Time | Network | Show | Rating | 18-49 |
---|---|---|---|---|
8PM | NBC | Football Night in America | 12.65 | 4.0/11 |
CBS | Survivor: Blood vs. Water | 10.17 | 2.6/6 | |
FOX | The Simpsons | 8.38 | 3.5/9 | |
ABC | Once Upon a Time | 6.40 | 1.9/5 | |
8:30PM | NBC | Sunday Night Football | 14.56 | 4.9/13 |
FOX | Bob’s Burgers | 5.53 | 2.4/6 | |
9PM | CBS | Survivor: Blood vs. Water | 10.17 | 2.6/6 |
FOX | Family Guy | 6.27 | 3.0/7 | |
ABC | Revenge | 6.10 | 1.5/4 | |
9:30PM | FOX | American Dad! | 4.94 | 2.4/6 |
10PM | NBC | Sunday Night Football | 14.56 | 4.9/13 |
CBS | Survivor: Blood vs. Water Reunion | 7.70 | 1.9/5 | |
ABC | Betrayal | 3.70 | 0.8/2 |
Archives for December 2013
On TV Tonight: Monday December 16, 2013
NET | 8PM | 8:30PM | 9PM | 9:30PM | 10PM | 10:30PM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ABC | Disney’s Prep & Landing | The Great Christmas Light Fight | ||||
CBS | How I Met Your Mother | 2 Broke Girls | Mike & Molly | Mom | Hostages | |
CW | Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer (R) | Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show (R) | ||||
FOX | Almost Human | Ice Age: A Mammoth Christmas Special (R) | Dragons: Gift of the Night Fury (R) | |||
NBC | The Voice | The Sing-off | ||||
MISC | Major Crimes (TNT) Top Gear (BBC America) | Generation Cryo (MTV) Mermaids: The New Evidence (Animal Planet) |
REVENGE Post-Mortem: Executive Producer Sunil Nayar Teases What’s Next Following Sunday’s Shocker!
In the ABC drama series REVENGE, even the best laid plans of Emily Thorne (Emily VanCamp) are sure to go haywire once in a while and, unfortunately, for all her careful planning, something went very wrong on her honeymoon. Lydia (Amber Valletta)cornered Victoria (Madeleine Stowe) on the yacht, making Aiden (Barry Sloane) unable to secure Victoria while Emily was on deck setting the stage, and then Victoria took it upon herself to accost Emily on deck and heated incriminating words were exchanged — all to the horror of Daniel (Josh Bowman) who stood in the shadows hearing everything. He learned that the woman he had just married had been using him all along, and in his drunken, angry stupor, he shot Emily with the gun she had brought to stage her fake death incriminating Victoria.
That’s right folks, Daniel was the shooter. Having just found out about Sara’s (Annabelle Stephenson) suicide attempt, and that Emily had been using him to get back at his mother, he just shot her. The look on Emily’s face was equal parts guilt and horror. It was her own fault that this had come about. The stage had been set perfectly, but it fell apart because Daniel heard what he was never supposed to hear. That gun that was supposed to be just a prop was just too easy to use for real — and Emily was shot point blank in the chest and thrown back into the water.
With Aiden and Jack (Nick Wechsler) worriedly searching for her on the beach when she failed to make her prearranged rendezvous, the fate of Emily Thorne is not yet known. Does she survive the gunshot wounds? Does she eventually make it back to the buoy and the beach? Will Daniel remember his deadly actions after he finally sobers up? And what about Victoria? Does she have a clue what really happened on the deck after she left?
For those who saw the previews of REVENGE when it returns on January 5th, a few of those questions are answered. Emily does survive. But does she remember who she is? Is the amnesia real or faked?
In a recent press interview, executive producer Sunil Nayar gave the inside scoop on what’s next in the increasingly complicated world of REVENGE. [Read more…]
Morning Static: HOMELAND, THE KILLING, THE VAMPIRE DIARIES & More!
• Page Out Of ‘24’ Book? HOMELAND’s Morgan Saylor, Morena Baccarin No Longer Regulars.
• THE KILLING’s Big Season 4 Mystery Revealed: A Military School, an Authoritarian and a Murder.
• News You Can Use: ‘Daily Show’s’ Tim Carvell Set as Showrunner of John Oliver HBO Series.
• After Seven Years in the Making, It’s Finally Clear “Skies” for Psych: The Musical
• TIME’s Top 10 Christmas Specials: Did Your Favorite Christmas Special Make the List?
• THE VAMPIRE DIARIES 100th episode promo: Let’s all toast … to Katherine’s impending death?
• We Love Lists! The worst TV of 2013.
• Pilot Watch: Matthew Perry To Star In, Write & Produce New ‘Odd Couple’ Comedy In Works At CBS.
• Funny Business: Rob Corddry Joins HBO Pilot BALLERS.
• More Funny Business: David Spade To Co-Write & Potentially Star In Music Industry Comedy Project For HBO.
• Deal of the Day: Save 60% off HOUSE THE COMPLETE SERIES via Amazon.
On TV Tonight: Sunday December 15, 2013
NET | 8PM | 8:30PM | 9PM | 9:30PM | 10PM | 10:30PM |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ABC | Once Upon a Time | Revenge | Betrayal | |||
CBS | Survivor: Blood vs. Water | Survivor: Blood vs. Water Reunion | ||||
FOX | The Simpsons | Bob’s Burgers | Family Guy | American Dad! | ||
HBO | Treme | Getting On/Ja’mie: Private School GIrl | ||||
NBC | Football Night in America | Sunday Night Football: Bengals at Steelers | ||||
MISC | Psych: The Musical (USA) | Witches of East End (Lifetime) | ||||
SHO | Homeland | Masters of Sex |
REVENGE: Get Thee To A Wedding!
Two years and nearly three seasons later, the long awaited wedding of Emily Thorne (Emily VanCamp) and Daniel Grayson (Josh Bowman) has finally come. From all the spoiler-filled photos we can see that the bride and groom make it to the wedding cake part of the celebration, and from the fateful opening to the third season, we all watched with horror as Emily was shot and fell overboard from her honeymoon yacht.
So for faithful fans, they have watched with wonder as Emily plotted out every final detail to her big day – not just her wedding day, but the day her ultimate revenge is unleashed on the Graysons. She is just itching to put that final nail in the Grayson coffin and bury Victoria (Madeleine Stowe) and Conrad (Henry Czerny) once and for all for their willingness to sacrifice her father to save their own skins all those years before. Fortunately, Emily’s revengenda has allowed her to pick up a few friends and allies along the way; there’s Nolan (Gabriel Mann), Aiden (Barry Sloane) and now Jack (Nick Wechsler) all working to ensure that her wedding day trap goes off without a hitch.
Last week’s shocker revealed that Lydia (Amber Valletta) had also survived the plane bombing that was supposed to have claimed her and Victoria’s lives in the Season 1 finale. Unfortunately, with Lydia back, so are her nasty suspicions that Emily Thorne is not who she is claiming to be — if only she could find that photo that exposes Emily. [Read more…]
Trailer Park: REIGN Ep. 9 “For King and Country” Sneak Peek!
A queen on the run, one brother valiantly by her side, two kingdom’s in jeopardy, and many hearts at risk, REIGN returns on Thursday, January 23rd at 9:00 p.m. on the CW with an all new episode “King and Country” — watch the sizzling, heart-clutching preview!
(Provided courtesy of the CW.)
As Queen Catherine, Megan Follows is so delicious on REIGN! It was such a treat to interview her about the series when it first premiered:
I am enamored by REIGN’s fearlessness. It does not hesitate to throw down the gauntlet with its storylines and characters. It is so confident and bold. Lessons other TV shows could learn from REIGN: be bold, be fearless, be romantic, and be more than anyone expects.
In case you missed the mid-season finale of REIGN entitled “Fated” — you can watch it HERE at the CW Now website.
Previous interview articles you may have missed:
REIGN Preview: Adelaide Kane Dishes On A Queen’s Heart Torn Between Two Brothers
It’s REIGN-ing Men! Torrance Coombs Previews Playing the Dark Prince Who Falls For a Queen
It’s REIGN-ing Men! Toby Regbo Explains The Tough Decision Facing the Young French Prince
REIGN Preview: Megan Follows Teases What Evil Mischief Her French Queen Is Up To
REIGN Preview: Jenessa Grant Talks Playing a Queen’s Confidante and Struggle for Her Own Identity
REIGN Preview: Caitlin Stasey Dishes on the Court’s Rebellious Lady-In-Waiting
Tiffany Vogt is the Senior West Coast Editor, contributing as a columnist and entertainment reporter to TheTVaddict.com. She has a great love for television and firmly believes that entertainment is a world of wondrous adventures that deserves to be shared and explored – she invites you to join her. Please feel free to contact Tiffany at Tiffany_Vogt_2000@yahoo.com or follow her at on Twitter (@TVWatchtower).
Trailer Park: HOUSE OF CARDS – Season 2 sneak peek!
Netflix debuts the Season 2 teaser trailer with highlights from its first season and the first look footage from the upcoming second season of HOUSE OF CARDS.
The second season of HOUSE OF CARDS premieres Friday, February 14, 2014 on Netflix.
FUN FACT: The series led the recently announced Golden Globe nominations with 4 noms for Best TV Series, Drama; Best Actress in a TV Series, Drama (Robin Wright); Best Actor in a TV Series, Drama (Kevin Spacey); and Best Supporting Actor in a Series, Mini-Series or TV Movie (Corey Stoll).
(Provided courtesy of Netflix.)
Tiffany Vogt is the Senior West Coast Editor, contributing as a columnist and entertainment reporter to TheTVaddict.com. She has a great love for television and firmly believes that entertainment is a world of wondrous adventures that deserves to be shared and explored – she invites you to join her. Please feel free to contact Tiffany at Tiffany_Vogt_2000@yahoo.com or follow her at on Twitter (@TVWatchtower).
HAVEN: A Truly Terrifying Trouble Terrorizes One of Our Heroes
Season 4 of Syfy’s drama series HAVEN has brought all kinds of surprises: multiple Troubles, morphing Troubles, and one devious newcomer known as William (Colin Ferguson). We all thought we knew the rules of Troubles. But we were wrong. Just as soon as William popped through the portal door, he was stirring up all kinds of trouble and giving people new Troubles – ones that neither they, nor their ancestors had before. William proved time and time again that he could create a new Trouble and infect anyone he wanted. He also showed that he could also change a person’s Trouble, causing it to manifest at an earlier age or have a wider range than before. William is literally a Trouble-maker. Then we found out that he is but one-half of a Trouble-making pair: Audrey (Emily Rose) is his split-apart – meaning anything that happens to William, happens to her, which was shockingly proven when Nathan (Lucas Bryant) shot William and Audrey developed a gunshot wound too. This has made it exceedingly difficult to get rid of him. Our HAVEN heroes cannot simply kill him, as much as they desperately want to.
That leaves them in a huge conundrum: how to solve a problem like William? Worse yet, the longer he’s around, the more he seems to bring out the worse in Audrey. He’s not just a thorn in her side, he’s actually bringing to the surface memories of her former existence – the original Audrey, the one who may or may not have relished cursing the residents of Haven with the Troubles, one-by-one over a century ago.
Audrey has always yearned for self-identity. From the moment she found out that she was not actually Audrey Parker (an identity claimed from a real woman in the FBI), Audrey wondered exactly who she was. She discovered she had lived at least two prior lives, known as Sarah and Lucy. It made her wonder just how many times she has come to Haven over the years, and why each time she had a different identity and no memory of her prior lives. Agent Howard (Maurice Dean Wint) was her one recurring link between her prior existences and that link was severed when Nathan shot him in the Season 3 finale, desperately hoping to prevent Audrey from disappearing with the barn, which acted as a portal between the 27 year gaps in Audrey’s lives across the timeline.
So without Agent Howard, Audrey thought she would never find out who she really was – and she was fine with that. She liked being Audrey Parker, being in love with Nathan, being flirty friends with Duke, and having a place in the everyday world of Haven.
Then came William. This last trip in the barn reintroduced Audrey to a key part of her past: William. At first, he did not tell her that they had a preexisting relationship. He wanted to see if she could figure it out for herself. He repeatedly told her that once she exited through the portal door opened by Jennifer (Emma Lahana) that Audrey would revert back to the one person she really wanted to be. He just thought that would be the woman he knew – his soulmate. Unfortunately, Lexie chose to be Audrey. That’s who she wanted to be. That left William scrambling as he followed her through the portal and began playing his usual tricks in Haven. He began infecting the unsuspecting residents of Haven with Troubles, all in hopes of stirring up some passion and deep memories within Audrey – to bring out her true inner-self.
When giving people Troubles was not enough to trigger anything, William took it even further and began triggering Troubles in those who already had them, but earlier in their life. He even triggered a Trouble in a baby in order to push Audrey into doing his bidding – he wanted her to give a Trouble to someone to combat or nullify the baby’s Trouble. Unfortunately, Audrey didn’t quite remember how to create a Trouble that complemented an existing Trouble and that seemed to go haywire. The next step was pushing Audrey to give a Trouble back to someone who had their Trouble cured – in desperation, Duke (Eric Balfour) asked to have his Trouble back so that he could kill people to save their families and future generations. It was a risky proposition. Would it work at all? And if it did, where did that leave Duke? He’d be forever cursed with the Trouble of having to kill the Trouble-afflicted, one that had a nasty addictive side and which turned him into a killer. It was his worst nightmare, and one he was only too happy to be rid of when his brother Wade (Christian Camargo) sacrificed himself to end his affliction and save Duke from their family’s Troubled-curse.
So last week’s episode “When the Bough Breaks” left us hanging just as Audrey was about to re-curse Duke and give him that nasty Trouble back. This week’s episode “The Lighthouse” will reveal whether Audrey actually went through with it and if it even worked. It will also show us how it affects Duke to have his Trouble back. Will it have a dire cost on his life? Will Jennifer still feel the same way about Duke now that he choose to get that particularly Trouble back? Will Duke even be able to do what is being asked of him and to kill the father to save the baby? How will Audrey react to re-infecting a close friend of hers and knowing that she is the cause of his pain and torment? Or will they both back away from the brink of this terrible Trouble and find another way to solve their Troubles?
HAVEN has never shied away from the trickier moral dilemmas. It relishes in making its characters and its fans squirm; for HAVEN is not a fairytale. It is a tale of terrible, terrifying Troubles; a curse that one woman may be responsible for, and why she may be paying the price of curing them every 27 years as a different person. Thus, what Audrey has wrought, she must atone for.
Yet William throws a wrinkle into that carefully constructed cure. He likes the Troubles. He loves the woman who created them. He wants her back. And he will literally do anything to get her back. It is something we all relate to. We have watched, cheering, as Nathan and Duke have fought ferociously over the past four seasons for Audrey – whether to save her life, to help her remember who she is, or to win her heart. So why is William any less deserving? Well, first of all, he’s a cold-blooded murderer and, second, he does not deserve her. But in his mind, he is worthy. He had her first. Underneath all those various identities, Audrey is at her heart the woman he loves — his soulmate. He just wants her back.
The Season 4 finale of HAVEN will show whether our heroes will win-out in the tug-of-war for Audrey’s heart. It will also deal with William, once and for all. The answers provided may delight and dazzle, or they may make us all question what we have always believed about Audrey, the Troubles, and those we know and love in HAVEN.
To see how the Season 4 finale of HAVEN plays out and where they shall leave us gasping at the end, be sure to tune in on Friday, December 13th at 10:00 p.m. on Syfy. Be warned Friday the Thirteenth is a traditionally cursed day of its own, and in true form for the occasion, the HAVEN Season 4 finale shall answer some prayers and unleash a few terrors in the process.
Tiffany Vogt is the Senior West Coast Editor, contributing as a columnist and entertainment reporter to TheTVaddict.com. She has a great love for television and firmly believes that entertainment is a world of wondrous adventures that deserves to be shared and explored – she invites you to join her. Please feel free to contact Tiffany at Tiffany_Vogt_2000@yahoo.com or follow her at on Twitter (@TVWatchtower).
GRIMM: David Giuntoli Previews the GRIMM Season 3 Winter Finale
With half the third season already done, GRIMM is taking a short winter break before turning with even more exciting tales of Wesen and Grimm adventures. But before it leaves on winter hiatus, GRIMM shall take a stab at turning Christmas on its head with another gruesome tale.
In a recent press interview, star David Giuntoli talked about what are the challenges and perks of being in their third season, what this Christmas special holds in store, and when the Season 3 villain shall finally make his presence known.
What can you tell us about GRIMM’s take on Christmas?
DAVID: Just guess. Whatever you think is what it is, we just ruin it. We just ruin Christmas for everybody. So I mean there’s an actual legend of Krampus out there, and we’ve had German people asking us to do Krampus over and over again, and we finally tipped our hat to the fine people of Bavaria and we’re bringing this legend to life. So we ruin Christmas for everybody and it’s gory and it’s wonderful.
The first part of the winter finale is about alligators in the sewers. Was there anything like that which you were afraid of when growing up or that maybe you were scared of when you were little?
DAVID: I was just afraid of ghosts. I couldn’t handle the thought of them and I felt constantly watched, and it was like the worst thing in the world.
Does Portland actually does have sewers and did you guys actually do some filming down there?
DAVID: Yes, we did actually. We did some trickery of course. We went into an actual sewer in Portland and then we shot on a sound stage that we built a sewer on a sound stage in Portland. But I got to look like an actual man for once in my life and had a little like sewer suit on with a little hard hat. Got my little soft city hands down a ladder into a sewer. I think everything’s getting better and better all the time. It’s one of these shows we’re very lucky to be on the air as long as we are. Any show that’s on the air is lucky to be on the air, and you got to really kind of find how to do it and constantly improve. It’s been fun and I think the seasons better than ever.
In this Friday’s upcoming episode Nick pulls out yet another new weapon from his arsenal. Is there any one weapon in particular that you really loved playing with? Is it kind of like getting to be a kid to play with all these fun things?
DAVID: That’s the one that had like the knife that shot out of it, right? That one was really cool. I mean that’s one of the first kind of practical weapons. I’ve always been a huge fan of the crossbow. It’s so great for those like little sexy director moments where you see the eyes above the crossbow. I just think that’s seems so cool. This weapon would be my favorite. It’s rare that I get a weapon that actually has some type of functioning mechanism on it, and this was really cool.
What do you think is the hardest thing Nick has to deal with in this series?
DAVID: The creatures get more and more difficult to deal with. I’m trying to think of what the strongest creature would be. Our show’s much like Mario Brothers. Like every level, they just get stronger and stronger and stronger, so obviously in Season 3, I’m dealing with some over-the-top, resilient ruthless Wesen. Krampus is pretty wild, that guy. I mean when I walked onto set and I saw the actor dressed — first of all, we hired a gigantic guy to play this character — and then when I saw him as Santa with these horns, I actually had like a visceral reaction to him. I was kind of frightened in a way. It was a disturbing thing. . . I think that some of the grossest things I’ve seen are like the corpse when they’re all set and bloodied. I remember in Season 1 the craziest thing I ever saw was walking on the set and seeing in a car a body being eaten alive from the inside by live rats, and rats were pouring out of this mouth of this dummy and it was awful. My colleague Russell Hornsby ran away like a scared little boy. There’s some other stuff too. I think the most difficult thing for me was the initial discovery when Nick found out he was a GRIMM and that this whole other world was out there. It’s something we play on in the series a lot. Whenever anybody else finds out who’s not ready to find out about the world of GRIMM, it’s very delicate — because like mental institutions are lined with people who weren’t ready to see something, and they did. So that’s the most difficult part I think emotionally of the whole show was when Nick finds out he was a Grimm. And then Hank had to find that out. And then later on in this season, maybe someone else is going to find that out. You think you’re going crazy and that’s the most difficult thing for the character to deal with.
Most of the GRIMM stories are based on fairy tales and folklore. Do you like that they’ve done something different lately, or do you prefer the more normal type folklore stories?
DAVID: I think anything that kind of throws a curve ball into what the audience is expecting is good for the show. What we’ve done on GRIMM originally is I was passed a book that had all these fairy tales in it, and that was what our episodes were based on. But as the show grows, as does the character Nick, and you discover that some of these other phenomena that take place in the world haven’t yet been added to the book of fairy tales, but they are being added by Nick now. So we are taking other myths and folklore and otherwise just any kind of stories that have been told and putting the little GRIMM spin behind them now. So I enjoy that.
With Nick having gone through a big change at the beginning of the season by becoming a zombie, and there’s some residual effects of that, are we going to see more of that after the winter break?
DAVID: Oh, yes. We’re going to be playing on this one for a little while. It’s like funny. Every time Nick gets harmed, he’s left with this kind of useful side-effect and we’re going to definitely be seeing more of that after the break.
With Nick’s new-found super hearing and his ability to appear dead, do you think that this is something he will learn to control over time, or is it something that you think may put his life in danger?
DAVID: At this point he does not control it at all. So he certainly can use his hearing to his advantage, but this dead thing, I don’t think he knows where it comes from yet. It is certainly not something that he can kind of pull out of his bag of tricks at his own whim. So it either helps him or it hurts him at this point.
Watching everything that’s been happening with the Royals and Adalind (Claire Coffee), is there one person that’s going to emerge as the villain?
DAVID: The writers have done a very good job of what I like to call the slow reveal. I would say coming towards the end of the mid-season we still have probably two or three contenders for the villain. One definitely. We have kind of a new character that emerges who is one of the I’d say two villains, but we have a new character who is one of the greater villains that we’re going to have on the show. But I still place the Captain as a possible villain, and I definitely Adalind as a villain, and then there’s one more guy who’s showing up here soon.
Can you tease a bit about what’s ahead in the European side of the story?
DAVID: There’s going to be a big plot line that’s going on in Europe. Nick is not too involved with it, at least through the mid-season, though I know that’s going to start changing soon. So we have the Verrat and we have the Royals. These are all bad guys. The Verrat I see as kind of the SS, and the Royals, such as Captain Renard, and his cousin, who’s being introduced as Alexis Denisof (a great actor) will be having a major conflict overseas. His cousin wants to get Nick and access to Nick, and he comes very close very soon. Then we have the resistance, a kind of group of rag-tag people trying to overthrow the Royals. So we’ll be meeting some new characters overseas doing that kind of thing and keeping an eye on Adalind. We’ll be doing quite a bit abroad. The passports have all been stamped, so we’re overseas quite a bit.
Nick’s relationship with Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch) has had so many rocky problems in the first 2 seasons and it seems to be going just maybe a little too smoothly this season, except for the whole zombie thing. Are we about to see some more problems between them, or are they going to live happily ever after?
DAVID: Oh, there’s no way they’re going to live happily ever after. I mean, I don’t know what’s going to happen, but if there is a relationship it is the job of the writers to tear it apart, at least temporarily. So I don’t know what’s going to happen, but I can guarantee you there’s going to be something thrown into the works there.
Do you hope someday to really be able to get in touch with your inner dark side a little bit more?
DAVID: Yes. I think the longer Nick does this job the more he is going to become that. I sense that. I sense that it happens, and he’ll become that more and more to the world of Wesen. He’s not afraid of people anymore. So that’s a good sign for my character, getting dark.
When Nick was staring to deal with the aftermath of the zombie period, Captain Renard (Sasha Roiz) made a very interesting observation when he asked Nick what the problem was with killing a human versus killing Wesen. Is that going to ever come up again?
DAVID: Yes, it will. It will come up again. The Captain made a very good point that somehow Nick never really thought of, but it will come up again. It’ll be a theme that is addressed.
Are we going to see more episodes about Latin American myth and folklore? Is there something special about them that you like?
DAVID: Yes, absolutely. For whatever reason when we did La Llorona, we got our second highest rated episode that we’ve ever done, and we’re like, “Oh, wow, maybe there’s a trick here.” But what I really do love is taking actual folklore, stuff that people really grow up being afraid of, that they hear about all the time. There’s plenty of stories in the Grimm’s Fairytales that we could go to that we haven’t gone to yet, but they’re not really stories that have made it really into the cultural conversation or don’t enter your homes through your parents telling you about them. There are plenty of other stories that do enter your family life as a child or whatever that are not Grimm’s Fairytales. So what I really love about these things like La Llorona are they’re actually part of the folklore of a lot of people, and we get to just add that to the Grimm’s Fairytale book now. And we get to utilize Bitsie’s Spanish speaking. I think they’re kind of somehow richer and more realistic. So those episodes, I do enjoy them. They’ve been very strong episodes.
What’s it like now that everyone knows Nick is a Grimm. Is it nice that you no longer have to hide this from Juliette and Hank and the whole gang can like work together now?
DAVID: Yes. I think the show is better for having several more people know about Nick being a Grimm. There are still some people in the dark that I don’t want it to be revealed to just yet. The show can never become a big happy family. There needs to be a lot of problems and that there are responsibilities and dangers that come with knowing about this world, and those who have found out who are not either Wesen or Grimm, there are dangers that come with that, and that’s going to be explored in this season. There’s a reason Nick doesn’t tell everybody. It’s not safer for him, the more normal human beings that know about it. But I am happy that a couple more characters are in this circle, so to speak. I think it opens up a lot of new character dynamics — different people who can interact with each other for the first time. And I love those big dinner scenes where we’re looking at gory, bloody pictures and drinking red wine and kind of discussing it from all these different points of views: Fuchsbau, Wesen, Juliette, Grimm, and Hank. I think it’s fun.
The Wesen decided to hide from the humans. How did that come about?
DAVID: The Wesen rarely ever throughout history, and to this day, want to be seen by humans. Now when it behooves them to be seen, such as they’re robbing a bank and they’re trying to scare the bejesus out of a normal person or threaten them, then irresponsibly, the Wesen will show themselves. And the Wesen Council governs this behavior. So there was an episode in Season 2 where the Wesen Council heard about bank robbers using what people perceived to be masks to rob banks. I believe Blutbaten were doing this, and the Wesen Council got involved because if human beings start to know about Wesen — like remember the Salem witch trials, — it will be slaughter and/or upheaval of some kind. So the Wesen could always be seen by humans, but it is for their health and safety to not be seen by humans.
How have you seen your character further grow and develop this season? Have there been new acting challenges as you discovered with the character?
DAVID: Well, I think he’s become far more confident. I kind of decided this year he’s not afraid of Wesen anymore. They’re not something that’s going to scare him. What does scare him to this day is what happens to his loved ones if he don’t stop the Wesen. So that’s where the struggle comes in. And Nick also see himself now as the only person who has like the rare blood to solve some of these cases. So the stakes are raised in a different way now. He’s not afraid of the creatures, but he knows it’s on him to take care of this case or this next case. Like no one else can figure this thing out because they can’t see anything that he can see. I don’t know if there’s an acting like struggle that’s come there, but you got to like make the decision of what is keeping my character so highly invested in each one of those cases, and that’s a decision I made. But the newest thing, is that Nick is now more confident as he has kind of settled into his role. There’s no reluctance there anymore and he’s willing to go kind of rogue more often.
This season we’re starting to see increasing tension between Rosalee (Bree Turner) and Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) concerning loyalty to Nick, and you alluded to the Captain as well. Are we going to see Nick eventually lose two members of his support team?
DAVID: You’ll see some wavering, I’ll say that. I don’t want to say I lose them all together. But things are starting to get questioned: Is Nick using Monroe? I just shot an episode where that’s like the central theme, and there’s a big falling out between Monroe and Nick. And it’s great because is he using Monroe? And in the episode that’s what is asked. Nick is sitting with Juliette, and he’s like, “I don’t know. He’s right. I think he’s right.” So I think it’s kind of cool that this stuff’s coming to the surface in Season 3.
What is your favorite Wesen that Nick has confronted over the year and why?
DAVID: Well, it’s got to be Blutbad. They’re like Labradors. They’re so loyal, to a fault. I’ve forged this bond with Monroe. It’s fantastic. And then I would say the Dämonfeuer because they’re just so fun to look at.
Are you happy that you’re portraying a Grimm, or would you rather be a Wesen?
DAVID: I love being a Grimm. I feel like I live inside the character now. I just get it. I know where he’s coming from. You sit with a character for long enough — and it’s the beauty of having a television show that’s running — you really get into it. You don’t even have to try any more. You just kind of know how he would react to a certain situation. And you probably can’t get that in movies. It’s just we spend so much more time with these characters. So I like being a Grimm. I’m sure I would love being a Wesen too, if I were one. But right now, I’m a Grimm and that’s just fine with me.
To see the 2-hour GRIMM winter finale, be sure to tune in on Friday, December 13th at 9:00 p.m. on NBC. Christmas is just never going to be the same again!
Tiffany Vogt is the Senior West Coast Editor, contributing as a columnist and entertainment reporter to TheTVaddict.com. She has a great love for television and firmly believes that entertainment is a world of wondrous adventures that deserves to be shared and explored – she invites you to join her. Please feel free to contact Tiffany at Tiffany_Vogt_2000@yahoo.com or follow her at on Twitter (@TVWatchtower).