Paloma Faith felt 'betrayed' by Celebrity Traitors killing
Paloma Faith felt "betrayed" after being the first to be killed on Celebrity Traitors by her good friend Alan Carr.

Paloma Faith felt "betrayed" after being the first to be killed on Celebrity Traitors.
The 44-year-old singer was murdered in plain sight by close friend Alan Carr, who had been tasked with wiping pollen from a "poisonous" flower onto one of the Faithfuls' faces and she was stunned to learn the Chatty Man star, fellow talk show host Jonathan Ross, and singer Cat Burns were responsible for her downfall.
Speaking to Ed Gamble on The Celebrity Traitors Uncloaked as he revealed who the Traitors were, she exclaimed: "Jonathan! The geek! What a p****."
After hearing Cat was involved, she explained: "Oh my God. So, these people just killed me out of malice because I didn't suspect any of them."
Paloma then delivered a blunt four-letter profanity in response to learning Alan had killed her and admitted she hoped they would "never call again".
She added: "And I mean that.
"I feel really even more betrayed now. I feel betrayed by Jonathan and Alan and actually Cat because she's on the same record label as me and she should have some loyalty."
The Only Love Can Hurt Like This hitmaker insisted she would never have betrayed Alan if their positions had been reversed.
She said: "If the shoe was on the other foot, I wouldn't have done that.
"I don't think he should have done it to me."
However, Paloma admitted Alan had almost given himself away with his constant perspiration.
She said: "I did keep asking him why he was sweating so much."
Paloma later took to Instagram to share a photo by her TV grave and admitted she was devastated.
She wrote: "Honestly. GUTTED , no words @bbc @bbciplayer #traitors (sic)"
Host Claudia Winkleman commented: "I LOVE YOU [three red heart emojis] (sic)"
Ahead of the show hitting screens this week, Paloma admitted she had seen the programme's therapist "all the time" during filming.
She told The Sun on Sunday newspaper: “It is not on camera - I went to see them [welfare] all the time. Yeah it was a therapist.
“I definitely learned some things about myself that I thought I had moved on from, from my childhood and everything.
“I guess it is a game of trust isn't it so it is quite unsettling when you feel like everyone you know might not be as trustworthy as they seem - everyone is playing a game and it is hard to rationalise."