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I love The Traitors, but it has one major issue – and we need to start talking about it

The Traitors is all anyone can talk about – and not always for the right reasons. The latest series is facing accusations of unconscious bias, as Judy, a 60-year-old Child Liaison Officer from Doncaster, was the first to be banished from the castle.

She was targeted by Sam, who launched a pretty hardcore attack, leading 17 people to vote her out. Their reasoning? Kind of unclear. “Can we just have one season without unconscious racial bias? Because there’s absolutely nothing about Judy in one episode that justifies the traitors gunning for her,” one fan noted on X.

Here, we revisit Glamour Contributor Chloe Laws’ op-ed on unconscious bias in The Traitors…

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BBC/Studio Lambert/Euan Cherry


Let me start by saying that I am one of the biggest The Traitors fans going. The show, which began in November 2022, has been a highlight of my winter for the last three years. I’ve thrown viewing parties, spent hours discussing it with friends, and generally consider myself number one in the Claudia Winkleman fan club.

For the uninitiated, The Traitors is a reality TV version of games like Mafia or Werewolf. The majority of the players are “the faithful,” who are trying to work together to win a big cash prize, while between one and four of them – “the traitors” – are secretly sabotaging the group, aiming to steal the cash for themselves.

Each of the UK version’s four seasons (plus last year’s Celebrity rendition) has gripped the nation. The first episode of season four was watched by a mind-boggling 6.9 million viewers.

But despite my love for The Traitors, it is by no means a perfect show. Every season, the contestants make judgments, assumptions and banishments that are laden with social bias and prejudice. This isn’t necessarily their fault; it’s a symptom of the society we live in. Most of the contestants, I’m sure, are good and kind people. But in group scenarios – namely the roundtables – internalised misogyny, ageism, and racial prejudice can often come to the forefront.

It was the same story in season three, when viewers watched with dismay as Dr Kasim Ahmed was wrongly accused and targeted by the group. On TikTok, creator Caz Simone commented, “I think there’s an element of micro-aggressive behaviour and subconscious/unconscious bias,” adding, “I’m not saying outright racism, but it’s about how we’ve been brought up in society to perceive what is trustworthy and what is not… To me, it was so obvious [Kas] was a faithful. A lot of other people were acting much shadier than Freddie and Kas.”

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

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