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Sex Education
TV Series

Sex Education

2019Comedy, Drama, Romance • 4 Seasons

Woke Score
8.5
out of 10

Series Overview

"Socially awkward high school student Otis may not have much experience in the lovemaking department, but he gets good guidance on the topic in his personal sex ed course -- living with mom Jean, who is a sex therapist. Being surrounded by manuals, videos and tediously open conversations about sex, Otis has become a reluctant expert on the subject. When his classmates learn about his home life, Otis decides to use his insider knowledge to improve his status at school, so he teams with whip-smart bad girl Maeve to set up an underground sex therapy clinic to deal with their classmates' problems. But through his analysis of teenage sexuality, Otis realizes that he may need some therapy of his own.

Season-by-Season Breakdown

Season 1

8/10

Insecure Otis has all the answers when it comes to sex advice, thanks to his therapist mom. So rebel Maeve proposes a school sex-therapy clinic.

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Season 2

8/10

Otis finally loosens up—often and epically—but the pressure’s on to perform as chlamydia hits the school and mates struggle with new issues.

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Season 3

9/10

Word of the "sex school" gets out as a new head teacher tries to control a rambunctious student body and Otis attempts to hide his secret hookup.

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Season 4

9/10

With Maeve in America and Moordale closed, Otis must find his footing at free-spirited Cavendish College — but he's not the only sex therapist on campus.

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Overall Series Review

"Sex Education" is a defining coming-of-age comedy that uses an intentionally stylized, anachronistic high school setting to deliver consistently modern and progressive messages about sex, identity, and relationships. Across its four seasons, the show operates as a platform to explore a vast spectrum of sexual practices and marginalized identities, moving systematically from introducing basic issues in Season 1 to building a full-fledged ethical framework based on inclusivity and sexual liberation by the final season. The overarching theme is the uncompromising celebration of self-acceptance and communication, achieved by actively dismantling traditional sexual, gender, and institutional norms. Early seasons established this by tackling issues like performance anxiety and abortion while championing marginalized characters. As the series progressed, particularly in Seasons 2 and 3, the narrative became a direct confrontation between the students' fluid, sex-positive culture and any form of established authority or conservative belief, framing order and tradition as inherently repressive. This evolution saw the show increasingly prioritize didactic social commentary. While always charming and well-acted, later seasons, especially the fourth, leaned heavily into delivering structured lessons on topics like non-binary identity, disability rights, and intersectionality. This shift sometimes moved the focus away from nuanced character development toward ensuring all contemporary progressive viewpoints were represented, resulting in storylines that felt more earnest and lesson-focused than character-driven. Overall, "Sex Education" is a landmark series praised for making difficult conversations about sexuality accessible and positive. It successfully packaged a radical affirmation of identity politics, queer ethics, and feminism within a bright, compassionate teen comedy wrapper. It ultimately concludes by affirming the necessity of constant change and the triumph of liberated, self-defined individuality over any form of restrictive structure.

Categorical Breakdown

Identity Politics8.8/10

Oikophobia6.5/10

Feminism8.5/10

LGBTQ+10/10

Anti-Theism8.3/10