
XO, Kitty
Season 3 Analysis
Season Overview
Kitty returns for her final year at KISS with her perfect senior year mapped out. She’s going to make meaningful memories with her friends, grow closer to her relatives in Korea, and make big decisions about her future. And, she’s going to define her relationship with Min Ho. For real this time. But when surprise revelations derail her plans and relationships, Kitty will have to learn to embrace the unexpected.
Season Review
Categorical Breakdown
Characters are categorized by their intersectional identities, with racial heritage and diverse casting serving as the primary drivers of the social hierarchy. The plot focuses on Kitty's rejection of her American cultural upbringing to validate herself through a curated Korean identity.
The series romanticizes foreign culture while depicting the protagonist's Western home in Portland as a place of cultural emptiness. Personal growth is framed as an escape from the West toward a more 'authentic' and spiritually fulfilling lifestyle in the East.
Kitty is portrayed as a hyper-competent social architect who manipulates the romantic lives of everyone around her. Male characters are relegated to being emotional support systems or objects of romantic competition, lacking independent agency or traditional masculine authority.
Sexual orientation is centered as the most important trait for the majority of the cast, with multiple prominent storylines devoted to queer pairings and bisexual discovery. The show depicts traditional societal norms as bigoted hurdles that characters must dismantle to achieve self-actualization.
The narrative exists in a secular vacuum where traditional religious beliefs and objective moral laws are absent. Characters make major life decisions based on subjective emotional impulses and 'romantic fate' rather than any established spiritual or higher moral authority.