Their names are Ana Paula and Rogelio and Blanca and Bruno. They flirt, argue, make mad love, peel out in sports cars, scheme, ride dangerous horses and every night leave their fans dying to know what happens next.
They are the heroes and villains of telenovelas, the Spanish-language serial dramas that are one of the most popular TV program formats in the world, watched by billions.
As American soap operas gasp their last breath, replaced by talk shows and reality TV, the telenovela is on the rise here. Now offered with closed captions in English, telenovelas could fill the steamy, tragic void left for soap opera fans -- and help them brush up on their Spanish.
If you've never seen one, you're in the global minority.
"Much of the total TV output in the world is telenovelas," said Doug Darfield, senior vice president of multicultural measurement for the Nielsen ratings company. In the United States, telenovelas, or novelas for short, are "far and away the most popular type of program among households who speak mostly Spanish," he said. A telenovela conclusion gets ratings comparable to the Super Bowl, Darfield added.
On Dec. 26, the two-hour finale of "La Fuerza del Destino" ("The Power of Destiny") on the Univision network had 8 million viewers nationwide, more than any other network in its time slot.
Beginning this year, all of Univision's prime-time novela premieres will be offered with English closed captions -- a move intended to expand the audience beyond the Hispanic community.
"Many of our viewers are mainly English speakers," said Gustavo Mancilla, general manager of WUMN-TV (Ch. 13), Univision's local affiliate. "They tune in just to get Spanish practice, and then they get engaged with the story."