As usual, Dexter has his share of problems, but it looks like Deb is the one acting out.
Plus: Showtime has released a first look at the final season!
Plus: IFC's new development slate, History's next potential miniseries, and a babe is returning to Dexter.
Speaking to investors, the CBS and Showtime boss said the upcoming season will be the last for the anti-hero.
Plus: AMC is developing a scary monster series, ABC Family orders a pair of reality shows, and Dylan McDermott adds star power to a CBS pilot.
This first batch is based on much of January plus the first week of February.
Plus: Bad Teacher: The TV Show?, Dexter adds to its cast, and J.J. Abrams gets a pretty important new job.
Ray Donovan, Masters of Sex, and The Big C, and Nurse Jackie also find slots on the schedule.
Price, Tim, and Jen are joined by Cory Barker to discuss the week in television in the last podcast of 2012. This week we get into: The Dexter and Homeland finales, our favorite shows of the year, and more.
After a season of covering for Dexter by lying about procedure and tinkering with evidence, Deb was forced to consider what it truly means to be involved with this version of her brother.
Plus: AMC is developing a period-piece comedy, Weird Desk is delayed, and Discovery orders its first scripted series.
It's not that the penultimate episode of Season 7 was especially bad. But "Do You See What I See?" over-relied on old Dexter tropes and in many ways, suggested that the conclusion to this season isn't going to be as…
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 week's episode thankfully continued the Season 7 trend of destabilizing Dexter's familiar rhythms by exploring what is really one of the dumbest things in the show's DNA: The Dark Passenger.
Only on a television show like Dexter can an entire episode revolve around the uneasy alliance between two cold-blooded killers who've spent most of the previous half-dozen installments plotting to kill one another.
Now more than ever, Dexter has lots of masters to serve.
My concerns about the shift in focus from Dex and Deb to a slew of other, somewhat-connected stories have been alleviated.
Today we honor the seventeenth-century flop with a look at five TV characters who seem to always end up involved in failed plots.
We've reached the halfway mark of Dexter's seventh season, and "Do the Wrong Thing" felt like a true pivot point.
When we get into the discussion of what makes a great series finale, one of the things often pushed aside is the fact that, like shows, not all conclusions are not equal.
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bloody and violent, characters with double lives, characters with hidden agendas, horrible people, isolation from society