
WHATS WRONG WITH NATE EUPHORIA FREE
HE just needs to adopt Jule's free spirit and let himself be more humane. Nate needs to find someone he can be openly vulnerable with and form an emotional connection with, as he has proven he can be with ShyGuy118. And this honesty demands more than a quick line, "Everything I shared with you was true." Furthermore, he must be candid with his feelings for Jules and any love interest that comes his way in the third season. Regardless, that is not enough - Nate must forgive his father for being the cause of his distorted worldview, cheating on his mother, and wrecking their family with his secret affairs. In the season 2 finale, after being the object of mockery in Lexi's play, Nate puts his Dad behind bars. Discovering his father, who raised him to be strong and masculine, had a life completely different from what and whom he projected himself to be, completely upended Nate's childhood innocence and distorted his worldview. But we soon realize all of this is a facade and an attempt to repress the childhood trauma he experienced from accidentally stumbling upon his Dad's sex tapes when he was a child. In the second episode, we see Nate as the guy that has it all: a guy who became a gym rat at the age of six, who leads his football team to multiple victories, enjoys the chants and cheers of crowds a guy with a specific taste in girls would get his attention. We get glimpses of a version of him that compliments his character in the pilot yet simultaneously contradicts it. However, in Episode 2, "stuntin like my daddy," Nate's childhood is narrated in an engaging exposition.


Already it seems he will follow the stereotypical jock bully typical in high school dramas. Nate made his first appearance in Euphoria's pilot, where he harassed and attempted to intimidate Jules (Hunter Schafer) for being a newcomer and, of course, trans, s he bellows in a derogatory tone, "I know what you are." With this, the premise for Nate's character is set in stone.
