Poging GOUD - Vrij
Why this could be the last waltz for rightwingers
The Observer
|October 05, 2025
People are tired of their favourite TV shows being used for reputation repair, says Sarah Manavis
In the past five years, British audiences have begun to brace themselves at the announcement of reality TV casts. Scanning a grid of faces, the dreaded thought appears: which rightwing figure has joined my most loved TV show to rehabilitate their public image?
Political figures have long used reality shows to transition from politician to personality - Ed Balls and Ann Widdecombe did Strictly Come Dancing; Stanley Johnson did I’m a Celebrity ... Get Me Out of Here; George Galloway did Big Brother - to lesser and greater degrees of success. But recently, rather than a vehicle for shifting careers, reality TV has become a vehicle for reputational recovery, used by controversial and disgraced conservative figures hoping to wash away a bad impression by making lovable fools of themselves to audiences of millions.
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