Hill | One Tree

But it’s also the only show that ever got it right. It understood that high school isn't the best time of your life—it's just the hardest. It understood that friendship is the real romance. And it understood that "everyone leaves" ... except the people who choose to stay.

If you grew up in the 2000s, you remember the trailer. A gravelly voiceover telling you that "a basketball court is a lonely place when you’re the only one who believes in yourself." You probably rolled your eyes. You probably changed the channel to The OC . One Tree Hill

Because in Tree Hill, you’re always someone. And you are enough. But it’s also the only show that ever got it right

Welcome to Tree Hill, North Carolina. Population: Nobody knows, because nobody ever leaves. Let’s be honest: The first four episodes are rough. The lighting is dark, the dialogue is trying way too hard to be edgy (Nathan: "What's the matter? Mommy not buy you the right kind of chewing gum?" ), and Lucas’s floppy hair deserves its own credit in the opening titles. And it understood that "everyone leaves"

But then episode six happens. Then episode seven. Suddenly, you aren't watching a show about two brothers fighting for a spot on a high school varsity team. You are watching a show about the weight of legacy, the toxicity of parental pressure, and the quiet beauty of finding your people in a town that has already written your story for you. Yes, the Brooke/Peyton/Lucas love triangle was exhausting. It was like watching three people pass a hot potato for four seasons. But looking back, that triangle wasn't really about "ships" (Team Brucas vs. Leyton—let’s not fight in the comments).

Title: It’s not about the game. It’s about the people under the lights.