
My Bias Is Showing?! knows exactly what kind of series it wants to be: cute, quick, a little ridiculous, and easy to binge. It takes an idol-fantasy setup that could have collapsed into pure fluff and gives it just enough emotional mess to stay engaging. The result is a Korean BL that never aims for greatness, but often lands on charm.
The story centers on Aejoon, a contract teacher whose private life is dominated by his devotion to pop idol Siyeol. When Siyeol arrives at his school to film a reality program, Aejoon is suddenly dragged into close proximity with the man who helped him through some of his hardest moments. That fantasy scenario would already be enough for a lightweight romance, but the show complicates it with jealousy, hidden motives, and an absurd revenge plan tied to old idol-group tensions.
What makes the series work is Aejoon himself. He could easily have been written as an embarrassing fanboy caricature, yet the performance gives him sincerity, awkwardness, and just enough self-awareness to keep him lovable. His excitement feels human rather than forced, which matters because the audience has to believe both in his crush and in the emotional sting when that fantasy starts to crack.
Siyeol is less grounded at first, largely because his original scheme is so obviously foolish. The show asks viewers to accept that a celebrity would try to hurt someone indirectly through fake romance, which is nonsense even by genre standards. Still, once the series moves past that contrivance, it becomes more enjoyable. Siyeol is easier to invest in when he stops acting like a plot device and starts behaving like a person who has made a very stupid emotional decision.
The supporting material also helps. The roommate-manager and former idol subplot adds a little extra texture without overwhelming the main romance, and the short-episode structure keeps the story from dragging its misunderstandings too long. That pacing is one of the series’ smartest choices. It understands that light romantic comedy lives or dies by momentum.
Of course, this is not a deeply layered drama. The emotional stakes remain modest, and parts of the backstory feel thinner than they should. Some viewers will probably wish the second couple had more room, while others may find the entire premise too sugary to take seriously. But the show’s appeal lies precisely in that softness. It is built for comfort viewing, not devastation.
In the end, My Bias Is Showing?! is an easygoing BL with enough chemistry, humor, and fan-fantasy sparkle to justify its runtime. It may be lightweight, but it is not empty, and sometimes a warm, uncomplicated queer romance is exactly what the format needs.
Rating: 6.5/10
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