Plus: FX cancels Brand X With Russell Brand but not Brand himself, FXX orders its first original series, and Christian Kane heads back to TNT.
Plus: Homeland loses an actor, a Workaholic gets his own show, and death comes to Revenge.
Plus: Merlin has a series-finale date, Melissa McCarthy is hosting SNL again, and Boardwalk Empire beefs up its cast.
Trying to logically consider possible winners and losers for the Globes is even more difficult than it is for the Emmys... so let's try it, shall we?
In Version 6.0: A beloved doc hangs up his stethoscope, a princess gets married, and a gangster receives a nasty surprise.
We projected the TV.com bat-logo into the sky and summoned the site's contributors to ask them to name their five favorite shows of the year.
But they did give surprising nods to Smash and The Newsroom. Homeland and Game Change earned the most nominations overall.
Plus: Margo Martindale returns to FX and we're excited, Storage Wars is totally fake, and SAG nominations!
Plus: The Writers Guild Awards nominees have been announced, PBS calls for more Midwife, and Fox's diving show names its "celebrities."
Price, Tim, and Jen discuss the week in television! And this week Cory Barker joins us for a spirited (and lengthy!) discussion of: Gossip Girl, Boardwalk Empire, Dexter, The Vampire Diaries, Sons of Anarchy, Homeland, The Walking Dead, and more.
This is a season that was ultimately about the tension between haves and wants, and the kind of trouble you can get into when you aren’t willing to be happy with what you've got.
I hate to say that Boardwalk Empire is a much better show when it is doing simple and familiar gangster stories that involve lots of blood and guns, but it certainly seems that way right now.
It feels like Boardwalk Empire is thrusting people into tricky circumstances and partnerships with tensions already pretty high. No one trusts each other, but they all know the stakes: Adjust and prepare, or end up in a box.
In the aftermath of an explosion that almost killed him and a big meeting that went nowhere fast, Nucky Thompson is completely alone—and he only has himself to blame.
Today we honor the seventeenth-century flop with a look at five TV characters who seem to always end up involved in failed plots.
The most compelling development of "The Pony" wasn't really a development, but more like a realization: Gillian might be Nucky's biggest threat.
This episode felt like the show taking its foot off the gas yet again, but I’ve grown to appreciate and admire the kind of low-key character work Boardwalk Empire has being doing this season.
Every week, Nucky seems like a different person than he was the episode before, and Boardwalk Empire is struggling to create any through-line between his various characterizations.
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