What your Newcastle Uni course says about your game in The Traitors

It’s been three weeks since the thrilling season finale of The Celebrity Traitors aired on the BBC. For five weeks, the series took over our screens, and honestly, most of us were quietly planning how we’d play if we ever got the chance. Now the dust has settled, we’ve revealed what your Newcastle Uni degree says about your chances in the ultimate game of deception.

Psychology

Hate to say it, but you’re definitely the type to brag about how good you are at reading people and that’s far from Inverness’s level. You take aim at all the wrong people, and although people initially follow your instructions, they start to become suspicious as to why you keep getting it wrong. The group exiles you.

Mathematic

We’ve seen it before, we’ll see it again. This is a classic case – people become intimidated by your intelligence and automatically assume you’re a traitor. First you are banished, even though you would have been an asset to the loyal team. You have been robbed.

Drama

You want to be a traitor, and your wish is Claudia’s command. Your acting skills come in handy here, and you play the role of the loyal better than the most loyal. You certainly behave more like a traitor than a certain Kate Garraway.

You fool everyone with your theatrics, but you are betrayed right before the finals.

Politics

Claudia chooses you to be the traitor because lying is your specialty, you become the “big dog” of the traitor team, taking control of the round table and leading the narrative. People are guided by you until halfway through, when they start to question your high profile and realize they need to think for themselves; Ultimately, you are deported. Your exit speech is iconic.

English

You start off strong, but then start overanalyzing every little thing and miss what’s right in front of you. Your search for symbolism and attempts to “read between the lines” is harmful to you, and you become so lost in your own mind that you cannot see the wood for the trees. You have been murdered.

Business

You’ll treat the game like a networking event and secure early doors for your colleagues. You get so caught up in the strategy that you forget to look for the real clues. The traitors keep you around for a while because you’re sending everyone in the wrong direction, but you’re eventually murdered. However, at least you have something else to stick to your LinkedIn.

Sociology

You and your bestie go in together, unbeknownst to the rest of the group. People underestimate both of you, without realizing that you have been playing with them all along. One of you gets murdered, and the other one makes it to the finals.

Law

The ultimate traitor catcher. You spot traitors, but you also know how to keep your mouth shut unless you have enough evidence to make a solid argument; You and History work together and stay close to the traitors until the time is right, how cool of you Nick and Joe!

History and Classics

You’ve spent years analyzing betrayals, coups, and badly thought-out alliances. On paper, you should be successful at this game. You know every famous backstab from Julius Caesar to the Wars of the Roses, and you’ll definitely reference them at any opportunity. You’re desperate to become a traitor, but don’t be chosen, because it’s too obvious. You work with the law to make a case against traitors, but the group struggles to trust you and question your loyalty.

Medicine

You make good decisions and offer some good principles. You show competence early on and serve as the voice of reason, keeping the group grounded. However, traitors see your influence on the loyal team and assassinate you before you become too much of a threat.

Sports Science

The unlikely traitor of the season. People trust you easily and you go largely undetected, partly because you spend more time playing badminton than contributing to the conversation. In the finals, people start calling your name, but the suspicion quickly goes away, and you successfully go under the radar; People start trusting you. You win the game.

Featured image via BBC



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