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📂 Category: The Traitors,Television & radio,Culture,Television
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While we wait for the show to start, please enjoy highlights from The Guardian’s extensive coverage of celebrity traitors over the past few weeks.
Analysis of the series by former contestant Paul Gorton
Michael Hogan Highlights
Zoe Williams interviews Tom Daley
Alan Carr vs. Celia Imrie, mentioning the fart
El Hante’s visit to the Castle of Traitors
And finally, the predicted ranking of contestants I wrote up back in May that was so clearly astonishingly wrong. As always, you’re welcome.
For those of you who somehow picked up the final episode of the series to get into The Traitors, here are the remaining few from this year’s lot.
Alan Carr: Traitor, the living embodiment of the Stanford Prison Experiment. At first, Carr is stuttering and embarrassed by the pressure of being a traitor. But then he had to kill Paloma Faith by touching her face, and now she had never seen a more cheerful killer. Better yet, he’s so likable and down-to-earth that he’s largely escaped scrutiny. Or is it?
Cat Burns: A traitor, and one to watch. Like Carr, Burns managed to slip under the radar for the duration of the series. This is largely because she manages to walk the line between friendliness and mystery publicly, but there’s a lot going on beneath the surface. The speed with which Burns turns on fellow traitor Jonathan Ross shows a coldness that’s insecure about anyone.
David Olusoga: Sincerely. Olusoga was probably the most outwardly intelligent contestant this year, yet he was haunted by suspicions of being a traitor. However, he had survived exile so many times that he definitely no longer feared death. Do not rule out the possibility of him turning into a full-fledged suicide bomber.
Nick Muhammad: Loyal, and another racer who prides himself on strategy. However, this is the worst performing group of believers in all of human history. They were really so incompetent at recognizing traitors that they would have been better off letting a monkey spin a wheel, so there’s really no telling how smart he actually was.
Joe Marler: A loyal general and witch finder. Marler spent the entire series desperately trying to guess and guess the identity of the Believers, a process that pretty much had him scowling at everyone as if he was just watching them eat his lunch. Marler ended the previous episode by correctly identifying the traitors. Whether he will be able to catch them or not tonight is anyone’s guess.
Hello fellow hunters, and welcome to The Guardian’s live blog of the 2025 Celebrity Traitors finale. Tonight, TV’s biggest show reaches its epic conclusion, as we finally get to know the answer to many burning questions. Who will win? Who will lose? Will believers recognize traitors? Would Joe Marler stare at someone so hard that their skull would explode? Will Claudia Winkelmann wear the Vileda Supermop jacket as she did last week? Soon we will find out everything.
Before we get started, there’s some important housekeeping. We won’t be the first in the world to watch the final, because – as has been widely reported – it was actually uploaded by mistake in both Canada and New Zealand. Although Traitors fans are absolutely amazing, and have largely refrained from posting spoilers online, I would very much like for us to be able to experience the final game together. This means that if you know who won, please keep it to yourself.
I’ll be back here, in and out until 9pm, when the full glory of the 70-minute Celebrity Traitors begins in earnest, and then I’ll probably live-blogging for BBC Two too, because I’m kind and generous, and also because my bosses are playing tricks on me. See you soon.
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