Culture ‘Heated Rivalry’ series mixes hockey and queer romance and is scoring big audiences. - Going beyond the typical ‘alpha-jock’ story. A ‘Game Changer’ for hockey romance fans.

https://apnews.com/article/heated-rivalry-hockey-romance-801f41aec6cc476a12fe1a670ea68a22
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NEW YORK (AP) — “Heated Rivalry” is scoring big with hockey romance fans.Since its Thanksgiving weekend debut, the steamy television adaptation of Rachel Reid’s 2019 novel has dominated social media feeds and inspired a growing fanbase devoted to the queer romance at its center.

The story traces Canadian Shane Hollander and Russian Ilya Rozanov as they sustain a decade-long secret relationship, mixing slow-building yearning with explicit sexual scenes. Jacob Tierney, who developed, wrote and directed the series, said he was drawn to the project for its “pure queer joy.”

Audiences have met that joy with a passionate response, propelling “Heated Rivalry” to the No. 1 series on HBO Max as the first season heads into its finale Friday. Along the way, it’s generated new interest in the “Game Changers” book series that it’s based on and drawn attention to sports romance fiction, especially stories with queer storylines.

Originally developed for the Canadian streaming service Crave, the show scored a distribution deal with HBO and has already been renewed for a second season.

“Unashamedly, when pitching, it was just like, this is a Harlequin romance. This has a happy ending,” Tierney said. “This is about two boys in love and a lot of sex.”

A ‘Game Changer’ for hockey romance fans​

Hockey romance books have grown in popularity within the broader sports romance genre, fueled by readers drawn to the intensity of sport as much as the relationships at its center. Mackenzie Walton, who edited the “Heated Rivalry” novel, said the genre’s staying power comes from how deeply the stories immerse readers in the sport itself.

“It’s much more common when I read a hockey romance that I get the sense that hockey is important at the heart of the book, and I think readers really respond to that sense of authenticity,” Walton said.

According to the book’s publisher Harlequin, Reid’s six novel “Game Changers” series has sold 650,000 copies since the first was published in 2018.

“Anytime Hollywood pays attention to, and respects, romance fans, they notice and show their appreciation,” Leah Koch, co-owner of the romance bookstore The Ripped Bodice, wrote in an email. She added that producing a high-quality adaptation of a story queer readers might not have expected to reach television signals a growing recognition of both their cultural interests and their economic impact.

Content creator Josh Banfield has been making Instagram videos about the show since its November premiere. He believes part of the show’s popularity with queer fans is the slow-burning aspect of Shane and Ilya’s romance.

“There’s something nice about seeing the yearning and seeing that they do maintain contact with each other and still have this connection,” Banfield said.

Finding the perfect Shane and Ilya for ‘Heated Rivalry’​

Fans and the creators behind the book and TV show also credit the lead actors, Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams, for the show’s success. Tierney said he knew they were his Ilya and Shane almost instantly.

“The show was going to live and die based on this casting,” Tierney said. “I think once they did their chemistry read together, everybody was like, ‘OK, fine, done.’”

Rachel Reid, author of the books, said she was happy with the adaptation and with who was chosen to play the characters she wrote.

“If I built the perfect actors in a lab, I could not have built better people to play these characters,” Reid said.

It was also important to both Tierney and Reid to have Shane played by someone of Asian descent, as the character is in the books, to keep a sense of diversity in a genre that tends to have mostly white characters.

Going beyond the typical ‘alpha-jock’ story​

Hockey romances still tend to be dominantly white and heterosexual. According to Koch, readers who come to the Ripped Bodice’s locations are looking for more people like Shane — queer and diverse — to be in their stories.

Customers frequently seek out queer sports romances and those that “go beyond the typical alpha-jock trope,” she wrote. But she’s skeptical that the success of “Heated Rivalry” will lead to more mainstream books or shows with queer stories.

“A breakthrough title does sometimes allow other authors more access, but not always,” Koch wrote. “But hey, maybe they’ll prove me wrong, and wouldn’t that be nice?”

Romance blogger Laura Dusi-Showers said women in particular are responding to the male-on-male romance in a hockey book because of the fantasy aspect of seeing something different than their everyday lives. As for why it works, she said it was due to hockey being a “manly, aggressive sport” with no out NHL players. “I think it’s opening people’s eyes to what could be,” Dusi-Showers said.

This was the reason Reid wrote her books in the first place: wanting to tell a different story.

“The series just came from a love of hockey, but also my own conflicted feelings about all the bad things about the culture around the sport, especially the homophobia,” Reid said.

Reid’s debut book in her hockey series, “Game Changer,” is about Scott Hunter, the fictional first fictional hockey player to come out publicly, and his juice-bar barista boyfriend Kip Grady. Part of this story was told in “Heated Rivalry’s” third episode and featured as a climactic moment in the fifth episode.

As to why fans are responding so strongly to the show and the actors, Reid singled out the acting.

“They’re getting really, really emotional or excited about one little quiet part or one line delivery, and that has nothing to do with the sex on the show,” she said, pointing specifically to Williams’ performance as the more awkward and less self-assured Shane. “Maybe a choice that Hudson made as an actor is making everybody lose their minds, and I love to see that.”
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Oh no the Xiao Zhan fans are crazed, but the truth is they had a point initially. If you let fujoshi sit in a given fandom, they act like a cancer, including the process of metastasis. They start doing things like policing non-fujo content, organizing harassment campaigns on individuals over the slightest disagreement, et cetera.

Much like chemo, however, the level of vigilance required and the overall process of stamping out the fujo can be rather destructive.
you are probably right, my frame of reference for western fandoms is when i was younger and i remember that there were a lot of popular straight ships and the fans took it very seriously. I never shipped fictional characters and i avoided people shipping real human beings like the plague because i thought it was fucking weird even back then. It make sense that things got worse since then like everything else on the Internet.

I'm more familiar with the non shipper side of fujos because i like to read novels/comics and they are in those circles but they aren't as toxic because they consume their own stuff. I just don't participate in fandom culture ( i mostly watch YouTube drama videos about it)

I only knew of one gay hockeyplayer in real life, he got shot by his geriatric sugar daddy, when he tried to switch to another, wealthier sugar daddy.
this is why tv shows about real gay men ( outside of comedies, that's pretty funny ngl ) are not popular. They do shit like this.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
It make sense that things got worse since then like everything else on the Internet.
Like everything else, a big part of the problem is Discord. You hang around fandoms long enough you will see shit like a teenager getting publicly invited to a fujo discord run by a much older presumed tranny, because them spewing fujo shit everywhere unprompted was not well-received.
 
Unfortunately, the show has actually enabled the RPFers. They feel catered to by it and have become significantly more comfortable going out in public as a result.
My anecdotal evidence says otherwise, but that may just be due to how curated I keep my social media. I tend to stay away from the real crazies.
 
As for the other thread I like to read books, so I'm familiar with what's popular even if in don't read it , a year ago it was the straight romance readers terrorizing the NHL.
"Yeah I like to books, dr zhivago was pretty good, haven't read the novelization of Avatar 3 yet but I have to say that the 58th "Popstars that are Secretly Gay and Doing it" isn't that good so far.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
The difference is that a nudity heavy series about lesbian volleyball players blatantly pandering to a male audience would never ever be greenlit by Netflix or Hulu, or Amazon.

I'm fact it's existence would be considered a sexist hate crime but the fujo equivalent is not only socially acceptable but highly encouraged.

It's literally "your horny bad my horny good.
In the article there's a single line about the show being popular with women, they are pretending the show is for "queer " audiences. I don't know if they actually believe that or if they are playing dumb. It's hard to tell with journalists.
 
Every time I hear about a new "hit" movie that is slopaganda it turns out it wasn't a hit financially a year later. You can't trust ratings or box office totals as it's all been so manipulated for narrative. I imagine this show has a far smaller audience than a mid-tier youtuber, but with NGO, government, and journo backing.
 
As far as I am aware, guys do not follow WNBA players into elevators, watch them go into their hotel rooms, and think they locked the door because they want privacy for fucking instead of just trying to get away from the insane stalker.
Scrotes literally throw dildos at WNBA players.

Faghags are disgusting but good on them for unintentionally taking revenge.
 
Thinking fujoshi weren't around before then is your first mistake, brother.

Here are quotes from the book I stole from reviews.

Do gays really? Surely not?

That's like asking if lesbians are typically attractive blondes with huge boobs who have dozens of screaming orgasms as soon as their spicy hot Latina lover touches their crotch area. It's not really about gays, and gays aren't the target audience.

It has nothing to do with that; it honestly has more to do with the fact that most of the players are white.

Women do not actually find niggers attractive, by and large.

Yeah it's been discussed in the fanfiction thread, but there's really nothing funnier than the fact that fujos in fandom are constantly demanding "media representation" of blacks and fatties and cripples and pooners, and then consistently ignore all those characters and continue to obsess over buff white men (and the occasional hapa-looking Asian).
 
Great Lakes women love hockey, it's the only sport they show up for and watch organically which I think is interesting. Not sure how other parts of the U.S. feel about it, I'm only surprised it has taken this long to be made. I would've expected this sooner during Pride being astroturfed 8 years ago.
 
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