I'd agree with hk on this. I enjoyed both UK series 1& 2 (especially 2) and Australia S1. Australia s2 was frustrating to watch. US S1 is just a rehash of the challenges from UK S1 and the contestants are annoying.
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Traitors (UK & USA)
There's also something over here called The Fortune Hotel, which is a bit like The Traitors on holiday in the Caribbean, which is pretty good if you like this kind of thing
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@Takoma11 I've not seen them all but I'd to go the two UK series, then Australian series 1, then US season 2 and then Australia series 2 and US series 1.
As someone who doesn't really like reality TV I am biased and so the two first UK series are with 'the most normal people' and therefore feel the least heightened which I like. It was the first example I saw, which also helped greatly and I adore and have been madly in love with Claudia Winkleman for 20 odd years and so having her there eased me into it as I don't know I have tried it otherwise. I don't know if I'd rate the first series above the second or vice versa. They are pretty equal for me.
So, for example, I have really enjoyed the different seasons of Glow Up (makeup artists), Blown Away (glass blowers/sculptors), Siren: Survive the Island (teams of athletic women from different fields of expertise), and School of Chocolate (chocolate sculpting).
I'm not really interested in dating shows (though I've heard really interesting things about Love on the Spectrum) or shows that boil down to rich people yelling at each other, or shows where Gordon Ramsey is either screaming that something is "incredible" or "humiliating!" and the editing is to choppy that you as a viewer have no sense of how well people are doing.
Traitors UK is probably my favorite reality show I've watched since Siren: Survive the Island, and I agree with you that it's all down to the cast. They just seemed like really nice people, and at the same time they understood that it was a game and so there was this nice mix of being philosophical about it and then the real emotion of people you like voting you out of the game. It's really rare that I watch a reality show where I would have cheered for anyone winning (well, anyone except one specific person in this case), and I loved that. I also liked that they devoted so much of the run time to positive interactions and the missions were really fun. Taking the time, for example, to show Aaron talking to Andrea about her life in the 1960s while they tried to figure out how to play bocce ball or something was really nice.
And I agree that Winkleman was a fantastic host. She was this perfect blend of firm, empathetic, and funny.
Were you a fan of previous seasons of The Mole? Or just the new Netflix version?
There's also something over here called The Fortune Hotel, which is a bit like The Traitors on holiday in the Caribbean, which is pretty good if you like this kind of thing or you're short of something to watch.
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You might like a show called The Bridge... I seem to remember there were two series, one on a tropical island, the other somewhere cold and damp in the UK. The tropical island one was better! It had people working together in competing teams to build a bridge out of little rafts.
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You might like a show called The Bridge... I seem to remember there were two series, one on a tropical island, the other somewhere cold and damp in the UK. The tropical island one was better! It had people working together in competing teams to build a bridge out of little rafts.
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@Takoma11
For nice, friendly people in competition with each other you really have to go a long way to beat The Great British Bake Off. It's not really what I think of as reality tv, but as you mentioned some similar sounding things, I thought I'd mention it. The Great British Throwdown is another which is very similar.
Masterchef and Masterchef: Professionals do similar stuff and have been on for years.
I don't watch it, but The Great British Sewinig Bee is also popular. My mum really likes that and she watches Glow up, which is one of the reasons I mention it.
For nice, friendly people in competition with each other you really have to go a long way to beat The Great British Bake Off. It's not really what I think of as reality tv, but as you mentioned some similar sounding things, I thought I'd mention it. The Great British Throwdown is another which is very similar.
Masterchef and Masterchef: Professionals do similar stuff and have been on for years.
I don't watch it, but The Great British Sewinig Bee is also popular. My mum really likes that and she watches Glow up, which is one of the reasons I mention it.
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@Takoma11
For nice, friendly people in competition with each other you really have to go a long way to beat The Great British Bake Off. It's not really what I think of as reality tv, but as you mentioned some similar sounding things, I thought I'd mention it. The Great British Throwdown is another which is very similar.
Masterchef and Masterchef: Professionals do similar stuff and have been on for years.
I don't watch it, but The Great British Sewinig Bee is also popular. My mum really likes that and she watches Glow up, which is one of the reasons I mention it.
For nice, friendly people in competition with each other you really have to go a long way to beat The Great British Bake Off. It's not really what I think of as reality tv, but as you mentioned some similar sounding things, I thought I'd mention it. The Great British Throwdown is another which is very similar.
Masterchef and Masterchef: Professionals do similar stuff and have been on for years.
I don't watch it, but The Great British Sewinig Bee is also popular. My mum really likes that and she watches Glow up, which is one of the reasons I mention it.
Masterchef, to me, does fall into the reality drama/bad editing trap.
I would love to watch the Great British Sewing Bee, but as of yet it's not available on any of my services. One day!
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You might also like Three/Four In A Bed (B&B/small hotels owners/managers spend a day/night at each others establishments) or Come Dine With Me (amateur cooks take turns throwing a dinner party.) I'd certainly recommend the early series of both (all of Three In A Bed and the maybe the first 5 or 6 years of CDWM) and fairly consistantly good.
Handmade: Best British Woodworker may also appeal if you liked Bake Off and Throwdown. There's also something called A Cut Above which is Candian (I think) chainsaw carvinig which I liked enough to finish.
Handmade: Best British Woodworker may also appeal if you liked Bake Off and Throwdown. There's also something called A Cut Above which is Candian (I think) chainsaw carvinig which I liked enough to finish.
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You might also like Three/Four In A Bed (B&B/small hotels owners/managers spend a day/night at each others establishments) or Come Dine With Me (amateur cooks take turns throwing a dinner party.) I'd certainly recommend the early series of both (all of Three In A Bed and the maybe the first 5 or 6 years of CDWM) and fairly consistantly good.
Handmade: Best British Woodworker may also appeal if you liked Bake Off and Throwdown. There's also something called A Cut Above which is Candian (I think) chainsaw carvinig which I liked enough to finish.
Handmade: Best British Woodworker may also appeal if you liked Bake Off and Throwdown. There's also something called A Cut Above which is Candian (I think) chainsaw carvinig which I liked enough to finish.
I was a big fan of the series Making It, which was an American series hosted by Amy Pohler and Nick Offerman.
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The UK is doing a celeb version next year. What I'm hoping is that there's two versions and not just the one celeb one.
The reason UK's version is the best, because we get people that are so relatable and real.
Unless they pick comedians, cause I have high regards for UK comics & I'm someone who watches a lot of Cat does countdown, taskmaster, would I lie to you etc.
Imagine having someone like Lee Mack or Bob Mortimor in there.
On a side note, @Takoma11 I would also add Norway's Traitors to the list. @John-Connor has watched the Dutch versions so he might know if they are worth it.
Do not watch Australia second season, unless you want to lose your hair & raise your blood pressure in frustration. The first Aussie season is quite good.
On a side note, I am thinking of watching New Zealand's second season because a lot of folks online have said it's quite good.
Also, I am still interested in hosting a Mafia Game here, which is similar to Traitors, if enough folks are interested.
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Why?
The reason UK's version is the best, because we get people that are so relatable and real.
The reason UK's version is the best, because we get people that are so relatable and real.
Honestly, it's more likely to get higher ratings simply because it is celebs. That's the land in which we now abide.
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They are likely to be such Z list 'celebs' it will be no different to having regular people.
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I doubt they will, actually. It's such a big show that I'd expect them to get some proper people. Although, it depends on what you call Z list? I mean, it's entirely possible that they'll have a great line up which I won't know many of because they'll be from soaps or Social Media/Youtube and, while they're probably a lot more famous than the people I would know, much like Vienna, it means nothing to me.
Although, if they are, then it'll be worse as they'll 'think' they're someone and act like it, which will be like watching the US version.
Although, if they are, then it'll be worse as they'll 'think' they're someone and act like it, which will be like watching the US version.
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