Hudson Williams With Connor Storrie
hudsonwilliamsofficial/Instagram/IBTimes UK

Connor Storrie's latest career move turned into an instant fandom moment this week, after his Heated Rivalry co-star Hudson Williams publicly reacted to the actor's new horror-style Verizon campaign with a teasing comment on social media. The brief exchange, which unfolded online and centred on Connor Storrie's starring role in the advert directed by filmmaker Nia DaCosta, quickly drew attention from fans on both sides of the Atlantic.

For context, the pair's on- and off-screen rapport has been a major part of their appeal since Heated Rivalry first put them together in front of cameras. Viewers did not just latch on to the story they were telling, but to the way Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams seemed to carry that warmth and chemistry into interviews, convention panels and casual online exchanges. That history is the backdrop against which even a throwaway social media remark can catch fire.

Hudson Williams Turns Connor Storrie's Horror Debut Into A Fandom In-Joke

The latest moment began when news emerged that Connor Storrie had landed a lead role in a stylised horror-inspired campaign for telecoms giant Verizon. The project, directed by Nia DaCosta, places him in a dark, cinematic setting that leans heavily on suspense and genre tropes. It is a marked shift in tone for Storrie, who is more widely associated with romantic and character-driven work.

As clips and stills from the campaign began to circulate, one video in particular highlighted his evolving dynamic with Williams. Under that post, Hudson Williams weighed in with a line that was as cheeky as it was economical: 'The screenshots are going in my folder 😛.'

Hudson Williams
Instagram

On the face of it, it is barely a sentence. Yet fans immediately read it as a layered in-joke, the sort of thing you send to a close colleague rather than a distant co-star. The idea of Williams quietly saving images of Connor Storrie from a horror advert into some imaginary folder has the exact tone their following has come to expect.

It helps that Williams' comment did not try to steal focus from the campaign itself. There was no elaborate praise, no attempt to analyse the work. Instead, he did something more interesting: he framed Storrie's horror debut as something worth replaying, capturing and privately archiving. That is faintly ridiculous, and gently flattering, and it tells you quite a lot about how relaxed the two seem to be with each other.

The remark also underscored the way digital fan culture now operates. A single line added under a video is enough to spark dozens of replies dissecting what it says about their friendship, their working habits and even their sense of humour. None of that is confirmed, of course, and much of it is projection. Still, the ease with which Williams dropped his comment suggests a genuine fondness that goes beyond calculated promotion.

Connor Storrie Steps Into Horror While Keeping His Closest Cheerleader

Storrie's own role in the Verizon project is not insignificant. The campaign, shaped by Nia DaCosta's eye for tension and mood, offers Connor Storrie an opportunity to try on a darker register than many viewers may be used to. Verizon is casting him not as background decoration, but as the focal point of a horror-inflected narrative, with the visuals designed around his reactions and physical presence.

For an actor building a career in a crowded field, that sort of exposure matters. Horror and thriller projects often live or die on whether the audience believes the person at the centre of the story, and Storrie's involvement hints at a willingness to be seen in more unsettling, less polished scenarios. The campaign might only be advertising, rather than a feature film, but its tone places him closer to the cinematic side of the industry than a straightforward commercial usually would.

Against that backdrop, Hudson Williams' public reaction takes on a slightly different flavour. It is not only a joke. It is also a quiet act of endorsement, the kind of offhand approval that signals he is paying attention to what Connor Storrie is doing outside their shared work. Fans picked up on that too, folding his comment into a narrative of mutual support that has long surrounded the pair.

Supporters frequently describe their bond as one of the main reasons they stay invested in everything these two do. The work matters, of course, but so do the flashes of camaraderie that appear between projects. When Williams posts a sly, affectionate line about Storrie's latest venture, it feeds that sense of continuity. It suggests that, even as Connor Storrie shifts into new creative territory with a horror-led campaign, the dynamic that helped make them both so watchable in Heated Rivalry is still very much alive.