Enjoying the show? Support our mission and help keep the content coming by buying us a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/deepdivepodcastOn paper, the show Love Con Revenge should have been an absolute global smash hit. It had the perfect recipe: a hero we all knew and loved (Cecilie Fjelhøy from The Tinder Swindler), a clear mission for justice, and the powerful, universally loved idea of turning a victim into an adventurer. Yet, the series, meant to be the epic follow-up to the Netflix phenomenon, completely fell flat, disappointing critics and audiences alike.
This episode breaks down the show's fatal flaws and reveals the unwritten, non-negotiable golden rules of the modern true crime genre.
The cracks appeared almost immediately, starting with repetitive, stretched-thin pacing that sapped all dramatic tension. However, the true failure lay in the show's desperate need to manufacture drama. The series felt profoundly staged. Conversations seemed scripted, the investigation felt "cooked up for the cameras," and big confrontations were overtly orchestrated. This theatricality completely broke the illusion of authenticity—the one thing the true crime genre lives and dies on. Audiences weren't just bored; they were actively turned off by how fake it all seemed.
We zoom out to ask a bigger question: What do we, the audience, truly want from stories about revenge? We explore the complex double standard often seen in TV, where we cheer on moments of emotional confrontation—but only when they feel raw and earned. The show's core issue, as one commenter pointed out, was that it felt like a performance of getting justice, not the real thing.
When revenge feels scripted and produced, it rings hollow; it is not satisfying. This critical failure teaches us the three ironclad rules for this type of television:
The Stakes Must Feel Real: We have to genuinely believe the subjects are in danger and the risks are high.
The Emotions Must Be Genuine: The second the dialogue feels scripted or unnatural, the audience is out.
Justice Must Be Earned: Real satisfaction comes from watching someone overcome a true challenge, not a fake one cooked up by a production team.
Love Con Revenge tripped right over the fine line between dramatizing a true story and creating something that felt deceptive. The idea—a survivor taking her power back and fighting for others—was brilliant. But the execution failed to deliver the one thing that matters most: authenticity.
Ultimately, the failure of this sequel leaves us with a lingering question for the entire genre we're obsessed with: As an audience, we demand stories that are both true and entertaining. In trying to achieve that perfect balance, where do the creators of these shows draw the line between telling a powerful story and merely making one up?