All I can say is Season 2 can't get here fast enough. As far as BL goes, nothing compares to S.O.T.U.S. The concept of falling in love with the person, not the gender is impeccably unique. It wasn't about lust. It was an emotional connection, and the struggle they showed dealing with reality was on point. It wasn't overly dramatic nor sophomoric & effortless. It was right in the middle, much like real life internal struggles for NORMAL people tend to be. That's what I enjoyed the most about this series. Everyone was NORMAL, with no family or background drama that wasn't just a natural flow of how life unfolds for the majority of mass society. It wasn't all angst-y, violent, and depressing as what I usual have seen. These are just normal college students with normal gay and straight friends living their lives, working hard to get through school or work, meeting new people, making new friends, and falling love.
From the bottom of my heart, especially having a gay son, it is nice to see this aspect of life portrayed like this that I even asked my son to watch it. He honestly doesn't like watching any BL because, to him, they are all cliche. As my son will be the first to tell anyone who has not walked a mile in his shoes, and the high school friends who like to tell him who he is, and/or box him into one-side of the spectrum or the other based on what social construct they've created in their minds and dictate some kind of general STEREOTYPE he has to live under -- NO, that's not reality! Reality is that like many parts of ANY human character, being gay is NOT your definition. It isn't what DEFINES you, it's just ONE of a multitude of aspects that come together to make the person. This in normality. Unfortunately, people with differing driving agendas don't understand this. If you're promoting the lifestyle or you're fighting the lifestyle, you're BOTH in the wrong. That mindset doesn't let a person just be who they're gonna be. Frankly, the problem lies with YOU, not them. ..and this is what S.O.T.U.S. brings to the table. The concept that people are just living their lives being who they are, regardless of society's precepts.