{
  "type": "article",
  "title": "Hollywood Misread Why 'Heated Rivalry' Was a Hit, and Fans Are Fuming About the Straight Hockey Romance Boom",
  "summary": "Prime Video's Off Campus and Netflix's upcoming Icebreaker have reignited the hockey romance trend, but fans argue the industry mistook the queer appeal of Heated Rivalry for a demand for straight love stories.",
  "content": "Streaming's new obsession with the hockey rink\nThere is a familiar pattern repeating across streaming right now, and it is built on ice and attraction. Prime Video's Off Campus and Netflix's upcoming Icebreaker are both, much like Heated Rivalry before them, hockey flavoured romances about two people who are total opposites yet cannot stop reaching for each other.\n\nThe crucial distinction sits underneath that shared setup. Both Icebreaker and Off Campus center on heterosexual couples, whereas Heated Rivalry told the story of a secret gay relationship. Given how central queerness was to Heated Rivalry's runaway popularity, the sudden rush to produce straight, hormonal hockey stories looks like one more case of Hollywood reading the room and getting it wrong.\n\nWhat the two new shows are actually about\nOff Campus, which arrived last month, follows Hannah Wells, a guarded musician who agrees to fake a relationship with college hockey captain Garrett Graham, all in trade for tutoring in her philosophy class. Icebreaker, announced by Netflix this week, turns on a figure skater who ends up falling for a hockey player after the two are forced to share the same rink for practice.\n\nStrip away the sport and the resemblance to Heated Rivalry runs deep. Each of these shows is pulled from a well loved book. Off Campus draws on a series of steamy novels by Canadian author Elle Kennedy, while Icebreaker takes its cue from a YA novel by British author Hannah Grace. All three also play with the \"enemies to lovers\" formula that fan fiction hubs like Wattpad and ao3 turned into a phenomenon.\n\nWhy Heated Rivalry broke out in the first place\nWhen Heated Rivalry premiered on Crave and HBO Max last winter, the early buzz was all about its explicit sex scenes and the crackling chemistry between its two stars, Connor Storrie as the volatile Ilya Rozanov and Hudson Williams as the buttoned up Shane Hollander. As word spread, though, praise widened to the unexpectedly tender bond between the pair and the show's careful handling of LGBTQ spaces and themes. It also pulled in a large audience of straight women, shining a light on fujoshi, the Japanese fandom built around heterosexual women who love stories about gay men.\n\nIt is difficult to overstate how much of the show's success flowed from its queerness, and not only because the scenes were hot. There is real, measurable appetite for this kind of storytelling.\n\nThe numbers behind diverse storytelling\nUCLA's 2024 \"Hollywood Diversity Report\" found that shows built on \"underrepresented stories,\" LGBTQ narratives among them, post higher median ratings and spark more conversation on social media than shows that leave such stories out. \"The evidence is clear that audiences today are hungry for both diverse stories and diverse storytellers,\" the report's coauthors Ana-Christina Ramón and Michael Tran told TrendKia via email.\n\nThere are also signs that Heated Rivalry lifted interest in the sport itself, with NHL ticket sales reportedly jumping in the weeks that followed the premiere. Even so, it is a stretch to imagine executives studying that hit and concluding that viewers suddenly fell for a game that has long trailed baseball, basketball and football in American popularity.\n\nFans say the industry learned the wrong lesson\nThe simpler reading is hard to miss. The girls, gays and theys enjoyed watching attractive men kiss in hotel rooms and trade longing glances across a dance floor. The forbidden charge of Shane and Ilya's relationship inside a traditionally hetero masculine world likely mattered just as much, according to Matt Puretz, senior researcher for UCLA's Center for Storytellers and Scholars.\n\nPuretz says he is not shocked that Hollywood answered Heated Rivalry with softer, \"more white and straight-washed versions.\" \"We rarely see boundary-pushing queer shows or films followed up with more entries in the category, since the industry often struggles to understand what audiences (and especially young audiences) love about those properties,\" he told TrendKia.\n\nThe show's devoted fans have clearly worked out what is happening, and they are unimpressed. \"Companies took the wrong message from heated rivalry,\" one fan account posted on X after Netflix revealed Icebreaker. \"We don't want more hockey, we want more gay. MAKE A LESBIAN HEATED RIVALRY. DO SOMETHING.\" Another joked about the entertainment industry's \"takeaway from Heated Rivalry's success is more straight sports romances rather than queer stories with queer directors at the helm.\"\n\nWhy the trend is not going anywhere\nHollywood, in the end, runs on numbers, and the numbers are cooperating. Despite complaints from viewers about its stilted dialogue and flat characters, Off Campus has done well enough that the hockey romance looks set to stick around. It has been an enormous win for Amazon, racking up an estimated 36 million viewers in its first 12 days on Prime Video. So if you are hoping for a gay lacrosse series or a poly lesbian MMA show, do not hold your breath just yet.\n\nWhat this means for you\nFor streaming viewers and fans:\n\n• If you loved Heated Rivalry, expect more hockey romances like Off Campus and Icebreaker on Prime Video and Netflix, but mostly straight retellings rather than queer ones.\n• Fans wanting more LGBTQ led stories may keep getting \"straight-washed\" versions, so your viewing choices and social media reactions are what signal real demand to studios.\n\nQuestions & Answers\n\n1. What is Off Campus about and when did it release?\nReleased last month, it follows Hannah Wells, a reserved musician who agrees to fake a relationship with hockey captain Garrett Graham in exchange for philosophy class tutoring.\n\n2. How many viewers did Off Campus get?\nIt was a big win for Amazon, drawing an estimated 36 million viewers in its first 12 days on Prime Video.\n\n3. How is Heated Rivalry different from the new shows?\nHeated Rivalry told the story of a secret gay relationship, while both Off Campus and Icebreaker center on heterosexual couples.\n\n4. Why are fans upset?\nFans feel the industry misread the queer appeal of Heated Rivalry and produced more straight sports romances instead of the queer stories they wanted.",
  "url": "https://trendkia.com/en/culture/heated-rivalry-ki-kamayabi-ka-galata-matalaba-samajha-baitha-hollywood-hoki-roma-1546",
  "category": "Culture",
  "publishedAt": "2026-06-17",
  "tags": [
    "hockey romance",
    "Heated Rivalry",
    "Off Campus",
    "Icebreaker",
    "Netflix",
    "Prime Video",
    "LGBTQ shows",
    "queer representation"
  ],
  "language": "en",
  "site": "TrendKia"
}