Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
True Blood is an American fantasy horror drama television series produced and created by Alan Ball. It is based on The Southern Vampire Mysteries, a series of novels by Charlaine Harris. The series revolves around Sookie Stackhouse (Anna Paquin), a telepathic waitress living in the fictional rural town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. It is set two ...
Rev. Steve Newlin is head of the Fellowship of the Sun (a prominent anti-vampire church that makes regular TV appearances in the True Blood universe, intent on spreading fear and hatred of vampires) and the secondary antagonist of season 2. He is featured mainly in the second season, as Jason decides to join his church.
True Blood follows a serialized format, with most episodes ending on a cliffhanger that leads directly into the next. Episode titles are taken from the name of a song that appears on the soundtrack of that episode. During the course of the series, 80 episodes of True Blood aired over seven seasons, between September 7, 2008, and August 24, 2014 ...
The first season of True Blood debuted at a very modest 1.44 million viewers compared to the network's past drama premiers such as Big Love which premiered at 4.56 million, and John from Cincinnati which debuted at 3.4 million. [12] However, by late November 2008, 6.8 million a week were watching; this figure includes repeat and on-demand ...
Paquin won Best Supporting Actress Oscar, aged 11 for her acting debut in Jane Campion’s 1993 film The Piano, and went on to win a Golden Globe for True Blood‘s first season.
A “True Blood” reboot is in the early development stages at HBO, Variety has confirmed with sources. Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Jami O’Brien are attached to write the script and executive ...
[14] and Newsday described the second season as: "Silly, gross, soapy, mysterious, intriguing, exotic, erotic True Blood is fun. Even more fun this season." [15] By the end of the second season, True Blood scored 74, indicating favorable reviews, on Metacritic, an aggregator of critical responses, 10 more than the 64 scored by season one.
In February 2012 series creator Alan Ball announced he would step down as day-to-day showrunner of True Blood but would stay on as executive producer. [12] Mark Hudis, who joined the writing staff at the beginning of the fourth season, was chosen as executive producer for season six. However, the producers announced in March 2013 that, after ...