{"id":291277,"date":"2026-01-18T19:31:09","date_gmt":"2026-01-18T19:31:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/291277\/"},"modified":"2026-01-18T19:31:09","modified_gmt":"2026-01-18T19:31:09","slug":"the-dark-delicate-art-of-choosing-the-traitors","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/291277\/","title":{"rendered":"The dark, delicate art of choosing the Traitors"},"content":{"rendered":"<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal drop-cap-paragraph\">Watching \ufeff<a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/news\/national\/article\/gaming-the-game-how-clued-up-traitors-stormed-the-castle\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500576 _col-c-orange_6048 _textDecorationColor-c-orange_6048 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">The Traitors<\/a> right now is like turning on a crime drama you\u2019re \ufefffamiliar with and suddenly seeing the cast attack each other with pickaxes. In the past two weeks, traitors have turned on each other in public, faithfuls have asked to be banished to prove a point, and players have sneakily pocketed protective shields to keep themselves safe. One faithful has \ufeffeven offered himself to traitors to recruit, like a vampire familiar asking for fangs in the neck.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201c<a role=\"link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/culture\/tv\/article\/the-traitors-is-back-and-pay-attention-because-everything-has-changed\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _cur-pointer _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-18 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500576 _col-c-orange_6048 _textDecorationColor-c-orange_6048 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" style=\"font-weight:var(--f-weight-300)\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">The players this year<\/a> have taken things to a new level \u2013 they\u2019ve surprised even us,\u201d says Lewis Thurlow, the show&#8217;s executive producer. \u201cWe\u2019ve seen a highly strategic game by so many players and they\u2019re more invested in the game than in any series we\u2019ve ever seen.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The result is defying expectations and TV trends. Episodes on Thursday and Friday pulled in overnight audiences of at least 8 million \u2013 roughly the same as the tenth most-watched show of 2025 or the fifth most-watched in 2024. And that\u2019s before catch-up figures are added. Given that catch-up can double an episode&#8217;s ratings after 28 days, The Traitors is a phenomenon all by itself in a TV world where 4 or 5 million is considered a popular show.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">But the real story of this series has been the players\u2019 off-the-wall strategies \u2013 which are difficult to recount without spoilers. This, says \ufeffThurlow, was completely unexpected.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The only things producers decide on is the daily missions and the casting process \u2013 and it\u2019s rigorous. Casting for the next series has \ufeffstarted and filming won\u2019t start until summer, giving producers around six months to pick the cast. The number of applications is climbing \u2013 about 20,000 applied for series one, 130,000 for series two and 300,000 for series three. Series four applications were a little higher, although Studio Lambert, the production company, is not revealing the final number.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Applicants have to submit a detailed form answering questions such as: what&#8217;s your biggest fear? What&#8217;s your biggest lie? Did you get away with it? As well as whether they would rather be a traitor or a faithful, plus their reasoning why. They also send a video explaining how they interact with people. After that, there\u2019s an elaborate interview process and fitness and medical checks. According to this series\u2019s banished contestant Amanda Collier, a CT scan diagnosed her with a \u201cquite serious heart disease\u201d before she took part in the show. The cast also undergo psychological checks which series three contestant Yin Lu described as \u201chaving an MRI scan, but full-body, full-heart, full-brain, even full-soul MRI scan\u201d and the production company has a welfare team, including psychologists, checking in daily. The team stays in touch with the cast afterwards to let them know which scenes will make the edit and ensure they are managing the transition to post-Traitors life, helping adjust to public attention.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The key, says Thurlow, is casting players \u201cwho are going to play a good game, a hard strategic game. And then you might want people who are going to try to create alliances\u201d. Each cast is built \u201cfrom the ground up,\u201d he says. \u201cWe definitely don&#8217;t look at the last series. So this year Harriet and Fiona have gone down well. They were really strategic. But it\u2019s a mistake to think, everyone loves this sort of character. You don&#8217;t want a carbon copy cast.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Working on a white board in the production office, the \ufeffteam starts with one or two cast members and builds from there, choosing people they think might complement each other. Things are \u201ca moving feast until the very last minute\u201d \u2013 hence the wipe-clean board.<\/p>\n<p>Thurlow stresses that he and his team have no control over what happens once the players are in the castleThurlow stresses that he and his team have no control over what happens once the players are in the castle<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The show has not been without controversy, particularly the accusation that players show \u201cunconscious bias\u201d in voting out ethnic minority contestants early on. In an article for Grazia, Otegha Uwagba wrote that the show is \u201ca brutal reminder of how, in social situations where \u2018in groups\u2019 are liable to form, \u2013 a group of contestants on a TV show, say, or a workplace \u2013 people of colour are often deemed less trustworthy and \u2018clubbable\u2019, finding themselves on the outs.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>NewslettersChoose the newsletters you want to receive<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">Clear, calm analysis on the stories driving the day\u2019s news.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">The very best of our journalism, reviews and ideas \u2013 curated each day.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-_xl_block _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal _dsp-none _text-left _shrink-1\">A dispatch from The Observer\u2019s kitchen table \u2013 from Nigel Slater\u2019s recipes to interviews, features and hot tips.<\/p>\n<p><a role=\"link\" tabindex=\"0\" data-disable-theme=\"true\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/newsletters\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-t-space-8 _mr-0px _mb-t-space-16 _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _col-c-grey_600 _dsp-inline-flex _items-center _cur-pointer _self-flex-start is_ButtonUnderlined \" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\"><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonDoric _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-4048 _fs-f-size-14 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500599 _col-c-black _select-auto _ws-normal _borderBottomColor-c-seville_p930930286 _borderBottomWidth-1px _pb-16px _borderBottomStyle-solid\">For information about how The Observer protects your data, read our <a role=\"link\" aria-label=\"Privacy Policy Link\" href=\"https:\/\/observer.co.uk\/policy\/privacy\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Anchor font_body _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _ws-pre-wrap _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _fs-f-size-true _cur-pointer _col-c-orange_6048 _textDecorationColor-c-orange_6048 _td-underline _textDecorationStyle-solid\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Privacy Policy<\/a><\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Thurlow stresses that he and his team have no control over what happens once the players are in the castle. Apart from wanting \u201clikeable people you\u2019d want a drink with\u201d, he says he\u2019s trying to produce what he describes as \u201cthe ideal version of a jury, a diverse representation of the British population. We want to represent British society as widely as possible and have a proper cross-section of society in every way so people watch thinking, \u2018Oh, that\u2019s how I would play it, or oh, that\u2019s like my next door neighbour, or oh, I can imagine my dad doing that.\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">The only hard and fast rules are: no one who wants to take part to be famous or to get their faces on the telly. After that, he explains, \u201cwe talk to them about how they think about playing the game, and it is nice to have a variety of strategies\u201d.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">He highlights the difference between Matt and Harriet this series. Both were given \u201cthe same opportunity to speak to the traitors in a confessional booth, find information or play the game how they want to play it,\u201d he says. \u201cHarriet wanted to take control of her own game while Matt did the total opposite. He asked to be a traitor. From day one he\u2019s wanted to be a traitor. It\u2019s the contrast that works.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Given the devious nature of the game, an ability to lie is a bonus. The traitors have to hide their identities and in this season many of the faithful have had secrets they\u2019ve kept hidden. Ross and Ellie, both now banished, kept the fact they were a couple quiet, Judy and Roxy hid their mother\/daughter relationship at the start, Amanda concealed her past life as a police detective and Harriet only revealed she was a criminal barrister as she was banished \u2013 following a spectacular implosion at the roundtable.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">This mendaciousness is a useful skill for would-be players. Previous contestants have offered extensive online advice to would-be applicants on lying tactics to impress interviewers \u2013 including season two\u2019s Brian, who showed up for his Zoom interview sporting a fake black eye.<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">\u201cAs soon as I got on the call I was like, \u2018I\u2019m so sorry, I feel so embarrassed I just like gave myself a black eye messing around with my friends,\u201d he explains in his tutorial. \u201cAnd then we got to the end of the call and I went, \u2018stop\u2019, I took control of the Zoom call and they were like, \u2018whoa\u2019, I totally blindsided them. I was like I\u2019ve been lying to you this whole time.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">But whatever anyone does or says in the casting process, says Thurlow, has almost no effect on how they play the game. He says: \u201c\ufeffEverything changes as soon as they get into the castle,\u201d he says. \u201cFiona was a lovely, sweet lady all through the application but once she was inside, my goodness she played that game hard.\u201d<\/p>\n<p role=\"text\" tabindex=\"0\" class=\"is_Paragraph font_caslonIonic _dsp-inline _bxs-border-box _ww-break-word _mt-0px _mr-0px _mb-0px _ml-0px _ff-f-family _fw-f-weight-3048 _fs-f-size-18 _lh-f-lineHeigh3500605 _col-c-grey_600 _select-auto _ws-normal\">Photograph by Studio Lambert\/PA Images\/Alamy<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Watching \ufeffThe Traitors right now is like turning on a crime drama you\u2019re \ufefffamiliar with and suddenly seeing&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":291278,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[265],"tags":[18,117,19,17,1238,3251,128],"class_list":{"0":"post-291277","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-tv","8":"tag-eire","9":"tag-entertainment","10":"tag-ie","11":"tag-ireland","12":"tag-television","13":"tag-the-traitors","14":"tag-tv"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/pubeurope.com\/@ie\/115917769143645912","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/291277","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=291277"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/291277\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/291278"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=291277"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=291277"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.europesays.com\/ie\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=291277"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}