Warning: The following incorporates spoilers via The Sex Lives of College Girls Season 2, Episode 6. Proceed at your individual danger!
We already introduced you a preview of what’s subsequent for The Sex Lives of College Girls‘ Kimberly and Jackson after their recent hookup, but Kimberly isn’t the one roommate with main developments in her romantic life.
In Thursday’s episodes, Bela made an enormous leap from informal intercourse to monogamy when her jealousy over Eric’s date led her to comprehend that she needs thus far Eric, a lot to her personal shock. After being so adamant about taking part in the sector, what’s it about Eric that made Bela wish to commit?
“I had a personalization for Eric with someone in my own life who I think often is the one who got away,” Amrit Kaur, who performs Bela, tells TVLine. “I think what Bela sees in Eric is that she’s not intimidated by him… She kind of feels like she’s a little less of a loser around him, and it makes her feel good about herself, and he’s enamored by her. She can be herself with Eric and boss him around, and she loves that, and he’ll allow her to do that.”
But simply as rapidly as their relationship went from non-exclusive to boyfriend-and-girlfriend standing, Bela sabotaged it. In the hopes of furthering her comedy profession, she had intercourse with the late-night discuss present host (Stranger Things‘ John Reynolds) for whom she was performing as a pupil liaison.
“I had conversations with my coach about the backstory, what the motivation would be,” Kaur says of the Episode 6 twist. “Bela is so obsessed with telling a cool story that everything that Bela does is petty. It’s not like any normal story, or any normal reason. She is willing to sacrifice her relationship in order to come back tomorrow to tell her roommates that she f–ked a famous stand-up comedian, and you know what, a lot of us do that. It’s a human thing to do, and she’s not the most noble of people. So that’s definitely what I think her mindset was.”
Meanwhile, Leighton lastly slowed down after hooking up with a lot of Essex’s queer standard (and getting chlamydia) and set her sights on somebody new: Tatum (Zoo‘s Gracie Dzienny), an ultra-cool junior who looks like Leighton’s doppelganger and could also be much more elitist than the freshman. (Apparently, once you first come out, you undergo a part of wanting thus far your self.)
“I think she’s a lover. That’s what I’ve decided,” Reneé Rapp says of Leighton, including that her character turns into “super enamored” with Tatum. “She’s like, ‘She’s perfect.’ Then she’s like, “Oh, wait, Jesus, maybe not.’ She goes in really quick, which is also like such a horrible lesbian stereotype, but sometimes it’s f–king accurate.” (Leighton additionally nonetheless has to come back out to her household. “I think that’s a loaded conversation that I’m not sure if she’s ready for, but she kind of does it anyway,” Rapp previews.)
Elsewhere, Whitney and her bio-chem nemesis Andrew (Love, Victor‘s Charlie Hall) were paired up for a lab. But rather than killing each other, might the two be jumping each other, given how Whitney wasn’t in a position to look away from Andrew’s shock biceps? He definitely didn’t appear to thoughts the eye, and Whitney is newly single after her break up with Canaan.
“She can’t decide. Truthfully, she has no idea,” Whitney’s portrayer Alyah Chanelle Scott says. (*6*)
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