![]() ![]() Celebrity Big Brother, Celebrity MasterChef, Celebrity Bake Off, Celebrity Apprentice, Celebrity Come Dine With Me, and so on and so forth, until the circle begins to complete itself and “normal” people who have become famous by appearing on reality TV end up appearing on the celebrity versions of other shows. Mostly, of course, we wonder when the next series will start, and whether or not they are going to treat us to a celebrity edition of the show, similar to the US version.įor years, it has been practice for networks to adapt popular reality television programmes by giving us a version featuring well known faces. ![]() Here are a few choice questions that have been bellowed from our sofa in the past few weeks: how does Claudia manage to get her hair so shiny (from my mother) how can Harry be smart enough to fool his fellow contestants for weeks but not be able to spell “Charlot” (from my daughter) and finally, why wasn’t I the genius to monetise wink murder and pitch it to the BBC (from me)? It’s so rare for something to come along and unite three generations of a family in screaming at the television, instead of each other, but The Traitors has managed it, with its twists, turns and menacingly slowed-down versions of otherwise jaunty pop songs. The second series of The Traitors is over and, as will be the case for many viewers, there is now a sense of emptiness in my life, a huge gap shaped in roughly the same manner as Claudia Winkleman’s fringe.
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