![]() MUCH less interested in this season, can’t believe there’s no steaminess,” says radio producer Jemima Carr-Jones.īut then why is it such a success? How has it beaten Season 1’s record? Surely it’s not just the leftover clout from Season 1 – people are still watching, and perhaps they enjoyed this season’s subdued sexuality even more. On Twitter, journalist Ria Amber Tesia says: “Slow burn was great, but perhaps went on for a little too long.” The three embark on an (entirely predictable, but incredibly enjoyable) love triangle.Ĭritics soon did their job, finding everything to criticise about Season 2: not enough sex, not enough fun, a show so entirely different that it deserved another name… the list goes on. ![]() To fulfil his duties, he must marry and overcome the emotional trauma of losing his father – in comes Kate (Simone Ashley) and Edwina Sharma (Charithra Chandran), the latter of which hopes to marry some rich nobleman. The second season, set in a kind of 1800s upper-class London, tells the story of Daphne’s elder brother Anthony (Jonathan Bailey), Viscount Bridgerton and head of the Bridgerton family. The show broke records immediately, becoming Netflix’s most popular English language TV show of all time, setting the bar high for Season 2. ![]() The first season shocked the nation and the world with its pretty in pink regency drama, Gossip Girl plot, and, what was it, oh yes – a whopping 15 sex scenes.Īudiences around the world blushed, giggled, and shrieked, watching a hot and heavy romance develop between protagonists Daphne Bridgerton (Phoebe Dynevor) and the Duke of Hastings, Simon Basset (Regé-Jean Page). To me, the second instalment of the ever-growing world of Bridgerton was just as steamy as its predecessor even though there was little to no explicit erotica. While critics are yawning at the prude-ish lack of sex in the second season of Bridgerton, I’m wondering if this season isn’t actually hotter. Or perhaps you’re watching the latest teen drama show, enjoying the secret glances, the innuendos, the awkward touch of passing hands that gets dispelled quickly only to be replaced with a hotter, heavier, hornier scene later in the episode.īut what happens when they finally do it? When the gleaming, perfect fictional bodies collide and just do it – they finally fuck. ![]() We all know that feeling – you’re halfway through your new steamy book, sexual tension grows, your cheeks burn red, and you pray to some superior being that nobody on the train can see what you’re reading. ![]()
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