The show would make for a great Friendsgiving weekend binge-watch.

Don’t freak when you finish eight episodes withsomany questions season 2 is already in the works.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: What American teen TV shows have you watched, and which were your faves?

MIGUEL BERNARDEAU: I watchedGlee.

I did watch a little bit ofGossip Girl, andStranger Thingsis one my favorite shows.

That would be my most favorite one right now.

Really what I’m asking is, are you more of a Dawson Leery or Dan Humphrey?

I haven’t watchedDawson’s Creek, so I can’t say.

I’ll have to watch it and get back to you.

What have you binge-watched recently?

What’s a U.S. show you’dloveto guest-star or be a regular character on?

I would really really like to be inStranger Things.

You lived in Los Angeles for a little while.

What were you doing, for how long, and what was your favorite place to hang out?

Any plans to come back (or move here)?

I really wanted to be an actor when I was younger.

I lived in Santa Monica for three years.

It was a great experience.

It was a good time for me to be on my own and trying to work.

I was getting ready for castings.

It made me mature really fast.

you’ve got the option to see all of Santa Monica.

That was like my secret spot in L.A. You and your castmates totally blew up on social media with this show.

What’s changed about how you approachyour Instagramnow that you have more than a million followers there?

My Instagram is my personal account.

What should we expect between them in season 2?

Fans are so obsessedwith you and Nadia.

What can you tell us about working together that we haven’t seen on screen?

What are you rooting for to happen in season 2?

If I had to say something to Nadia, it would be, “You are enough.

You don’t need to be anything else, you are enough.”

It was beautiful to work with Mina, the actress that plays Nadia.

She’s very special, and her experience is very relatable to the character.

She taught me a lot of things about her culture.

I needed to learn how to confront a family that doesn’t accept their kids.

We, as young people, are very different from what our parents lived in the past.