InFrame

Jacob Tierney Condemns Racist Backlash Targeting 'Heated Rivalry' Star Hudson Williams

Photo Credit: HBO/Crave

by Chris Tremblay  Apr 9

Heated Rivalry showrunner Jacob Tierney has sharply criticized the racist backlash directed at lead actor Hudson Williams, calling the abuse “horrific” and stressing that centering a person of color in a hit queer hockey drama is “f****** important.” In a recent interview cited by LGBTQ+ outlets, Tierney said the creative team had not anticipated the scale of attention or the intensity of fan reactions around the Crave series, which follows two male professional hockey players whose rivalry evolves into a long-term romantic relationship.

Tierney described the fandom’s extremes as “a lot to think about moving forward,” acknowledging both the positive enthusiasm and the toxic behavior that has surfaced online around the show’s stars. He underlined that Hudson Williams’ presence as a non-white lead in a mainstream queer romance sends a significant message, arguing that storytellers “don’t need to be making an Asian show to have an Asian lead” and praising Williams as “a f****** star.”

Heated Rivalry is a Canadian sports romance television series created, written and directed by Tierney for Crave, adapted from Rachel Reid’s Game Changers novels and centered on the evolving relationship between two rival hockey players. Williams portrays Shane Hollander, an Asian-Canadian hockey captain whose on-ice rivalry with Russian player Ilya Rozanov turns into a secret love story spanning several years.

Off screen, Canadian actor Hudson Williams is described as having a Korean mother, and the show mirrors that heritage by making Shane Hollander canonically of Asian descent, with a Japanese mother in the series’ narrative. Tierney and cast members have pointed to that representation as part of what makes the series resonate with audiences seeking stories that place queer people and people of color at the emotional center of a mainstream sports drama.

As the show’s profile has grown internationally, Williams has been subjected to racist harassment, including anti-Asian slurs and hateful comments that target his heritage and his character’s background. Reports collated by entertainment and news outlets say he has also received death threats from a subset of viewers, prompting mounting concern from supporters and fellow cast members about his safety and wellbeing.

The hostility has not been limited to Williams: Ksenia Daniela Kharlamova, who is Russian-Trinidadian and plays Svetlana, a close friend and sometimes hookup of Ilya, has also faced racist commentary and criticism for portraying a character who was described as white European in the original books. François Arnaud, the show’s openly bisexual cast member, has encountered biphobic backlash despite playing a role in a series that directly explores the pressures and homophobia that can keep queer athletes in the closet.

On March 9, Williams posted a written statement to social media calling out what he described as “bigoted” behavior within the fandom and rejecting any suggestion that such conduct could coexist with genuine support for the show. The statement, shared across Instagram Stories and feeds by Williams and co-star François Arnaud, warned: “Don’t call yourself a fan if you share racist/homophobic/biphobic/misogynist/ageist/ableist/parasocial/bigoted comments of any kind,” adding, “None of us need your hateful ‘love’… we all respect and support and love each other and are on the same side.”

Coverage of the coordinated response notes that the message was reposted by cast member Robbie GK, author Rachel Reid, and Tierney himself, signaling a unified front between the creative team and the performers. Actor Ksenia Daniela Kharlamova also echoed the statement on her social channels, reportedly adding that viewers should not turn “a show that’s about love” into a site of online hate.

Media analyses and aggregated reports describe the negative behavior toward Williams and his colleagues as part of a broader pattern of toxic fandom, where intense emotional investment slides into entitlement, bigotry and harassment against performers. Some coverage notes that a portion of the Heated Rivalry audience has developed parasocial expectations about Williams’ personal life, including criticism rooted in his real-world relationships and speculative claims about how those relationships align with his portrayal of a queer character.

Tierney has acknowledged that the team had “learned a lot” from the unexpected intensity of the fandom, suggesting that future seasons will need to balance engagement with clear boundaries around how cast members are treated. In one interview about the show’s impact, he said the more “noise” that surrounds the series, the more he wants to “drown that out” creatively, focusing instead on telling a love story that can contribute something positive without becoming a “massive change agent.”

Tierney and Reid’s adaptation has been widely described as a story that foregrounds queer joy alongside the realities of homophobia in professional sports, with the first season tracing Shane and Ilya’s journey through secrecy, career pressures and eventual openness. Tierney has credited Reid’s novels with presenting a hockey world that does not erase homophobia but instead shows that coming out requires courage, sacrifice and “saying things with your full chest,” which he framed as a narrative “triumph.”

Within that context, Tierney’s pointed defense of Williams and his co-stars aligns with the show’s themes, emphasizing that a queer sports romance cannot be separated from conversations about racism and biphobia when its leads are people of color and queer people. He has argued that keeping a non-white lead at the center of a global hit offers a concrete example of inclusive casting that does not require a story to be defined solely by a character’s race or ethnicity.

Despite the backlash, the Heated Rivalry team is moving ahead with a second season that is expected to draw from The Long Game, the sixth book in Reid’s Game Changers series, though Tierney has indicated that the entire novel may not be contained within a single season. He has suggested that Shane and Ilya’s storyline will “end happily” but will feature many emotional “ups and downs” along the way, mirroring the challenges queer athletes can face when navigating public scrutiny and internal team culture.

Tierney’s recent comments, combined with the cast’s collective statement, indicate that the creative team plans to continue foregrounding respectful, affirming portrayals of queer relationships and diverse characters while condemning racist and bigoted fan behavior surrounding the show. For many viewers and advocates, how the team navigates the intersection of global popularity, fandom culture and the safety and dignity of its cast will remain a key test as Heated Rivalry’s next chapter approaches.

Copyright EDGE Media Network. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


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