But what’s most striking about Heartstopper, and likely what’s driven it to become such a buzzy title (especially in an American political environment where “Don’t Say Gay” and similar legislation police LGBTQ content for school-age kids) is its ability to tap into an audience famished for cloyingly sweet high-school stories. It’s aggressively heartwarming, the kind of show designed to be described as a warm hug or a cozy blanket it demands you respond to it, in turn, with “pleading” eyes (□). Adapted from Alice Oseman’s graphic-novel series, it tells the story of two young high-school lads who find their way into each other’s lives and hearts. In fact, those googly eyes are very much what kick-start the romance at the, pun intended, heart of Heartstopper. You use it when something is just too precious and your emotions feel like they’re about to spill over in rather embarrassing ways. ![]() ![]() After all, those puppy-dog eyes are more often than not used to express a feeling of cloying sentimentality. If Heartstopper, the gay YA Netflix rom-com that seems to be gaining fans by the hour, were an emoji, it would be the pleading face: □.
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