The other “Traitors Viewing Party” lands at C’mon Everybody as a live, communal watch built around the ritual of reality TV in a nightlife setting. The room becomes part screening, part performance, with audience reactions treated as material rather than background noise. In New York, where viewing parties have long doubled as queer and downtown gathering points, this format reads as cultural practice as much as entertainment. It’s also a small study in how suspicion and alliance-making play differently when a crowd witnesses them together.