Sunday People

Emojuices start to flow in Circle

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BEST fact of the week – the

Queen likes to eat her dinner on a tray in front of the telly.

I can just picture it now:“oi, Phil, hurry up with the eggs on toast,corrie’s about to start.”

This was revealed in Secrets Ofthe Royal Kitchens, on C5 on Wednesday, which gave an insight into the royals’ eating habits. And they must send palace chefs loopy.

Sandwiches must be cut into four – no crusts. And absolutely under no circumstan­ces should a dish contain garlic.

We also heard how a young Prince Harry had a close shave with a pot of boiling water and Meghan committed an avocado faux pas.

Stirring stuff. WE are live on Channel 4 and it feels so good to be here!” yelled Emma Willis in front of a live studio audience. Flashback to Big Brother. I assume contestant­s are still not allowed to swear.

The Circle returned this week – the stand-out reality contest from last year but now with Emma for extra cool TV points.

In essence it’s social media in action on the telly. Big Brother for the modern age – instead of living together in a house, contestant­s sit alone in separate apartments glued to social media. Just like real life. What a depressing thought.

It is set to give us a reason for existence at 10pm most nights for nearly a month. We will watch strangers communicat­e through a voice-activated platform called The Circle. Yes, voice activated.

Which means lots of excruciati­ng emoji descriptio­ns. “Open message, how are you this morning babe? Winky face, double heart emoji, end message.”

By next week we’ll all be talking like that and hating ourselves for it.

Players can be whoever they want to be on their profiles – last year’s winner Alex pretended to be a woman called Kate.

“What does it take to be a successful catfish?” Emma quizzed Alex. Preparatio­n and confidence, he said. Should we really be glamorisin­g this?

Horrified

At this point I’m as horrified as I am fascinated. Yet I am still watching.

The players, all vying to win £100,000, only have to be the most popular. That’s it. No song and dance, no baking a cake, no human interactio­n.

They are a mixed bag. Among them, professor, ex-monk and Robin Williams look alike Tim; Katie, pretending to be her son Jay; James, pretending to be a single mum; and Woody, son of famous folks Zoe Ball and Norman Cook. Emma announced the first “cruel twist, shock face emoji” – the players had to rate each other on first impression­s.

“We have to rate them before we even talk to them!?” wailed model Emelle, astonished. Imagine that. Judging people on social media without knowing them.

Poor Emelle was blocked within about 24 hours. Brutal. This viewing is good for ratings but it’s not good for the soul. Yet I still seem to be watching.

In other news, the nation’s favourite embarrassi­ng uncle Richard Madeley entered to “stir things up” in the guise of Judy, 27. I don’t think there’s a TV show that wouldn’t be enhanced by Madeley.

With plenty of opportunit­y for players to feel paranoid, this addictive goldfish bowl show filled with fake news feels like everything that’s wrong with society.

Should we all stop watching or is it just a bit of fun? Upside-down confused emoji, thinking face, end message.

 ??  ?? EXTRA COOL: Emma Willis on The Circle
EXTRA COOL: Emma Willis on The Circle
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