Amazon’s new series ‘Modern Love’ hosts panel about romance on screen

Romance in New York City has been the source material for a myriad of popular stories in film and television throughout the years.

Amazon’s newest series Modern Love, based around the New York Times column of the same name, is attempting to turn this format on its head as it showcases love and all the unique forms it can come in. This past Friday, to celebrate the new series, Amazon Fire TV set up the “Museum of Modern Love” in New York, with sections dedicated to each episode’s story, accompanied by a panel to discuss the show itself. In attendance was Sex and the City author Candace Bushnell, founder/CEO of the dating app Hinge, Justin McLeod, and host of the pop culture podcast ‘Las Culturistas,’ Matt Rogers, who all discussed love on screen and how it has evolved.

“What you used to see in film and television was a handsome white male lead in a heterosexual relationship with a gorgeous female lead, and that was what we saw,” Rogers said. “What I appreciate about television now is that we see the open up. Not everyone is straight, not everyone is white, not everyone is in a traditional situation.”

“As we’re in this Golden Age of television and as we’re seeing that explored, we’re seeing more of the honest aspects of relationships.”

McLeod, who has an episode of ‘Modern Love’ based on his own experience, spoke on how difficult romance can be to capture.

“The traditional narrative that we all see in these romantic comedies and TV shows is just very linear, and it’s just not that,” he explained.

“Seeing how complex and rich it is, [my] Modern Love episode, even still the story behind it is like 10,000 times more complex.”

Bushnell, one of the original curators behind modern New York romance on screen, said she’s happy to see the genre open up to all forms of relationships.

“Most entertainment for women, we are so forced into that romantic trope. As a woman I try to write so many things where the happy ending is not a guy and it’s almost impossible,” she said.

“As a straight woman that you’re always up against is a relentless, relentless insistence on this happy ending finding a guy, when in reality today in terms of finding a guy I think that women have to really think twice about it because its very easy for women to waste a lots of their time and energy and end up with nothing.”

“I think its much more open for us to see many many different varieties of relationships.”

Modern Love premieres October 18th on Prime Video.

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