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The episode also acquired a 5.7 rating in the 18–49 demographic, making it the highest-rated show on cable television of the night. [21] In the United Kingdom, the episode was viewed by 3.54 million viewers on Sky Atlantic, making it the highest-rated broadcast that week on its channel. It also received 1.02 million timeshift viewers.
The seventh season includes an 81-minute finale; [65] this was the series' longest episode until it was surpassed by the Season 8 episode "The Long Night", which is 82 minutes. Season 7's penultimate episode also runs for 71 minutes – around 16 minutes longer than an average Game of Thrones episode.
The Vampire Diaries, an American supernatural drama, was renewed for a seventh season by The CW on January 11, 2015, [1] and premiered on October 8, 2015. [2] On March 11, 2016, The CW renewed The Vampire Diaries for an eighth season, [3] which was confirmed to be the final one in July 2016.
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the seventh season of The 100 holds an approval rating of 100% based on 8 reviews, with an average rating of 7.5/10. [27] From Entertainment Weekly, Dalene Rovenstine opined that, "Overall, I'm not crazy that this very sci-fi show suddenly went supernatural/spiritual at the end. There were certainly rocky ...
The episode was written as a continuation to the previous episode, "Sein und Zeit," but branched off into different territory. Although a majority of the episode was filmed on a soundstage, several scenes were shot on location, such as the scenes at the former Norton Air Force Base in San Bernardino, California. Several of the sequences ...
After that episode's airing, they were confirmed as series regulars for season 7. [3] West took over the role from Jared S. Gilmore, who has been confirmed to appear in at least the first two episodes of the season. [15] [87] On July 6, 2017, it was announced that Dania Ramirez and Gabrielle Anwar would be two additional series regulars for ...
At the time, "The End" had been crafted as a series finale, and Whedon noted it "had its own feeling and its own flavor, and we felt like we had done a pretty good job with that." [9] Coming up with the episode's ending sequence "was just blue sky" for Whedon after the first part of the episode had "so many moving parts" to it. Whedon ...
Maureen Ryan of The Huffington Post felt that "some past season finales were more satisfying and resonant than the series finale was" but felt the ending for Stan and Peggy was great. [8] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix felt the Stan and Peggy aspect, while "as sappy and wish-fullfillment-y as Mad Men has ever gotten", was "a fair way to end things ...