The series follows Oliver and Kiara, two strangers who meet and fall into an intense, fast-burning connection. But this isn’t a love story where one person is the hero, and one is the cautionary tale. “Both of them are exhibiting red flags,” Cameron explains. “I think when the playing field gets more levelled, it’ll be like, oh, so these two are just fucked up. They’re perfect for each other.” But getting here, to a place where we can watch two flawed people collide without immediately assigning moral hierarchy, took a cultural shift that’s still very much in progress. For years, male characters got a free pass on complexity. “We’ve allowed it for so long in male characters where it’s like, ‘Oh, but he’s a good man, he’s got good intentions,'” Cameron notes.
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