Hit psychological reality TV show The Traitors is back on TV screens tonight with a brand new series.
The nail-biting reality game show first debuted in the UK in November 2022 and viewers have been hooked ever since.
Set in the Scottish Highlands and hosted by Claudia Winkleman, the show sees 22 strangers compete in the ‘ultimate game of detection, backstabbing and trust’ by completing a series of challenges together as a team in the hope of winning up to £120,000.
Among the ‘faithful’ contestants are ‘traitors’ hiding in plain sight secretly looking to sabotage the game and eliminate their fellow players one by one.
The traitors’ aim is to go undetected, while the Faithfuls must find out who the traitors really are.
After completing their daily challenges, the group finishes the evening with a round table where they ‘banish’ the suspected traitor from the game.
Here’s everything you need to know about The Traitors season two.
The first episode of the new season will debut on BBC One and iPlayer at 9pm on Wednesday, January 3rd.
The following two episodes will be available to watch right away afterwards on iPlayer. The show will air on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday nights and will be 12 episodes long, running for four weeks.
Host Claudia Winkleman will be back to take the contestants on their journey of truth and deceit in a castle set against the stunning backdrop of the Scottish Highlands. She says ‘the missions this year are epic’.
The 22 contestants have been revealed as follows:
Andrew
The 45-year-old insurance broker from Talbot Green in Wales, says he wants to inspire people who have ‘had a traumatic experience or suffered with their mental health’ never to give up.
More than 20 years ago, he nearly died on a roadside and was left with brain damage, in a coma and his parents were told he would never walk again.
Andrew said: “You only have one life, and I know that more than anyone because I suffered a serious accident many years ago. Your life is short, and it can get taken away at any moment.
“I live my life as best I can and take as many opportunities as possible that come my way. I never thought I’d get on the show in a million years.”
If he wins Andrew says he would like to pay off a couple of debts and start his own business.
Anthony
The 45-year-old chess coach from Birmingham says when he first saw the show he thought, ‘this has me written all over it! It’s like a real life, live game of chess’.
He says he has a very good poker face and is very good at ‘being able to manage my emotions’.
The chess extraordinaire says he has a ‘very loose game plan’ and is prepared to be ‘adaptable’.
Ash
The 45-year-old events co-ordinator from London says she is ‘looking for an adventure’ and thinks ‘the best way for me to win is to be a traitor’ where she can bring ‘strong alliances’.
Ash said if she wins she will spend the money on getting on the property ladder as she does not want to be ‘renting when I’m 60 years old, renting with housemates’.
Aubrey
The retired shop owner, 67, believes his moustache will come in handy to maintain his poker face.
Aubrey, from Loughborough, Leicestershire said if he wins he will ‘travel more’ and give money to the Mykonos Animal Welfare charity in Greece, where he likes to go on holiday.
Brian
The 33-year-old photographer, from Glasgow, plays the Werewolf game with his family which has a similar format.
Brian says if he wins he’d like to use the money to ‘take my girlfriend and her family away on holiday’ as well as put some ‘towards a house’.
Charlie
The mental health area manager, 34, from Bristol, says she would not want to do a challenge based around sound as she wears hearing aids.
Charlie hopes to use the money to get married following a nine-year engagement to her partner.
Charlotte
The 32-year-old recruitment manager from Warwickshire, who used to compete in poker tournaments, says she thinks people will not suspect her as she can play the ‘the ditzy one’.
Charlotte says: “I think I’m really good at pretending I don’t know what’s going on, when actually, I have a very good idea.” She wants to use the money to take her dogs Lady and Lolly on a private jet.
Diane
The 63-year-old retired teacher, from Lancashire, says she has taught ‘some very difficult kids’ and knows how to remain calm.
If she wins Diane says she would ‘love to take my children, and grandchildren, on a holiday’.
Evie
The veterinary nurse, 29, from Inverness says she entered as she is ‘having a bit of an existential crisis’ ahead of approaching 30.
Evie said she has a good poker face and would make a good traitor because people would not suspect someone who is blonde, with dimples, who works with animals.
Harry
The British Army engineer from Slough says he wants to be a traitor as he is a bit of a ‘Jekyll and Hyde’.
Harry, 22, a corporal, says if he wins he would like to take his girlfriend and family on a holiday. He would also like to use some of the money towards a new chapter in his life.
Jasmine
The 26-year-old sales executive from London says she would be happy to be a traitor so she can ‘steal the big pot of money’ but being ‘naturally very empathetic’ she would make a good faithful.
If she wins Jasmine said she would use the prize money to help her parents, who have been ‘through some tough financial times’.
Jazz
The 30-year-old national account manager from Manchester says nothing apart from his wife and his wedding day has meant more than competing on The Traitors.
He says he will bring ‘pure energy’ to the game. If he is a traitor he will be ‘buzzing’ and if he is a faithful he will be ‘a team player’, he says.
If he wins, Jazz would like to use some of the prize money to take his mum ‘on the Orient Express’.
Jonny
The 31-year-old from Bedfordshire is ex-military, and described himself as someone with disabilities who enjoys ‘psychological things’ and is ‘a problem solver’.
With no game plan in mind, Jonny says he is just going to wing it.
Kyra
The apprentice economist, 21, from Kent, says if she is made a traitor then she will ‘feel a mix of emotions’ but will have to be ‘adaptable’.
Meg
The 22-year-old illustrator from Herefordshire says she ‘wouldn’t throw somebody under the bus so that I could win more’ money so is unsure about being a traitor.
But watch out as she says she is ‘very competitive’.
She wants to spend the money on ‘the most expensive pair of dungarees ever’ and a motorhome trip around Scotland.
Miles
The 36-year-old Brummie veterinary nurse who now lives in Worcestershire, said he has done the ‘cookie cutter’ life by having a husband, going to college and having a family and thinks this will be a change.
After joking about spending the money on ‘loads of plastic surgery’, Miles says if he wins he would spend it on a ‘forever home’.
Mollie
The 21-year-old disability model from Bristol says looking ‘innocent’ and young will help in the game if she becomes a traitor.
Mollie, who also works as a healthcare assistant, believes she is also able to be ‘quite good at building that relationship but also separating myself in a way which I feel like will be really good in the game’.
Paul
The business manager from Manchester says as someone who has done stand-up he can use his comedy skills to ‘diffuse situations when they get so tense’.
Paul, 36, said if he becomes a traitor he is ‘never washing’ his top when Winkleman touches his shoulder – the host taps the contestants during the round table to secretly let them know what side they are on.
Ross
The 28-year-old video director from Lancashire says he sees it as a ‘good excuse to tell my business partner that I just can’t work for three weeks’.
Ross also said that being a traitor would make him feel a ‘bit gutted because then I’ve actually got to play a game’.
Sonja
The 66-year-old volunteer business mentor from Lancashire says she learned to read body language cues from her son Dan, who died two years ago, and was ‘severely disabled with autism and other disabilities, and was nonverbal’.
Sonja would use the prize money to start her own charity and take her sister on a cruise.
Tracey
The sonographer and clairvoyant, 58, from Inverness says she is ‘quite eccentric’ and ‘good at lying’.
Tracey, who used to be in the air force, said: “The only thing that would be my downfall is that I do really like to be liked.”
Zack
The parliamentary affairs adviser, 27, from London says he thinks he would be ‘cutthroat’ as a traitor and not ‘factor in sentimentality’.
He says he has a good poker face but does ‘do this stupid thing where my lips curl up’ that he can’t help doing.
He also said his girlfriend does not know he wants to spend the money, if he wins, on a Mazda MX-5 and he will tell her it will go on a flat deposit as he says she ‘will break up with me if I didn’t say it’.
The second season of the BBC‘s hit police drama Blue Lights launches tonight.
The broadcaster previously confirmed which cast members will return as well as the fresh faces who have joined the series for new episodes.
Set in Belfast, the drama followed a batch of new constables as they navigated a post-conflict Northern Ireland.
Before the first series even came to an end, a second series had already been commissioned. The new series will follow on one year later.
Reprising her star role as Grace Ellis is Sian Brooke, also joined by Martin Mccann as Stevie Neil, Katherine Devlin as Annie Conlon, Nathan Braniff as Tommy Foster and Joanne Crawford as Helen McNally.
Also returning are Andi Osho as Sandra Cliff, Hannah McClean as Jen Robinson, Paddy Jenkins as Happy Kelly, Desmond Eastwood as Murray Canning, Andrea Irvine as Nicola Robinson, Aoibhéann McCann as Geraldine Gilroy and Abigail McGibbon as Tina McIntyre.
New cast members joining the show are Frank Blake (Sanditon) as new Constable Shane Bradley, along with Seamus O’Hara (An Irish Goodbye) as Lee Thompson, and Seána Kerslake (Bad Sisters) as his sister Mags.
As well as Craig McGinlay (Cobra) as Craig, and Dan Gordon (Bloodlands) playing Mags and Lee’s Uncle Rab.
At the end of the last season, viewers watched on as the team lost Gerry, who tragically died after being shot by Sully, and the McIntyre Crime Gang collapsed.
In new episodes the new recruits, Grace, Annie and Tommy, are now fully fledged officers who have to face new turmoil as rival gangs try to fill the void after the downfall of the McIntyre’s.
More drama is promised in season two, as the synopsis continues: “Constable Shane Bradley is drafted in to help, but his motivations are unclear. Tommy is dangerously seduced by the world of intelligence policing, while Grace struggles to deal with her son’s absence, and growing feelings for fellow officer Stevie.
“As a young loyalist threatens to take over the city, the officers face a major gangland feud – culminating in a violent and devastating confrontation.”
Commenting on the series and teasing the upcoming episodes, writers and directors Declan Lawn and Adam Patterson, said: “Blue Lights is a very personal project for us, set in the city where we live, so for us making this show is a special kind of privilege.
“In series two we join our officers exactly a year after the events of series one, and now they’re facing a whole new set of professional and personal challenges. We’re very excited indeed about bringing you this next chapter of the Blue Lights story. Take a beat!”
Season one landed on screens in March 2023 and received a slew of five-star reviews as well as more than 7 million viewers (28-day figure).
It was in the top ten new drama series of 2023 across all broadcasters and streamers, and the biggest drama series in Northern Ireland in 2023. More than half of the 28-day audience (56%) came from BBC iPlayer.
And fans had high praise for the first series, with one person saying: “Just finished watching Season 1 of Blue Lights (BBC iPlayer) and it’s superb. Gripping and properly moving. Hard to believe, I know, but it’s even better than Happy Valley.”
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The latest episode of ITV’s The 1% Club issued a final question which left viewers baffled as the last two contestants ‘gave up’.
The hit entertainment quiz show which is presented by comedian Lee Mack is known for its notoriously difficult last question – which it claims only 1% of the nation can answer correctly.
After smashing through a series of questions, the last two standing contestants, Maisie and Alex, made it through to the final 1% question, where they had the chance of walking away with the £100,000 prize money or risked losing it all.
But when the question was delivered, the pair were left completely baffled as 30 seconds on the clock ticked away.
Fans watching at home said they didn’t even bother trying to answer the difficult question and were left completely stumped.
Both Maisie and Alex made the decision not to take a gamble and answer the question for a chance to walk away with the £100,000 prize money as they chose to play it safe and take their £5,000 each instead.
The question was: “Given that: 0+100 =100, 1+99 = 100, 2+98 =100, What is the sum of all the whole numbers between zero and 100?”
Maisie and Alex both guessed 5,000 – which was the wrong answer.
Contestants only have 30 seconds to lock in their answer but even allowing themselves a little longer, viewers still struggled to work it out.
The correct answer was actually 5050.
Lee explained why as he revealed the answer, saying: “There are 50 pairs that total 100 (0 and 100, one and 99, two and 98, etc.). That makes 5000, but there is also the number 50 in the middle, that is not in a pair but also needs to be counted, giving a total of 5050.”
Fans of the show who were watching at home took to X to express how difficult they found the question. One viewer said: “I still have the last question on pause, trying to work out the question… never-mind the answer.”
Another wrote: “Hard questions this week. Last week, I got all the way. First time ever this week I was out at the beginning.”
While a third added: “I didn’t even try with that one. Maths is hard enough on a calculator for me, never mind doing it in my head in 30 seconds.”
Popular BBC detective drama Shetland is returning for two new series.
The long-running crime drama will return with Ashley Jensen and Alison O’Donnell reprising their roles as Detectives Ruth Calder and Alison ‘Tosh’ McIntosh.
Filming on the next season, its ninth, will get underway later this month.
The broadcaster said Shetland was the biggest drama of the year across Scotland and all channels and streamers in 2023, after Yorkshire crime drama Happy Valley.
Last season averaged seven million viewers and was the first to see Ashley Jenson take the lead role after taking over from Douglas Henshall as Jimmy Perez – a role he played for a decade.
Ms Jenson said she was ‘thrilled’ to be coming back as Detective Calder.
She said: “The reaction to the last series was incredible and I’m excited at the prospect of unravelling more intrigue.
“The Shetland Isles are breath-taking – without a doubt one of the most memorable and unique filming locations I’ve been to.”
Ms O’Donnell also expressed that she ‘could not be happier’ about returning to film another series. She added: “Ashley and I just scratched the surface of our dynamic in Series 8 and I am delighted that we now have the opportunity to build on that.”
Fans of the programme will be delighted to know Steven Robertson (Sandy), Lewis Howden (Billy) and Anne Kidd (Cora) are also confirmed to return.
Lindsay Salt, director of BBC Drama, said the news showed the corporation was ‘further strengthening’ its commitment to the show, which first aired in 2013.
The latest series will be written by Paul Logue and Denise Paul and produced by Silverprint Pictures, with filming scheduled to take place throughout this year and next.
We can’t wait for this!
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