In the years since, Episode 3 has been cited as a template for modern prestige teen drama. Shows like Genera+ion and Grand Army owe a debt to its raw, unblinking eye. But none have replicated its specific alchemy of art direction, music, and psychological realism. “Made You Look” is the bridge between the introduction of Euphoria and its descent into chaos. By the end of the episode, there is no going back. Rue has relapsed. Nate has fully committed to his reign of terror. Maddy is trapped. Kat is diving deeper into sex work. Jules, the only character who seemed to have a moral compass, is lying to the girl who loves her.
This is the episode's thesis statement: Euphoria is about the lies we tell ourselves to survive. Maddy convinces herself that Nate’s violence is passion. She “made him look” like a good boyfriend to her parents, to her friends, and to herself. It is a devastating portrait of abuse that refuses to offer easy redemption or escape. The central plot of Episode 3 focuses on Rue and Jules’s burgeoning relationship. After the emotional vulnerability of the carnival (Episode 2), Rue is intoxicated—not by drugs, but by Jules. She has been clean for several weeks, attending Narcotics Anonymous meetings, but she is replacing heroin with a human being.
When Euphoria premiered on HBO in June 2019, it arrived with the force of a gut punch. The Sam Levinson-created drama, dripping in neon and nihilism, immediately divided critics and audiences with its graphic depiction of teenage life. The pilot introduced us to Rue Bennett (Zendaya), a freshly sober drug addict adrift in a world of sex, social media, and trauma. The second episode expanded the ensemble, giving heartbreaking depth to Jules (Hunter Schafer) and the volatile Nate Jacobs (Jacob Elordi). Euphoria Season 1 - Episode 3
Later, Nate’s internal conflict explodes. He has been having violent, confused dreams about Jules (whom he is blackmailing) and Maddy. In a private moment, he takes a shower, turns the water to scalding, and punches the wall until his knuckles bleed. It is the first time the show suggests that Nate’s cruelty stems from self-hatred—specifically, self-hatred over his own suppressed desires. He wants Jules. He hates that he wants Jules. So he will destroy her. The B-plot of Episode 3 belongs to Kat Hernandez (Barbie Ferreira). After losing her virginity at the carnival to a boy who immediately ignored her, Kat has discovered a new world: online cam sites and fan fiction. In “Made You Look,” she begins to monetize her body.
What starts as a joke—wearing a corset and a cat mask for an audience of strangers—becomes something darker. Kat realizes that men will pay to be humiliated by her. She discovers that her weight, the source of her high school insecurity, is a fetish to others. She leans into it with a cold, calculating fury. In the years since, Episode 3 has been
The episode ends with Rue finding a hidden stash of pills in her house. She stares at them. The episode cuts to black. The audience knows—and worse, Rue knows—that she is going to take them. The love of Jules is not enough. It was never going to be enough. While “Made You Look” softens the edges of Rue and Jules, it hardens Nate Jacobs into something genuinely terrifying. After beating Tyler (an innocent college student) to a pulp at the end of Episode 2 and framing him for assaulting Maddy, Nate spends this episode managing the fallout.
Rue narrates: “I’ve never been in love before. I thought it was something you made up in movies. But it’s not. It’s this thing that grabs you by the throat and doesn’t let go.” The irony is suffocating. Rue has swapped one form of escapism for another. “Made You Look” is the bridge between the
The episode follows them on a date. They steal clothes from a mall, break into a stranger’s pool, and finally sleep together for the first time. The scene is shot with reverence and soft focus—a stark contrast to the harsh, strobe-lit brutality of the show’s sex scenes involving Nate and Maddy. For a moment, you believe Rue might be okay. Jules looks at her like she’s the moon.