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Alan Carr, by now known as a very happy man, has spent celebrity traitor openly murdering his fellow competitors And anyone who looks and sounds like Alan Carr can sidestep as much unwanted attention as possible. he has Undoubtedly the breakout star of the show – But at what cost? Carr (jokingly?) revealed this week that he has fled to Florida after becoming “The most hated man in Britain”His crimes? Opportunities for Tom Daly to display his knitting collections were brutally cut off! Killing off your good friend Paloma Faith and not even pretending to feel bad about it! Just be very good at it all!
However, the funny thing is that Carr is actually Not there. Very good at all this, in the clearest sense of the word. But like the chameleon power of “boring, laddy, slouch straight to traitor” on a regular basis Cheat,Loud, Campy Gay TraitorThis has its own strange transformative effect on the celebrity version: Carr’s nervous laugh becomes nothing more than a nervous laugh; His excessive sweating is merely a physical problem; The wickedness of his winking is just a little knowing humor. Somehow he just gets away with it endlessly.
To be fair, Carr anticipated this from the beginning. He told Claudia Winkleman in episode one that he really wanted to be a traitor, even after being asked if he would be comfortable backstabbing his fellow contestants. “They’ll do this to me, they’re showbiz people!” He replied.
He knew and understood the tone of the show and the silliness inherent in it. “It was a classic Cheat Mission,” he said at the beginning. “Teamwork; a huge horse; A little tenuous link in history that no one really understands. And the murder of Faith, who is reportedly a real-life friend, established him as someone who actually sees the show as a game and not something that should be taken too seriously.
Early indications were that he was too erratic to escape suspicion for long (remember how he winked at fellow traitor Jonathan Ross, then blabbered the plot really hard). With Cat Burns?), but this was proven wrong. Over the course of the series, Carr has cleverly cast suspicion on completely innocent people, particularly actor Mark Bonner, and has been prepared to throw his fellow traitors under the bus – when several loyalists discovered Ross was not doing well, Carr was more than happy to turn on him. He admitted to Burns that if it came down to it, he would have voted for Ross.

However, Carr’s fortunes may have turned in the show’s final week. saw last week rugby player joe marlerThe show’s only Hercule Poirot character, privately plots to expose both Carr and Burns as traitors – a plan cemented when Celia Imrie, the only other loyalist who seemed to outwit the pair, was murdered in the middle of the night.
A cynical viewer might interpret this last-minute threat – after Carr had been carrying a neon sign reading “Traitor” around his neck for several weeks – as a producer-led invention. After all, how come no one pointed fingers at him sooner? Plus, can you really blame the show if it wants to keep her around? Carr has enjoyed humor throughout the series, perfectly in sync with the melodrama of the show’s arc. The most hated man in Britain? Only if we are apparently a nation of humorless scolds. And something tells me we’re not – if only for two hours of BBC primetime every week.