newsWell, that’s one way to flip the script. Almost all season long, a vocal percentage of Sleepy fans have been grumbling that the show’s sophomore year has seemed off—there’s been too much Katrina, too little Abbie time, too many detours into repetitive Monster-of-the-Weeking. In this recapper’s opinion, though, the main issue has been that up until this point, the series seemed to have lost a crucial aspect—the breakneck, go-for-broke, throw-everything-at-the-wall-and-see-what-sticks batshit insanity that characterized season 1, hooking all of us on the rickety roller coaster that was Sleepy Hollow in the first place.
Death at a Funeral FX ''SO'' (season 3, episode 1) RIP: David Hale Death by: Hit-and-run Reason: As season 3 began, SAMCRO had a lot on its plate: relations with the Mayans motorcycle club were tense. VP Jax Teller (Charlie Hunnam) had no idea where True IRA member Cameron Hayes (Jamie McShane) had taken his kidnapped baby Abel. And the club was mourning the loss of prospect Half Sack (Johnny Lewis), whom Hayes had stabbed after overhearing ATF agent June Stahl (Ally Walker) falsely report that Jax's mother, Gemma (Katey Sagal), had killed his rat son instead of her.
His name is Lancelot. He likes to dance a lot. For several weeks, theater fans have been waiting to find out just whose name will be Lancelot in the Broadway revival of Spamalot. EW can exclusively announce that Saturday Night Live alum and Single Parents star Taran Killam will be portraying the knight who really likes his night life. Killam will portray Lancelot from the first preview on Halloween through Jan.
When it comes to Star Wars projects on either the big screen or small, The Acolyte — which will be coming to Disney+ in 2024 — promises to stand out in several ways. Not only is it the most diverse franchise project ever, and not only is it a Star Wars show with no war it in, but the more intimate individual battles hope to set the bar for action sequences taking place in a galaxy far, far away.
Suits is back, and the episode “Blind-Sided” seemed to have one goal: Make everyone miserable, so when the firm really starts to come under attack from the outside (which it does next week), they’re already frayed and short-fused. It feels like we’re going to need a thick skin to watch these next five episodes, which is what people who think the show is just about admiring Harvey Specter’s Tom Ford’s suits don’t get.
Life. Death. Taxes. And Survivor. Those have been the four constants this millennium — and the gold standard of reality TV that kicked off the unscripted broadcast network craze back in the summer of 2000 is now ready to unleash its 46th season. Survivor 46 will premiere Feb. 28 at 8 p.m. ET/PT on CBS and kick off with two-hour episodes for its first two weeks before settling into its regular 90-minute runtime.
Well, that was surprising. Not that it was anything close to resembling a lock that Charlie Davis would win Survivor 46 after he made it into the final three against Kenzie Petty and Ben Katzman on Wednesday night’s finale on CBS. Kenzie especially had played a strong social game and made personal bonds with several of the jurors. But the one vote everybody thought for sure that Charlie could count on was his biggest ally in Maria Shrime Gonzalez.
Warning: This article contains spoilers for the season finale of Survivor 46. There is a lot of strategy on Survivor. Moves are made. Players are blindsided. Endgames are put into place. But for all that tinkering and strategizing and alliance-making, the game of Survivor is primarily a social one, and the folks that end up winning are usually the ones who form the closest bonds with other players… meaning the jury. That explains why Kenzie Petty was just crowned the winner of Survivor 46.
Nowhere in the Survivor handbook does it say that to win Survivor, one should tell that jury at final Tribal Council that “Yeah, I got brought along on votes. I’ll take it. I’ll own it. It’s true. I’m not going to say I drove a vote.” Yet, that strategy paid off — literally — for Kenzie Petty. The 29-year-old salon owner from North Carolina (who is very much pregnant) became the latest player to be crowned the Sole Survivor when she was voted the winner of Survivor 46.
At the end of tonight’s Survivor: Worlds Apart Reunion Jeff Probst announced the title and cast for next season, titled Survivor: Cambodia—Second Chance. (Check out the fancy new logo above!) Thirty-two former players (all of whom had only played once and did not win) were competing for fan votes to make the cast, with the top 10 men and top 10 women heading overseas for another chance at the million dollars.