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25 Big Ass Relationships and Romantic Storylines That Defined Fandom

When we talk about "ships" in modern media, most conversations revolve around cute glances and fan edits set to Lana Del Rey songs. But every once in a while, a romantic storyline comes along that is so massive, so consuming, and so epic that it transcends the screen or the page. These are the relationships that alter the DNA of the show. These are the storylines that cause ratings to spike or comic book sales to double.

18. Mia & Sebastian (La La Land) The anti-fairytale. The "Epilogue" montage showing what could have been is a gut punch. It’s a big relationship because of the absence of the happy ending—a love that made them better artists but not a married couple. 25 sexy big ass girls photos 1

Proof that you don’t need dialogue to have a massive romantic storyline. A lonely trash robot and a high-tech probe saving humanity through the power of a "holding hands" directive. 23. Penelope and Colin (Bridgerton) 25 Big Ass Relationships and Romantic Storylines That

17. Ben and Devi (Never Have I Ever) The final season payoff. Mindy Kaling perfected the teen triangle, but the "Benvi" ending—where Ben shows up at the airport, says he loves her, and offers to drive her to her dream school—is the rom-com finale we all deserve. It’s the nerd getting the girl because he saw her at her worst. These are the storylines that cause ratings to

The epitome of "Summer Love" that lasts a lifetime. Their story, told through the lens of memory and aging, reminds us that true love is an act of endurance. 11. Meredith Grey and Derek Shepherd (Grey’s Anatomy)

4. Meredith & Derek (Grey’s Anatomy) – The “Pick Me, Choose Me, Love Me” Epic

Post-it note marriages, Alzheimer’s clinical trials, and a tragic ending that broke millions. Their relationship carried Shonda Rhimes’ universe for a decade. It was messy, toxic at times, but absolutely monumental.

16. Rue and Jules (Euphoria) "Rules" is not a romance; it is a collision of two addicts (one of substances, one of love). The cinematography of the train station abandonment, Rue’s special episode where she admits she was using Jules as a drug—this is a raw, ugly, beautiful depiction of queer teenage desperation. It is a big ass mess, and it is perfect.