Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


'Bonding' Season 2 is a good crash course in BDSM for curious couples

This Valentine's Day, give them the gift of kink
 By 
Jess Joho
Mashable Image
Jess Joho
Jess is an LA-based culture critic who covers intimacy in the digital age, from sex and relationship to weed and all media (tv, games, film, the web). Previously associate editor at Kill Screen, you can also find her words on Vice, The Atlantic, Rolling Stone, Vox, and others. She is a Brazilian-Swiss American immigrant with a love for all things weird and magical.
Read Full Bio
 on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.
'Bonding' Season 2 is a good crash course in BDSM for curious couples
"Bonding" Season 2 is the BDSM conversation starter you need.Credit: netflix

Watch of the Week

Mashable's entertainment team picks our Watch of the Week, TV shows and movies that you absolutely must add to your list.


Like every holiday over the past year, Valentine's Day will need to be a little different this time around (unless you want to be a public health risk, I guess). One of the biggest annual occasions for a date night out on the town will most likely be spent with your partner on the same couch you've both been watching Netflix from every night since March.

But while it can't replace the usual Valentines Day dinner, one Netflix show could be the inspiration couples needed to explore new forms of intimacy from the safety of their own homes.

Season 2 ofBonding, released Jan. 27, continues the story of Tiff, a part-time professional dominatrix in NYC, and her best friend Pete, an aspiring comedian who falls into becoming her bodyguard/assistant. While far from a perfect representation of either the BDSM or sex worker communities (more on that later),Bonding is the kind of casual, mainstream, and newbie-friendly introduction to kink that can serve as the conversation-starter for couples who are curious, but just don't know where to start.

Despite its marketing (and, honestly, a good portion of Season 1), the new episodes ofBonding differ from other mainstream media representations of BDSM by mostly avoiding playing the latex and whips of kink for cheap laughs or shock value. From yourFifty Shades of Greys to your Mr. Slaves onSouth Park, normies have been peddling narrow, unhealthy, and demeaning misrepresentations of BDSM that not only perpetuate stigma, but also turn people off from considering the myriad alternatives to vanilla sex they'd probably enjoy trying.

A lot of folks see the chains, whips, and ball gags that mainstream media paints as synonymous with all kink and assume, "Well, none of that does it for me." But what these depictions fail to communicate to audiences is just how wide a spectrum of sexual proclivities are encompassed within BDSM, roleplay, and kink — many of which are what some might consider less "intense" than all that. Rarely does any kink journey start in a playroom lined with walls of intimidating sadomasochistic equipment. While there's nothing wrong with being into that style of BDSM, plenty of long-term kinksters find that none of those dynamics or fetishes are their thing either.

Worse, the miseducation spread by such narrow and irresponsible media depictions of kink lead the public to not even realize that some more "mainstream" acts — like choking, spanking, or even certain types of dirty talk — are, in fact, BDSM, and should always be practiced with the safety measures established by the BDSM community to ensure everyone's consent and well-being.

Bonding Season 2 stands out for focusing far less on the leather of it all, and far more on the underlying emotional connection, vulnerability, communication, and boundary-setting.

Bonding Season 2 stands out for focusing far less on the leather of it all, and far more on the underlying emotional connection, vulnerability, communication, and boundary-setting that can make ethical BDSM an incredible vehicle for deepening relationships.

Now, before I extol the virtues of Season 2 too much, I need to address the glaring flaws with Season 1 — which was guilty of a lot of those mistakes. During its release back in 2019,Bonding waspretty widely panned by the very communities it claimed to represent, withsex workers and kinksters balking at its perpetuation of harmful myths, kink-shaming humor, unrealistic portrayals, and failure to address any of the discrimination sex workers face.

From the jump, the first episode establishes the show's entire premise on a flagrant disregard for consent, as Mistress May (Tiff's dominatrix persona) essentially tricks and pressures her friend Pete into becoming part of the world of dungeon play. You can't claim to be a sex-positive show if your story violates the very pillars of kink and professional BDSM, reducing sex work and roleplay to just some fun kooky comedic circumstances.

Mashable Top Stories
Stay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.
Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletter
By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to ourTerms of Use andPrivacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up!

Related Video: The horniest TV moments from 2020

Bonding creator Rightor Doyle, who loosely based the show on his own real-life experiences as the assistant to a dominatrix friend, clearly took those criticisms of the first season to heart. Season 2added Olivia Troy, who is a BDSM professional, writer, producer, and intimacy coordinator, to the writer's room. To no one's surprise, including more people with some of the lived experiences a fictional narrative is wading into really does matter.

It's exactly in the stark juxtaposition between Seasons 1 and 2 that you can see the difference between a superficial understanding of BDSM, and the more complex and grounded realities of actually practicing it. It's evident from minute one of the second season, when Tiff is reprimanded by her dominatrix mentor Mistress Mira, who lists all the egregious violations and wrongdoings Tiff committed — essentially echoing much of the criticism the show faced in 2019.

It isn't the usual lampshading you see from other TV shows, which seem to think that by calling out the problematic tropes they're perpetuating, it gives them a free pass to keep using them. Instead, reckoning with the consequences of irresponsible BDSM and other emotional complexities embedded in kink are central to Season 2's plot.

Mistress Mira forces Tiff to take a Dominatrix 101 course, giving both the character and the viewers one of the most nuanced educations in what it means to be a dominant and a submissive ever aired on TV. Meanwhile, Pete's relationship with his boyfriend shows the more organic ways roleplay can happen between partners in a non-professional setting. Sure, some of their scenes are at a BDSM leather bar. But most occur in private spaces.

Crucially,Bonding gives equal weight to showing toe-sucking as a tender act of appreciation between them as it does to scenes where a partner expressesnotbeing comfortable with a certain kink. A lot of the time, Pete is both simultaneously excited and disgusted by some of the stuff he realizes gets him off. He struggles to unpack exactly what kind of internalized homophobia is at play, for example, in his desire to have sex with his closeted boyfriend's straight bro alter ego.

Mashable Image
I have a foot phobia, but even I thought this scene was sweet.Credit: netflix

That's another thing about kinkBonding gets right that other mainstream media doesn't: When you open yourself up to the depths of your unconscious desires — especially with a partner — some unsavory stuff is bound to come up. That doesn't mean BDSM is bad for you or inherently dangerous or particularly depraved. It just means everyone's sexuality is complicated, and some are more ready than others to dive into both the good and not-so-good of unraveling it. Also, a lot of good can come from facing the repressed parts of ourselves in emotionally safe environments.

In the show, the intimacy exchanged through roleplay and BDSM isn't presented as just a bunch of hardcore porn scenes. There are probably fewer raunchy sex scenes inBonding Season 2 than there are inBridgerton. In place of the more visually graphic, though, it prioritizes the sensuality of vulnerable trust, delicate power dynamics, and emotional stakes embedded in BDSM.

Despite being leaps and bounds better than its first season,Bonding Season 2 is far from perfect. I can't personally speak to how successful or not it is at addressing all the critiques from various sex workers' perspectives. It does, at least, make discriminatory laws likeFOSTA-SESTA a central plot point. The craftsmanship of professional sex work, and the humanity of the people who are great at is, is certainly also more centralized. But those are all pretty low bars to clear. And when a straight, cis, well-off white girl is the main protagonist in a story about sex work, you inevitably leave out a lot of experiences that are integral to the backbone of that community.

Of course, you should never treat any fictional TV show's version of sex education as anything but a starting point at most.Bonding will by no means teach novices what all they need to know in order to safely practice BDSM and kink. But often, just broaching the topic of wanting to try out something new in the bedroom is a huge obstacle for couples' sexual exploration.Bonding is a great vehicle for conversations about what you hypothetically might be into or not into. Just be sure to thendo more research and start off slow before actually bringing those hypotheticals into the bedroom.

Bonding Season 2 can't replace all the real-world romantic experiences we'll miss out on this Valentine's Day. But if you give it a shot, it could very well give you and your partner a whole new world to explore during a pandemic, all from the safety of your bedroom.

Bonding Season 2 is streaming nowon Netflix.

TopicsNetflix

Mashable Image
Jess Joho

Jess is an LA-based culture critic who covers intimacy in the digital age, from sex and relationship to weed and all media (tv, games, film, the web). Previously associate editor at Kill Screen, you can also find her words on Vice, The Atlantic, Rolling Stone, Vox, and others. She is a Brazilian-Swiss American immigrant with a love for all things weird and magical.

Mashable Potato

More from Watch of the Week
'Clean Slate' review: Norman Lear and Laverne Cox team up for a fresh twist on a classic sitcom formula
Trans representation done with grace and humor comes to Prime Video.
Laverne Cox stars as Desiree Slate in "Clean Slate."
Laverne Cox stars as Desiree Slate in "Clean Slate."





Recommended For You

How romcoms made kink mainstream
'Secretary' ran so that 'Babygirl' and 'Pillion' could walk.
A split screen shows an image of Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary (left) and Dakota Johnson (right; caption reads: "the evolution of the dom-com"
A split screen shows an image of Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary (left) and Dakota Johnson (right; caption reads: "the evolution of the dom-com"

'The Pitt' Season 2: Everything you need to remember from Season 1
Dr. Robby, Langdon, Dana, Crash, and Louie are back. But what else?
The cast of "The Pitt" looks concerned.
The cast of "The Pitt" looks concerned.

The Green brothers are turning Crash Course production company into a nonprofit
"Trust in information and access to education matter more than ever."
Hank and John Green in front of a white background, smiling at the camera.
Hank and John Green in front of a white background, smiling at the camera.

An asteroid near Earth could become a temporary moon, then a crash risk
Another mini moon, but this one's different.
An artist's rendering of a near-Earth asteroid
An artist's rendering of a near-Earth asteroid

More in Entertainment
How to watch the 2026 Six Nations online for free
Live stream every fixture from this electric competition without spending anything.
France's full-back Thomas Ramos catches the ball
France's full-back Thomas Ramos catches the ball

How to watch Wales vs. France online for free
Live stream all the action from the 2026 Six Nations without spending anything.
 Louis Bielle-Biarrey of France looks on
 Louis Bielle-Biarrey of France looks on

How to watch the T20 World Cup 2026 online for free
Live stream all the action from India and Sri Lanka without spending anything.
Mohammed Siraj of India
Mohammed Siraj of India

How to watch Canada vs. France in men's ice hockey online for free
Live stream all the action from the PalaItalia and Fiera Milano from anywhere in the world.
Ice hockey players
Ice hockey players

How to watch the 2026 winter sports bobsleigh online for free
Live stream the battle for medals from anywhere in the world.
Bobsled on track
Bobsled on track

Trending on Mashable
NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for February 15, 2026
Everything you need to solve 'Connections' #980.
Connections game on a smartphone
Connections game on a smartphone

Wordle today: Answer, hints for February 15, 2026
Here are some tips and tricks to help you find the answer to "Wordle" #1702.
Wordle game on a smartphone
Wordle game on a smartphone

How to watch India vs. Pakistan in the 2026 T20 World Cup online for free
Live stream all the action from the R. Premadasa Cricket Stadium without spending anything.
Ishan Kishan and Jasprit Bumrah of India embrace
Ishan Kishan and Jasprit Bumrah of India embrace


NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for February 14, 2026
Everything you need to solve 'Connections' #979.
Connections game on a smartphone
Connections game on a smartphone
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to ourTerms of Use andPrivacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp