Uzo Aduba is getting on the right side of the law: The Emmy-winning Orange Is the New Black alum will star in the crime drama Low Country from The Good Wife creators Robert and Michelle King, our sister site Deadline reports.
The series produced by CBS Studios, which doesn’t have a network attached yet, stars Aduba as Shirley Johnson, an openly gay deputy sheriff in South Carolina’s low country. “Shirley has been underestimated her whole life until now, when she takes on the wealthy white crime family that has kept everyone in the grip of fear,” per the official description.
The series produced by CBS Studios, which doesn’t have a network attached yet, stars Aduba as Shirley Johnson, an openly gay deputy sheriff in South Carolina’s low country. “Shirley has been underestimated her whole life until now, when she takes on the wealthy white crime family that has kept everyone in the grip of fear,” per the official description.
- 2/18/2021
- by Dave Nemetz
- TVLine.com
Hey, "Evil" fans. In this brand new article, we're going to tell you a few things you can expect to see go down in the next,new episode 5 of this current premiere season. We hope you guys enjoyed episode 4 tonight. Thanks to the lovely folks over at CBS, we've got a couple of teaser descriptions for episode 5 via their official press release. So, we will definitely be referencing those in this spoiler session. To start things off, we've got the official title for episode 5. It's labeled, "October 31." That's definitely fitting for a show like this. It sounds like episode 5 will feature some very intense, dramatic and interesting scenes as Kristen and David hit up an intense exorcism situation! Ben tries to debunk supernatural finds and more. We'll go ahead and start off this spoiler session with the Kristen and David exorcism situation. Like the title of this episode indicates, it will be Halloween night.
- 10/18/2019
- by Chris
- OnTheFlix
The Following Episode 211
“Freedom”
Written By: Dewayne Jones
Directed By: Liz Friedlander
Original Airdate: 31 March 2014
In This Episode…
Joe is working with a group of his followers, to prepare them for killing. A woman, Angela, is brought up in front of the “class” and Joe instructs her to remember the serenity and freedom of the time she went snorkeling, and give that freedom to Carla, a woman tied and gagged on the table before her. She takes some encouraging, but Angela plunges the knife deep into Carla’s abdomen. Joe hugs her. Later, while alone, Emma brings up Mandy to Joe, fearing that she is a lost cause. Joe agrees, she has turned out to be a disappointment. Mandy overhears all this and rushes from the room before they know she is there. Robert comes in to speak to Joe. While he promises that he is with Joe, he says...
“Freedom”
Written By: Dewayne Jones
Directed By: Liz Friedlander
Original Airdate: 31 March 2014
In This Episode…
Joe is working with a group of his followers, to prepare them for killing. A woman, Angela, is brought up in front of the “class” and Joe instructs her to remember the serenity and freedom of the time she went snorkeling, and give that freedom to Carla, a woman tied and gagged on the table before her. She takes some encouraging, but Angela plunges the knife deep into Carla’s abdomen. Joe hugs her. Later, while alone, Emma brings up Mandy to Joe, fearing that she is a lost cause. Joe agrees, she has turned out to be a disappointment. Mandy overhears all this and rushes from the room before they know she is there. Robert comes in to speak to Joe. While he promises that he is with Joe, he says...
- 4/1/2014
- by Alyse Wax
- FEARnet
Review Ron Hogan 1 Apr 2014 - 07:15
The Following won't win any awards for it, but it is consistent in its insanity, violence, and queasy entertainment factor...
This review contains spoilers.
2.11 Freedom
One of the things The Following has always done very well is violence as spectacle. When the show decides that it's time for a crazy, bloody set piece, the end result is usually pretty hard to look away from, even if they make it hard to watch. The Following won't win any awards, except perhaps a Scream Award for Stabbiest Show, but it's consistently, insanely entertaining, and it never hesitates to go completely mental and mow down dozens of people with the aim of providing queasy entertainment.
True to form, The Following's villains are always looking for a big, flashy, bloody way to get attention for themselves, and this week's episode is no different. Given that Joe's kill...
The Following won't win any awards for it, but it is consistent in its insanity, violence, and queasy entertainment factor...
This review contains spoilers.
2.11 Freedom
One of the things The Following has always done very well is violence as spectacle. When the show decides that it's time for a crazy, bloody set piece, the end result is usually pretty hard to look away from, even if they make it hard to watch. The Following won't win any awards, except perhaps a Scream Award for Stabbiest Show, but it's consistently, insanely entertaining, and it never hesitates to go completely mental and mow down dozens of people with the aim of providing queasy entertainment.
True to form, The Following's villains are always looking for a big, flashy, bloody way to get attention for themselves, and this week's episode is no different. Given that Joe's kill...
- 4/1/2014
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Review Ron Hogan 26 Feb 2014 - 07:18
Is The Following currently the most violent, bloody show on television? This week's episode suggests so...
This review contains spoilers.
2.6 Fly Away
If I had to make a bet, I would say that on The Following there will not be an unperforated torso by the end of the season. Ryan is nursing a gunshot wound, and yet despite that, he still manages to gut someone with a fold-out tactical knife. Several of Lily's “International House of Psychos” family members get their torsos mangled this week, some courtesy of Joe, some courtesy of Ryan, and some courtesy of Mike (who was stabbed in the first season, checking him off the gut wound list). You've got so many knives and guns and surprisingly sharp fireplace pokers getting rammed into people or waved at people in a threatening manner that it's kind of difficult to keep track,...
Is The Following currently the most violent, bloody show on television? This week's episode suggests so...
This review contains spoilers.
2.6 Fly Away
If I had to make a bet, I would say that on The Following there will not be an unperforated torso by the end of the season. Ryan is nursing a gunshot wound, and yet despite that, he still manages to gut someone with a fold-out tactical knife. Several of Lily's “International House of Psychos” family members get their torsos mangled this week, some courtesy of Joe, some courtesy of Ryan, and some courtesy of Mike (who was stabbed in the first season, checking him off the gut wound list). You've got so many knives and guns and surprisingly sharp fireplace pokers getting rammed into people or waved at people in a threatening manner that it's kind of difficult to keep track,...
- 2/26/2014
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
The Following, Season 2, Episode 5, “Fly Away”
Written by Dewayne Jones
Directed by Rob Seidenglanz
Airs Mondays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
For the most part, the second season of The Following has been miles ahead of its first. Between Lily Grey’s (Connie Nielsen) psychotic family, Ryan’s (Kevin Bacon) dark but understandable obsession with killing Joe (James Purefoy), and Purefoy’s continuously enjoyable performance, The Following has been a lot of fun. However, “Fly Away”, the season’s sixth episode, is uneven.
What’s become obvious in these last six episodes is that Mark and Luke (Sam Underwood) have turned into The Following’s most compelling characters, outside of Joe. There are some great scenes in “Fly Away” and the majority of them belong to Luke and Mark. Luke’s disbelief that Gisele (Camille De Pazzis) is gone, his taunting of Ryan, Mike (Shaun Ashmore), and Max (Jessica Stoup...
Written by Dewayne Jones
Directed by Rob Seidenglanz
Airs Mondays at 9pm (Et) on Fox
For the most part, the second season of The Following has been miles ahead of its first. Between Lily Grey’s (Connie Nielsen) psychotic family, Ryan’s (Kevin Bacon) dark but understandable obsession with killing Joe (James Purefoy), and Purefoy’s continuously enjoyable performance, The Following has been a lot of fun. However, “Fly Away”, the season’s sixth episode, is uneven.
What’s become obvious in these last six episodes is that Mark and Luke (Sam Underwood) have turned into The Following’s most compelling characters, outside of Joe. There are some great scenes in “Fly Away” and the majority of them belong to Luke and Mark. Luke’s disbelief that Gisele (Camille De Pazzis) is gone, his taunting of Ryan, Mike (Shaun Ashmore), and Max (Jessica Stoup...
- 2/26/2014
- by Tressa
- SoundOnSight
The Following Episode 206
“Fly Away”
Written By: Dewayne Jones
Directed By: Rob Seidenglanz
Original Airdate: 24 February 2014
In This Episode…
Picking up where we left off last week, Mark heads into the main house and he hears noises coming from Luke’s room. Naughty noises. Luke admits Giselle is back and alludes to them fooling around. Mark is a little naive and pushes his way into the room. Giselle is dead, laying in bed. Mark freaks, Luke insists she is just sleeping, then breaks down, crying, saying that Ryan killed her.
Down the hall, Joe and Lily are luxuriating in post-coital bliss. But Lily has lots to do - she has planned out everything. She, Joe, and the kids will take a small plane to Boston, where they will hop into a private jet and fly down to Venezuela. She has an enormous beach-front property there, they don’t extradite, and...
“Fly Away”
Written By: Dewayne Jones
Directed By: Rob Seidenglanz
Original Airdate: 24 February 2014
In This Episode…
Picking up where we left off last week, Mark heads into the main house and he hears noises coming from Luke’s room. Naughty noises. Luke admits Giselle is back and alludes to them fooling around. Mark is a little naive and pushes his way into the room. Giselle is dead, laying in bed. Mark freaks, Luke insists she is just sleeping, then breaks down, crying, saying that Ryan killed her.
Down the hall, Joe and Lily are luxuriating in post-coital bliss. But Lily has lots to do - she has planned out everything. She, Joe, and the kids will take a small plane to Boston, where they will hop into a private jet and fly down to Venezuela. She has an enormous beach-front property there, they don’t extradite, and...
- 2/25/2014
- by Alyse Wax
- FEARnet
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