≡ Those hot scenes from Shonda Rhimes shows, which you remember, but refuse to believe ➤ Brain Berries

≡ Those hot scenes from Shonda Rhimes shows, which you remember, but refuse to believe ➤ Brain Berries

Most of us agree that we like Shonda Rhimes’ shows because of their strong stories, interesting characters, and unexpected twists. But the truth is that sometimes we like her other attractive features equally – especially her bold and hot scenes. Those secret meetings, stolen moments in the corridors and such dialogues which seem to cross the boundaries of TV.
Shonda has taken romance and passion to new levels on each of her shows — from the beginning of Grace Anatomy to the sizzling love stories of Scandal and the daring scenes of How to Get Away with Murder. Now is the time to relive those memorable and warm moments, which are impossible to forget.

2005: Grace’s Anatomy gets off to a hot start

The very first scene of Grey’s Anatomy opens with Meredith Grey, waking up next to a very attractive, shirtless stranger. Later it turns out that he is not just a one-night stand, but her new boss. This is where the sexual tension and strange workplace dynamics begin.
The pilot episode left no stone unturned, and neither did Meredith and Derek, who romped on the floor in that opening scene. It set the tone for one of TV’s hottest hospital dramas.

2006–2008: Grace becomes even bolder

By Season 2, the show had stopped being shy. The network’s censors forced them to cut the scene just before it got too heated, but the signal was loud and clear. We weren’t just watching a medical drama—we were watching beautiful people in lab coats living out our soap opera fantasies.
Highlights of this season include Mark Sloan (aka McSteamy) making his name “Steamy” his own identity, Callie and Arizona’s passionate relationship, and the moment in Season 4 where Callie and Mark discuss having a threesome while actually romancing.

2012: Scandal and presidential obsession

Just when you thought you’d seen it all, Shonda gave us Scandal. And along came Olivia Pope and President Fitzgerald Grant—one of the most passionate and complicated couples ever to appear on primetime.
Their chemistry was explosive—an attraction that made you feel like you were intruding on their personal life. And they did it everywhere: in the White House, in closets, in hotel rooms, while Secret Service guys pretended not to see.
Season 2 gave us an infamous ‘angry sex’ scene in a storage closet, immediately followed by Fitz telling Olivia he’s not much interested in her.

2014: The beginning of the era of ‘dirty talk’

Let’s talk about Season 4 of Scandal—specifically that moment when Jake, Olivia’s second boyfriend, pulls back the curtain and says, “I’m the one you have fun with. I’m the one that makes you sigh.”
While most shows revolved around intimacy, Scandal made a direct entry with bold dialogues. This ‘Dirty Talk’ wasn’t just provocative—it was boundary-breaking for broadcast television.

Mid-2010: When women’s wishes got priority

Earlier, TV used to shy away from showing some intimate scenes—especially when they showed women receiving pleasure. But Shonda Rhimes had no interest in playing by those old rules.
There is a scene in Scandal where the First Lady is caught giving oral sex to a man. In Grace, men are regularly shown prioritizing their partners’ pleasure. Even the President couldn’t help himself when it came to Olivia Pope.

2014: How to Get Away with Murder broke all limits

From the very first episode of How to Get Away with Murder, Annalies Keating (played by Viola Davis) was featured in a lot of steamy scenes. His bisexuality was explored without any pretense or morality.
And their students? Well, they were ‘extracurricular’ in every sense of the word. At the time, Connor, one of the most openly gay characters on network television, was at the center of some of the most daring and groundbreaking scenes ever shown on primetime.

What made Shonda’s sex scenes stand out was their intention. These weren’t throwaway moments thrown in for ratings—they told us something about the characters: their power dynamics, their vulnerabilities, and their emotional turmoil.
Olivia and Fitz didn’t just tear each other’s clothes off—they were emotionally torn apart, too. Meredith and Derek didn’t just sleep together—they fought, loved, and broke up like real people. Annalies didn’t just make connections—she held tight to connections in a world that constantly tried to crush them. And that’s why it connected with the audience.

Exit mobile version