Colman Noctor: What 'The Traitors' can teach us about honesty in the real world

‘The Traitors Ireland’ contestants with host Siobhán McSweeney is a wildly popular reality TV show where deception is the central theme.


- Make it clear is a game with artificial rules. Just as children understand that telling the seeker during a game of hide and seek, ‘I saw them run outside’ when they are in fact hiding under a table, they can grasp that lying in this context is a form of strategy, not a life lesson.
- Ask children: “Would this kind of lying work in school or at home? Why not?” Discuss the difference between a controlled environment where everyone agrees on the rules and real life, where trust is ongoing and fragile.
- Highlight how contestants also depend on observation, intuition, persuasion, and teamwork, not just lying. Show that honesty often wins when Faithfuls collaborate, and that deception eventually unravels.
- Point out that, while the show rewards deception in the short term, lying often damages friendships, relationships, and reputations in everyday life. Ask children how they would feel if a friend lied to them the way a Traitor lies to their teammates.
- If your child points out that you sometimes lie, admit it. Explain why adults occasionally use ‘white lies’ and discuss the difference between kindness and dishonesty. Being open about these grey areas can actually strengthen a child’s sense of morality.