
The Traitors Ireland announce spin-off show hosted by Kevin McGahern
The Traitors Ireland: Uncloaked, will be the "companion show" to RTÉ One and RTÉ Player's eagerly-awaited The Traitors Ireland, which is filmed in Co Meath's Slane Castle and is hosted by Siobhan McSweeney.
The Co Cavan native will act as the show's "mischievous host" who promises the ultimate "post show destination for fans across Ireland".
The Traitors Ireland: Uncloaked team said: "Get ready for betrayal, banter, and behind-the-scenes bombshells with The Traitors Ireland: Uncloaked, a brand-new companion show to the highly anticipated The Traitors Ireland that will air directly after the programme across RTÉ platforms later this year.
"Comedian, actor, and presenter Kevin McGahern will act as our mischievous host with Uncloaked promising to be the ultimate post-show destination for fans across Ireland.
"As soon as viewers have finished with their latest fix of The Traitors Ireland on RTÉ One and RTÉ Player, they'll be able to join Kevin, celebrity guests, and players from the show for all the best analysis and reaction to the latest betrayals, mind games, and manipulations.
"Uncloaked will take fans of The Traitors Ireland deeper into Slane Castle with dissection of the episodes and exclusive access to the banished and murdered players." Slane Castle will be the setting of The Traitors Ireland
The spin-off show will be filmed in RTE Limerick and each episode will feature an exclusive interview with the banished or murdered player as well as bonus unseen footage.
"Kevin will have celebrity guests from the world of comedy, music, sport, and entertainment, who will give their opinion on the goings on within the castle walls," they added.
"Whether it's their first time tuning in or they're long-time The Traitors fans, guests will share who they're backing, who they suspect, and who they'd banish without hesitation.
"Don't miss a moment of the drama, watch The Traitors Ireland: Uncloaked after every episode of The Traitors Ireland, later this year on RTÉ."
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
5 hours ago
- Irish Times
North Circular review: ‘You'd have robbed cars flying around... It used to be chaos, but good fun'
There's a beautifully hallucinatory quality to Luke McManus's North Circular ( RTÉ One , 9.35pm), a dreamy black-and-white valentine to Dublin's North Circular Road that comes to the small screen three years after it was received with acclaim on the film festival circuit. It's a documentary with a thesis: that Dublin's grittier postcodes have a down-at-heel glamour particular to themselves which should be cherished at a time when much of the capital's urban landscape is passing into history. Whether or not you agree that the city should be preserved in perpetuity, like a specimen in a bell-jar, there is no denying the poetic punch of this travelogue. It takes a Joycean hike from the Phoenix Park , past the site of the old O'Devaney Gardens public housing scheme. Next it is on to Dalymount Park soccer stadium, Mountjoy Prison , Croke Park and down to the docklands via Sheriff Street (not on the North Circular strictly speaking but very much part of the same spiritual hinterland). McManus was inspired to make the film after strolling around these neighbourhoods during lockdown. Reflecting its perambulatory roots, the documentary has the pottering charm of an intense hike on an overcast day. He begins with the 1861 Wellington Monument in the Phoenix Park. There is an acknowledgment of Dublin's complicated relationship with Britishness. The British army, an unnamed narrator explained, was handsomely provisioned with volunteers from inner Dublin, driven to fight for British Empire by poverty and desperation. READ MORE Rambling up into the north side, we hear an ex-resident of O'Devaney Gardens lament the loss of community and the construction of new apartments. 'You'd have the robbed cars flying around,' she says. 'It used to be chaos sometimes, but good fun.' Then we arrive at Dalymount Park where Bohemian FC fans chant about their bitter rivals, Shamrock Rovers . Amid the grungy greys, there are flashes of darkness. Sitting in shadows in his livingroom, tin whistle-player Seán Ó Tuama recalls witnessing his brother strangle his father. Elsewhere, a former inmate at Mountjoy talks about how he would walk out the front gates and seek the nearest drug dealer, before belatedly cleaning up. North Circular finishes with singer Gemma Dunleavy , who talks about how people from Sheriff Street are looked down upon and regarded as 'spongers'. Her rejoinder is that 'there are spongers in suits. Look at the banks, it's a different type of sponger. They're sponging off the public'. It's gorgeously filmed with a stunning soundtrack, much of it courtesy of the new wave of Irish folk artists centred on The Cobblestone in Smithfield. They include singer John Francis Flynn , who insists that living in gentrified Stoneybatter doesn't make him 'posh'. [ Luke McManus: 'The North Circular Road tells the story of Ireland' Opens in new window ] As Dublin continues to change – as all cities must if they are to thrive – McManus' film functions as an act of bearing witness to a particular moment in its history when the old capital was giving way to something new and different (a sprinkling of tall buildings, a proposed redevelopment of Sheriff Street). It has the grainy quality of a Polaroid in the drizzle – a snapshot of a period that, for better or worse, is slipping away before our eyes but which McManus has ensured will now be preserved. By the credits, I felt I'd paced the length of the North Circular – and returned home weary but wiser, and with a better appreciation of the old bones that glimmer beneath the new Dublin.


The Irish Sun
7 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Liz Hurley, 60, stuns in red dress as she holds hands with boyfriend Billy Ray Cyrus at The Inheritance premiere
Liz plays an exciting role in the new Channel 4 series star stuns Liz Hurley, 60, stuns in red dress as she holds hands with boyfriend Billy Ray Cyrus at The Inheritance premiere LIZ Hurley wowed in a figure-hugging red dress as she posed alongside boyfriend Billy Ray Cyrus at The Inheritance premiere. The happy couple have been inseparable since going public on Easter Sunday. 3 Liz Hurley and Billy Ray Cyrus attended The Inheritance premiere Credit: PA 3 The happy couple went public on Easter Sunday this year Credit: PA 3 Liz and Billy Ray held hands as they posed together Credit: PA They looked loved up while attending the premiere for new Channel 4 show The Inheritance. Set to air over 12 episodes, the brand new competition series sees the contestants sent to a grand countryside manner. Left behind and for them to inherit is a vast fortune by the deceased who previously lived at the mansion. Liz, 60, portrays the fictitious deceased benefactor - with Rob Rinder appearing as the executor of her will. Appearing in the form of video messages for the players from beyond the grave, they must compete in a series of challenges to unlock money from the will. It comes from the same team behind smash-hit The Traitors and Squid Game: The Challenge. Speaking about the new series, Steve Handley, C4's Head of Reality & Entertainment, said previously: 'The Inheritance isn't just a battle of strategy, alliances, and inevitable betrayals - it's a cocktail of drama, jeopardy, and outright mischief that Reality fans love. "I can't wait to see how our players handle the challenges, the twists, and a few sneaky surprises.' Earlier this year, Liz and Billy Ray went public with a loved-up picture in a field. Wearing festive bunny ears, Billy went in for a kiss on Liz's smiling mouth. Liz Hurley, 59, looks stunning as she strips off to barely-there bikini The pair first met in 2022 playing the romantic leads in the movie Christmas In Paradise. We revealed they reconnected last year when Billy turned to Liz for help as his third marriage crumbled. An insider said: "Everyone is saying Billy and Liz are world's apart, but actually they are very similar. 'They have a lot in common and have the same interests. 'Billy is also very much her type - he has a real twinkle in his eye and a naughty streak that she can't resist." The new romance came 12 years after she and ex-fiance Shane split in 2013. 'He really reminds her of Shane Warne, they have a very similar energy about them," they continued. 'Liz has a really good time with Billy they share a lot of laughs and he is a real flirt, which she loves. 'Shane was the love of her life and it has taken her years to be able to move on but she finally feels like she is able to. 'Billy isn't perfect and neither was Shane but Liz truly believes they have a strong future together. 'She is nearly 60 and deep down does want to share her life with someone and settle down. 'Everyone is saying he could be the one, so don't be surprised if she marries again.'


Extra.ie
11 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Garron Noone says what most of us are thinking as he lambasts new Domino's flavour
Garron Noone has roasted a new type of pizza from Domino's, which has divided opinion online. Dominos are known for their more *ahem* 'eccentric' flavours in certain markets, including but not limited to the popular (and semi-reasonable) hot honey base pizza, to the horrifying garlic mayo flavoured Easter egg that was released on these shores earlier this year. However, Domino's in Singapore have truly outdone themselves with a mac and cheese pizza — yes, that's macaroni and cheese as the, well, everything on the pizza — with a hot dog sausage as the crust. No, we're not sure how they came up with that one either. One person who was aghast at such a revelation was Mr Delicious himself, Garron Noone — who recently made his return to social media — who has returned all guns blazing as he lambasted the new flavour. 'Domino's, what the f**k is this?' Garron told his Instagram followers, before taking immediate issue with the sausage crust, saying 'why is there a sausage there? That's no place for a sausage. There's a time and a f***in' place for a sausage.' Despite only being available in the far east, Garron added that he was 'personally offended' by the new pizza, joking that it was 'attention seeking' from Domino's to create such a sin and adding 'food is finished, we've discovered it all.' Garron Noone has lambasted Dominos for its new mac and cheese pizza, with a hot dog sausage crust — saying that 'food is finished, we've discovered it all.' Pic: Garron Noone/Instagram People were divided over the new pizza type, however, with some disagreeing with Garron's sentiment. 'That actually looks nice,' one commented, while another added: 'Iceland did a Mac and cheese pizza a few years ago, it was awesome, and I'm pissed they haven't done it again. Searches flights to Singapore.' Others were appalled, however, with one commenting 'Jayyyyzuuuuss !! It's vomit on a pizza with the smell of vomit on a pizza,' while another joked that it looks like such a creation one would create while under the influence of certain substances — which is ironic, as Singapore has banned illegal drugs — commenting Weed is very criminalized in Singapore, why in God's name would you roll it out there first?' Garron returned to social media after two months last week, after he took time off to focus on his mental health. Pic: RTÉ Garron made his return to social media last week, and came back to his rants in perfect fashion, having a laundry list of complaints about life over the last few months while he went on his hiatus. Kicking off in style, Garron said that the past two months 'have been far too f**kin warm for my liking,' saying that while he doesn't mind it being hot or cold, he detests being warm, adding 'I can't sleep because my body's just moist — I'm not even sweating, my body's just threatening to sweat… I should probably move on.' And move on he did, with soup of the day being his next target; telling his followers 'I don't want to gamble with soup. And what soup was it [when he ordered it]? Tomato soup. The worst kind of soup. Tomato sauce is a sauce, not a soup, you're not fooling me.' He then went on to give out about how he lost a triple word score in Scrabble because the word he wanted to use (which we, unfortunately, can't repeat here) wasn't a 'valid word' before saying that he was running out of time but to follow him because 'I'm delicious.'