… I’m just saying,” Monica noted, seemingly shading Heather Gay‘s bestselling Bad Mormon.

    “It was actually really frustrating,” Monica continued of the reunion taping. “That burn book did not get enough attention, but maybe I should be thanking them. Maybe I should just legit post it. There’s so much in there that makes sense and bridges gaps and stories. There’s a lot that adds to the whole situation that no one got to see. Everyone’s saying it was a fail, and it was, but there was a lot of stuff that didn’t make it on air and everybody needs to keep that in mind.

    Looking ahead to season five, Monica said that while she understands everyone is “replaceable,” she believes fans would like to see more of her story.

    “If housewives like NeNe Leakes and Porsha Williams [leave]… those shows continue on. Everyone’s replaceable and I know that. I’m sure they’ll be just fine, but I do think that there is such a void and open chapter for the fans. People want resolution,” she reasoned. “That’s what we love about these shows. There’s conflict and resolution and that’s a fact within a friend group. That happens in real life. Let’s conclude that.”

    As for if she’d appear on another reality show, Monica said she’d be down to join The Traitors.

    “I would LOVE to be a traitor! I think there is no more fitting show for me than Traitors. I’m totally open!” she confirmed. “I have gone back and forth [about whether I’d want to be a traitor or a faithful]! I feel like either way I’m getting voted off first roundtable. Everyone would think I’m a traitor! Same result is going to happen. Just give me the cloak… I just want the moment!”

    The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City is currently on hiatus.

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    Lindsay Cronin

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  • ‘The Traitors’ Draws Highest Ever Audience For UK’s Season 2 Finale (Spoiler Free!)

    ‘The Traitors’ Draws Highest Ever Audience For UK’s Season 2 Finale (Spoiler Free!)

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    The BBC enjoyed fresh success with its second season of The Traitors, which drew its highest ever audience with its second season finale airing on Friday evening in the UK.

    A reported peak of 6.9million tuned in to discover the winner of the ‘blink murder’-inspired reality TV show, set in a Scottish castle, where ‘faithfuls’ must try to guess the identity of the ‘traitors’ who are meanwhile trying to bump them off one by one. This figure was up by 2.2million on the first season a year ago.

    After Friday evening’s tense finale, the show’s winner pocketed a prize of £95,000 and told the BBC: “My legs are shaking. I just won £95,000. I underestimated this massively, you come here and there’s 22 amazing people, and from the off I’ve been a traitor.”

    They added: “I’ve had enough of being naughty and being bad, because that was next level. I didn’t know I could lie that well and keep it up.

    “The first couple of days I was struggling, because you’re lying to people and building relationships out of a lie. It was just mad.”

    The show is one of the BBC’s biggest hits in recent years, and has already been commissioned for a third series. The Traitors is produced by All3Media-backed Squid Game: The Challenge maker Studio Lambert and the U.S. version has just kicked off on Peacock.

    A third series for the UK has already been commissioned.

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    Caroline Frost

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  • Harry wins The Traitors as BBC urged to keep series 3’s chosen Traitors a secret from viewers ‘so we all become Faithfuls’

    Harry wins The Traitors as BBC urged to keep series 3’s chosen Traitors a secret from viewers ‘so we all become Faithfuls’

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    The final of The Traitors aired on BBC One tonight (January 26) and boy what an episode!

    Drama, an intense mission and the ultimate “end game” round table.

    But viewers at home were all wishing one thing as they watched – that they could play along as well!

    Who won The Traitors? Harry was crowned victorious! (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors final – who wins?

    After the first end game round table, all four players decided to banish again. Andrew was given his marching orders, with Harry, Mollie and Jaz voting again.

    Mollie decided to end the game, Harry decided to end the game, Jaz decided to banish again.

    All three had to pick a player to banish. Harry decided to banish Jaz, Jaz decided to banish Harry. This meant Mollie had the deciding vote. She banished Jaz, meaning he was eliminated from the game.

    This left Mollie – a Faithful – and Harry – a Traitor – in the final two as the game ended. And it wasn’t long before Mollie realised she’d been mistaken in trusting Harry all along as he revealed himself as a Traitor and stole the entire prize pot.

    Mollie on The Traitors
    Mollie was double-crossed by Harry and lost a fortune (Credit: BBC)

    Viewers want in on the decisions

    Posting on social media, fans of The Traitors have decided they want in on the action. And so they’re suggesting that the BBC switches things up and keeps exactly who is a Traitor a secret.

    “Wonder if there is a season 3, if they will consider NOT telling the audience who the Traitors and Faithfuls are so we are trying to work it out as well,” said one amaetuer sleuth.

    “Would this work? In a new series they don’t tell us who the Traitors are, we literally all become Faithfuls watching at home and get to use an interactive app to all be part of the round table and vote each episode,” said another.

    “The thought of finding out who’s been murdered and then trying to figure out why and who the Traitors are feels exciting,” a third agreed.

    “I’d love to play along next year, please don’t tell us who the Traitors are!” urged another.

    Series 3 – expect the unexpected

    However, some spotted a flaw in the plan. “I’ve considered that. But you’d have no turret scene as it would give away who they considered murdering, it would probably be a lot less interesting.”

    But, a fair bit changed from series 1 of The Traitors to series 2. So could the BBC switch things up and make a key change to the format next time around?

    When it comes to The Traitors, anything is possible. Watch this space!

    Read more: ED!’s wishlist for The Traitors series 3 – listen up BBC!

    So what did you think of the final? Tell us on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix.

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    Nancy Brown

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  • The Traitors fans slam ‘useless’ faithfuls as Jasmine is banished: ‘Don’t deserve to win’

    The Traitors fans slam ‘useless’ faithfuls as Jasmine is banished: ‘Don’t deserve to win’

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    The Traitors 2024 viewers took to Twitter to slam the faithfuls during tonight’s show (Thursday, January 25) as another faithful was banished.

    Jasmine became the latest faithful to be booted from the competition – just one day before the final.

    Jasmine was banished (Credit: BBC)

    What happened on The Traitors 2024 tonight?

    Tonight’s edition of The Traitors saw another banishment take place.

    Last night (Wednesday, January 24) saw Ross get banished, less than 24 hours after becoming a traitor.

    Following his banishment, eyes turned on Jasmine.

    Despite her best efforts, she didn’t manage to convince the people around the roundtable that she wasn’t a traitor.

    Standing up before her fellow contestants, Jasmine revealed that she was a faithful. “It’s been a journey, oh my god. It’s been emotional. Love you all, and good luck,” she said.

    Jasmine on The Traitors
    Fans were not happy (Credit: BBC)

    Fans slam ‘useless’ faithfuls

    It’s safe to say that viewers were not impressed with the faithfuls tonight. Many took to Twitter to slam them for being “useless” and banishing another faithful.

    “The finest writers in this country could not come up with characters as utterly stupid as these faithfuls. It’s jaw-dropping,” one BBC viewer fumed.

    “These faithfuls are so [bleep] I want the traitors to win,” another said. “Nah I cba lmao I would always back the faithfuls but they just don’t deserve to win this season,” a third wrote.

    “The faithfuls really are useless – not one has questioned why would Ross have murdered his own mother,” another wrote.

    “The faithfuls have been absolutely shocking this year… WHY would they automatically suspect Jasmine because of Ross when Charlotte was innocent despite Paul?!” a fifth fan tweeted.

    “These faithfuls are useless,” another said.

    The Traitors Claudia Winkleman
    The final is tomorrow (Credit: BBC)

    What to expect from The Traitors 2024 finale

    Tomorrow night (Friday, January 26) will see the final take place. Andrew, Mollie, Harry, Evie, and Jaz will all be hoping to win a chunk of the ever-growing prize pot.

    Viewers are going to be in for almost two hours’ worth of Traitors content tomorrow night.

    This is thanks to not only an extended, 70-minute episode of the show but also an extended, 40-minute episode of Uncloaked too.

    Ed Gamble, host of Uncloaked, will be joined by the vast majority of the series 2 cast, as well as show host Claudia Winkleman.

    Read more: Giovanni Pernice reveals he’s ‘obsessed’ with The Traitors as he declares ’sign me up right now’

    The Traitors final airs tomorrow night (Friday, January 26) at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    So what do you think of this story? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Robert Emlyn Slater

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  • The Traitors UK series 3 wishlist – We want more twists, less traitors, and no celebrities

    The Traitors UK series 3 wishlist – We want more twists, less traitors, and no celebrities

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    The Traitors UK is arguably one of the best shows on TV at the moment, and a third season is on the way.

    Following on from the success of the first two series, here’s our wishlist for series three, whenever it graces our TV screens.

    The Traitors is coming back for another series (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors UK season 3 wishlist: Missions to mean more

    Let’s be honest here, viewers tune in to The Traitors to see who will turn up at breakfast and who will get banished at the round table.

    The missions are the bits where you can check your phone and see what people are saying on Twitter. Let’s change that.

    Give us more missions like Diane’s funeral, where it played a huge part in ousting a traitor. Personally, I’m not fussed watching the contestants play hopscotch across a lake with handfuls of gold. I want to see faithfuls growing suspicious of traitors due to how they’re playing in the missions. I want to see traitors sabotaging faithfuls attempts at winning money.

    Give us missions that directly allow the traitors to deceive the faithfuls, or faithfuls to sniff out the traitors!

    Miles on The Traitors
    Give us more scenes like this (Credit: BBC)

    More twists

    If the whole poisoned chalice episode wasn’t enough of a twist, finding out that the poison hadn’t worked instantaneously was an even bigger one!

    Seeing the traitors thrown for once at breakfast when they clocked Diane at the table was brilliant television.

    Give us more instances where there’s a twist to the traitors murdering sprees. Rattle them.

    Let the faithfuls think they’ve banished a traitor, only for them to make a return – and no one knows whose side they’re on.

    Give us more twists, Claudia! Pull the rug from out under our feet every single episode! 

    Ross on The Traitors
    Ross was recruited recently (Credit: BBC)

    Restrict the Traitors to just one recruitment

    The traitors have had a bit of an advantage in this series, thanks to the fact that they’ve been allowed to recruit three times.

    There’s never been less than two traitors at one time this year. After Miles fell, Andrew was recruited. After Paul was banished, Ross was recruited.

    Whilst it does make it interesting watching a faithful suddenly become a traitor, it does put the faithful at even more of a disadvantage.

    Maybe in series three, the traitors should only be allowed to recruit once during the series. And if their offer to join the dark side is rejected, then that’s it. Or maybe, they should only be allowed to recruit when they’re down to one.

    It would be so interesting to watch the faithfuls banish all the traitors, then turn on each other, thinking that there are still traitors hidden amongst them. The mind games, backstabbing, and paranoia would make amazing television.

    Ekin-Su on The Traitors
    Ekin-Su is taking part in the US version of The Traitors (Credit: Peacock)

    No celebrities

    Yes, the US version is doing it, sort of, but that doesn’t mean the UK version needs to do the same.

    One of the best things about The Traitors is the fact that we don’t know who these people are. They’re all strangers to us and to each other (well, not always), so we don’t know what they’re capable of.

    I have no interest in watching a bunch of minor celebrities turn against each other and argue. That’s what Celebrity Big Brother is for.

    I wouldn’t say no to an All-Stars version of the show at some point though. Maybe in a few years…

    Harry on The Traitors
    The Traitors works so well as it is (Credit: BBC)

    Don’t change too much

    The main thing on our wishlist is that the BBC doesn’t change too much when it comes to the format of The Traitors series 3.

    The show works amazingly well just as it is. A few tweaks here and there to heighten the drama even more might be good, but overall, the show works brilliantly.

    If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

    More episodes would be nice though. 12 just isn’t enough! We want more!

    Read more: The Traitors fans are ‘convinced’ Harry will win the show: ‘He is honestly too good at this game’

    The Traitors continues tonight at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    So what do you think of this story? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and then let us know. 

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    Robert Emlyn Slater

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  • The Traitors star Paul suffered collapsed lung month before filming that almost cost him his spot on the show

    The Traitors star Paul suffered collapsed lung month before filming that almost cost him his spot on the show

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    The Traitors 2024 star Paul almost didn’t appear on our screens, thanks to a life-threatening injury that saw him rushed into hospital.

    Paul’s journey on the show has enthralled viewers of the hit BBC show, with the 36-year-old proving to be quite the Marmite character before his banishment this week.

    The Traitors 2024 star Paul talks horror injury

    Speaking to OK! magazine recently, Traitors star Paul revealed that he suffered a collapsed lung that almost meant he couldn’t appear on the show.

    The accident happened during a football match when someone “banged” into him. It happened just four weeks before he went off to Scotland to film the show.

    “My lung collapsed. I was outside A&E, screaming and crying, and I was on morphine and CAT scans and all that type of stuff,” he said.

    “I nearly had an emergency operation to re-inflate my lung because it had depressed so much, and yeah, it was chaos,” he then continued.

    Paul was banished this week (Credit: BBC)

    Paul’s collapsed lung

    “They also couldn’t give me the painkillers that I needed to be on because it affected my body in a different way. So I went through all this type of stuff, and then in the back of my brain, I was going, ‘Oh my God, in four weeks I’m actually going on The Traitors,” he then said.

    Paul then went on to tell how his partner, Kate, looked after him during his recovery. Together, they share a one-year-old son, Charlie.

    Speaking to the publication, Paul confessed that he couldn’t pick his son up for some time due to the injury.

    While filming the show, Paul was concerned that his lung would deflate again during the first challenge, which involved swimming in a lake.

    He also revealed that he didn’t tell anyone about his injury as he didn’t want it to come across as a “sob story”.

    Paul was banished from the show on Thursday night (January 18) after fellow traitor Harry turned on him.

    Ross on The Traitors
    Ross is a new traitor (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors 2024: Ross is recruited

    Last night’s episode of The Traitors ended on a massive cliffhanger, with Ross being recruited to become a new traitor.

    Harry and Andrew thought they had Ross right where they wanted him. However, after learning why his mum, Diane, was murdered, Ross announced his plan for revenge.

    “She was getting too brave, so we put her in her place,” Harry said when asked why they’d murdered Diane.

    Ross clearly wasn’t happy with this. “I could feel myself going to boiling point,” he told the camera after. “My mum was murdered, so I will take revenge. If I’ve got an opportunity, they’re getting it.”

    “DO IT ROSS THIS IS THE ONE CHANCE TO SAVE THE SEASON SEND HARRY HOME,” one viewer tweeted. 

    “Harry is gonna get his karma when Ross comes for him,” another said. “This man is already plotting Harry’s murder my god the revenge of Ross is going to be incredible to witness,” a third wrote. 

    Read more: The Traitors star Harry’s famous girlfriend jokes she will ‘never trust him again’ following betrayal of Paul

    The Traitors continues on Wednesday, January 24 at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    Leave us a comment on our Facebook page EntertainmentDailyFix and then let us know what you think of this story.

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    Robert Emlyn Slater

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  • The Traitors fans predict Harry's downfall after Ross wants 'revenge' for Diane's murder

    The Traitors fans predict Harry's downfall after Ross wants 'revenge' for Diane's murder

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    |
    Updated:

    In tonight’s episode (January 19) of The Traitors, Harry and Andrew recruited Ross as a Traitor after Charlotte was banished from the round table.

    During the early stages of the competition, Diane dropped the bombshell that Ross is her son. However, no one else knows that this is the case. On Wednesday night, the Traitors decided to murder Diane.

    After recruiting Ross as a Traitor, he asked Harry why he chose to murder Diane. All smug, Harry told Ross: “She was getting too brave, so we put her in her place.”

    Ross from The Traitors
    Ross was recruited as a Traitor (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors: Ross wants his ‘revenge’

    While trying to keep his cool, Ross wasn’t happy about Harry murdering his mum.

    “I could feel myself going to boiling point,” he expressed. “My mum was murdered, so I will take revenge. If I’ve got an opportunity, they’re getting it.”

    Throughout today’s episode, Jaz name-dropped Harry a few times and recalled a conversation he previously had with Paul that left him suspicious.

    Could Ross be planning his revenge by teaming with Jaz and trying to banish Harry before the finals?


    Fans are prediciting Ross will seek revenge on Harry (Credit: BBC)

    Fans are rooting for Ross

    After many people were originally rooting for Harry, the tables suddenly turned with fans wanting Ross to get his revenge after murdering his mum and fan-favourite Diane.

    DO IT ROSS THIS IS THE ONE CHANCE TO SAVE THE SEASON SEND HARRY HOME,” one user passionately pleaded on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    “Harry is gonna get his karma when ross comes for him,” another person shared.

    “This man is already plotting Harry’s murder my god the revenge of Ross is going to be incredible to witness,” a third remarked.

    Things we need to see: Ross becoming a traitor, avenging his mum by getting Harry and Andrew banished and running off into the sunset with all the money,” a fourth wrote.

    Cannot wait for Ross to expose Harry at the round table & get him banished,” a fifth person shared.

    Read more: The moment The Traitors ‘icon’ Ross reveals Diane is his mum and no one noticed

    The Traitors continues Wednesday (January 24) from 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    What do you think? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Fabio Magnocavallo

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  • The Traitors final: who deserves to be there and why Harry should win

    The Traitors final: who deserves to be there and why Harry should win

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    |
    Updated:

    With three more episodes until The Traitors final, tonight’s taping (January 18) saw traitor Paul finally be banished from the Round Table.

    Following the gripping episode, Harry and Andrew now remain the only two traitors left out of the 10 contestants.

    The final episode next Friday (January 26) will determine whether any of the traitors or faithfuls will take home the money. However, only a handful can be in for a real chance. So, who do I think should make the final?

    Paul from The Traitors
    Traitor Paul was banished from the round table tonight (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors final: Who should be the final 4?

    The last series saw four contestants in for a chance for the money. If the same formula applies to this series, I would like to see faithfuls Jasmine, Ross, and Jazz stand in front of the fire alongside traitor Harry.

    Going by the episodes so far, it appears that most believe that Jasmine is a faithful. Therefore, unless she is murdered, it is likely she’ll remain until the end. She’s a great team player, hasn’t faded into the background once, and has a great attitude towards the missions.

    Ross has also played a brilliant game. Not only has he been able to keep the secret that Diane is his mum well under wraps, but it would also be nice to feel that fan favourite Diane (RIP!) somehow also won. His wink to the camera in the car in tonight’s episode was also iconic.

    Jazz is often misunderstood and overlooked for how clued up he is. He sussed Paul’s game out early on and is usually right about his theories. If a traitor doesn’t win, he should be rewarded with some money.

    Harry from The Traitors
    Traitor Harry should win the whole show (Credit: BBC)

    Should traitor Harry win the whole show?

    Out of anyone in this series, it’s fair to say that Harry is playing a complete blinder. No one throughout the competition has suspected that he’s a traitor, and it doesn’t seem that they will.

    He’s managed to remain friendly with everyone and keep his friendships with everyone close enough for them to not question him. Even when he was gunning for Paul in this episode, no one had an inkling that he was throwing him under the bus.

    For that reason, seeing Harry win the whole show and take all the money for himself in the final would be a brilliant watch. The reaction from the faithfuls is bound to be even bigger than Paul’s reveal tonight.

    Read more: The Traitors star Meryl admits Claudia Winkleman gets ‘so immersed’ in show: ‘It must be hard for her’

    The Traitors continues tomorrow (January 19) from 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    Who do you want in the final? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Fabio Magnocavallo

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  • How you can play The Traitors at home with friends and family

    How you can play The Traitors at home with friends and family

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    The Traitors is currently thrilling audiences on BBC One, but did you know it’s based on a game you can play at home with friends and family?

    For those out of the loop, The Traitors is a reality series that pits ordinary people against each other to win a prize. Sounds simple? It isn’t. The contestants are separated into two groups ‘Faithfuls’ and ‘Traitors’, with only the latter group aware of who is what. In order to win, the Traitors must eliminate the Faithfuls without anyone foiling their identities. The Faithfuls have to work out which of their companions are Traitors and vote them off to win.

    TV buffs will know The Traitors is based on a Dutch series called De Verraders, which itself is based on the 1980s Russian party game Mafia. Here’s how you can play The Traitors, or Mafia, at home.

    Cast of The Traitors, aka, This Could Be You! (Credit: BBC)

    How to play Mafia

    Mafia is actually slightly more complicated that The Traitors, as some players have special privileges.

    The basic concept is as follows: The players are split into two groups, Townsfolk and Mafia. The game follows a night phase and a day phase. During the night phase, the players close their eyes as the Mafia eliminate Townsfolk. The Doctor may then step in to save someone and/or the Detective may successfully deduce a Mafia member. During the day phase, the surviving players must figure out who the Mafia members are and eliminate them. Anyone accused of being a Mafia member can defend themselves before a vote decides who leaves. The phases continue until either the Townsfolk successfully root out the Mafia, or the Mafia overcome the Townsfolk.

    Typically, you’d play this game with 10 participants, although it could be played with as few as six. So this is probably one that you’ll need to grab a bunch of friends or family for. At least ‘killing’ your in-laws might make family events a bit more entertaining!

    A step-by-step guide on how to play Mafia

    Step 1

    Gather six or more people to play Mafia. This can be in person at home, at the pub, or, in the age of Zoom, over the internet!

    Step 2

    The players choose one person to be the Major, who is basically the game’s moderator (or you could call them Claudia Winkleman). Unfortunately, Mayors don’t really get to play the game but they do get to know who is or isn’t a mafia member.

    Claudia Winkleman in The Traitors
    You can play as Claudia Winkleman when you play The Traitors (Credit: BBC)

    The Mayor’s duties are:

      • Distributing cards to participants
      • Telling people when they can open and close their eyes during night and day cycles
      • Timing the discussions between players so they don’t exceed the time limit
      • Informing players they have been ‘killed’ or voted out (if voting is anonymous)
      • Declaring the winner!

    Step 3

    There are two ways to select the player roles. You could either write the different roles – Townsfolk or Mafia – on pieces of paper, mix them up in a hat, and have players draw their role.

    Alternatively you could have the Mayor go around the circle and tap each player on the shoulder: one tap for Townsfolk, two taps for Mafia.

    The roles are:

    The Mafia: The Mafia are responsible for killing one player per night phase, which happens while everyone’s eyes are shut.

    The Townsfolk: Sadly, these are the ordinary innocent villagers with no special privileges. Good luck!

    Some Townsfolk also have special roles. These roles are:

    The Detective: The Detective makes guesses as to who the Mafia members are. They get a number of guesses per round equal to the number of Mafia. If they are correct, the Mafia member is removed from the game. If they are not, nothing happens.

    The Doctor: Once per turn before the Night Phase, the Doctor gets to choose one person to save (which could be themselves). If the Mafia then choose the ‘kill’ that player during that round, they are saved.

    Step 4

    Start the first night cycle. The Mayor instructs everyone to close their eyes. Once all are closed, the Mayor asks the Mafia to ‘wake up’ and silently decide amongst themselves which townsperson to kill that night. They point at their choice to inform the Mayor. The Major then tells the Mafia to close their eyes.

    Step 5

    The Mayor asks The Detective to wake up next and make a guess as to who the Mafia are. The Detective does so silently, and the Mayor silently informs them if they are correct or not. If they are right, the Mafia member is eliminated. If not, nothing happens. The detective must then close their eyes.

    The Traitors
    The Traitors (Credit: BBC)

    Step 6

    Next, the Mayor asks the Doctor to wake up. The Doctor must choose someone to save, which could be themselves. The Doctor can save the person the Mafia selected if they choose the same person. If the Doctor chooses someone else, the person the Mafia chose is eliminated. The Doctor can also be eliminated, which means the role of Doctor no longer exists. After making their choice, The Doctor closes their eyes again.

    Step 7

    The day cycle begins and the Mayor tells everyone to open their eyes. The Mayor informs the players what happened the night before and can be as theatrical as they would like.

    Step 8

    Players discuss the night’s events. The Townsfolk have to figure out who the Mafia are, while the Mafia sit amongst them and play along to maintain their identities. The Townsfolk can use any evidence they have, such as perhaps hearing movements or sounds close to them. Everyone still alive can participate.

    Step 9

    The players make accusations. More than one player must make the same accusation before the accused player will be required to defend themselves.

    Step 10

    The accuser gets 30 seconds (or however long you decide) to explain why they have accused someone. The accused then gets 30 seconds to defend themselves.

    Step 11

    All players vote on whether the accused person is guilty. If the majority vote guilty, the player is eliminated regardless of whether they are a mafia member or not. If the majority vote not guilty, the accused survives.

    Step 12

    In the scenario where the ‘not guilty’ verdict prevails, continue accusing players until someone is found guilty by majority.

    Step 13

    The eliminated player reveals their role, and if they are not the final mafia member remaining, the game continues.

    Step 14

    Repeat the above steps until there are either no mafia members remaining (Townsfolk win) or no Townsfolk (Mafia win). The Mayor will declare the victor.

    Claudia Winkleman on The Traitors (Credit: BBC)
    Claudia Winkleman on The Traitors (Credit: BBC)

    The BBC Play Along Game

    If all of that is a bit too much for you, or you’re simply more interested in watching the TV show, the BBC website also has a play along game.

    The Traitors: Predictor Game lets you play alongside the Players and think like a Faithful or a Traitor!

    You can vote for who you think will be the next murder victim, who you think will be banished next, and choose who you think will survive.

    You’ll also score points for your predictions, which rollover as the show progresses.

    Apply to be on the 2025 series of The Traitors

    Perhaps none of the above is enough, and you really want to play the game. Or perhaps you’d like a holiday in Scotland.

    The good news is that the BBC is currently casting for series three of The Traitors, so why not get involved? Anyone interested can register now with Studio Lambert.

    Read more: Claudia Winkleman’s most iconic Traitors looks and what you can actually afford from her £10k series 2 wardrobe

    The Traitors continues tonight at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

    What do you think? Leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and then let us know.

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    Susan Brett

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  • The Traitors: Here's how to stream the show's 'incredible' soundtrack

    The Traitors: Here's how to stream the show's 'incredible' soundtrack

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    The Traitors is back on our screens for series 2 – and its soundtrack has got plenty of fans talking!

    The BAFTA-winning reality series made its return this month with a brand-new cast. TV favourite Claudia Winkleman is back at the helm for the ultimate game of deception, backstabbing and trust.

    Like its smash-hit first series, the new series has seen 22 members of the public compete for a £120,000 prize. And already there has been a a ton of drama!

    But along with its jaw-dropping scenes that unfold, fans are also obsessed with iconic tunes that accompany them. And it turns out you can stream the soundtrack.

    22 new contestants joined up hoping to win big (Credit: BBC)

    Who composed The Traitors 2 soundtrack?

    The iconic music was composed by Sam Watts. And it’s no surprise it’s top-tier dramatic music, as Sam has previously worked on the likes of Planet Earth, Wizards vs Aliens and The Sarah Jane Adventures.

    Fans of The Traitors can even stream the full album on Spotify here.

    Claudia Winkleman on The Traitors
    The show has been delivering the drama (Credit: BBC)

    As well as the dramatic and ambient music, the show also features songs by other artists. Whether it’s a bit of Massive Attack or a reworking of Gangsta’s Paradise, the songs definitely help amp up the tension.

    Episode 1

    Darkside – Neoni

    Losing My Religion – BellSaint

    Who Can It Be Now – Royal Deluxe

    Me And The Devil – Soap&Skin

    The Strong Survive – 7kingZ

    Insomnia – 2WEI

    Angel – Massive Attack

    Gangsta’s Paradise – 2WEI

    The Traitors 2: Episode 2

    Darkness Inside – Astyria

    [I Just] Died In Your Arms – Hidden Citizens

    Sour Times – Portishead

    Boadicea – Enya

    Keep On Fighting – Tribal Blood

    Walking On The Moon – Ruelle

    Rise Up – 2WEI & Edda Hayes

    Claudia Winkleman presenting The Traitors
    The Traitors fans have been on the edge of their seats (Credit: BBC)

    Episode 3

    The One To Survive (feat Josh Bruce Williams) – Hidden Citizens

    Monster – Ely Eira

    O Fortuna – Hidden Citizens

    Tainted Love – Holy Wars & NOCTURN

    Blindside – 2WEI & Edda Hayes

    Episode 4

    Final Hour (feat Ruelle) – Unsecret

    In The House, In A Heartbeat – John Murphy

    Never Tear Us Apart – Dia Frampton

    Wanted Dead Or Alive – Empara Mi & Dreamchild

    Whose Side Are You On (feat Ruelle) – Tommee Profitt

    The Traitors 2 fans ‘loving’ the soundtrack

    It comes after a lot of viewers were applauding the soundtrack on this year’s Traitors series. One person tweeted this week: “The soundtrack is always perfect on this show.”

    Another wrote on X – formerly known as Twitter: “The soundtrack on this series of The Traitors is incredible.”

    A third quipped: “The main thing I’m taking away from watching @TheTraitorsUK for the first time is that if you’ve ever released a ‘dark’ cover of a pop song (ideally from the 80s), you’re pretty much guaranteed to be on the soundtrack.”

    The soundtrack alone is a reason to watch,” said another. “No but seriously, where can I listen to the soundtrack?!” asked another.

    As of yet, no one appears to have compiled a full Spotify playlist for the series, but here’s hoping they do by the finale!

    Read more: The Traitors star Ash ‘gobsmacked’ as Claudia Winkleman knew their names when they first met

    So what do you think of this story? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Joey Crutchley

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  • Here’s How to Watch The Traitors UK in the US if You’re Obsessed With the US Version

    Here’s How to Watch The Traitors UK in the US if You’re Obsessed With the US Version

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    All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, StyleCaster may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

    Mafia but with a regal twist? Survival reality shows like Survivor and Amazing Race gained their iconic status all over the world with so many spinoffs and international versions. Well, a new reality show is ready to make its mark in the US. The Traitors was a hit in the UK, but now it’s ready to cross the pond with the US version. As the US version lands on Peacock, here’s how to watch The Traitors UK in the US so you know what’s up with all the twists and turns.

    The Traitors derived from the Dutch reality show De Verraders, where contestants play a version of the popular party game Mafia. It takes place in a secluded castle and more than £100,000 (more than $123,000) are at the stake. If you’re American, read on for how to watch Traitors UK in the US.

    How does The Traitors UK work?

    The Traitors UK is a reality show based on the party game Mafia where 22 contestants play as “Faithfuls” who try to make it until the end to share the prize money of £120,000. UK host Claudia Winkleman picks out a set of “Traitors” whose goal is to eliminate all of the “Faithfuls” so that they could steal the money at the end. “Traitors” can murder “Faithfuls” and the rest of the “Faithfuls” must choose who they think killed the “Faithful” and banish them. At the end of each day, they all come together to vote for who they think killed them. A “Faithful” can also go into the armory and gain immunity which allows them to be saved and not killed. At the end of the series, the remaining “Faithfuls” can share the prize money if there are no “Traitors” among them. However, if there is one “Traitor” remaining, then the “Traitor” wins the money for themselves.

    How to watch The Traitors UK in the US

    How can one watch The Traitors UK in the US? The Traitors UK is available to stream for free on BBC iPlayer’s website, which has all the episodes from the first season. However, to watch the show in the US, Americans will need a VPN, a service that allows users to set their computer’s location to another country and access websites that would otherwise be restricted by location. The most popular VPNs out there are ExpressVPN, NordVPN and PureVPN—all of which offer a 30-day money-back guarantee. Read on for how to sign up for them to watch Traitors UK in the US before everyone else.

    ExpressVPN is one of the most popular VPN services and the one we recommend above all others for a simple reason. The service—which allows users to set their location to more than 160 locations in 90 countries with unlimited bandwidth—offers a 30-day free trial and a money-back guarantee. After the free trial ends, Express VPN costs $6.67 per month for a 12-month plan + 3 extra months with their current Special Deal discount ($99.95 in total), $9.99 per month for a six-month plan ($59.95 in total) or $12.95 per month for a pay-by-the-month plan. Along with access to more than 160 locations, Express VPN—which takes about five minutes to set up—also promises lightning-quick connectivity, 24-hour live-chat support and allows users to connect to any device, from computers to phones to tablets. Of course, users can do more than watch international events and shows in the US with a VPN. Along with this event, VPNs also allow users to access international versions of Netflix, Disney Plus and HBO Max (which have different content than in the US) as well as stream international services like Hayu, which has access to programs like the Real Housewives, Below Deck, The Bachelor and hundreds of other reality TV shows.

    Read on for step-by-step instructions on how to watch The Traitors UK in the US with ExpressVPN’s free trial.

    1. Sign up for ExpressVPN and create an account
    2. Log into your ExpressVPN account and click “Download” on the “Dashboard” or in “Set Up Your Devices”
    3. Once you’ve installed Express VPN, enter the “Activation Code” from the “Dashboard” or in “Set Up Your Devices”
    4. Once ExpressVPN is set up, change your location to “UK” by clicking the connect icon to read “Connected” and selecting the country in the “Smart Location” menu
    5. Visit the Traitors UK page on BBC iPlayer’s website
    6. Sign in or create an account and watch The Traitors UK in the US

    Nord VPN is another popular VPN service recommended by YouTubers like PewDiePie, Casey Neistat and Philip DeFranco. The service—which offers a 30-day free trial and a money-back guarantee—costs $3.29 per month for a two-year plan ($78.96 in total), $4.99 per month for a one-year plan ($59.88 in total) or $11.99 per month for a monthly plan. Along with access to more than 59 countries, NordVPN also allows users to connect to multiple devices (from computers to phones to tablets) and offers 24-hour live-chat support. Read on for step-by-step instructions for how to watch The Traitors UK in the US with NordVPN’s free trial.

    1. Sign up for NordVPN and create an account
    2. Log into your NordVPN account and click “Downloads” on the left-side menu
    3. Once you’ve installed NordVPN, log into your account
    4. Once NordVPN is set up, change your location to the “UK” by clicking “Quick Connect” or searching the country in the menu
    5. Visit The Traitors UK page on BBC iPlayer’s website
    6. Sign in or create an account and watch The Traitors UK in the US

    Another popular VPN service is Pure VPN, which offers a 31-day free trial and a money-back guarantee. After the free trial ends, users can sign up for Pure VPN for $2.08 per month for a two-year plan + 3 free months ($49.95 in total), $3.24 per month for a one-year plan or $10.95 per month for a monthly plan. Pure VPN offers more than 6,5000 servers in over 78 countries across the world, as well as 24-hour live chat support. Read on for step-by-step instructions for how to watch The Traitor UK in the US with PureVPN’s free trial.

    1. Sign up for PureVPN and create an account
    2. Once you’ve created your account, scroll to the bottom of PureVPN‘s homepage and select the VPN that fits your device: Windows, MAC, IOS, etc.
    3. Click “Download the app”
    4. Once you’ve installed PureVPN, log into your account
    5. Once PureVPN is set up, change your location to the “UK” by searching for the country in the right bar
    6. Visit The Traitors UK page on BBC iPlayer‘s website
    7. Sign in or create an account and watch The Traitors UK in the US

    Who hosts The Traitors UK? 

    Claudia Winkleman
    Image: Ian West/PA Images via Getty Images

    Claudia Winkleman hosts The Traitors UK. When she was first asked to host the series, she talked about how she was hesitant to do so. “I was like ‘I don’t think so’ and then I pressed play on episode one and I didn’t sleep or eat for two days,” she explained to BBC when she watched the Dutch version. “I watched the whole thing. I said to them I will get to Scotland myself, I will make sandwiches for the whole cast and crew please please please let me do this. I was absolutely hooked.” Alan Cumming, who you’d know best know from the movie Spy Kids and as the Dolce & Gabbana guy in season two, episode four of Sex and the City, hosts the US version of the show.

    Who are The Traitors UK contestants?

    The “Faithfuls” and “Traitors” in Traitors UK season 2 include:

    Aubrey Emerson 67 Loughborough Retired shop owner
    Sonja 66 Lancashire Volunteer business mentor
    Kyra Johnson 21 Kent Apprentice economist
    Andrew Jenkins 45 Talbot Green Insurance broker
    Anthony Mathurin 45 Birmingham Chess coach
    Ash Bibi 45 London Events coordinator
    Brian Davidson 33 Glasgow Photographer
    Charlie Bees 34 Bristol Mental health area manager
    Charlotte Chilton 32 Warwickshire Recruitment manager
    Diane Carson 63 Lancashire Retired teacher
    Evie Morrison 29 Inverness Veterinary nurse
    Harry Clark 22 Slough British army engineer
    Jasmine Boatswain 26 London Sales executive
    Jaz Singh 30 Manchester National account manager
    Jonny Holloway 31 Bedfordshire Ex-military
    Meg Corrick 22 Herefordshire Illustrator
    Miles Asteri 36 Worcestershire Veterinary nurse
    Mollie Pearce 21 Bristol Disability model
    Paul Gorton 36 Manchester Business manager
    Ross Carson 28 Lancashire Video director
    Tracey Griffin 58 Inverness Sonographer & clairvoyant
    Zack Davies 27 London Parliamentary affairs advisor

    Where is The Traitors UK filmed?

    The Traitors UK is filmed in the nineteenth-century Ardross Castle, 25 miles north of Inverness in Scotland. Host Claudia Winkleman said of the location, “I thought I’ve been to beautiful places. I have never been anywhere more beautiful than the Scottish highlands in my life. It felt sometimes like we were in a painting if that’s not too cheesy.” She continued, “On day two, we saw a double rainbow and everyone was like oh my gosh, and the crew were crying, there were baby deer, there was beautiful heather, there were ancient trees, and an ancient loch… But it’s just the most beautiful landscape.”

    The castle is not open to the public but is able to be reserved for parties or corporate events.

    Traitors UK is available to stream on BBC iPlayer’s with a VPN. Here are the best free VPNs.

    Our mission at STYLECASTER is to bring style to the people, and we only feature products we think you’ll love as much as we do. Please note that if you purchase something by clicking on a link within this story, we may receive a small commission from the sale.

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    Lea Veloso

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  • The Traitors series 2 cast: How to follow stars on Instagram and who's the most popular already

    The Traitors series 2 cast: How to follow stars on Instagram and who's the most popular already

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    BBC’s hit murder mystery The Traitors series 2 cast have the nation gripped once again as Claudia Winkleman‘s new group of Traitors are trying to kill off the Faithfuls one by one.

    Social media is going mad for the 22 stars of the show and now you can follow them online.

    So whether they’re a Traitor or “100% Faithful”, you can keep up with your favourite star.

    This article contains spoilers for The Traitors.

    The Traitors series 2 cast: Andrew

    Faithful Andrew is a 45-year-old insurance broker from Talbot Green in Wales.

    He was considered a “miracle patient” by doctors after being pronounced dead following a serious accident 23 years ago.

    Andrew currently has 417 followers on Instagram – but this is sure to grow as the series progresses.

    Click here to follow him.

    Anthony

    Anthony is a 45-year-old chess coach from Birmingham.

    Despite being a Faithful, some of his fellow players are picking up Traitor vibes, leading to him receiving votes at the first round table.

    Anthony currently has 221 followers on Instagram, where he shares life coaching tips.

    Click here to follow him.

    Ash

    Ash is the first Traitor on our list, and is a 45-year-old events co-ordinator from London.

    She says: “I know being a Traitor means you’re lying but my strategy will be to tell the truth.

    “Because the best lies come from truth.”

    Ash currently has 4,382 followers on Instagram, and you can follow her here.

    You can follow Aubrey and his cat Lionel Richie (Credit: BBC)

    Aubrey

    Aubrey, a 67-year-old retired shop owner from Loughborough, was the first person to be murdered.

    During his short time on the show, he won viewers over with his eccentricness.

    You can follow Aubrey and his cat Lionel Richie – yes, really – here.

    Brian

    Photographer Brian, 33, from Glasgow has fast become one of the heartthrobs of the current series.

    He says he has taken inspiration from last year’s star Wilfred Webster’s gameplan, despite being a faithful while Wilf was a Traitor.

    Brian already boats 2,841 followers on Instagram.

    Click here to follow him.

    Charlie

    Charlie is a 34-year-old mental health area manager from Bristol.

    She is one of the only members of the cast who told host Claudia that she did not want to be a Traitor.

    She said: “I feel like my face will go red if I’m lying!”

    Charlie has a private account on Instagram and has just over 200 followers.

    Charlotte

    Charlotte is a 32-year-old recruitment manager from Warwickshire.

    She is hoping to remain in the game by playing a “ditzy” character, something which has helped her in poker tournaments.

    Charlotte says she will use the winnings to fly her dogs on a private jet to the US so she and her wife can embark on a road trip if she is victorious.

    You can join Charlotte’s 614 Instagram followers here.

    Diane The Traitors
    Diane has been sharing memes on Instagram (Credit: BBC)

    Diane

    Retired teacher Diane, 63, from Northern Ireland has already captured the attention online and is becoming a traitor-hunting meme.

    Viewers have gone wild for her ability to sniff out the Traitors amongst the group, but is yet to convince her fellow Faithfuls.

    She currently has 337 followers and is using her Instagram to repost memes of herself.

    You can follow her here.

    Evie

    Evie is a 29-year-old veterinary nurse from Inverness and lives just a 30 minute drive from the castle where The Traitors is filmed.

    She is currently a Faithful but believes she would be a good traitor as she could play up to people’s preconceptions of her.

    Evie has a whopping 13,800 followers on Instagram already where she shares posts of herself hiking, running and wild swimming.

    Click here to follow her.

    Harry

    Harry is a 22-year-old British army engineer from Slough.

    He is the boyfriend of CBBC star Anna Maynard, whose brothers are singer Conor and former I’m A Celeb star Jack.

    In the show, Harry is a Traitor who is trying his hardest to not be banished by the Faithfuls.

    He currently has 3,275 Instagram followers, you can join them here.

    Jasmine

    Jasmine, a 26-year-old sales executive from London, is another Faithful in the game.

    She says that her job will help her in the game as she’s “a professional truth embezzler which is kind of my tagline”.

    Jasmine is hoping to put the money from her potential winnings towards helping her parents pay off their mortgage.

    She currently has 1,051 followers on Instagram and you can follow her here.

    Jaz

    National account manager Jaz, 30, from Manchester was convinced to apply for the show by his in-laws.

    He says he will bring “pure energy” to the show and thinks of himself as a team player.

    Jaz currently has 996 followers on Instagram and is sharing run downs of each episode online.

    You can follow him here.

    The Traitors series 2 cast: Jonny

    Jonny is a 31-year-old ex-military serviceman from Bedfordshire.

    During his time on the show he has been open about losing his leg in the line of duty.

    He currently has 6,226 followers on Instagram and often shares throwback images of him on tour.

    Click here to follow him.

    Kyra

    Kyra is a 21-year-old apprentice economist from Kent.

    Similarly to Brian, Kyra says she has been inspired by Wilfred’s gameplan from series one.

    She said: “I think that he’s inspired me in the sense that you have to be very emotive but also very emotionally intelligent.”

    Kyra has 2,068 followers on Instagram. You can follow her here.

    Meg

    Meg is a 22-year-old illustrator from Herefordshire.

    She is another star who asked to be a Faithful rather than a Traitor as she is “not a great liar”.

    She currently has 720 followers on Instagram, where she shares her art.

    You can follow her here.

    The Traitors series 2 cast: Miles

    Veterinary nurse Miles, 36, from Worcestershire started the game as a faithful.

    However, he was soon recruited by the traitors and switched to the dark side.

    He says: “I will be doing anything that I can do to win for the Traitors and shock people.”

    Miles currently has 1,365 followers on Instagram and you can join them here.

    Mollie

    Mollie is a 21-year-old disability model from Bristol.

    Since appearing on the show, she has been open about having one hand and using a stoma bag.

    She currently has 4,445 followers on Instagram.

    You can follow her here.

    Paul

    Paul is a 36-year-old business manager from Manchester and the final Traitor on our list.

    He said: “To participate in the show fully is to be a Traitor I think.

    “It’s great to be a Faithful and find the Traitors but I want to be the one that people are trying to find.”

    He currently has 3,009 followers on Instagram, who you can join here.

    Ross

    Ross is a 28-year-old video director from Lancashire.

    He, too, asked Claudia not to be made a Traitor, saying he would feel “a little bit gutted”.

    Ross is a regular poker player, which he hopes will help him in the game.

    He currently has 1,765 followers on Instagram. You can follow him here.

    Sonja

    Sonja, a 66-year-old retired shop owner from Loughborough, was the first person to be banished.

    She was a Faithful, but her fellow co-stars were convinced she was a Traitor.

    It seems that Sonja is the only member of The Traitor series 2 cast who does not have an Instagram account.

    Tracey

    Tracey is a 58-year-old sonographer and clairvoyant from Inverness.

    She has also caught the attention of social media users, with some thinking she has the potential to go all the way.

    With no gameplan, she vows to “live moment to moment and do what feels right”.

    Tracey currently has 219 followers on Instagram, which you can join here.

    Zack

    Zack is a 27-year-old parliamentary affairs advisor from London.

    He is happy to be a faithful, as he believes his “massive mouth” would give him away if he was a Traitor.

    Zack currently has 591 followers on Instagram.

    Click here to follow him.

    The Traitors airs Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer. 

    Are you enjoying The Traitors? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and then let us know.

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    Entertainment Daily

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  • The Traitors: Paul will 'throw fellow players under the bus,' warn viewers

    The Traitors: Paul will 'throw fellow players under the bus,' warn viewers

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    The Traitors is finally back on our screens for a brand new series as Claudia Winkleman made her hosting return tonight (January 3).

    22 contestants have headed to a castle in the Scottish Highlands for a thrilling new game of The Traitors as they try and compete for a potential £120,000 prize.

    But who has been chosen by Claudia to become the Traitors?

    The Traitors is back! (Credit: BBC)

    The Traitors on BBC

    Three Traitors were picked by Claudia during the first episode. Their job is to kill off the Faithful. Paul, Ash and Harry will put their lying and betraying skills to the test this series.

    The trio then made the decision to recruit one Faithful to join them. However, who the chose will be revealed in Thursday night’s episode (January 4).

    Paul is so going to throw the others under the bus at some point.

    But back to tonight’s first ep, it seems Harry has already got some eyes on him as Diane admitted she’s suspicious of him.

    Meanwhile, viewers also reckon Paul will waste no time in throwing his fellow Traitors under the bus when he gets the chance.

    Paul blindfolded on The Traitors
    Paul was chosen by Claudia to become a Traitor (Credit: BBC)

    Paul on The Traitors

    One viewer said on X – formerly known as Twitter: “Paul would throw every other Traitor under the bus in a heart beat.”

    Another wrote: “Paul is so going to throw the others under the bus at some point. He gives me those vibes.”

    Someone else tweeted: “Paul telling Harry he was overthinking about Diane makes me think he’s ready to throw him under the bus in the future.”

    Meanwhile, a fourth added: Paul… too cocky.”

    Another agreed, writing: “Paul’s cockiness is going to be his undoing.”

    Paul, Ash and Harry gathering on The Traitors
    Paul, Ash and Harry were the first Traitors chosen (Credit: BBC)

    Others fear Paul and Harry won’t last very long in the series. One person tweeted: “Paul and Harry are already making it obvious that they’re being sketchy. If at least one of them doesn’t get banished within three episodes then these Faithfuls will be worse than the ones from last year.”

    Another wrote: “Paul and Harry won’t last long as Traitors.”

    A third added: “Paul keeps smirking/smiling and Harry looks so guilty, idk how long either will last.”

    Read more: The Traitors: First contestant tipped to get the chop from new series revealed by bookies

    The Traitors continues tomorrow night (January 4) from 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer. 

    What did you think? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Rebecca Carter

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  • Where are the cast of The Traitors season 1 now? From stand-up comedy and soap stints to a First Dates appearance

    Where are the cast of The Traitors season 1 now? From stand-up comedy and soap stints to a First Dates appearance

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    The Traitors took the UK by storm when it launched back in 2022. The show – which sees 22 contestants try and win up to £120,000 and is hosted by Claudia Winkleman – became an instant hit, with a second season airing tonight (Wednesday, January 3).

    Before we meet the next 22 contestants taking part – let’s take a look back at the the cast of series 1 and what they’re doing now…

    Hannah, Meryl, and Aaron (Credit: ITV)

    Traitors UK winners – Meryl Williams, Aaron Evans, Hannah Byczkowksi

    The first season of The Traitors saw three contestants win – Hannah, Meryl, and Aaron. Between them, they won £101,050. But what have they done since winning?

    Meryl seems to have done what she said she would do with her cut of the prize money – go travelling. She’s also attended a number of glitzy events, including the NTA’s and the BAFTA Scotland ceremony. She also appeared on The Weakest Link Christmas special.

    Hannah has also appeared on The Weakest Link – and has gone on to become a full-time comedian. She now hosts a comedy podcast, Ghost Huns.

    Aaron, meanwhile, has made an appearance on MasterMind and is set for a stint on First Dates this year too.

    Wilf Webster

    Traitor Wilf narrowly missed out on walking away with the whole prize pot – however, it’s not been all bad since he left the show.

    Despite not winning, Wilf has appeared in a Comic Relief sketch about the Traitors, presented an award at the Soap Awards, and got married!

    He is back working as a social worker, despite giving social influencing a go. “‘It’s never guaranteed income all the time. That’s hard, especially with a family,” he said.

    Kieran Tompsett

    Kieran became a Traitor very late in the series – and was responsible for Hannah, Aaron, and Meryl sussing out that Wilf wasn’t on their side.

    He now does speaking engagements as a PTSD UK ambassador. Back in May, he also revealed that he was “in talks” with EastEnders to land a role on the soap, according to the Daily Star.

    Amanda Lovett
    Amanda was a Traitor (Credit: ITV)

    Amanda Lovett

    Welsh star Amanda was betrayed by her fellow Traitor, Wilf, meaning she walked away with nothing.

    However, Amanda’s TV appearances didn’t end there. Last month, she appeared in Homes Under The Hammer.

    “I’ve just had the best year, I’ve met so many fabulous people, and I’ve done some TV work. I just spent all my summer at Pride events I was asked to go to, so it’s been fantastic. It’s absolutely been brilliant,” she said on Morning Live in November.

    Maddy Smedley

    Actress Maddie was convinced Will was a Traitor but never managed to prove it.

    Since leaving the show, Maddie’s career has gone from strength to strength. She has landed roles in both Hollyoaks and Big Boys.

    She also became a mum for the first time in September, giving birth to a little girl, Shelby Rae.

    Andrea Addison

    Andrea was the oldest contestant on the show at 72. She hasn’t posted much on social media since the show – however, she enjoyed a reunion with the cast back in November.

    Fay Greaves

    Head of School Welfare, Fay, is now the host of a podcast, The Uncut Show. She is also an ambassador for the NSPCC and Ripple Suicide Prevention.

    Theo Mayne

    Since his stint on the show, Theo has become an influencer, judging by his Instagram, having done several brand deals.

    He appeared on BBC Breakfast recently alongside Hannah too.

    Amos Ogunkoya
    Amos has been on TV a number of times (Credit: Channel 5)

    Amos Ogunkoya

    Doctor Amos has made a number of TV appearances since leaving the show.

    As well as making an appearance on the Jeremy Vine Show, he has also appeared on Morning Live too.

    Last year, he made history when he became the youngest first-team doctor in the Premier League, after joining Luton Town FC.

    Alex Gray and Tom Elderfield

    Alex and Tom hid their relationship from their fellow contestants initially – however, things quickly went to pot for the actor and her magician boyfriend. Tom was the first to go, and a few days later, Alex followed him out of the castle.

    Judging by their Instagrams, they’re still together. Alex has continued with her presenting and acting, whilst magician Tom is available for bookings.

    Rayan Rachedi

    Rayan doesn’t appear to have social media. However, he did enjoy a reunion with the cast at the Survivor launch party back in October.

    Alyssa Chan on The Traitors
    The then 21-year-old was the first Traitor to leave the game (Credit: BBC)

    Alyssa Chan

    Alyssa doesn’t appear to have made any other TV appearances since her time on The Traitors. However, she has enjoyed a lot of travelling, jetting off to Indonesia and Spain since. She also graduated from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh earlier this year.

    She too reunited with the cast at the Survivor launch night in October.

    Matt Harris

    BMX athlete Matt – who fell for Alex before learning of her deception – is now living in Switzerland. A cursory glance at his Instagram shows plenty of cycling and skiing is taking place for him at the moment.

    He has enjoyed a couple of reunions with the cast, such as at the 2:22: A Ghost Story premiere and a night on the Six Musical red carpet in London.

    John MacManus

    John was an early casualty on the show. He recently played a clown in CBBC show Lagging.

    Ivan Brett

    Author Ivan hasn’t posted on social media much recently. He did take part in the London Marathon earlier this year, raising £1.2k for the Samaritans in the process.

    Imran Nasim

    Imran held a very impressive record, being the youngest Ph.D. in astrophysics in the world. However, it wasn’t enough to outsmart the Traitors. He hasn’t posted on social media in a while but is now working as an Artificial Intelligence Engineer. Impressive!

    Claire Barrett on The Traitors
    Police officer Claire was murdered second (Credit: BBC)

    Claire Barrett

    Claire was the second contestant to be murdered by the Traitors. She doesn’t appear to have done any TV work since then.

    She got engaged a couple of weeks ago – taking to Instagram to share the happy news with her 32.3k followers.

    Claire also sat down for an interview with winner Meryl back in January on YouTube.

    Nicky Wilding

    Nicky was the first contestant to be banished from the castle. Since then, she has continued to document her journey to get a bionic arm, regularly posting workout videos.

    Aisha Birley
    The 23-year-old was first out (Credit: BBC)

    Aisha Birley

    Aisha was the first contestant to leave the castle after she was murdered by the Traitors. She doesn’t appear to have social media, and doesn’t seem to have made any further TV appearances since.

    Read more: The Traitors: First contestant tipped to get the chop from new series revealed by bookies

    The Traitors season 2 airs tonight (Wednesday, January 3) at 9pm on BBC One and BBC iPlayer. 

    So what do you think of this story? You can leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Robert Emlyn Slater

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  • Claudia Winkleman thought she would be sacked before series 2 of The Traitors

    Claudia Winkleman thought she would be sacked before series 2 of The Traitors

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    The Traitors host Claudia Winkleman has revealed how she thought she would be sacked before the second series of the hit BBC show.

    The Scottish-set reality TV competition was one of the BBC’s biggest hits last year, earning a whopping 34 million views on iPlayer in March.

    And now The Traitors is set to return for its second season, with the first episode airing on Wednesday (January 1).

    Claudia Winkleman returns as host… although she has revealed that she feared that this might not be the case.

    Host Claudia will return for the second series of The Traitors (Credit: BBC)

    Claudia Winkleman reveals fears of ‘sacking’ as The Traitors returns

    Speaking in an interview with The Sun, Claudia has opened up about her fears for her future on the show.

    “I was hopeful they’d ask me back but you don’t take anything for granted,” she told the tabloid.

    I don’t take anything for granted. You mustn’t do that because we never know what might happen

    She continued: “And they phoned me and said, ‘We’re going again’, and I thought they were going to say…” she trailed off.

    Claudia continued: “You know, I never take it for granted. Even with Strictly, I don’t take anything for granted. You mustn’t do that because we never know what might happen.”

    Strictly host Claudia Winkleman on This Morning
    Claudia revealed a bout of impostor’s syndrome around her return (Credit: ITV)

    What can we expect from The Traitors Series 2?

    As before, a cast of 22 individuals will gather in a remote Scottish castle. There, a small number of competitors will be picked out by Claudia as this series’ Traitors.

    The remaining members of the group – the Faithful – must then try to uncover the Traitors in their midst.

    Every night, the Traitors will ‘murder’ one of the Faithful. The next day, the group must then attempt to banish those they suspect to be Traitors.

    If a Traitor remains at the end of the competition, then the potential £120,000 prize pot will go to the Traitor(s) alone.

    Will you be tuning in for the second series?

    Read more: Claudia Winkleman admits she wanted to quit The Traitors after just one series

    The Traitors returns to BBC iPlayer on Wednesday January 3, 2024

    What do you think of our story? Leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know what you think!

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    Joel Harley

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  • New and returning reality TV in 2024: The Traitors, Love Island All Stars and Married at First Sight UK

    New and returning reality TV in 2024: The Traitors, Love Island All Stars and Married at First Sight UK

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    Say goodbye to 2023 and hello to new reality TV in 2024.

    The telly genre really dialled it up a notch in 2023. A new reality show Your Mum, My Dad joined the mix: And we got reboots of some of history’s finest: Big Brother and Survivor.

    So it’s only natural we’re expecting big things from 2024! Here’s what the new year has in store for reality television fans.

    Fred Sirieix in First Dates (Credit: Channel 4)

    First Dates

    Confirmed to return to Channel 4 on January 2 at 10pm

    After all the drama with Nella Rose on I’m A Celebrity 2023, maître d’ Fred Sirieix is back on our screens in January with new First Dates. The BAFTA-winning dating series returns to the romantic city of Bath to kickstart the dating lives of new singletons. In fact, 2024’s series is described as “its biggest series yet”.

    Claudia Winkleman in The Traitors S2
    Claudia Winkleman hosts The Traitors season 2 (Credit: BBC/Studio Lambert/Mark Mainz)

    The Traitors

    Confirmed to return to BBC One on January 3 at 9pm

    Fresh off the back of winning an Entertainment Daily Award for Best Reality Show, The Traitors returns early in the new year. Claudia Winkleman fronts the series, which sees 22 strangers compete to win a prize of £120,000. Of course, there’s slightly more to it than that: some of the contestants are “traitors”, secretly working to eliminate players until they can grab the prize money for themselves. The non-traitors, or “faithfuls”, must correctly identify the traitors or that money is stolen from right underneath their noses.

    Maya Jama in the Love Island All Stars promo
    Maya Jama, behind the scenes of the Love Island All Stars promo (Credit: ITV)

    Love Island All Stars

    Confirmed to premiere on ITV2 and ITVX in January 2024

    What’s more iconic than epic dating series Love Island? Love Island, with all its biggest and most iconic stars back for a second chance at finding love. That’s right, Love Island is finally doing an All Stars version in January 2024. Maya Jama returns to host the series, which films in South Africa.

    The season 3 cast of Race Across the World
    The season 3 cast of Race Across the World (Credit: BBC/Studio Lambert)

    Race Across the World

    Confirmed to return to BBC One in 2024

    2023 saw contestants travelling across Canada’s picturesque and vast landscapes, as Tricia and Cathie came out on top. While we’re not sure where Race Across the World will go next, we are sure that it will return. It might even return relatively soon, given that applications to appear on the series closed in May 2023. The last three seasons of the show premiered in March, so we’d take a gamble on that.

    My Mum, Your Dad

    Confirmed to return to ITV1 and ITVX in 2024

    The heartwarming new dating show, hosted by Davina McCall, is also due to return in 2024. My Mum, Your Dad sees single parents busting out the romance with one twist – their children are watching it all. The last series was such a success that one of its lasting couples, Janey and Roger, are sharing their Christmas plans with OK! magazine months later. Though we don’t have a release date exactly, we do know the show will return in 2024 with “new twists”.

    Married at First Sight UK

    Confirmed to return to E4 in 2024

    The says-what-it-is-on-the-tin reality show will also return in 2024, after going from strength to strength in 2023. With more episodes and a more diverse cast than ever before, the series continued to be a big hit for E4. November’s reunion revealed that couples such as Tasha and Paul are still together, so it’s a success on that front too. Again, there’s no confirmation on dates but the series usually airs around late August/early September.

    Big Brother

    Confirmed to return to ITV in 2024

    Maybe ratings-wise it wasn’t exactly the glittering return ITV hoped for with new Big Brother in 2023, but it is confirmed to return for a second shot in 2024. After five years away from our screens, ITV revived the classic reality show for the 2020s. There were fresh new hosts AJ Odudu and Will Best, new challenges and a beautiful new house. Applications for 2024 are open now if you’d like to be a part of it. Considering applications don’t close until July, we’d probably guess at a late 2024 return date – which is what ITV went for in 2023.

    Read more: The Traitors: Claudia Winkleman ‘terrified’ people won’t enjoy Series 2 as much as Series 1

    Are you excited for reality TV in 2024? Leave us a comment on our Facebook page @EntertainmentDailyFix and let us know.

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    Susan Brett

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