As I don't have access to
You Me Here, I'm getting curious.
Let me see if I got this right: a husband hires a prostitute, &, when he confesses, his wife hires the prostitute as well. Feelings develop, so they continue hiring the prostitute.
Does the central prostitute drop all other clients? or is the couple wealthy enough to support her in the manner to which she's accustomed? or is "true love" somehow redeeming her?
As
Variety notes, it's about a "three-way sexual affair." Naturally, "romance" appears a couple of times, yet not "love," though the situation's also called "a three-way romantic
relationship." (To be fair, they also called the show "twisted.")
While I find it pleasant when sex-trade workers receive popular support for their career choices, I get the feeling that most viewers aren't so progressive, instead being rather voyeuristic about the idea of sex with a prostitute -- and, for that matter, nonmonogamy.
It sorta sounds like a lightened-up version of
The Rebellion of Yale Marratt (published 1964), or a "safe"
The Sex Monster (1999, still makes me laugh).
Given a chance, I'll watch it, but I have yet to see where it goes particularly poly.