Indeed, Faye is objectively hot.
Faye is subjectively hot. Your desires are your own.
Sort of both?
There are many objective measures for attractiveness; Hip to waist ratio, facial symmetry, general proportions, and of those measurements, Faye has a lot of objectively desirable qualities.
However, many people weight those values differently.
Thus, Faye can be objectively hot in a way that you or others do not desire, as attraction is subjective.
Line break because second topic;
I get a lot of you are saying that a romantic subplot devalues the idea of a strong platonic friendship and I totally get where you're coming from, but it is less narratively interesting by all conventions you care to measure it by. A romantic subplot provides the same closeness and character interaction as the friendship while providing more concrete objectives and struggles you can set, provides more apparent stakes to hold, etc. etc. etc.
A close friendship doesn't have to be 'lesser' than a romantic one by any means, nor a step below one. But there's a reason they tell stories about princesses and princes instead of kings and queens; When you're a prince, one day you might become a king. But once you're a king, that's all you'll ever be.
It might not be something you totally agree with personally, or like, but it
does make for better storytelling.