• No Lube, No Warning | Spilling the Beans on the Intimacy of “Brokeback Mountain”
    May 6 2026

    This episode is sponsored by: taking your time.

    Ariel and Morgan are diving into Brokeback Mountain: the film that changed queer representation forever… and also left us with a lot of questions about how these scenes actually function.

    From the infamous first tent scene to the long-awaited reunion, we’re breaking down what’s working, what’s not, and why these moments feel so tense without ever fully landing.

    They get into it all:

    • The reality of prep, lubrication, and pacing (and what’s missing here)
    • How tension overtakes intimacy and why that leaves the scenes feeling incomplete
    • The difference between awkwardness that serves the story vs. awkwardness that comes from unclear choreography
    • How the intimacy goes from zero to 100… and tends to stay there forever

    Plus: beans, spit logistics, near broken noses, and a very real conversation about how these scenes would be approached differently today with an intimacy coordinator.

    We also zoom out to talk about the film’s massive cultural impact, the historical context it exists in, and why representation matters, even when the intimacy itself needs room for growth.

    Justice for lube. That’s all we’re saying.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers the Tent scene: 00:27:30, the Rasslin' scene: 00:32:51, and the Reunion scene: 01:03:07. We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN

    Director: Ang Lee
    Writers: Larry McMurtry; Diana Ossana
    Source Material: Based on the short story by Annie Proulx
    Producers: Diana Ossana; James Schamus
    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Heath Ledger; Jake Gyllenhaal; Michelle Williams; Randy Quaid
    © 2005 Focus Features / River Road Entertainment / Good Machine. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

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    40 mins
  • Her Throbbing Labia | Hormones Gone Rogue in "PEN15"
    Apr 22 2026

    This one is so real it hurts.

    Ariel and Morgan dive into PEN15 (Season 1, Episode 3: “Ojichan”). From the very first moment of “wait… what is happening to my body?” to the full spiral of can’t-stop-won’t-stop self-discovery, this episode captures the chaos, confusion, and intensity of discovering desire with absolutely no roadmap.

    They get into it all:

    • The painfully accurate portrayal of first arousal: awkward, obsessive, and completely all-consuming
    • Why casting adult actors as teens might allow the show to explore this safely without crossing ethical lines
    • The way PEN15 captures the feeling of “I must be the only one experiencing this”
    • How shame, secrecy, and silence around sex education shape those early experiences

    It’s cringey. It’s deeply familiar. And it turns one of the most private human experiences into comedy gold.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers Maya's first discovery (00:00:41), the Closet/Walkman scene (00:09:22), and the Classroom montage (00:04:14) We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    👉 Before you say anything - yes, Ariel mispronounced Maya Erskine’s last name. We know. We’re sorry. We love her.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — PEN15 (S1E3 “Ojichan”)
    Creators: Maya Erskine; Anna Konkle; Sam Zvibleman
    Director: Daniel Gray Longino
    Writers: Maya Erskine; Anna Konkle; Sam Zvibleman
    Producers: Maya Erskine; Anna Konkle; Sam Zvibleman
    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Maya Erskine; Anna Konkle
    © 2019 Hulu / Lonely Island Classics, Odenkirk Provissiero Entertainment,
    AwesomenessTV. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

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    40 mins
  • Hardcore Vanilla | The Unhinged Sex Scenes of "Buffy The Vampire Slayer" Explained
    Apr 8 2026

    👉 BIG OLD SPOILERS AHEAD! YOU'VE BEEN WARNED!

    The Buffy reboot/reimagining isn't happening for now. We are devastated. So naturally, we need to talk about Buffy and Spike in season 6.

    Ariel and Morgan are finally diving into Buffy the Vampire Slayer where things are darker, messier, and include a whole lot more property damage 👀.

    From literally breaking a house down during sex to invisible hookups to whatever the hell is happening on that balcony… they have thoughts.

    They get into it all:

    • The iconic Buffy/Spike “Smashed” scene: why it’s so hot and makes zero logistical sense
    • How the show tries to portray Buffy’s rock bottom through sex (and where it succeeds vs. fails)
    • The invisibility scene as a surprisingly perfect example of how simulated sex actually works on set
    • Why the show keeps saying Buffy and Spike are kinky… while showing the most vanilla execution imaginable
    • The difference between toxic intimacy vs. BDSM, and why those are not the same thing

    Plus: pants continuity crimes, mystery penetration logistics, and a full breakdown of our personal histories with Spuffy.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers "Smashed” (House scene): ~00:39:39, “Gone” (Invisibility scene): ~00:28:08, and “Dead Things” (Balcony scene): ~00:20:25 We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER
    Creators: Joss Whedon

    “Smashed” (Season 6, Episode 9)
    Director: Turi Meyer
    Writers: Drew Z. Greenberg; Rebecca Rand Kirshner; Steven S. DeKnight

    “Gone” (Season 6, Episode 11)
    Director: David Fury
    Writers: David Fury; Rebecca Rand Kirshner; Steven S. DeKnight

    “Dead Things” (Season 6, Episode 13)
    Director: James A. Contner
    Writers: Steven S. DeKnight; Rebecca Rand Kirshner; Drew Z. Greenberg

    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Sarah Michelle Gellar; James Marsters; Nicholas Brendon; Emma Caulfield; Alyson Hannigan
    © 1997–2003 Mutant Enemy, Inc. / 20th Century Fox Television. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

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    44 mins
  • Orgasm Against The Machine | Sci-Fi, Stripteases, and Sex in “Barbarella”
    Mar 25 2026

    Get ready for one of the most bizarre and brazen films of a generation.

    In this episode, Ariel and Morgan travel back to 1968’s sci-fi cult classic Barbarella — a movie where Jane Fonda strips out of a spacesuit in zero gravity and later defeats a villain using… an orgasm machine.

    Yes. Really.

    The hosts break down how the film uses erotic spectacle, camp, and absurdity to create scenes that are both wildly objectifying and oddly revolutionary for their time.

    They get into it all:

    • How the famous zero-gravity striptease opening uses choreography, framing, and floating credits to tease and shock the audience
    • Why the “Excessive Machine” scene was extremely bold for mainstream cinema in 1968
    • Fascinating power dynamics where the villain weaponizes pleasure and the hero literally sets the situation on fire.
    • Why early Hollywood often treated sex as visual spectacle first and human experience second

    It’s campy. It’s chaotic. And somehow still iconic.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers the opening striptease (0:00:00) and the excessive machine scene (Time Code: ~1:15:00). We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — Barbarella
    Director: Roger Vadim
    Writers: Terry Southern; Roger Vadim; Claude Brulé; Vittorio Bonicelli
    Source Material: Based on the comic Barbarella by Jean-Claude Forest
    Producer: Dino De Laurentiis
    Actors: Jane Fonda; Milo O’Shea
    © 1968 Dino De Laurentiis Cinematografica / Paramount Pictures. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

    Show More Show Less
    38 mins
  • Thrown in the Deep End | Brooke M. Haney Dives Into "Booksmart"
    Mar 11 2026

    This one’s about awkward first times — featuring skinny jeans, bad geometry, and absolutely zero game.

    Ariel and Morgan sit down with intimacy coordinator and author Brooke M. Haney to break down the chaotic, vulnerable, and surprisingly tender hookup scenes from Booksmart: a film that proves intimacy on screen doesn’t have to be polished to be powerful.

    They get into it all:

    • Why awkward intimacy can still be choreographed and is not an excuse to skip process
    • The storytelling power of wardrobe choices, body language, and messy logistics (yes, including skinny jeans and sneakers)
    • And why representation of imperfect queer intimacy matters when so many people learn about sex from movies

    It’s thoughtful, nerdy, hilarious, including shop talk from kit items and choreography language to the very real production challenges of filming intimacy on beaches, in pools, and under rapidly disappearing sunlight.

    Buy Brooke's book "A History of Intimacy Professionals in Entertainment" Here!

    Buy Brooke's book "The Intimacy Coordinator's Guidebook" Here!

    Listen to us on the podcast "Happier in Hollywood" Here!

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers the pool sequence (~1:04:00) and the bathroom hookup scene (Time Code: 1:14:42–1:18:00). We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — Booksmart (2019)

    Director: Olivia Wilde
    Writers: Emily Halpern; Sarah Haskins; Susanna Fogel; Katie Silberman
    Producers: Megan Ellison; Jessica Elbaum; Katie Silberman...
    Actors: Kaitlyn Dever; Diana Silvers; Victoria Ruesga
    Studio: Annapurna Pictures / Gloria Sanchez Productions
    © 2019 Annapurna Pictures. All rights reserved.

    ------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • From Nightmare to Nirvana | "Insecure" Sex Scenes Have The Range
    Feb 25 2026

    This week we’re diving into Insecure — and honestly? The range.

    Morgan introduces Ariel (who has never seen the show 👀) to two wildly different intimacy moments from Season 4: one chaotic, jealousy-fueled nightmare fantasy and one slow-burn reunion that might be one of the most emotionally satisfying TV hookups ever.

    We break down:

    • How a comedic sex scene can be intentionally not realistic — and why that works
    • “Pop the tags” and the audacity of imagining such a thing
    • The crackling eye contact, breath work, and micro-choices that make the reunion scene explode
    • Tender Black love on screen and why we don’t see enough of it
    • The blink-and-you-miss-it position change that tells you exactly who’s in control

    This episode is funny, nerdy, and unexpectedly emotional; it's a perfect example of how a show can pull off slapstick fantasy and deeply romantic intimacy in the same breath.

    Listen to the episode of the Indie Film Podcast where we were interviewed behind the scenes HERE.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers Episode 4: Lowkey Feelin' Myself (Time Code: 11:53), Episode 8: Lowkey Happy (Time Code: 25:17). We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — Insecure (Season 4)

    Creators: Issa Rae; Larry Wilmore/ Showrunner: Prentice Penny

    Episode 4x01 “Lowkey Feelin’ Myself”
    Director: Kevin Bray
    Writer: Issa Rae
    Intimacy Coordinator: Mia Schachter
    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Issa Rae; Jay Ellis; Christina Elmore

    Episode 4x08 “Lowkey Happy”
    Director: Kevin Bray
    Writer: Natasha Rothwell
    Intimacy Coordinator: None
    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Issa Rae; Jay Ellis
    © 2016–2021 HBO Entertainment / Issa Rae Productions / 3 Arts Entertainment. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

    Show More Show Less
    36 mins
  • Three ICs Walk Into a Podcast | Chala Hunter Talks "Heated Rivalry", Queer Joy & The Craft of Intimacy
    Feb 11 2026

    This one’s a BIG ONE.

    Ariel and Morgan sit down with intimacy coordinator Chala Hunter, the creative force behind the intimacy work in Heated Rivalry, for a deep dive into how some of the most talked-about scenes on TV actually get made.

    From the early days of learning the job during the #MeToo shift to stepping onto a set packed with hockey vibes, choreography, and high emotional stakes, Chala pulls back the curtain on what it actually takes to build intimacy that feels grounded, safe, and electric.

    They get into it all:

    • How she found her way into intimacy coordination when the field was still being defined
    • Why she prioritizes trust, play, and actor agency over rigid choreography
    • How Heated Rivalry balanced tenderness, heat, and authenticity without losing its heart
    • Why representation doesn’t have to feel “authentic to everyone” to still be meaningful
    • And what happens when three intimacy coordinators get together and the nerding starts before the mics are even warm

    It’s insightful, funny, incredibly revealing, and a rare behind-the-scenes look at the craft from someone doing the work at the highest level.

    This one feels like a milestone episode.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers Episode 4: Rose (Time Code: 21:07 - 24:29), Episode 6: The Cottage (Time Codes: 20:15 - 22:37 & 32:34-33:27). We cut around the clips, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    CREDITS — Heated Rivalry

    Director: Jacob Tierney
    Executive Producer: Brendan Brady
    Source Material: Based on the novel Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid
    Intimacy Coordinator (Interview Guest): Chala Hunter
    Actors (featured in discussed scenes): Hudson Williams; Connor Storrie
    © Crave / Canadian Production Partners. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • Church, But Make It Gay | Why "She’s Gotta Have It" Feels Like a Religious Experience
    Feb 4 2026

    Some shows open quietly. Season 2 of "She’s Gotta Have It" opens with a bang — literally.

    In this episode, Ariel and Morgan break down the iconic simulated sex montage from Season 2, Episode 1 of She’s Gotta Have It, focusing on how lighting, space, and who’s in control radically reshape how intimacy is experienced and understood onscreen.

    They get into it all:

    • How Spike Lee uses daylight vs candlelight to reflect different emotional states
    • Why this scene feels devotional rather than voyeuristic
    • How Nola’s relationship with Opal marks a shift from exploration to embodiment
    • How choreography, hair, and stillness do as much storytelling as movement
    • And why this scene quietly sets a new bar for how queer Black intimacy is filmed on television

    They also discuss the evolution from the 1986 film to the Netflix series, what it means to reclaim Nola Darling’s story through a more expansive lens, and why sexually liberated queer Black women are still so rarely given this level of care onscreen.

    It’s reverent, gorgeous, deeply nerdy, and a reminder that intimacy doesn’t have to escalate to be electric.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers 1:22:10–1:29:34 of the TV show episode and 39:27-40:27 of the movie. We cut around the clip, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

    -----------------------------------------

    Credits — She’s Gotta Have It (Season 2, Episode 1: “#IMFEELINGMYFEELINGS”)

    Director: Spike Lee
    Writers: Cinqué Lee; Joie Lee; Spike Lee
    Based on the film: She’s Gotta Have It (1986), written and directed by Spike Lee
    Producers: Spike Lee; Win Rosenfeld; Charlie Corwin
    Actors (featured): DeWanda Wise; Ilfenesh Hadera
    © 2019 Netflix / 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks. All rights reserved.

    Credits — She’s Gotta Have It (1986)

    Director: Spike Lee
    Writer: Spike Lee
    Producers: Spike Lee; Monty Ross
    Actors (selected): Tracy Camilla Johns; Tommy Redmond Hicks; John Canada Terrell; Steve White; Spike Lee
    © 1986 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks. All rights reserved.

    -----------------------------------------

    Support the show

    🔗 Connect & Support the Show

    👀 Watch the Video Version: See our reactions! The video podcast is available on Spotify and YouTube.
    💌 Suggest a Scene & Get Bonuses: Join our Patreon to request movies for us to break down and access exclusive bonus episodes HERE!
    📱 Follow Us for Chaos: Get behind-the-scenes content and updates on Instagram @FakingItThePod
    🌐 Visit Our Website: Find all our links and more at FakingItThePod.com
    🎶Theme Song is Faking It by Mike Goetz

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe on your favorite podcast app.

    💬 Review Us: Love the show? Give us 5 stars! It helps other listeners find us.

    Stay real, Fakers!

    Legal Disclaimer

    The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are our own. This episode is for entertainment and educational purposes only. Nothing here is intended to defame, slander, or infringe upon any individual or entity. All trademarks and copyrights remain the property of their respective owners.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins