To me Alan's behavior is just piling up evidence -- but I'm not sure if that's just because I know he's guilty. Maybe if I didn't know, I wouldn't think he was being so transparent 🤔
Some of it (like forgetting his shield), is more damning, but he's said/done other subtle things that felt like slips to me.
Fizzbuzz
2025-10-30 17:45:56 +0000 UTC
IMO, the aggressiveness from Joe is arguably justified because we know Alan is guilty. Of course Joe doesn't know that, at least not with total certainty. But to some extent it seems like his confrontational demeanor is just a bit of his personality (which some people may not like but may be just a part of who he is, I don't know him outside of this show really). I can definitely see how that makes a lot of people uncomfortable -- and it's even drawn heat to him at the roundtable previously in the series.
Alan's behavior on the other hand, is entirely an act, he knows he's guilty 😆
Fizzbuzz
2025-10-30 17:30:08 +0000 UTC
This would be a good strategy for Alan. It would make it less obvious that he’s a traitor because people will just assume there was a recruitment instead of a murder.
Jennifer T
2025-10-30 14:48:08 +0000 UTC
I thought everyone was joking, not talking to Alan because of playing a game is so petty ;_;
sicxen
2025-10-30 13:53:15 +0000 UTC
Speaking of the songs on the show, I've made a playlis that I update after every episode, you're welcome :D https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7zsthC46NMucjt4HLETlUS?si=419d1cfc561a45f4
Samuel
2025-10-30 13:27:12 +0000 UTC
Love Joe and the reveal of the traitors, he's like "Yeah, not bothered with this dragging it out for dramatic effect" xD
Samuel
2025-10-30 13:18:16 +0000 UTC
Yes I think from series 3, they changed the banishment process so when the game is approaching the final showdown, banished players can no longer reveal their allegiance after being voted out. This is intended to make it more difficult for them to know how many traitors remain, before the final showdown around the fire pit.
Andrew
2025-10-30 13:15:21 +0000 UTC
I’d like this to happen: Kate murdered. Alan banished. Cat recruits Nick as a traitor, then they both win. The rules are if there is only one traitor they have to recruit. I felt uncomfortable watching the round table. Joe was quite aggressive, and there seemed real animosity between him and Alan.
Jennifer T
2025-10-30 12:12:42 +0000 UTC
Alan Carr said that Paloma still isn’t talking to him months later, which is sad.
I’d like Cat to win because she hasn’t put a foot wrong, including on the bridge.
Jennifer T
2025-10-30 12:09:34 +0000 UTC
Hmmm, well, Jonathan finally fell. Hopefully Cat and Alan can put some heat on someone else... I liked that Alan paired Joe with Jonathan at the round table, but we'll see if that seed sprouts. Poor Alan, being paired with a socially reticent person means he has to be the voice. I think he should pepper some other quotes throughout the dinner, so it doesn't look so sus. I think they need to murder Celia. She's the only one, outside themselves, that has no heat on them, and It think he could also pass the 'parting is such sweet sorrow' line to her without it being truly obvious.
Susan AKA Maisy13(YT)
2025-10-30 11:29:16 +0000 UTC
I love Alan planting the seed on joe still, always thinking ahead. Not sure if it will work!
Queen Naga 🌶️
2025-10-30 10:31:19 +0000 UTC
I’ve just thought - what if saying the phrase is so obvious that Alan decides to do it and say joe? Then they could think there was no murder or that they failed. Probably against the rules.
Poor Alan for tonight though.