Lisa Vanderpump Passes PuppyGate Lie Detector Test — But Her RHOBH Costars Are Skeptical - PEOPLE.com
Lisa Vanderpump Passes PuppyGate Lie Detector Test — But Her RHOBH Costars Are Skeptical - PEOPLE.com |
- Lisa Vanderpump Passes PuppyGate Lie Detector Test — But Her RHOBH Costars Are Skeptical - PEOPLE.com
- Lisa Vanderpump Wants RHOBH Cast to Take Lie Detector Tests - Reality Blurb
- Is the Jeremy Kyle lie detector accurate? Science behind how polygraph machines work - Mirror Online
| Posted: 21 May 2019 12:00 AM PDT ![]() this link is to an external site that may or may not meet accessibility guidelines. |
| Lisa Vanderpump Wants RHOBH Cast to Take Lie Detector Tests - Reality Blurb Posted: 30 May 2019 08:54 AM PDT
Lisa Vanderpump is revealing she would like her Real Housewives of Beverly Hills castmates to take a lie detector test at the upcoming reunion as the cast is also suggesting that Camille Grammer might be afraid of Lisa. Lisa is more than ready to pass the torch when it comes to her polygraph test. During her solo segment for the RHOBH After Show, Lisa explained her decision to take a lie detector test about her alleged role in Puppy Gate and suggested her co-stars do the same. "I don't think anybody would volunteer for a lie detector test if they were one iota guilty," Lisa said. "So I was happy to say, 'Yes.' I was absolutely secure with my innocence to say, not only did I not give the story to Radar Online, but 'Do you know who gave the story to Radar Online?' No, I don't." Lisa then revealed she would like to see all of her co-stars take a lie detector test at the reunion next week as she feels it might have been one of them who actually leaked the story. "I don't know who did but do I think who might have a motivation, somebody who might want to make me look bad? I think they should all take a lie detector. I think you should have the reunion and have each and every one of them lined up. How about that? I've done it. Can you?" she wondered. In other Real Housewives of Beverly Hills news, Camille's co-stars, including Kyle Richards, Denise Richards, Dorit Kemsley, Erika Jayne, and Teddi Mellencamp, addressed her "flip-flopping" during a separate RHOBH After Show segment. "Camille had been saying that she was very hurt that Lisa didn't come to her wedding and that she wished she could have been there on such an important day and then, when we are leaving Hawaii, Lisa Rinna gets some tweet with a PEOPLE Magazine article saying, 'Thank God for Lisa Vanderpump,'" Kyle recalled. As fans saw on the show, Camille complained about Lisa's absence from her wedding on a number of occasions and made it clear that she should be there. Then, during an interview with PEOPLE, she said she completely understood and respected Lisa's decision. "We're like, 'She didn't even show up to your shower or your wedding,'" Kyle recalled. "We don't care that she said something nice about Lisa but you were saying negative things and now you are saying nice things in the press and she's not even here." "I think a lot of them felt slighted," Denise explained. "She's just flip-flopping all the time," Dorit added. According to Erika, Camille may have been afraid to share her true thoughts with Lisa. "I wonder… is she afraid to really say how she feels about Lisa Vanderpump? Like if you say some things in one company, why aren't you consistent?" Erika asked. "Is it because you are afraid?" In her own After Show segment, Teddi was a bit more blunt and suggested Camille was playing nice with Lisa in an effort to expand her season nine storyline. "I think she tells whoever she's talking to what she thinks they want to hear," Teddi suspected. "I think she wanted to have a bigger story and be able to talk about Lisa Vanderpump because it had already been rumored that Lisa wasn't filming with us and 'Here! I'm her savior and I miss her and she's been so amazing to me and now we can talk about that.'" The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills season nine airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on Bravo TV. Photo Credit: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock.com, Tommy Garcia/Bravo |
| Is the Jeremy Kyle lie detector accurate? Science behind how polygraph machines work - Mirror Online Posted: 14 May 2019 12:00 AM PDT ITV bosses opted to suspend filming of The Jeremy Kyle Show on Monday, and take it off air pending review. The programme was cancelled last minute following the tragic death of guest Steve Dymond, who overdosed just days after failing a lie detector. Dymond was hoping to prove to his fiancee that he'd never been unfaithful, and was reportedly certain he would pass the test. Now, some fans have even called the lie detectors inhumane, and questioned whether they are accurate following his tragic passing. So, how to the Jeremy Kyle lie detectors work and can they be trusted? ![]() ![]() Jeremy Kyle reportedly employ Guy Heseltine and Tim Burgess from Manchester's UK Lie Tests to run their polygraph. Costing £400 a test and taking a grand total of two hours each, the tests are complex and therefore highly accurate. However, the company are sure to assert that they can't guarantee 100 per cent accuracy. The test essentially calls on an examiner, who is a member of British Polygraph Association, to ask questions to the interviewee – having pre-agreed what they're going to be faced with. ![]() The experts then track changes in the subject, which may indicate a physiological trigger that they're not telling the truth. These include a change in blood pressure, sweaty palms and breathing. The breathing is measured by two rubber pneumograph tubes on the subject's upper chest and abdomen, while adhesive pads on their hands or fingers measures the sweating, and a cardiophygmograph keeps tabs on blood pressure and pulse. Alongside the test itself, subjects are given a pre-test interview, and their answers are put into charts which are then analysed by the examiner. ![]() Despite their rigorous approach, UK Lie Tests confirm on their website that "no test process can be guaranteed 100% certain". They do, however, promise that the test they conduct is "reliable" and, when done properly, proven by over 200 studies. Plus, they give all their examiners anti-countermeasure instruction to ensure they spot a subject trying to cheat. Discussing the use of the tests on the show after the heartbreaking news of Dymond's death, one member of the public wrote: "Lie detector tests are pseudo-science. "Talking people into going through them on air with huge real-world consequences for themselves – their marriages – is modern day bear-baiting. This show should be cancelled. Or at minimum, end its use of the tests." While another agreed: "It is disgusting that Jeremy Kyle and registered psychotherapist and mental health nurse Graham Stanier were able to convince the UK audiences that lie detector tests are '99% accurate' when this HORSES**T. "Remember how many guests claimed the test was wrong? It probably was." Mirror Online have contacted UK Lie Tests for comment. Do you have a story to sell? Get in touch with us at webcelebs@trinitymirror.com or call us direct 0207 29 33033 |
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