Miles Heizer Leads “Boots”, The Gay Marine Series You’ll Binge Tonight
A Netflix coming-of-age set in Marine boot camp.
Miles Heizer stars in Boots, a new eight-episode Netflix dramedy about Cameron Cope, a teen who follows his straight best mate Ray into US Marine Corps boot camp in 1990 while quietly figuring himself out. The show rolled out in mid-October 2025 and is now streaming.

Boots is based on Greg Cope White’s 2015 memoir The Pink Marine, with series leads Miles Heizer and Liam Oh, and Max Parker as a closeted drill instructor. The project counts Norman Lear among its executive producers, tying its sharp humour and heart to classic TV pedigree.

Dates, policy and why the timing matters.
The story is set four years before Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) became policy; Congress passed repeal in 2010 and the ban ended on 20 September 2011. In 2025, the policy debate flared again when President Donald Trump moved to restrict service by transgender people, an action that has faced fast-moving legal challenges. The show’s period lens lands close to current headlines, which is part of its sting.

Heizer on being seen, coming out and building a team.
Heizer told Variety the response has been immediate: “A guy came up to me at the gym and said, ‘Are you in Boots? I was in the Coast Guard and I’m gay.’” He also speaks openly about coming out: “It was a nightmare and everyone was upset,” he says, crediting his sister and friends for steady support as things improved over time. He appreciates a set that brings many queer creatives and women together to make the show.

The head-shave that calmed first-lead nerves.
Landing a first lead can rattle anyone. For Heizer, the boot-camp buzz cut actually eased the worry: once the hair was gone, the role felt locked.
“Then it was the most freeing feeling because I didn’t have to worry about what my hair looked like,” he says.
Season two hopes, because the story isn’t finished.
Heizer is keen to keep marching. “There are a lot of stories to tell… I would do it for 10 seasons if they let us.” At DNA, we’re with him. Will Netflix order a second season? We’ll be watching.

Boots blends barracks humour with the pressure of hiding who you are, and it does so without winking away the stakes. It offers a familiar truth for anyone who has had to measure every word in a locker room, at a family dinner, or on day one of a new job. That grounded honesty is what gives the series its pull.

All episodes are streaming on Netflix. Expect hard training sequences, a close but non-romantic friendship at the core, and a drill instructor whose secrets complicate the chain of command. The mix of danger, jokes and small wins keeps the show light on its feet while it says something real.
