A new nine-episode TV romance drama has just dropped, and the internet is already deep in debate.
Within days of its release, the series has become the kind of show people can’t stop talking about.
While half the audience is completely captivated, the other half wonders why we’re romanticizing something that may have been unhealthy from the very start.
The show currently holds a 79% on Rotten Tomatoes and a 7.7/10 on IMDb — proof that controversy can be good sometimes.
What is everyone saying online?
Opinions are polarized, and many viewers are making the same complaint: since the show is based on real people, not everyone is comfortable with the show’s romantic framing.
“I told my mom they made a show about their love story,” one viewer wrote. “She said, ‘What love story? They were always fighting in public and cheating on one another. They’d have been divorced if they were still alive today.’”
Another chimed in: “He was a monster. The whole relationship was a mess. They were just hot, so people glorify them. In reality, it was a nightmare, and she ended up dying at his hands.”
And yet… plenty of viewers are fully under its spell.
“This series is magnetic and moving,” one fan wrote. “It weaves swoony romance, harrowing history, and intriguing character dynamics into a classic love story — even though we already know the tragic ending.”
“Very intimate portrayal. Fascinating and emotional storytelling,” another added.
And the soundtrack? It takes you straight into the ’90s.
So yes, the internet may be divided – but either way, everyone’s glued to their screens.
So… why is the show controversial?
Ironically, the very elements that make the series binge-worthy are also what make some viewers uneasy.
The on-screen relationship constantly toes the line between passionate and problematic.
Moments of intense devotion blur into emotional manipulation, raising questions about whether the show is depicting love or unintentionally glamorizing dysfunction.
For some viewers, the issue is how these dynamics might be interpreted today, especially by younger audiences.
“His negligence + ego literally killed her and her sister,” someone commented bluntly.
“People love to romanticize messy people just because they were rich and semi-good-looking,” another added.
A third one agrees: “Everyone is idolizing it, but that was not a love story. It was a horror at best.”
It’s the eternal pop-culture question: can we appreciate the aesthetic and storytelling of a relationship while acknowledging the darker realities behind it? Or are we simply addicted to beautiful chaos?

Why is everyone so obsessed with this show?
Part of the show’s appeal is undeniably visual.
The series feels like a mood board for ‘90s minimalism: sleek blowouts, sharp tailoring, slip dresses, and Carolyn’s famously understated elegance.
Her aesthetic is suddenly having a full cultural renaissance, with natural nails and monochrome wardrobes trending again. Black is, once again, a personality trait.
But the obsession goes deeper than fashion: there’s also the irresistible pull of doomed romance.
Just like true-crime stories, tragic love stories carry a strange cultural gravity. We watch not only for the romance itself, but for the slow unraveling we know is coming.
And then there’s the electric chemistry between the two co-stars.
In a world defined by dating apps and cautious emotional investment, watching someone pursue love with such intensity — grand gestures, dramatic declarations, devotion that borders on obsession — can feel oddly… intoxicating.
Who’s in the cast — and who is it actually about?
Set against the flashbulb frenzy of 1990s New York, the story dives into a relationship that was once everywhere: photographed relentlessly, analyzed endlessly, and mythologized almost instantly.
The series traces the couple’s courtship, their glamorous public life, and the tension that simmered beneath the surface.
Think grainy paparazzi photos, whispered arguments outside Manhattan restaurants, and the kind of minimalist, Calvin Klein-inspired looks that continue to shape fashion decades later.
But what sets this romance apart from all the others?
For one, it’s rooted in real life — and from the very first scene, it unfolds under a shadow. The series opens with the couple boarding a plane, an ominous reminder that this particular love story is doomed from the very beginning.
The series promises a ‘tumultuous’ retelling of JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette’s feverish 1990s romance and very public unraveling — and judging by the internet’s reaction, that might be the understatement of the year.
The drama stars Sarah Pidgeon as Carolyn and Paul Anthony Kelly as John Jr., while Naomi Watts steps into the pearls of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and Grace Gummer plays Caroline Kennedy.

Grounding the story firmly in ’90s Manhattan glamour, Alessandro Nivola appears as fashion titan Calvin Klein, and Dree Hemingway is Daryl Hannah, one of Kennedy Jr.’s former flames.
Opinions may differ, but there’s one thing critics and fans agree on: Sarah Pidgeon ‘carries the entire show’ on her impossibly chic shoulders, perfectly capturing Carolyn’s famous enigmatic essence.
Where (and when) to watch
Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, produced by Ryan Murphy, premiered on February 12, 2026, on FX and Hulu.
The first three episodes dropped together at launch, with the remaining instalments streaming weekly.
Love it, hate it, or hate-watch it — either way, we can’t seem to look away.
Watch the gripping trailer for Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette below…
Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette is available to watch FX and Hulu.
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