![]() ![]() Such fun.īeth O’Leary’s “The Flatshare” springs from a classic rom-com setup - two strangers thrown together under awkward and yet intimate circumstances. ![]() When the flatmates do finally meet, it’s in a sexy, hilarious and deeply embarrassing way. The notes the two begin leaving each other slowly grow from all-business (“Would you mind putting the toilet seat down please?”) to longer, friendlier and confessional. This kind of relationship is what Post-it notes were invented for. Tiffy can live there, sleep in the same bed, but perhaps never meet him. The price is right, but the arrangement is odd - Leon, her new roommate, works nights as an oncology nurse and spends weekends away. Those were pretty big clues.) Desperate, heartbroken and broke, Tiffy answers an ad for a flatmate. Tiffy Moore has broken up with her boyfriend again, but this time it looks like it’s going to stick. ![]()
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