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Sunday, May 17, 2026

How racy IS Rivals season two? All the raunchy scenes unpacked

Season two of Rivals has launched on Disney+, with producers ensuring they maintain their status as the ‘naughtiest show on TV’.

While just three of the 12 episodes have been released as of yet, there is no shortage of racy scenes, with the characters wasting no time stripping off and indulging in acts of passion. 

Just eight minutes into the first episode and viewers are confronted with the sight of two flaccid penises as brothers Sebbie and Dommie Carlisle, played by Maxim Ays and Bobby Lockwood, strip off and go skinny dipping at a pool party. 

A mere two minutes later the first sex scene occurs, between Rupert Campbell-Black (Alex Hassell) and Cameron Cook (Nafessa Williams), shortly followed by a racy shower sex scene performed by Declan and Maud O’Hara (Aidan Turner and Victoria Smurfit) while enjoying a night away at a hotel. 

Yet Declan and Maud’s passionate tryst soon turns into an equally passionate row, resulting in Declan being kicked out of the room while fully nude and being forced to cover his modesty with a box of cereal aptly named ‘crunchy nut flakes’. 

It’s in this scene that EastEnders’ Pam St Clement makes a surprise cameo as a fellow hotel patron who stumbles across a nude Declan in the corridor. As Declan runs away, Pam’s character has the line of the season as she asks ‘was that Terry Wogan?’ 

In episode one of Rivals Declan (Aidan Turner) is kicked out of his hotel room while fully nude and being forced to cover his modesty with a box of cereal aptly named 'crunchy nut flakes'

In episode one of Rivals Declan (Aidan Turner) is kicked out of his hotel room while fully nude and being forced to cover his modesty with a box of cereal aptly named ‘crunchy nut flakes’

It's in this scene that EastEnders star Pam St Clement makes a surprise cameo as a fellow hotel patron who stumbles across a nude Declan in the corridor

It’s in this scene that EastEnders star Pam St Clement makes a surprise cameo as a fellow hotel patron who stumbles across a nude Declan in the corridor

Having featured enough racy moments to make Rivals writer Dame Jilly Cooper proud, episode one concludes with a sweet tribute to the late author. 

Before the credits roll, up flashes a black and white photograph of the writer, who died last October after a fall at her home while season two was still being filmed. 

Episode two is far more limited with its racy content, yet to make up for it, the episode opens with a lengthy sex montage between Rupert and Cameron.  

The only other cheeky moment occurs when Paul Stratton (Rufus Jones) is filmed in the shower with his bare bottom on display. 

While not explicitly shown, the theme of sex is prominent in episode three, as MP Rupert’s campaign for re-election is threatened after being exposed as a ‘sexual deviant’. 

His past indiscretions, including taking part in sex parties, involving his wife in foursomes and his infidelities are discussed at length. 

In what later appears to be a nod to Colin Firth’s famous Pride and Prejudice scene, Rupert is soaked by a hose while wearing a white vest and shirt. 

A departure from the raunchiness comes with Lizzie and James Vereker’s (Katherine Parkinson and Oliver Chris) sex scene. 

Devoid of any kind of passion, the pair are filmed briefly underneath bed sheets, with Oliver encouraging his wife to let the ‘mole live in the hole’.  

This is swiftly followed by a scene implying that Sarah Stratton (Emily Atack) is performing oral sex on her husband Paul, but nothing is explicitly shown. 

The final sex scene is episode three is far more graphic and features political hopeful Gerald Middleton (Hubert Burton) and TV producer Charles Fairburn (Gary Lamont). 

Just eight minutes into the first episode and viewers are confronted with the sight of two flaccid penises as brothers Sebbie and Dommie Carlisle, played by Maxim Ays and Bobby Lockwood, strip off and go skinny dipping at a pool party

Just eight minutes into the first episode and viewers are confronted with the sight of two flaccid penises as brothers Sebbie and Dommie Carlisle, played by Maxim Ays and Bobby Lockwood, strip off and go skinny dipping at a pool party

Episode two is far more limited with its racy content, yet to make up for it, the episode opens with a lengthy sex montage between Rupert and Cameron (Hassell and Williams)

Episode two is far more limited with its racy content, yet to make up for it, the episode opens with a lengthy sex montage between Rupert and Cameron (Hassell and Williams) 

In what later appears to be a nod to Colin Firth's famous Pride and Prejudice scene, Rupert is soaked by a hose while wearing a white vest and shirt

In what later appears to be a nod to Colin Firth’s famous Pride and Prejudice scene, Rupert is soaked by a hose while wearing a white vest and shirt

A departure from the raunchiness comes with Lizzie and James Vereker's (Katherine Parkinson and Oliver Chris) sex scene

A departure from the raunchiness comes with Lizzie and James Vereker’s (Katherine Parkinson and Oliver Chris) sex scene

The final sex scene is episode three is far more graphic and features political hopeful Gerald Middleton (Hubert Burton) and TV producer Charles Fairburn (Gary Lamont)

The final sex scene is episode three is far more graphic and features political hopeful Gerald Middleton (Hubert Burton) and TV producer Charles Fairburn (Gary Lamont) 

Having featured enough racy moments to make Rivals writer Dame Jilly Cooper proud, episode one concludes with a sweet tribute to the late author

Having featured enough racy moments to make Rivals writer Dame Jilly Cooper proud, episode one concludes with a sweet tribute to the late author

Their romance was introduced in the first season of the show, with Rivals executive producer Dominic Treadwell-Collins explaining why they felt the need to introduce a gay romance into the show when it didn’t feature in the books. 

Dominic told Radio Times: ‘In the book, Charles and Gerald are both gay characters, but they never actually cross. What was really important to us was alongside the heterosexual love stories, telling a big, swooping gay love story.’

When asked if this was an example of ‘pushing a gay agenda’, Dominic responded: ‘I have a humanity agenda. It’s about making everyone stop thinking about themselves and instead empathise with other people.’

The timing of Charles and Gerald’s storyline is also relevant, given it’s set against the backdrop of the AIDS crisis and Margaret Thatcher’s Section 28 policy, which banned schools from teaching children about homosexuality.

Ahead of its release, Rivals series two received rave reviews from critics, who hailed it an ‘exquisite bonkbuster’ that was able to live up to the acclaimed first season. 

The official synopsis for Rivals reads: ‘In the cutthroat world of 1980s television, where the shoulder pads are big and ambitions even bigger, a long-standing rivalry boils over. 

‘In this award-winning drama capturing the joy, excess, and brazen power-grabbing of the affluent elite in 1980s England, ex-Olympian and notorious womaniser Rupert Campbell-Black goes head-to-head with the media mogul Tony Baddingham in a bid to win the Central South West television franchise. 

‘Amidst the hedonistic glamour of ’80s excess, the personal lives of our Rutshire heroes spiral into chaos when illicit affairs threaten to shatter families, and long-buried secrets ignite with explosive consequences. 

‘As rivalries push everyone to the brink, loyalties are tested and hearts are broken in the pursuit of victory. But what is the true cost of war?’

The first three episodes of Rivals season two are available on Disney+ now. 

Episode four will be released on May 22, with the remaining episodes released on the subsequent Fridays. 

Rivals Series two: Reviews  

The Guardian

Rating:

‘If I could give this exquisite bonkbuster 10,000 stars, I would… Its fabulous escapism is beyond earthly praise’

The Telegraph 

Rating:

‘Rivals continues to refresh the parts that other television cannot reach – a heady mix of guilty pleasure, trenchant satire, rambunctious comedy and out-and-out trash.’

The Times

Rating:

‘Despite its deliberate corniness, this is also gloriously uplifting television. It is unashamedly celebratory and perhaps even better than the last series.’ 

The Independent

Rating:

‘There is a sense, across the cast, that everyone is enjoying themselves immensely, whether they’re romping on a pony or romping on a staircase.’

Financial Times 

Rating:

‘Some of the storylines, particularly those about the TV industry, drag a little. Rivals needs more slapstick, more of those capers, to keep things as light as they need to be for it to really work.’ 

Metro

Rating:

‘Rivals arrives for its second outing with the swagger of a show that knows it’s already got us all on side… How good it feels to be back. Mercifully, little has changed.’

 

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