Maybe read the previous 32 pages of people telling you exactly why? |
It's romance. A romance between equal partners with consent, emotions, vulnerability, and incredible chemistry between the actors. |
It is two men, same physical size and strength, same age, same career, same financial status, same desire for hook up sex, - so yes, no real power differential which makes it very unthreatening. Fantasy as not something women can ever have due to biology. |
| Season Two April 2027! Can't wait! |
Ahhhh! So many things from the next book I’m looking forward to seeing play out. |
me too!! |
I’m not sure if I’m more excited to see the plug or the plane scene. I love them both for very different reasons. Do you think we’re getting any Troy and Harris, or Ryan and Fabian? |
Women have been dreaming about this since Kirk/Spock fanfics were getting circulated. It’s just a fantasy. The truth is that we as women get the short end of the stick biologically so this sort of thing sidesteps all that. I’m not interested anymore but when I was young and naive I found it appealing. |
DP - I think Troy and Harris almost have to be in the next season because of how much their book overlaps with The Long Game. I loved The Long Game so excited to see season 2 when it comes. |
You're welcome.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9Mt9PcoPrM |
What an incredible shining moment. Applause all around. |
My gay son told me part of the reason this show is so different is the “feel good” optimism of how things work for gay people out due to the positive human responses—from the waiter dropping a tray and being forgiven, to the mom accepting her gay son and lover. It’s a fantasy of things working out in the best way possible. |
Yes, I saw Jacob Tierney interviewed and he said that his gay friends were struck by this too. They were waiting until the very last scene for the other shoe to drop (would they get in an accident as they were driving back to the cottage?) because it generally does in gay plots. But it never did drop and this was on purpose. There was no drama, there was no tragedy. This was just a feel-good love story about 2 gay men. |
I’ve also heard that it’s the first time that gay men are not portrayed as neurotic or with some sort of major personality flaw. |
This. Besides being romantic and beautiful and hot . . . my LGBTQ+ friends and family have said how this show would have changed their lives as a teen or young person. It shows the leads as normal, the relationship normal, instead of tragic, queeny, or having AIDS. Just two normal people. Many teared up talking about it. I also personally loved (beyond the above) how these two very masculine guys were sweet, sensitive, talked about consent . . . . not toxic. |