I’m getting a bit concerned that The Celebrity Traitors – which will soon dramatically conclude over a steaming hot bowl of fire on a patio – is going to ruin me for the regular civilian Traitors. Will it be like filling up on bread before a meal and having no appetite for the main course?
I mean, how can regular Joes compete with Joe Marler – a man with a head like an Etruscan urn who emanates such jovial sweetness that he makes even Stephen Fry look like a conniving, craven bastard? Surely it would take some kind of supercharged combo of Linda (S3) and Diane (S2) to even get close to the wise-owl charm and farty breeziness of Celia Imrie.
And say what you like about Alan and Jonathan, but boy, can they put on a show. Last week, Alan’s red-faced attempts to murder a faithful in plain sight by crowbarring the phrase “parting is such sweet sorrow” into the conversation were so funny that I almost did a Celia myself.
Read more:
- How ‘winter madness’ made The Traitors the defining cultural event of the year
- The Traitors winner Harry Clark: ‘I wish I hadn’t signed an NDA’
- Claudia Winkleman on Rose Ayling-Ellis, representation and the role of TV
The Celebrity Traitors really has been magnificent. Well done to whoever assembled this particular bunch, from the most beloved household names in the UK to people who make you shrug and say “Who?” They put in some excellent teamwork, even though they couldn’t spot a traitor if they wore their cloaks around the house. But that didn’t really matter, because the game wasn’t as important as delivering good old-fashioned entertainment – which is what they were paid to do.
Yes, they were surprised at how well they got along and how much they loved each other (however briefly) but at the end of the day, it’s showbiz. You sign up, endure a couple of weeks in the Inverness Travelodge, and then you’re onto the next thing – eating spiders on I’m A Celebrity…, or interviewing Robert De Niro on a sofa. Job done, profile raised, winnings gifted to charity, national treasure status assured.