Latest news with #Leverage:Redemption


Geek Girl Authority
15-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Geek Girl Authority
LEVERAGE: REDEMPTION Recap: (S03E07) The Shakedown in Clone-Town Job
It's been a while since the Leverage: Redemption team fried up a big fish in a little pond. In Leverage: Redemption Season 3 Episode 7, 'The Shakedown in Clone-Town Job,' they stumble across the hamlet of Gillon, Louisiana, where the mayor has been filling his pockets with money collected from people passing through in the form of traffic tickets and fines for breaking frivolous bylaws. As a lovely sidenote, Sophie (Gina Bellman) has a Hallmark moment with the town's handyman/vet/tow truck driver. RELATED: Catch up with our recap of the previous Leverage: Redemption episode, 'The Swipe Right Job' It's another Hardison/Aldis Hodge-light adventure. In addition, Noah Wyle's Harry Wilson only contributes via text message. Ostensibly, he's in court all week, but Wyle might've been filming The Pitt just as Hodge had other work obligations like Cross and City on a Hill . Still, with a hint of The Magnificent Seven and a whiff of Spartacus , the active Leverage: Redemption team members work their magic on a town that could be better than their municipal leaders. Image Credit: Sam Lothridge/Prime Video Leverage: Redemption, 'The Shakedown in Clone-Town Job' An exhausted Eliot (Christian Kane) drives home in his 2008 Dodge Challenger. Sophie rides in the passenger seat, bemoaning her dating life, and Parker (Beth Riesgraf) is in the back seat searching for food. At headquarters, Breanna (Aleyse Shannon) wanders around in a panda onesie, questioning how Sophie could be doing dating 'wrong.' Sophie says that a lifetime of lying and grifting has made her overly distrustful. Breanna admits that she's created dozens of online bots to build fake interactive histories to use in future cons. However, she also uses them to mess with real people occasionally. RELATED: The Librarians Sequel Coming to the CW When Sophie starts questioning Eliot about what he lies about to romantic partners, he steps on the gas to get home faster. Suddenly, a hidden police car pursues them with its siren screaming. The team reports that they've been pulled over. Breanna reminds them that law enforcement might take exception to some of the items from the previous night's con that are in the car's hidden compartment. The sheriff, Pinkus (Carl Palmer), demands Eliot's license. Eliot hands over one for Luke Newman. Pinkus tells him to pop the trunk. When Eliot questions this, Pinkus warns him he's already getting a $300 ticket for speeding in a construction zone. He threatens to tack another hundred on for the look Eliot's giving him. The situation escalates quickly due to Pinkus's aggressive manner. He impounds the car and arrests Eliot. Breanna looks up the township, Gillon, and discovers it collects $2.5 million each year by ticketing passing motorists. Gillon, LA Parker and Sophie ride into town with the tow truck driver. He and Sophie strike up a conversation about Yeats's poetry. He gets a call about a kitten with a possible broken leg. Turns out he's the town vet who also drives the tow truck. He drops them outside Ethel's Diner to wait for Eliot. Sophie's a bit smitten. RELATED: A Leverage: Redemption Primer: Get Ready to Steal Season 3 Parker's still hungry, so she and Sophie wade through the biker gang outside to get into Ethel's. Inside, a man scolds a younger man about how he handles the loans at the town's bank before shooing him away without any breakfast. As Ethel (Julie Ivey) passes by his table, the older man grabs her and complains about the peppers on his omelette. She takes the omelette away without a word. Sophie and Parker watch from the counter. In the courthouse, Eliot and other defendants are directed to plead guilty or no contest when they face the judge, and they'll get to leave with a slap on the wrist. Eliot wants Harry to help him. Sophie says Harry's in court all week but tells Breanna to try to get a message to him. Pissing Someone Off In the diner, Sophie chats up Ethel and finds out the loud older man is Armin Brewster (Cedric Yarbrough), the town's mayor. He's been mayor for 15 years. Ethel used to run the town paper before it shut down. Brewster walks over to greet Sophie and Parker. Sophie comments that whoever's in charge should deal with the riff-raff outside. He tells Ethel he forgot his wallet and leaves without paying. Ethel tells the women the last thing you want to do is piss off the mayor. RELATED: Read our Cross recaps Breanna lets Eliot know that Harry says to plead no contest, pay the fine, and get home. Eliot asks the courthouse sheriff, Pinkus, what happens if he pleads not guilty. Pinkus says he'll get stuck in a very small cell for a very long time while they send a call out for the magistrate. He warns Eliot that the last thing he wants to do is piss off the judge. A Mayor's Court Sophie and Parker arrive in the courtroom just as Pinkus announces the judge, who turns out to be Armin Brewster, the mayor. Parker theorizes that the mayor and the judge are twins, or possibly clones. Harry informs Breanna by text that it's legal in several states for the mayor to sit as judge. Once Brewster gets started, he racks up the fines until Eliot's on the hook for a thousand dollars. In addition, he recognizes Parker and Sophie from the diner and charges them another thousand to get the car out of impound. Sophie decides it's time to add Mayor Brewster to their collection of toppled mayors. RELATED: Falling Skies Season 4 Premiere Thoughts and Recap Heading back to the diner, Sophie asks Ethel about the history of Gillon and Brewster. After the mill shut down, Brewster made himself mayor and turned the town into a speed trap. He squeezes the townsfolk when he can't make enough off fining people driving through. If anyone tries to challenge him for the mayorship, he sics the biker gangs on them. The only oversight committee, the town council, has only three people on it. Two of them are Sheriff Pinkus and Clyde Brewster (Craig Frank), Armin's younger brother. The third is Ethel's brother — the town vet and tow truck driver — Jack (John Charles Meyer). Let's Go Steal a Town Eliot's keen to come back in a week to run a con after he's gotten some sleep. Sophie insists they can quickly and easily Field of Dreams Brewster, separating him from his campaign war chest, and setting the town up for a fair election. The plan is to portray Eliot as a racecar driver-turner-track designer representing Apex 300, a race track development company looking to turn Gillon into a racing mecca. Parker's a daredevil driver, Helena von Strom, the future face of Apex 300. Sophie's the rainmaker, Tia Salabianchi, the influencer with the ear of the Apex 300 board. Sophie approaches Clyde Brewster at the First Bank of Gillon as Tia. She proposes the purchase of the old mill grounds and the property between it and the highway for a mysterious consortium, offering $50 million. As she takes a fake call from the Apex 300 board, Clyde looks her up and gives Armin a call. Armin has Pinkus with him and sends the sheriff to the mill. Good With My Hands Sophie spots Jack fixing a truck and comes over to talk. They quote some Yeats at each other, and he offers her a bed. At his bed and breakfast. Obviously. Sophie regretfully declines, saying that she's leaving town that night. RELATED: TV Review: Leverage: Redemption Season 3 When Sophie returns to the bank to meet with Clyde, he brings her to a room to meet with Armin. She furthers the grift, but he leaves without biting. Over the coms, Eliot comments that something's not right. He's headed to the mill on a bicycle. When he arrives, he finds the biker gang set up. He beats them up, sending them off on their bikes to lick their wounds. He discovers a kilo of cut cocaine on the ground. Parker drives up and takes the cocaine with her since the police are on their way to arrest Eliot. Again. Sophie knocks on Jack's door. He wonders if she's actually willing to trust him. She states she's interested in peeking behind the facade of the house. She spends the night and enjoys a proper cup of tea the next morning. Jack tells her that he and Ethel believe in the town and want to give it a chance to thrive. He says the only time they made any progress was when Armin went on holiday and the council elected a temporary mayor. The Missing Pieces Regrouping with Parker and Eliot, Sophie shares her Jack-made pastries while Eliot informs them that the bikers push drugs at the local truck stop. They realize Armin's been turning a blind eye in exchange for their muscle. If a racetrack were to draw attention to Gillon, the bikers' gig would be over. RELATED: Read our Fallout recaps Parker decides they need to turn the bikers against Armin. Sophie says that's a part of it. She goes and waits for Armin in Ethel's. He sits down and gloats that they read him wrong. Money's not as important to him as power. He believes she'll be running out of town by nightfall. She disagrees. She won't be the one running. Eliot finds the biker gang and plants the idea that Armin is running a cartel deal under their noses. They break open a trailer at the truck stop and find barrels full of bags of flour that Sophie and Parker seeded with the kilo they left with Eliot. The bikers head out to find Armin. Phase Two Eliot enters the bank wearing a clown mask, triggering panic in the tellers and clients. While everyone is distracted, Parker steals the keys to the vault. She empties several safety deposit boxes, taking all the bikers' money. Clyde realizes what's happened after Pinkus takes Eliot away. He runs outside and tries to get away in his car. It doesn't start. Sophie sits down in the passenger seat. She promises to fix everything for him in exchange for his vote on the council. RELATED: Geek Girl Authority Crush of the Week: Leverage: Redemption 's Parker In the courtroom, Jack addresses Armin, having called an emergency council meeting to elect a temporary mayor to replace Armin. He nominates Eliot/Luke Newman. Clyde votes with Jack against Pinkus and runs from the room. Jack takes the gavel from Armin before he can run after Clyde. Armin runs out of the courtroom and straight into the bikers. Pinkus pulls the bikers off Armin, giving him a chance to escape. Sophie, Parker, and Ethel watch Armin peel out of town. Ethel points out that the biker gang is still set up in town. She asks how they can clean the town up with them around. 'Where's the cavalry?' she asks. Sophie states they'll turn up. With a deep sigh, she states, 'I trust.' Building Trust Breanna uses her bots to create buzz and excitement about Eliot as Mayor Newman. At the diner, Sophie waitresses while Ethel revives her paper online, writing about the town and what it has to offer. Breanna sets Ethel's article up to go viral and heads up to Gillon to join the team. RELATED: Prime Video Renews Fallout for Season 3 Montage of Eliot doing mayor stuff while the bikers terrorize the town. In the bank, the bikers discover their money is gone. Breanna's there to 'push them over the edge,' on Sophie's advice. She tells them there was a break-in and recommends that next time, they put their money in a chequing account. They storm out and head to the courtroom, where they try to shake down Eliot. Eliot refuses, and they walk out. He warns Sophie that the bikers are going to do something extreme. The bikers head to Ethel's and pour gasoline all over the walls and windows. They light a torch, and the head biker holds it up, threatening to burn the building and possibly the whole town down unless they get rid of their new mayor. Ethel can't see how the town will survive. Sophie explains that the plan was always to have the people of Gillon rise up and take their town back. Jack and the town firefighters arrive in the firetruck. The rest of the town arrives on bicycles, en masse. They face off with the bikers who drop the torch and leave. Outside Gillon, Parker pulls Armin and Pinkus over for speeding in the construction zone. She finds the stolen bank money in the trunk and arrests them. RELATED: Read our Leverage: Redemption recaps In Gillon, Ethel launches her campaign for mayor with a peach-themed festival and a proposal to turn the old mill into a multi-purpose recreation and live concert venue. Clyde thanks Sophie for bringing him and his horticulture degree onto the project. Guilty or No Contest In the courtroom, a magistrate informs Armin and Pinkus that Mayor Newman has split mayoral and judicial duties forever. She accuses Armin and Pinkus of working with the bikers to sell drugs over the last ten years. Their choice is to plead guilty or no contest. Outside, Ethel bids Breanna, Parker, and Eliot goodbye, thanking them for their help. She tells them they're welcome in Gillon anytime. Sophie decides to stay in Gillon with Jack for a few days. For his popovers. Leverage: Redemption Season 3 streams on Prime Video with new episodes every Thursday. The New BALLERINA Trailer Is Pure Fire Diana lives in Vancouver, BC, Canada, where she invests her time and energy in teaching, writing, parenting, and indulging her love of all Trek and a myriad of other fandoms. She is a lifelong fan of smart sci-fi and fantasy media, an upstanding citizen of the United Federation of Planets, and a supporter of AFC Richmond 'til she dies. Her guilty pleasures include female-led procedurals, old-school sitcoms, and Bluey. She teaches, knits, and dreams big. You can also find her writing at The Televixen, Women at Warp, TV Fanatic, and TV Goodness.


Chicago Tribune
23-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Chicago Tribune
‘Leverage: Redemption' review: Breezy caper series with a moral compass is back for Season 3
With a taste for heists and a soft spot for anyone wronged, the team on 'Leverage: Redemption' operates outside the law, targeting unscrupulous individuals in need of karmic payback. Back for a third season on Amazon, the show's swindlers-with-a-moral-compass include Noah Wyle, who joined the ensemble when the series was rebooted in 2021. More recently, Wyle has been giving a wonderfully unfussy performance on the hospital drama 'The Pitt,' which just wrapped its first 15-episode season. But it's fun to see him doing something lighter on 'Leverage.' Though he plays an attorney, his actual purpose within the team has never been clearly spelled out. That's fine, and better than fine when he gets to go undercover in service of the con, whether as an eccentric CEO of a cryonics company or a pool hustler with incredible sideburns, because it's in these moments that Wyle gets to be silly. That fits the tone of this breezy caper series from John Rogers and Chris Downey, where details and logistics are less important than a jaunty overall approach that gives audiences something that's been in short supply both in fiction and the real world: Consequences for the rich and corrupt. A man stealing water from an aquifer and then selling it back to the area's residents? A local judge with a taste for gifts rivaling Clarence Thomas's? A company that's more or less a chop shop selling human body parts? The team has found their next project. They're able to scam the scammers because they have very specialized skills and seemingly unlimited funds. That's not exactly a galvanizing message, but there is one episode that features ordinary people coming together to push out a nasty crook of a mayor, albeit with considerable 'Leverage' shenanigans making it possible. As a series, it has its head screwed on straight. I mean, right now? With everything that's happening? As someone puts it, a con is just a set of artificial circumstances designed to elicit an intended response. It's impossible to hear those words and not think of the stock market in recent weeks. Aldis Hodge and Aleyse Shannon play the group's hackers (the former is once again largely absent from the season, I'm guessing due to scheduling conflicts with his other Amazon series, 'Cross') and I was bummed at the inclusion of stray bits of dialogue along the lines of 'I can run an AI algorithm.' The team may wink in the face of 'rules,' but their existence is predicated on a clear ethical framework and they'd never be so blithe and cavalier about the many issues surrounding artificial intelligence. These casual references stick out in a bad way. It's surprising because the show tends to do the little things so well. In one episode, a food bank charity raises money at a gala where the theme is Marie Antoinette. So wrong, so absurd — no notes! In another episode, the team's cat burglar (Beth Riesgraf) and muscle (Christian Kane) impersonate FBI agents in windbreakers, and it works as a legit parody of these kinds of swaggering portrayals. The brains of each operation is the grifter (Gina Bellman) and she's the steadying presence amid the wild card personalities of her compatriots. Something about the energy and storytelling flags in the final two of the season's 10 episodes, but it's a minor quibble. I can't express how satisfying it is to watch a television show that doesn't pretend we have to accept that systems are permanently rigged and we're all doomed. It's also deeply ironic that this show exists on this streaming platform. Hell, any streaming platform, for that matter. These are not companies particularly interested in notions of 'fairness' or 'balancing the scales,' and yet somehow this show exists. Hustling the hustlers? I'll take it.
Yahoo
17-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
INTERVIEW: ‘Leverage: Redemption's' new season now streaming on Prime Video
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) — For four years, action-thriller 'Leverage' dominated TV on TNT. When the show ended in 2012, the producers thought there were more stories to tell. This led to the revival series 'Leverage: Redemption' kicking off its first season in 2021. Now, with season three premiering Thursday, the series is moving from network 'Freevee' to 'Prime Video.' The series follows a Robin Hood-esque team of criminals as they stage elaborate cons against wealthy and powerful individuals on behalf of clients who have been wronged. News 8's Gio Battaglia spoke with the show's stars: Gina Bellman and Beth Riesgraf about what's in store for the new season. Gio Battaglia: It's gotta be an exciting week with season three just around the corner! Gina Bellman: Thrilling. It really is so exciting. I couldn't be happier. Gio Battaglia: Tell me a little bit about what fans can expect this season. I know it's also a move to Prime Video. So a lot, a lot's happening with this new season. Beth Riesgraf: They can expect the same shenanigans with all the characters, and their interpersonal relationships are a lot of fun. There's a lot going on with everybody emotionally this season — and then all the action and international appeal that the show has is really present. Being on Prime has given us this great boost to do chase sequences in Paris and fight scenes in Serbia and all the things. So, I think fans are going to be really excited to see all the worlds we play in this season. Gina Bellman: I think they'll also be pleased that we haven't run out of bad guys to take down. They just keep coming thick and fast, just like in the real world, and you can always rely on our crew to bring them down. Gio Battaglia: I love that. So, since the original show ended in 2012. How did it feel to kind of come back into these characters and continue these stories? Gina Bellman: It was the craziest journey for us. We all got the same phone call from our boss, Dean Devlin, who is a legend to all of us and television in general, he called us each individually and said, 'How do you feel about putting the band back together?' And that was such an innovative way of putting it. And we all just like, jumped up and down, and we've been celebrating ever since. Gio Battaglia: What's been the reaction from the fans? Beth Riesgraf: They're flipping out. They've been so supportive. I mean, they're the reason that we keep coming back. It's so great. Our community is so supportive and so engaged in everything we're doing along the way. They're so supportive. So, they, I mean, from Facebook to X to Instagram. I feel our audience is really growing and growing and growing, and I'm so excited for new people to also join us on Amazon Prime this time around. Gio Battaglia: I know that we touched on, obviously in the first response, what fans can expect. But take me a little bit deeper. What was your favorite part of taping this season? Gina Bellman: My favorite episode this season takes us actually into the future, where we meet a bad guy who is freezing people after their death, and he's charging their families like an exorbitant fee to keep them going with the promise that maybe they can be resuscitated. But we kind of fake a future world and for and that's a Jonathan Frakes episode, who's one of our great regular directors, who's wonderful with comedy. So, it's like, my favorite episodes are always the ones with the great, like hijinks, like super comedy. And that's, that's one to look forward to. What's yours, Beth? Beth Riesgraf: I think, as a performer, diving into the horror genre, which we do during one of the episodes this season, we've never done this like this before. That was really exciting. And then as a director, it would be, you know, personally, I just love the episode, which is based actually on a true story about a corrupt judge who's also the mayor and is stealing from the townspeople, essentially set up a speed trap and taking their money and doing horrible things. So, I loved working with Gina, especially in this episode, because she has a really beautiful arc for Sophie, and she absolutely crushed it. And I designed an incredible fight sequence that Christian actually nailed the heck out of in a way almost that we've never really done before. So, for me, it was really challenging in a way. As a director, that was really exciting for me. Gio Battaglia: It's evident in the clips that I watched that the cast enjoys working together, and it's told through the plot lines of these episodes. So, talk a little bit about the cast dynamic. Gina Bellman: We've always just had a really good click. I don't quite know how they pulled it off, but you know what I think we all love about the show is that it is a true ensemble in that we read a script, and it comes in and I might like call Beth and say, 'Hey, actually, this, this is a really good moment for you. Let's ask them to expand that.' Or Christian might say, 'Hey, this is a moment for you and I to have some rapport.' And we're always collaborating. And this year, the three of us, are acting as executive producers as well. So, it's really nice to have that acknowledgement that not only do we click, but and lift each other up, but that we're so invested in making the show better and better and better for the fans. Beth Riesgraf: I think that thing that essence and fun that the fans show up for, we really are feeling that as characters, but as performers and artists. And it's like, I think that is the thing, at least, when I watch TV, I show up because I feel like I know the people I'm about to hang out with, and I'm excited to see what they get up to, and we organically, like Gina said, we all just bounce off each other in such a fun, authentic way. But I think that's what keeps us all coming back with such excitement. And it really is fun. Gio Battaglia: Do you guys have anything else you want to highlight before anything else you wanted to add? Gina Bellman: I think what's great about this show is that you can dip into any episode. So don't worry if you haven't caught up with the show yet. Come to us on season three, fall in love with the characters and on Amazon Prime, and then you can go back and discover the origin stories. Beth Riesgraf: I think fans that have been with us since the beginning of 'Leverage' are going to be really excited to see some of that edge and action and danger being heightened even a little more this season. And I think they're going to have a lot of fun watching it. Season three of 'Leverage: Redemption' is streaming now on Amazon Prime Video. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


Axios
17-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Axios
New movies and shows this week on Netflix, Paramount+ and Apple TV+
Here's what's new on Netflix, Paramount+, Apple TV+, Prime Video, Disney+, Max and Peacock. What we're watching: A documentary about the Oklahoma City bombing, a look at the tragic family story surrounding pop singers Nick and Aaron Carter, and a new period comedy about a former inmate acclimating back into society. " Oklahoma City Bombing: American Terror," available Friday on Netflix State of play: It's been 30 years since the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in U.S. history. Zoom in: This documentary features crime scene recreations and firsthand accounts and interviews with Timothy McVeigh, the man responsible for the bombing. " The Carters," available now on Paramount+ The intrigue: This emotional documentary about the upbringing of pop superstars Nick and Aaron Carter is narrated by the singers' sister, Angel. Behind the scenes: Director Soleil Moon Frye uses home videos, photographs, audio recordings, private text messages and conversations with family friends, including Melissa Joan Hart, Scout Willis and longtime manager Lori Knight. " Government Cheese," available now on Apple TV+ Driving the news: This surrealist comedy series starring and produced by David Oyelowo ("Selma") premiered at SXSW. " Leverage: Redemption," Season 3, on Prime Video This season, the team will be pitted against a variety of corrupt adversaries while dodging the wrath of a past enemy and working through new relationship dynamics. Available now " Ransom Canyon," on Netflix This new drama from "All American" creator April Blair follows a power struggle between three ranching families in Texas Hill Country and the budding romance between a rancher (played by Josh Duhamel) and a local dancehall owner (played by Minka Kelly). Available now " The Rehearsal," Season 2, on Max Director and star Nathan Fielder puts his resources this season toward simulating a commercial plane crash. Available Sunday " Law & Order: Organized Crime," Season 5, on Peacock This season, the Organized Crime Control Bureau will face threats like cross-border smuggling, high-tech domestic terrorism and a crime family looking for vengeance against Det. Stabler (played by Christopher Meloni). Available now " Behind the Curtain: Stranger Things — The First Shadow," on Netflix This documentary goes behind the scenes of the stage-play prequel to the events of "Stranger Things." Available now " Jane," Season 3, on Apple TV+ The show's namesake, renowned zoologist Jane Goodall, will make an appearance this season. Available Friday " Light and Magic," Season 2, on Disney+ This three-part series follows the visual effects division of Lucasfilm (the studio behind "Star Wars") during the beginning of the digital age. Available Friday
Yahoo
05-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Almost Paradise Cancelled After 2 Seasons
Paradise can't last forever, it seems: The tropical action drama Almost Paradise has been cancelled after two seasons, TVLine has confirmed. 'We're looking for a new home,' executive producer Dean Devlin tells TV Insider. 'I've never had a show that was this successful and yet couldn't stay at the same place more than one season.' Almost Paradise debuted on WGN America back in 2020 and then moved to Amazon Freevee for Season 2, which aired in July 2023. A source tells TVLine that when Freevee was scrapped last year, Almost Paradise became a casualty. More from TVLine Power Rangers Update: Percy Jackson Bosses in Talks to Pen a Live-Action Series for Disney+ The Sex Lives of College Girls Cancelled at Max After 3 Seasons - Could It Be Saved? Cruel Intentions Cancelled at Prime Video After 1 Season Devlin isn't ready to say goodbye yet, though: 'As you can tell from Leverage: Redemption, I don't give up. So at some point, Almost Paradise will be back. I just don't know when.' Devlin also exec-produced the long-running TNT procedural Leverage, which was revived by Freevee as Leverage: Redemption in 2021. Almost Paradise starred Christian Kane — who also co-starred on Leverage — as Alex Walker, a former U.S. DEA agent who, after his partner's betrayal and a life-threatening battle with hypertension, is forced into early retirement and relocates to a small tropical island in the Philippines. There, he's pulled back into a world of dangerous people and deadly situations, either through his friends in the local police — Kai Mendoza (played by Samantha Richelle) and Ernesto Alamares (Art Acuña) — or running into people from his old life. Devlin and Gary Rosen (The Librarians) co-created the series and served as co-showrunners. Kane still stars on Leverage: Redemption (Season 3 premieres Thursday, Apr. 17) and is set to reprise his role as Jacob Stone in The Librarians: The Next Chapter (coming soon to TNT). Will you miss spending time in ? Share your thoughts on the cancellation in a comment below. Best of TVLine Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More 'Missing' Shows, Found! The Latest on Severance, Holey Moley, Poker Face, YOU, Primo, Transplant and 25+ Others