When he unexpectedly re-enters her life, she begins journaling explicit memories of all their wild sex, which play out in flashbacks.
UNSIMULATED GAY SEX SCENES FREE
She starts fantasizing about when she was in her twenties, a sexual free spirit whose world was rocked on a daily basis by a music producer bad boy (Adam Demos). But the house in Greenwich, Connecticut, the kids, the “perfect life”… it’s starting to bore her. She’s married to the nicest man in the world (played by Mike Vogel), who happens to be rich and an absolute hunk, like someone brought to life a Ken doll.
UNSIMULATED GAY SEX SCENES SERIES
The series stars Sarah Shahi as a mother who seems to have it all, and recognizes the cliché of it. Whereas Love and 365 Days were outside productions that Netflix acquired, the streamer is finally producing a similar show itself, the sexual soap opera Sex/Life, which premieres Friday. Like most of us and sex, Netflix doesn’t really talk about it, almost as if to say, “Who knows how all those sexy shows got to the top of the most-watched list?” (People have long suspected that there are certain algorithms that impact that list.)īut now, the service seems to be leaning into the hornier part of its brand. Its craven desire to be the destination for Oscar-friendly awards fare has become one of the dominant entertainment stories in recent years. It’s elevated itself as a hub of prestige content to rival the likes of HBO, where eye-popping production and marketing budgets are devoted to shows like The Crown and creators like Ryan Murphy and Shonda Rhimes are wooed with massive deals. It’s been comfort-watch central, with audiences making a blockbuster hit out of Schitt’s Creek and, over the years, resurging the relevance of shows like The Office, Friends, and Gilmore Girls. Still, if the mind-blowing revelation that people like sex, are sometimes horny, and sometimes like to watch hot people have it-or at least simulate having it in movies or TV-can be accepted as fact, it’s interesting to figure out where that fits into this idea of what Netflix is as a brand, and what people turn to it for. Remember the “mommy porn” discussion when the Fifty Shades sensation hinted that middle-aged women actually have sexual desires? It was demeaning. The pearl-clutching tenor of surprise and snickering whenever there’s a phenomenon like this can be patronizing and shaming. But the lesson was learned: People like watching sex on Netflix.
There were several reasons why the film surged to the top of Netflix’s most-watched list-there was a viral TikTok challenge where people would film themselves watching the opening scene in shock.