Plus: Get ready for more sessions of Web Therapy, The Big Bang Theory is unstoppable, and Arrow casts a True Blood hottie.
DVR numbers couldn't save the nuclear sub drama and hellish apartment building horror from the axe.
This real-world Batman show is becoming a moving comic book, thanks to an expanding arsenal of villains.
The man who presses the Cancellation Button at CBS finally returned from vacation today and immediately got to work.
Plus: CBS orders more of one show and less of another, Hunted may live on in the U.S., and Eddie Izzard joins Hannibal.
TV's greatest nonsensical gorefest will be back, but where will it take place? We have a few suggestions.
Plus: The Secret Circle's showrunner sells two new projects, NBC heads to Washington, and Bryan Greenberg has a new job.
Jax continues to be one part Pope, one part Clay, and zero parts the man we used to know.
Plus: There's a MacGyver movie in the works, a Disneyland ride is the basis for a new TV project, and Arrow casts its Vertigo.
This week Monroe sent his deadliest man after Miles and the pendant, but it was Nora who takes center stage in one of Revolution's most boring episodes yet.
Plus: More scripts for some ABC comedies, Girls might already be filming Season 3, and more pathetic stunt casting for 90210!
This week, Walter followed another tape's instructions to a building that defied physics, but will this plan ever come to fruition?
Strong DVR numbers and song sales helped the country-music soap earn nine more chances to repair achy-breaky hearts.
We didn't really learn anything really in this episode, but hey, more zombies died!
This was a solid hour of television, but only an okay episode of Homeland.
Plus: 1600 Penn has a premiere date, Ben and Kate's Tommy gets a love interest, and Lindsay Lohan disappoints everyone again.
This time the network didn't wait for a cliffhanger to order more.
"The High Road" stripped Person of Interest to its core and spread out the themes of the case of the week toward its main characters for an outstanding hour of television.
Yes, by the time we get to May we'll get 22 hours' worth of Kristin Kreuk toughing it up as a cop and Jay Ryan brooding as a handsome monstrosity.
Plus: Nikita changes time slots, The Carrie Diaries has a premiere date, and more Whitney for NBC?