1 Aug 2022

cimorene: closeup of a large book held in a woman's hands as she flips through it (reading)
I was talking about how weirdly popular the Steve Harrington/Eddie Munson ship has quickly become after the release of Stranger Things season 4 recently, and in my prior post compared it to the blossoming of Din Djarin/Luke Skywalker after the Mandalorian season 1. My original thought was that one of the ingredients was a pre-existing fan favorite character who lacked an obvious and available slash partner in canon - that's Luke in Star Wars, an undeniable favorite, and would be Steve in this case. I don't mean to say that Steve isn't a fan favorite character - I haven't observed the fandom before this summer - but I know that people were pairing him (controversially, apparently - lol) with Billy in seasons 2-3. I just have a sort of subjective experience of people in general swooning a little less perhaps.

But what I have seen is a lot more material on the Eddie phenomenon, and I think the popularity of his character is actually much greater than I realized. It's not a fanfiction fandom specific, or a fandom specific, phenomenon, either - it's also out there with casuals and non-shippers and reviewers and interviewers and randoms. This is evident from the focus of a lot of the fiction, too, really. I suspect this is a big driver of the ship's popularity, probably.

As for the runaway popularity of the character, the performance (by a British actor approaching 30 named Joseph Quinn) is obviously a standout. He chews scenery and steals every scene he's in, overflowing with charisma but charmingly vulnerable. His style is also unusually theatrical and broad, full of frenetic energy. The character's charm took the creators (the Duffer brothers) by surprise too. They said in an interview that they kept expanding his role because everything they saw was so great, more or less. Beyond that, though, I think the character has really touched a chord, being relatable to a lot of people:
  • He's the first working class character in the ensemble. There's less money in the Byers family, but they still live in a suburban house in a suburban neighborhood; they're getting by on the mother's retail salary. Eddie lives with his uncle - the first character with a strong country accent we've seen - in a trailer park.

  • He's the most marginalized character yet. He's a social outcast and is known by the epithet "the freak", which we see him lean into, and the extent of antipathy towards his heavy metal style and Dungeons & Dragons later turns into a full-blown Satanic panic witch hunt. This goes beyond the bullying we see the main kids suffer in earlier seasons (although some of that was legitimately life-threatening).

  • He's apparently neurodivergent in some way. We learn early in the season that he's repeating his senior year for a third time, though his intelligence is otherwise obvious. A lot of fanfiction portrays him as ADHD, which seems like a reasonable assumption, although as fanfiction does not always realize, the diagnosis was rare and in fact the 'hyperactivity' portion wasn't part of the clinical definition yet, let alone the popular imagination. Portraying him as autistic is also not uncommon, again, usually undiagnosed, but again, many fanfiction writers unaware that the diagnosis was extremely rare and basically only given to non-verbal autistic children at that point, well before the initial proposal of Asperger's.

  • He's a metalhead, which is a very explicitly and deliberately non-conformist self-identification encompassing his whole style. There haven't been any other characters so deliberately announcing themselves to be counterculture in their visual self-presentation, although we do learn that Dustin wore a Weird Al shirt on the first day of school (very bravely, as Eddie remarks). The goth, punk, emo, and metal aesthetics are more threatening to normativity, though, obviously, as you see by people's reactions to them (in the Satanic Panic, of course, but also endless examples from my own childhood of patiently explaining to schoolmates that the goth guy doesn't worship the devil, he's an atheist, and no, that's NOT the same thing because atheists don't even believe the devil exists, let alone care about his wishes, only to have them eventually inform me that he's still scary anyway because it's "weird" or that he doesn't have to be so weird and scare everybody, so he's really bringing the bullying on himself. This is why I typically said I was Unitarian Universalist or agnostic to everyone but my closest friends in middle and high school, and they did the same.)

Profile

cimorene: cartoony drawing of a woman's head in profile giving dubious side-eye (Default)
Cimorene

January 2026

S M T W T F S
    123
4 5678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

  • Style: Practically Dracula for Practicalitesque - Practicality (with tweaks) by [personal profile] cimorene
  • Resources: Dracula Theme

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 6 Jan 2026 10:14 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios