![]() ![]() ![]() Because it’s in them and that’s how they are, which makes them such a great fit together. Spencer and Olivia are perfect together in so many ways and I know I babble about them too much, but one of the reasons is that they need to be the ones that can save the people they care and love, no matter what it takes. Speaking of the saving part… you know who else can’t seem to stop doing that? Spencer. Like I said, they’ve outgrown each other. But the way he finally gave in and told Olivia how he felt, and in the way that she’s always wanted to save the people around her, I’ll give him a pat on the back for that. I haven’t been too keen on Asher lately, especially because he’s been slowly regressing on all of that character development he had last season. He wants her but can’t find it in him to be upfront with Olivia about it… until their fight. His body language and demeanor changes around her and you can sense the jealousy coming from him from time to time. In this episode, Asher has the audacity to call Olivia out for being close with Spencer and always wanting to help him out, like he wasn’t clearly having an emotional affair with Vanessa this whole time. ![]() And that’s okay because Spencer (Daniel Ezra) and Olivia are endgame. After they had their fight towards the end, we know that they just grew apart. Asher and Olivia parting ways was the best decision. The tension between Asher (Cody Christian), Vanessa (Alondra Delgado), and Olivia (Samantha Logan) had to be exposed at some point and Olivia nor Vanessa made any effort to shy away from it. We had some mature conversations and those conversations had to happen because most of the feelings were all bottled up. But what makes it a good episode is how we get the chance to see everyone’s issues come to light. Sometimes, teen dramas forget to allow their characters to be teenagers and have teenager issues. What was also notable in this episode is the series has its teens being teens. That “Never Have I Ever” game went south pretty fast-game over in the messiest way. “Teenage Love” does a great job of bringing some long-neglected issues to light as tensions rise between the teenagers. Overall, “Teenage Love,” gave us time to see teens being teens, with all their drama and secrets-if there weren’t any, it wouldn’t really be a teen sports drama, would it? The cinematography and the music choice of the first couple of minutes of “Teenage Love” got to me. ![]() Coleman) died, but that cold open really gave the Season 2 installment a run for its money. I didn’t think I’d have to go through the same level of emotional gutting as “Coming Home”, when Corey (Chad L. Submissions that are considered low effort threads such as, just a picture of something or posts clearly submitted for the sake of "karma whoring" are subject to be removed at moderator discretion.Īll submissions must be properly flaired using a flair appropriate for the content.This All American review contains spoilers. NSFW content is not allowed on the subreddit. Rude, harassing, racist, bigoted or derogatory comments will not be tolerated.Īll content must be relevant to All American in some way. Providing such links may result in a ban.īe civil in the comment section. Links to pirated/streaming sites will be removed. Posts that contain spoilers must be marked with the tag or have the post flair SPOILERS assigned to it. Buy the complete season on Amazon Comment spoilersĬomments containing spoilers beyond the original topic of the post must also be contained within a spoiler tag. ![]()
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