Faking It with Ariel and Morgan Podcast Por Ariel Leigh Cohen & Morgan Smith arte de portada

Faking It with Ariel and Morgan

Faking It with Ariel and Morgan

De: Ariel Leigh Cohen & Morgan Smith
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Faking It with Ariel and Morgan is the podcast that strips down the mystery of Hollywood’s most private moments, and makes you laugh while doing it. Hosted by Intimacy Coordinators Ariel Leigh Cohen and Morgan Smith, each episode dives into the world of film sets, sex scenes, and all the awkward, hilarious, and surprisingly tender stories that come with them.

From behind-the-scenes Hollywood secrets to spicy movie moments, we’re here to answer the questions you didn’t even know you had: How do actors fake it? What really happens under the covers on set? And what the actors are really wearing?

Expect a mix of comedy, storytelling, and real talk about intimacy, relationships, filmmaking, and the art of pretending. If you’re into funny film podcasts, behind-the-scenes stories, acting tips, NSFW comedy, and Hollywood chaos, you’ve just found your new obsession.

Subscribe now and stay real, Fakers.

© 2026 Faking It with Ariel and Morgan
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Episodios
  • 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.

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    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.

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    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. patreon.com/FakingItThePod
    📱 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

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe to Faking It on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.

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

    Más Menos
    33 m
  • Is This Allowed? | Why “The Handmaiden” Rewrites Sapphic Sex on Screen
    Jan 21 2026

    This episode is a love letter to immaculate choreography, devastating eye contact, and sapphic tension that could power a small city.

    Ariel and Morgan dive into the two iconic intimacy scenes from Park Chan-wook’s The Handmaiden: with scenes so explicit, so intentional, and so beautifully constructed that they still feel transgressive nearly a decade later. Set during Japan’s occupation of Korea in the 1930s, the film takes familiar sapphic tropes and flips them inside out, using intimacy as liberation rather than spectacle.

    They break down why these scenes work on every level:

    • How the film weaponizes restraint, pacing, and POV to build erotic tension
    • Why a simple hand-grip deserves its own IMDb credit
    • How sapphic sex is framed as joy, discovery, and mutual power, not performance
    • And why this might be one of the best examples of the female gaze in modern cinema

    They also unpack the behind-the-scenes approach to filming the intimacy, the deliberate removal of the male gaze, and why The Handmaiden remains a gold standard for what intimate storytelling can look like when trust and intention lead the way.

    It’s sexy, funny, deeply thoughtful, and a reminder that sometimes the most radical thing a movie can do is let women actually enjoy each other.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers 41:47 to 46:56 and 1:39:53 to 1:44:00. We cut around the clip, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

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

    Credits — The Handmaiden (2016)

    Director: Park Chan-wook
    Writers: Park Chan-wook; Chung Seo-kyung
    Based on the novel: Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
    Producers: Park Chan-wook; Syd Lim
    Actors (featured): Kim Min-hee as Lady Hideko, Kim Tae-ri as Sook-hee
    © 2016 Moho Film / Yong Film. 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. patreon.com/FakingItThePod
    📱 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

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe to Faking It on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.

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

    Más Menos
    34 m
  • All Props, No Process | Why “Fifty Shades of Grey” Gets BDSM Wrong
    Jan 7 2026

    We’re kicking off the new year by finally stepping into the Red Room and immediately asking some hard questions.

    In this episode, Ariel and Morgan break down the infamous first Red Room scene from Fifty Shades of Grey, a film that promised mainstream BDSM and delivered… confusion, questionable choreography, and music doing most of the emotional heavy lifting.

    New year, new structure. For 2026, they cut straight to the craft: power dynamics, consent, and why the scene ultimately falls flat.

    They get into it all:

    • Why the Red Room reads more like spectacle than negotiated intimacy
    • How the film confuses dominance with control and intensity with compatibility
    • How music, montage, and production design work overtime to create heat that isn’t really there
    • What a more grounded, informed version of this scene could have looked like
    • And why Christian Grey seems more turned on by interior design than intimacy

    This episode isn’t about kink-shaming. It’s about unpacking why a movie that centered BDSM failed to show how consent, agency, and erotic tension actually function in practice. It’s part critique, part craft analysis, and part public service announcement for anyone who thinks mood lighting counts as communication.

    Want to watch along? Our reaction covers 1:22:10–1:29:34. We cut around the clip, so it won’t sync perfectly, but you’ll absolutely get the point.

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

    Credits — Fifty Shades of Grey

    Director: Sam Taylor-Johnson
    Writer (Screenplay): Kelly Marcel
    Writer (Novel): E. L. James
    Producers: Michael De Luca; Dana Brunetti; E. L. James
    Actors (featured): Dakota Johnson; Jamie Dornan
    © 2015 Focus Features / Trigger Street Productions / Michael De Luca Productions. 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. patreon.com/FakingItThePod
    📱 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

    🎧 Subscribe for Free: Never miss an episode! Subscribe to Faking It on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app.

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

    Más Menos
    39 m
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