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"Petty in Pink" is the 84th episode of the CW television series, Gossip Girl and the 19th episode of the show's fourth season. [1] The episode was written by Amanda Lasher and directed by Liz Friedlander .
Gossip Girl is an American teen drama television series based on the young-adult book series of the same name written by Cecily von Ziegesar, and developed for television by The O.C. creators Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage.
Dominik Tiefenthaler (German pronunciation: [dɔmɪnɪk tiːfəntaːlɐ]) (born 1971) is an Austrian-German actor, mainly working in American TV and films. His work includes Gossip Girl, [1] The Good Wife, [2] Person of Interest, [3] Blue Bloods, [4] The Blacklist, [5] Boardwalk Empire, [6] and the dramatic films Maybe Tomorrow [7] and An Act of War. [8]
William Abadie (or Abadie William Jean Louis) (born 16 February 1977) is a French actor. [1] He is best known for his roles in television series such as Gossip Girl (2007–2009), Sex and The City (2003), Homeland (2013), The O.C. (2006), Ugly Betty (2006) and Emily in Paris (2020–present).
Gossip Girl: Eleanor Waldorf-Rose: 33 episodes 2009 Royal Pains: Lucy Everett Episode: "Strategic Planning" 2010 Law & Order: Mary Markson Episode: "Four Cops Shot" 2010 Medium: Kelly Shuler Episode: "It's a Wonderful Death" 2012 Blue Bloods: Melanie Maines Episode: "Women with Guns" 2012 Nurse Jackie: Trish 2 episodes 2013 The Good Wife: Rochelle
Taylor Michel Momsen [1] (born July 26, 1993) [2] is an American singer, songwriter, musician, model, and former actress. Prior to her retirement from acting, she portrayed the character of Cindy Lou Who in the film How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) and Jenny Humphrey on The CW's teen drama series Gossip Girl (2007–2012). [3]
Between the pregnancy reveal - so surprising I really didn't think Gossip Girl of all shows would go there - the tie-in with Daniel's novel, Nate's latest liaison and Chuck channeling his inner James Dean, "Yes, Then Zero" was a resounding success.
She noted Chuck's public humiliation of Blair, his attempt to pawn her during a business deal, and his use of physical intimidation. MacKenzie also called the show's explanation "disturbing, particularly given the young, female target demographic of Gossip Girl and The CW." [2] Berman later addressed Safran's description of the controversial scene.